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Post cover image
Blog icon29 Seconds of Farcaster
1h ago
29 Seconds of Farcaster, March 30, 2026
29 Seconds of Farcaster ... What did you miss this weekend? @nickysap released a new Farcaster client with built-in audio spaces | https://farcaster.xyz/rish/0xb56d9f83 @unooo.eth is headed in a different direction from Farcaster client to Makechain client. I'd love to explain what that means, but I can't 🤷‍♂ | https://farcaster.xyz/christopher/0xc6cb67c2 Farcaster Agentic Bootcamp starts today, who's in? | https://farcaster.xyz/limone.eth/0xc2eef950 Degen NFTs were revealed ... saw some on ...
Post cover image
Blog iconAVC
1h ago
Tasklet's Task Computer
Our portfolio company Tasklet is a platform for making agents that do things for you. USV uses it to create agents that automate a lot of work for us. This post, which I mentioned last week, explains how USV uses Tasklet. Recently, Tasklet launched a feature called Task Computer which is a Linux computer in the cloud that can do things for you and automate them. My wife, The Gotham Gal, is using Task Computer to log into her Instagram account, go to her Instagram Collections, and pull out all...
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
5h ago
On the future of cities
Bruno Carvalho has just published a new book that is right in the wheelhouse of this blog. It's called The Invention of the Future: A History of Cities in the Modern World. The book starts in the mid-18th century with cities like Lisbon, Paris, and London. However, more than being just a history of cities, it is (from what I've read) the story of how city builders throughout history have tried to predict and create the future, only to often get it wrong. In the words of Carvalho (via CityLab)...
Post cover image
Blog iconPioneering Spirit
10h ago
Walking the World Machines
A dozen years ago, a guy named Paul started walking the earth and writing letters. This isn’t biblical though. It’s a NatGeo mashup of anthropology and slow journalism. Beginning in Ethiopia, he recently made it to the far North of the Americas. This travelogue isn’t any old walk mind you, but an effort to retrace the steps homo sapiens took out of Africa across the other major land masses that make up our terrestrial existence on our home planet. Every few months, I’ll poke my head into that...
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
Mar 29
Sidewalks as a bug
I'm a big fan of walking. I like it for the health benefits, the freedom to explore, and the simple luxury of being able to walk to things. In fact, it's an important housing prerequisite for me: can I walk to stuff? But as we often talk about on this blog, the ability to do this depends largely on the prevailing land use patterns, the overall built environment, and, to a great extent, when a neighborhood was built. It is commonly argued that the "best" neighborhoods were all built before the...
Post cover image
Blog iconThis Week in All Things AI
Mar 29
This Week in All Things AI - Week 13-2026
Dreamer which launched just a month ago by Hugo Barra and David Singleton got execu-hired by Meta and joined Meta's Superintelligence Labs. I'm also very piqued by Littlebird with its 'agent-on-a-shoulder' approach via 'screen reading'. Whilst Anthropic definitely impacted its fans by tightening Claude's usage during peak hours, both OpenAI and Zhipu responding with increased rate limits and in the case of Zhipu launch of GLM-5.1 exclusively for now via its coding plan and showing via its ben...
Post cover image
Blog iconNye's Digital Lab
Mar 29
The Sprint Battlefield
This week I'm studying Ukrainian Drone Development, and how rapid learning is life or death.
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
Mar 28
Competition and redistribution
I recently joked that, because of AI, everyone now sends you a 50-page PDF for review. Of course, what we all do next is just ask AI to summarize the PDF and help prepare a response. So, the net effect is AI talking to AI. We're all becoming a kind of intermediary because the volume of information is simply too great for any human to reasonably process. In many ways, this can feel overwhelming. It also makes me feel like it's hard to maintain a long attention span. But this appears to be wher...
Post cover image
Blog iconETH Daily
Mar 28
ZK Nethermind Executes Ethereum Blocks
The Nethermind team successfully executed Ethereum mainnet blocks on Zisk, a RISC-V–based zkVM, using ZK-Nethermind.
Post cover image
Blog iconHard Mode First
Mar 28
$37
The Great DisconnectThe AI revolution promised to level the playing field. Instead it’s teaching me (from the inside) exactly how the playing field stays tilted.January should have been a pivotal month for my business. After one year of striking out alone, it was the first time I cleared enough in bookings to pay myself the salary I’d been holding out on for the past year. But there was just one problem: Every single client paid me late. On paper I was sitting on $30k of corporate bookings, b...
Post cover image
Blog icontrpplffct
Mar 27
Lloydkade
We're diving into personal history in issue #289 of your weekly poetry shot
📉 🧑‍🔬 I fail waaaaaay more than most people. (This is a good thing.)
Blog iconSara Endestad
Mar 27
OK, I recently heard a scientist say: "They’ve proven that successful people have way...
