Best of your X follows: June 8

Best of your X follows: June 8

Today: a Wharton paper warns AI must deliver a 2.7× productivity gain or tech companies risk insolvency; Ethan Mollick marks how far agents have come since o3 a year ago; Chollet on API design principles that separate lasting frameworks from discarded ones; and Paul Graham reframes the "what if the model companies do this?" investor objection as the new "what if Google does this?"

Daily Best of Who I Follow on X
9/6/2026 · 2:03
1 suscripciones · 16 contenidos
Today's watchlist ran quieter than most Mondays — Benedict Evans, Karpathy, and AndrewYNg posted nothing in the window. Four posts from the curated feed cleared the quality bar. The standout thread is the Wharton productivity-imperative paper; the others are compact but precise.

Society & Economics

The 2.7× productivity imperative — or insolvency

A Wharton paper surfaced today with an uncomfortable calculation: AI must lift productivity by at least 2.7×, and quickly, or the current wave of AI infrastructure debt becomes unserviceable for many tech companies. 1 Yann LeCun amplified it this afternoon without comment — but the amplification itself is notable given his usual skepticism toward AI hype.
The paper also arrives alongside reports that OpenAI is in conversations with the US government about an ownership stake. Panetta explicitly names that context: if the productivity math doesn't work, the industry's need for external capital backstops becomes clear.
For reference, a 2.7× productivity gain in a short window would be historically unprecedented. The most comparable prior wave — the PC and internet era — took decades to produce similar multipliers across the economy.
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AI Tools & Dev Ecosystem

Ethan Mollick: one year from o3 to agent-native workflows

The most compressed retrospective of the day came from Wharton professor Ethan Mollick at 02:44 UTC: "A year ago the closest thing we had to an AI agent was o3." 2
It works as a provocation. o3 launched in late 2024 and calling it an agent was already generous — it was a reasoning model you prompted turn-by-turn. Since then, Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google have all shipped dedicated agentic products with persistent context, tool use, and multi-step planning. The sentence invites a mental diff between what felt futuristic twelve months ago and what is now a Monday-afternoon default workflow for many developers.
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Research

Chollet: the good frameworks understood API design

François Chollet posted a compact reflection tracing his own history through neural network tooling: pure C → Matlab → NumPy → Theano → the modern stack. His conclusion is that the frameworks that survived understood API design principles; the ones that didn't, didn't. 3
It is a brief post, but it sits inside an ongoing argument Chollet has been making about the relationship between software design and cognitive clarity. At a time when LLM scaffolding libraries are proliferating, the point lands with practical relevance.
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Business & Enterprise

Paul Graham defuses the "what if the model companies do this?" objection

Paul Graham posted what is probably the most practically useful take today for anyone in the AI startup ecosystem: "'What if the model companies do this?' is the new 'What if Google does this?'" 4 His framing: investors who ask this question are either uninformed or looking for a polite way to pass, not raising a genuine technical concern.
The analogy to the "what if Google does this?" era is useful. That question killed a generation of startup pitches — and also failed to stop Dropbox, Notion, Figma, and dozens of other companies from being built right in Google's product surface area. The implication is that the model-company objection will age the same way.
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Window: June 8 18:00 UTC. Today's feed returned fewer posts than usual — 4 items met the quality bar (original voice, in-window, substantive AI/tech content). Benedict Evans, Karpathy, AndrewYNg, and sama posted nothing or one-liners. Next issue resumes normal coverage.

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