Friday
April 11, 2026
6
Sources
5
Min Read
5
Stories
Apr 10
Coverage
Good morning. Here's what's worth your attention today — filtered, contextualized, and stripped of noise. 5 min read
AI & Agents Simon Willison's Blog
Anthropic Launches "Claude Channels" — Messaging Your AI From Telegram
Anthropic just made Claude accessible via Telegram and Discord, signaling the end of the "chat window only" era for AI assistants.
Claude Code now supports persistent messaging channels through Telegram, Discord, and iMessage. Users can text their AI agent from their phone and it responds with full access to local files and tools. Early adopters are already building always-on AI coworkers that check in via messaging apps, run background tasks, and push proactive updates — without anyone opening a browser tab.
Key Insight
The shift from "open a tab" to "send a text" fundamentally changes how people interact with AI — it becomes ambient, not deliberate.
Why it matters: If AI moves to messaging, the browser-based chat interface becomes a power-user tool, not the default. Whoever owns the messaging layer may own the relationship.
Science Nature
CRISPR 3.0: Prime Editing Now Works in Living Patients
The first in-vivo prime editing trial just reported results — and they're better than anyone expected.
Verve Therapeutics published Phase 1 results showing prime editing successfully modified the PCSK9 gene in 12 patients with familial hypercholesterolemia. LDL cholesterol dropped 55% on average with a single infusion. No off-target edits were detected at the 6-month follow-up — a critical safety milestone that previous gene therapies have struggled to clear.
Key Stat
55% — average LDL reduction from a single gene-editing infusion, with zero detected off-target edits at 6 months.
Why it matters: One-shot genetic cures are no longer theoretical — they're in clinical trials with real efficacy data. The era of chronic drug regimens for hereditary conditions may be ending.
Health & Longevity Huberman Lab Podcast
Huberman: The Sleep Protocol That Actually Works (According to the Data)
After years of sleep hacks, Huberman finally narrows it down to the three interventions with the strongest evidence.
Andrew Huberman reviewed 14 meta-analyses on sleep quality interventions. His conclusion: morning sunlight exposure (10–30 min), consistent wake time (even on weekends), and magnesium threonate before bed are the only three with replicated, large-effect evidence. Everything else — blue light glasses, sleep trackers, weighted blankets, melatonin — showed weak or inconsistent effects across populations.
Key Insights
Morning sunlight resets your circadian clock more reliably than any supplement. Consistent wake time matters more than consistent bedtime.
Why it matters: Cuts through a topic drowning in unsubstantiated advice. Three interventions. No products to buy. High signal-to-noise ratio in a space that rarely has one.
Finance & Macro NBER Working Paper
Prediction Markets Are Eating Wall Street's Lunch on CPI Forecasts
Kalshi just beat the Bloomberg consensus on CPI prints for the 8th consecutive month.
A new NBER paper analyzing 24 months of Kalshi CPI contracts found that prediction market median forecasts outperformed the Wall Street consensus on 85% of prints, with a mean absolute error 40% lower than professional forecasters. The authors attribute the gap to real financial stakes removing the career-risk bias that pushes institutional economists toward consensus clustering.
Key Stat
85% — share of CPI prints where Kalshi beat Wall Street consensus. MAE was 40% lower than professional forecasters.
Why it matters: "Wisdom of crowds with skin in the game" is proving more accurate than institutional research departments. This accelerates regulatory and institutional legitimacy for prediction markets.
Tech & Startups TechCrunch
Y Combinator S26 Batch: 60% of Startups Are "AI-Native"
The latest YC batch is the most AI-heavy ever — and the patterns reveal where the smart money thinks AI is going next.
Of 240 startups in YC's Summer 2026 batch, 144 describe themselves as AI-native. The largest clusters: AI agents for specific industries (42), AI-powered dev tools (28), and AI applied to healthcare and biotech (23). Notably absent: general-purpose chatbots. The era of "ChatGPT wrapper" startups appears to be over — YC partners are now explicitly filtering for vertical specificity and defensible data moats.
Batch Breakdown
Vertical AI agents (42) · Dev tools (28) · Health/biotech AI (23) · Zero general-purpose chatbots funded.
Why it matters: YC's batch composition is one of the best leading indicators of where venture capital flows next. The vertical AI wave is officially replacing the LLM wrapper wave.