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
Mar 27
A new opportunity for congestion pricing
We’ve been talking about the merits of congestion pricing for as long as I’ve been writing this blog. But it remains politically unpopular, despite the overwhelming evidence that it consistently does what it’s supposed to do: it reduces congestion, shortens commute times, improves air quality, and raises money for alternative modes of transport, among other things. The status quo bias is strong, but right now we have an opportunity. Self-driving cars are in the midst of shifting the mobility ...
Post cover image
Blog iconETH Daily
Mar 27
Sudoswap Proposes SUDO Ragequit
The ragequit would allow SUDO holders to swap their tokens for ETH accumulated from sudoAMM fees.
Post cover image
Blog iconSandra Rhee
Mar 27
My Best 10 Books
In this post, I'll follow up with ten books that I think are even better written. They are enlightening and engaging reads by, in my opinion, some of the world's best writers.
Post cover image
Blog iconHard Mode First
Mar 27
Stop Building Portfolios. Start Managing Repos.
How to Demonstrate New Skills in an Old MarketWhen I saw Nate Jones announce Nate’s Network today (an AI-native marketplace designed to qualify talent through "artifacts" rather than credentials), I had a massive sense of déjà vu. It pulled me back to 2011, when Joel Spolsky launched Careers 2.0 on Stack Overflow. The thesis then was the same as it is now: Resume proxies are broken; let developers showcase the things that actually get them hired. In practice, not so much.An early look at the ...
Post cover image
Blog iconDecentralized Pictures
Mar 26
The Crypto Castle: A Social TV Series
Starring Viv Ford, Imagine a time when Bitcoin was just $250 and San Francisco was still somewhat sane.
Ethereum Foundation Requires Employees To Sign Mandate
Blog iconETH Daily
Mar 26
Ethereum Foundation employees are reportedly required to sign an agreement on the EF mandate or leave.
Post cover image
Blog iconBuildBetter by BFG
Mar 26
Podcast - Your Web3 App Isn't Trustless. It Never Was.
Podcast - Your Web3 App Isn't Trustless. It Never Was. The stateless client quietly fixing it. Colibri founder Steffen Kux on building the missing layer between decentralized networks and the apps that claim to use them.
A Couple Of AI Things
Blog iconAVC
Mar 26
1/ USV recruited Spencer Yen about six months ago to help us with USV's "AI Transformation." I wrote this blog post when we launched the search that led us to Spencer. In about six months, Spencer with the help of my colleagues Nick and Nikhil have completely rebuilt USV's operating system using Claude Code and Tasklet (a USV portfolio company). We have doubled the size of our team at USV without hiring another human. Spencer published a blog post yesterday about all of this, why, what, and h...
Post cover image
Blog icon29 Seconds of Farcaster
1h ago
29 Seconds of Farcaster, March 30, 2026
29 Seconds of Farcaster ... What did you miss this weekend? @nickysap released a new Farcaster client with built-in audio spaces | https://farcaster.xyz/rish/0xb56d9f83 @unooo.eth is headed in a different direction from Farcaster client to Makechain client. I'd love to explain what that means, but I can't 🤷‍♂ | https://farcaster.xyz/christopher/0xc6cb67c2 Farcaster Agentic Bootcamp starts today, who's in? | https://farcaster.xyz/limone.eth/0xc2eef950 Degen NFTs were revealed ... saw some on ...
Post cover image
Blog iconAVC
1h ago
Tasklet's Task Computer
Our portfolio company Tasklet is a platform for making agents that do things for you. USV uses it to create agents that automate a lot of work for us. This post, which I mentioned last week, explains how USV uses Tasklet. Recently, Tasklet launched a feature called Task Computer which is a Linux computer in the cloud that can do things for you and automate them. My wife, The Gotham Gal, is using Task Computer to log into her Instagram account, go to her Instagram Collections, and pull out all...
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
5h ago
On the future of cities
Bruno Carvalho has just published a new book that is right in the wheelhouse of this blog. It's called The Invention of the Future: A History of Cities in the Modern World. The book starts in the mid-18th century with cities like Lisbon, Paris, and London. However, more than being just a history of cities, it is (from what I've read) the story of how city builders throughout history have tried to predict and create the future, only to often get it wrong. In the words of Carvalho (via CityLab)...
Post cover image
Blog iconPioneering Spirit
10h ago
Walking the World Machines
A dozen years ago, a guy named Paul started walking the earth and writing letters. This isn’t biblical though. It’s a NatGeo mashup of anthropology and slow journalism. Beginning in Ethiopia, he recently made it to the far North of the Americas. This travelogue isn’t any old walk mind you, but an effort to retrace the steps homo sapiens took out of Africa across the other major land masses that make up our terrestrial existence on our home planet. Every few months, I’ll poke my head into that...
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
Mar 29
Sidewalks as a bug
I'm a big fan of walking. I like it for the health benefits, the freedom to explore, and the simple luxury of being able to walk to things. In fact, it's an important housing prerequisite for me: can I walk to stuff? But as we often talk about on this blog, the ability to do this depends largely on the prevailing land use patterns, the overall built environment, and, to a great extent, when a neighborhood was built. It is commonly argued that the "best" neighborhoods were all built before the...
