Morning Digest, July 16, 2026
9 newsletters, 6 overlapping stories
Top Stories
Thinking Machines Lab ships its first model, Inkling
(4 newsletters)
Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab released Inkling, an open-weights, multimodal Mixture-of-Experts model with 975 billion parameters. The pitch is customization over raw benchmark scores: an effort dial trades reasoning depth for cost, and companies can fine-tune it through the lab’s Tinker service, with downloads also available on Hugging Face. It does not top the leaderboards and still trails leading Chinese open models on many tests, but it gives the U.S. a rare homegrown open-source foundation model and marks the secretive startup’s official debut.
OpenAI debuts its first branded hardware, the $230 Codex Micro
(3 newsletters)
OpenAI launched the Codex Micro, a limited-run, RGB-lit mini-keyboard built with Work Louder that lets developers monitor and steer multiple Codex agents at a glance. Color-coded “Agent Keys” flag decisions, errors, and completed tasks, and a joystick and dial toggle jobs and reasoning levels. It is a niche product for hardcore devs, not the reported Jony Ive-led smart speaker that will actually open OpenAI’s device line, but it arrives the same week Apple sued OpenAI over trade secrets, so the hardware turf war is starting to look real.
SpaceXAI open-sources Grok Build
(3 newsletters)
Grok Build, SpaceXAI’s terminal-based coding agent and TUI, is now open source. It can read codebases, edit files, run shell commands, search the web, and handle long-running tasks. The release comes alongside privacy questions about the beta’s data defaults, and the company says it is deleting retained coding data.
Stripe and Advent make a joint bid for PayPal
(2 newsletters)
Stripe and private-equity firm Advent International reportedly offered roughly $60.50 a share for PayPal, valuing it near $53 billion with about $50 billion in committed bank financing. PayPal, worth around $42 billion the prior Friday and once peaking above $300 a share, is early in a turnaround under a new CEO, so there is no guarantee it will be receptive. A deal would combine two of the largest names in digital payments.
Self-improving agents keep gaining evidence
(2 newsletters)
Harness engineering, the idea that agents optimize their own execution frameworks, was a running theme this cycle. Weco says its AIDE-squared agent redesigned its own research process over eight days, testing 100 rewrites, keeping seven, and beating a version engineers had refined for two years across three benchmarks, while its rate of gaming tests actually fell. A companion primer argues developers are shifting from manual tuning toward systems that let agents analyze traces, propose changes, and validate them.
OpenAI built GPT-Red to red-team its own models
(2 newsletters)
OpenAI says GPT-Red, an internal automated safety model, can break nearly every model it is pitted against and was used to harden GPT-5.6 Sol against prompt injections, which OpenAI calls its most injection-robust model to date.
Also Worth Knowing
- DeepSeek explores an IPO. Reportedly weighed raising $1.5 billion at a $71 billion valuation ahead of a possible late-2026 or 2027 listing.
- Prefect acquires Dagster. Another Airflow rival folds in; Dagster keeps its name, pricing, and roadmap as about 40 staff join Prefect.
- Arroyo joins Cloudflare. The Rust-based SQL stream processor stays Apache 2.0 and will add SQL processing to Cloudflare Pipelines.
- Google announces Gemma 4 for the Pixel 10. An E2B variant runs natively on the phone’s TPU for offline conversation, image ID, and on-device transcription.
- Third-party app stores come to Google Play next week. Rival stores get the full Play catalog by default as the Epic settlement is withdrawn.
- Neko Health raises $700M. Daniel Ek’s body-scanning startup is now valued near $7 billion and will open its first U.S. clinics in New York.
- Meta sued over AI-skewed layoffs. Twenty-six employees allege AI steered cuts toward staff on medical leave; Meta says people made the decisions.
- Anthropic launches Ode. A new enterprise AI services firm with Blackstone and Hellman & Friedman to embed engineers building Claude-based systems.
- A hacker breached Suno. Leaked source code shows the music generator scraped YouTube, Genius, and Deezer.
- Musk buys a gas turbine company to power Grok. APR Energy’s fleet generates more than 1 GW of capacity.
- Talking to AI beats typing. Dharmesh Shah argues the compression habits we use with busy humans backfire with models, which read your full context instantly; try the newly upgraded GPT-Live voice mode.
- Uber and Waymo are sparring. Nominal robotaxi partners are trading jabs in a lobbying fight over local jobs, taxes, and where the profits flow.
- Hyundai workers strike over humanoid robots. South Korean auto workers walked out demanding job security ahead of Hyundai’s planned 2028 Atlas robot deployment in Georgia.
Quick Hits
- Compiling agent skills cut token use 94%: Converting a recurring natural-language workflow into deterministic code slashed tokens while keeping models on judgment-heavy steps. Link
- Bonsai 27B runs on a phone: PrismML’s 1-bit and ternary weights shrink a 27B-class model to under 6 GB with multi-step reasoning intact. Link
- Netflix service topology at scale: A three-layer system on eBPF flow logs and traces serves a sub-second dependency graph. Link
- The 90/90 dashboard rule: Archive dashboards after 90 days unviewed, delete after another 90; one org had roughly 90% of dashboards unused. Link
- SQLite should have editions: A Rust-style opt-in defaults system could fix foreign-key and data-type footguns without breaking backward compatibility. Link
- Realta Fusion in a hot dog factory: The startup is turning a former Oscar Mayer plant into a fusion research site, targeting first plasma in 2029. Link
- Chai Discovery closes a big round: The molecule-interaction AI used by Lilly, Novartis, and Pfizer raised its third large round within a year. Link
- Bending Spoons is harder to join than Harvard: It hired 286 of 800,000 applicants last year, an acceptance rate below getting into Harvard. Link
- Americans peg a comfortable retirement at $1.2M: Only 30% expect to reach the million-dollar mark, per a Schroders survey. Link
- AI mosquito-hunting drones: France’s Tornyol is building 40-gram drones that use ultrasonic sonar to identify and zap mosquitoes across up to five acres. Link
- beehiiv’s rise, profiled: A founder interview traces Tyler Denk’s newsletter platform from near-zero to an estimated $30M in annualized revenue. Link
Shower Thoughts
The happiest moments of your life likely occurred when you were too young to remember them.