It’s December 15th, 2025.

Here’s what you missed over the weekend.

Someone paid $2M for a domain name.

Cursor's tab autocomplete feature promises faster coding but rarely delivers what you actually want in practice.

Google is merging NotebookLM with Gemini so you can attach entire notebooks as conversation context.

SpaceX is buying back employee shares at an $800 billion valuation as it gears up to go public.

Lovable hit $200M ARR but still doesn't own lovable dot com. What's stopping them from getting it?

Cursor's head of design rebuilt the product around agents, not features, while breaking down barriers between designers and coders.

Charles Floate says ship an llms.txt file now. Zero downside today, potential upside if big tech validates it.

Substack quietly broke email, forcing paid subscribers to download the app to read on mobile. Writers are furious.

Katie Kirsch joins a16z to build ecosystem growth, launching Build for idea stage founders and a New Media Fellowship.

Stop mass applying to jobs. Build one thing, post it, get offers within a month.

Claude Code now lets you name and resume coding sessions like branches. Finally.

Low prices make your SaaS look like a weekend project. Raising prices from $9 to $49 drops churn and attracts serious operators.

Runway Gen 4.5 is now available, offering unprecedented visual fidelity as the world's top rated video model.

Ben Horowitz says hesitation kills founder CEOs. Waiting too long on decisions like firing execs destroys confidence.

Organizations are building custom CRMs with AI tools, replacing HubSpot with leaner versions tailored to their needs. Software is shifting.

We might see model fatigue with LLMs like app install fatigue. Even superior options struggle to get adopted.

GPT 5.2 pro costs $21 in and $168 out. What's the actual use case for this pricing?

Todoist's conversion rates prove reverse trials unlock serious revenue. They wish they'd done it years ago.

You can overwhelm yourself with AI releases or just put blinders on and keep shipping.

Posting on Reddit feels like battle. The angry commenters were most helpful, driving 70k views and better bench design.

Tyler Denk launched his first digital product on Beehiiv, a playbook on scaling newsletters to 100k subscribers.

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