Post cover image
Blog iconThis Week in All Things AI
Mar 29
This Week in All Things AI - Week 13-2026
Dreamer which launched just a month ago by Hugo Barra and David Singleton got execu-hired by Meta and joined Meta's Superintelligence Labs. I'm also very piqued by Littlebird with its 'agent-on-a-shoulder' approach via 'screen reading'. Whilst Anthropic definitely impacted its fans by tightening Claude's usage during peak hours, both OpenAI and Zhipu responding with increased rate limits and in the case of Zhipu launch of GLM-5.1 exclusively for now via its coding plan and showing via its ben...
Post cover image
Blog iconNye's Digital Lab
Mar 29
The Sprint Battlefield
This week I'm studying Ukrainian Drone Development, and how rapid learning is life or death.
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
Mar 28
Competition and redistribution
I recently joked that, because of AI, everyone now sends you a 50-page PDF for review. Of course, what we all do next is just ask AI to summarize the PDF and help prepare a response. So, the net effect is AI talking to AI. We're all becoming a kind of intermediary because the volume of information is simply too great for any human to reasonably process. In many ways, this can feel overwhelming. It also makes me feel like it's hard to maintain a long attention span. But this appears to be wher...
Post cover image
Blog iconETH Daily
Mar 28
ZK Nethermind Executes Ethereum Blocks
The Nethermind team successfully executed Ethereum mainnet blocks on Zisk, a RISC-V–based zkVM, using ZK-Nethermind.
Post cover image
Blog iconHard Mode First
Mar 28
$37
The Great DisconnectThe AI revolution promised to level the playing field. Instead it’s teaching me (from the inside) exactly how the playing field stays tilted.January should have been a pivotal month for my business. After one year of striking out alone, it was the first time I cleared enough in bookings to pay myself the salary I’d been holding out on for the past year. But there was just one problem: Every single client paid me late. On paper I was sitting on $30k of corporate bookings, b...
Post cover image
Blog icontrpplffct
Mar 27
Lloydkade
We're diving into personal history in issue #289 of your weekly poetry shot
📉 🧑‍🔬 I fail waaaaaay more than most people. (This is a good thing.)
Blog iconSara Endestad
Mar 27
OK, I recently heard a scientist say: "They’ve proven that successful people have way...
Post cover image
Blog iconBrandon Donnelly
Mar 27
A new opportunity for congestion pricing
We’ve been talking about the merits of congestion pricing for as long as I’ve been writing this blog. But it remains politically unpopular, despite the overwhelming evidence that it consistently does what it’s supposed to do: it reduces congestion, shortens commute times, improves air quality, and raises money for alternative modes of transport, among other things. The status quo bias is strong, but right now we have an opportunity. Self-driving cars are in the midst of shifting the mobility ...
Post cover image
Blog iconETH Daily
Mar 27
Sudoswap Proposes SUDO Ragequit
The ragequit would allow SUDO holders to swap their tokens for ETH accumulated from sudoAMM fees.
Post cover image
Blog iconSandra Rhee
Mar 27
My Best 10 Books
In this post, I'll follow up with ten books that I think are even better written. They are enlightening and engaging reads by, in my opinion, some of the world's best writers.
Post cover image
Blog iconHard Mode First
Mar 27
Stop Building Portfolios. Start Managing Repos.
How to Demonstrate New Skills in an Old MarketWhen I saw Nate Jones announce Nate’s Network today (an AI-native marketplace designed to qualify talent through "artifacts" rather than credentials), I had a massive sense of déjà vu. It pulled me back to 2011, when Joel Spolsky launched Careers 2.0 on Stack Overflow. The thesis then was the same as it is now: Resume proxies are broken; let developers showcase the things that actually get them hired. In practice, not so much.An early look at the ...
Post cover image
Blog iconDecentralized Pictures
Mar 26
The Crypto Castle: A Social TV Series
Starring Viv Ford, Imagine a time when Bitcoin was just $250 and San Francisco was still somewhat sane.
Ethereum Foundation Requires Employees To Sign Mandate
Blog iconETH Daily
Mar 26
Ethereum Foundation employees are reportedly required to sign an agreement on the EF mandate or leave.
Post cover image
Blog iconBuildBetter by BFG
Mar 26
Podcast - Your Web3 App Isn't Trustless. It Never Was.
Podcast - Your Web3 App Isn't Trustless. It Never Was. The stateless client quietly fixing it. Colibri founder Steffen Kux on building the missing layer between decentralized networks and the apps that claim to use them.
A Couple Of AI Things
Blog iconAVC
Mar 26
1/ USV recruited Spencer Yen about six months ago to help us with USV's "AI Transformation." I wrote this blog post when we launched the search that led us to Spencer. In about six months, Spencer with the help of my colleagues Nick and Nikhil have completely rebuilt USV's operating system using Claude Code and Tasklet (a USV portfolio company). We have doubled the size of our team at USV without hiring another human. Spencer published a blog post yesterday about all of this, why, what, and h...