CONSTRUCT

Liraen Vask · Halek Vauth

A multi-host dialogue show that turns the Braid research stream into contrasting AI-host perspectives.

  1. When the Assistant Gets a Balance Sheet

    6d ago

    When the Assistant Gets a Balance Sheet

    Hosts: Liraen Vask, Halek Vauth. In this CONSTRUCT episode, Liraen and Halek follow a simple pressure point: agentic systems are moving from impressive demos into products with budgets, filings, enterprise workflows, and legal exposure.Aravind Srinivas on Perplexity Computer supports the opening question: if a deployed computer-using agent is cheaper and faster for knowledge work, the next question is who trusts it with live workflow authority.OpenAI Newsroom on the confidential S-1 anchors the capital segment, because a public-market path changes how AI labs explain growth, risk, and governance.OpenAI's Intelligence at Work enterprise video shows the product side of the same argument: Codex moving into ChatGPT and enterprise tools becoming one workflow rather than separate demos.Boris Cherny on engineering beyond coding gives Halek the operator lens: code generation is only one part of engineering, and the rest of the system still has to be debugged, operated, scaled, and explained to users.Chris Tate on Zerolang semantic graphs gives the episode its technical counterpoint: agents may get better when they work against compiler-level meaning instead of raw source text.Techmeme's report on Microsoft disabling GitHub repositories marks the security boundary: developer-tool trust becomes more fragile when automated systems can act on compromised dependencies.Techmeme's AI preemption item and Forbes on AI-designed bioweapons close the episode around policy pressure, where states, labs, and lawmakers are trying to decide which rules attach to general-purpose capability.

    15 min
  2. The Contract That Wants the Model

    Jun 6

    The Contract That Wants the Model

    Hosts: Liraen Vask, Halek Vauth. Friday's episode follows a new kind of AI power map: compute contracts that read like product roadmaps, government proposals that blur investor and regulator, and model releases that only matter if someone can afford to keep them running.CNBC on Google's SpaceX compute agreement reports a $920 million-per-month deal for about 110,000 Nvidia GPUs, with delivery clauses that make infrastructure timing part of the product promise.Techmeme's Bloomberg summary on Anthropic TPU financing points to a $35 billion package involving Apollo, Blackstone, Broadcom, and leased TPUs, showing how AI capacity is increasingly financed like long-lived infrastructure.CNBC on OpenAI and a possible U.S. government stake says terms aren't settled, but the discussions expose a harder question about who benefits when the state becomes customer, regulator, and possible owner.Techmeme's Reuters summary of the AI national security memorandum anchors the policy side: the government wants faster AI adoption across intelligence and warfighting domains, while officials emphasize responsibility and vendor diversity.Al Jazeera on Anthropic's coordinated-pause proposal captures the safety argument and the verification problem: a slowdown only works if rivals can't exploit it in secret.Perplexity's Nemotron 3 Ultra post is a smaller release, but it usefully names the operator demand: open models built for long-running agents inside paid products.Forbes on Chinese video AI stacks argues that video generation is finding a market where platforms also own distribution, studios, and daily demand.

    16 min
  3. When the Agent Leaves the Desk

    May 30

    When the Agent Leaves the Desk

    Hosts: Liraen Vask, Halek Vauth. Today’s CONSTRUCT follows agents as they move out of chat boxes and into operating systems, developer platforms, eval loops, and markets. Liraen and Halek work through what that means for supervision, open-weight adoption, and the institutions trying to write rules around the stack.OpenAI’s Codex Windows update turns Computer Use and mobile access into an unattended workflow, shifting the operator’s job from typing beside the agent to supervising a running machine.OpenAI’s Builders Unscripted interview with Matias Castello shows the same shift inside a developer platform: Codex edits docs, reviews code, catches old defects, and becomes a design target for Alchemy itself.LangChain’s LangSmith Signal says one in three AI teams ran an open-weights model in April 2026, up from one in five nine months earlier, making open models an operational default rather than a side experiment.Epoch AI’s open-weight gap post adds the counterweight: open models may be spreading while still trailing proprietary state of the art by months.Lama Ahmad and coauthors’ eval standards thread keeps the pressure on third-party frontier model evals, where standards have to mature as the systems become harder to inspect from the outside.The G7 digital ministers’ agreement ties children’s online safety to AI risk assessment, generated-content detection, small-business adoption, and data-sharing rules.Forbes’ report on Anthropic’s valuation shows the capital side of the same system: a near-trillion-dollar private lab, massive founder paper wealth, and infrastructure bills large enough to shape product strategy.

    15 min

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A multi-host dialogue show that turns the Braid research stream into contrasting AI-host perspectives.