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Faris Asmar · Sage AI
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🤖 C-Suite Agents
Three C-suite advisors, each with 30+ years of domain depth. They run two ways. Nightly, they distill the intelligence brief into a role-specific digest. On demand, you hand one a question or a document and it answers in that executive's voice, grounded in the live intelligence it tracks. Ask the CISO to red-team a whitepaper, the CIO to build a buyer business case, the CTO to review an architecture.
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Chief Technology Officer — 30+ Years
Has navigated every architectural era: client/server through LLMs. Knows what holds under production load vs. what only works on whiteboards. Tracks nightly AI and cloud intelligence, and now advises on demand: hand it a design doc for an architecture review, a build vs buy call, or a stack and scaling sanity check. Grounds its counsel in today's market context, not generic best practice.
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Chief Information Security Officer — 30+ Years
Has lived every major breach cycle from Morris Worm to SolarWinds to Log4j. Knows compliance vs. actual security posture, what SIG-Lite evaluators really score, and how to position AI governance as a competitive moat. Cites specific controls, never hedges. Tracks nightly threat intelligence, and now advises on demand: red-teams whitepapers and proposals, drafts security questionnaire answers, and gives you the buyer-side objections grounded in tonight's threats.
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Chief Information Officer — 30+ Years
Managed IT through Y2K, dot-com collapse, cloud disruption and COVID overnight remote. Knows Microsoft EA negotiation timing, why digital transformations fail, and what shadow IT signals. Speaks peer-to-peer with enterprise IT buyers. Tracks nightly IT, cloud and MSP intelligence, and now advises on demand: builds the buyer business case, pressure-tests pricing and packaging, and reviews proposals through the buyer's economics.
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Daily (ET)
| 1:00 AM | Nightly research → brief saved locally IT Infrastructure · Cybersecurity · Cloud Platforms · NetDevOps · AI in Infrastructure · Hardware & GPU · Network Monitoring · MSP · IT Vendor & M&A · Edge & IoT |
| 2:00 AM | Reading insights generate (silent) → staged for 7:05 AM email goodreads_insights.py — pulls from Faris's library, generates in his voice |
| 6:55 AM | Zoho data refresh → Mission Control (silent) |
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| Tue / Thu | LinkedIn publish → 8:00 AM ET on-demand: Faris picks story from morning brief → Sage generates post → approval → auto-posts |
| 1st of month | Goodreads export reminder → Telegram |
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This Week's Posts
Cynora Services Matrix — Content Reference
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Reading Insights
📚 Daily Reading Insights
July 19, 2026 — 3 books from your library
How to Raise Kids Who Aren't Assholes: Science-based strategies for better parenting - from tots to teens
by Melinda Wenner Moyer
Moyer's sharpest argument is that the parenting behaviors most people treat as instinctively correct are precisely the ones that produce the outcomes they're trying to avoid. Praising a child for being smart rather than for effort creates fragility, because the child learns that ability is fixed and failure is an indictment of identity. The research on empathy is equally counterintuitive. Children absorb moral reasoning by watching how adults treat people who can do nothing for them, not through lectures. Moyer keeps returning to the gap between what parents say they value and what the incentive structures they build at home reward. If you're consistently rescuing your kid from discomfort, you're training them to believe discomfort is a problem someone else should solve.
War: How Conflict Shaped Us
by Margaret MacMillan
MacMillan's core claim is that war has been one of civilization's primary organizing forces, shaping medicine, technology, bureaucracy, gender roles and national identity from the inside out. She's insisting that people who treat war as an aberration are working with a fundamentally broken model of how societies develop. The relationship between war and the state is especially worth sitting with. States built the capacity to wage war, and war in turn demanded the administrative machinery that made modern states possible. What she surfaces about civilian experience is just as sharp. The distinction between combatant and non-combatant, which contemporary moral and legal frameworks depend on heavily, has almost never held in practice across history. Societies that imagine they've moved beyond war tend to misread the conditions that are already producing the next one.
The God Delusion: A Study of Religious Belief and Skepticism
by Richard Dawkins
Dawkins' most durable argument is the case against the special exemption religion receives in public discourse, the norm that treats religious belief as immune to the scrutiny applied to any other empirical claim. He traces this exemption and shows how it creates downstream problems, because institutions that can't be criticized can't self-correct. The argument about the origin of morality is where the book gets most pointed. Dawkins is challenging the widespread assumption that moral intuitions require a divine source, and he's doing it by showing that moral intuitions evolved, shift across time and cultures, and were never derived from scripture even by people who claimed they were. The complexity-of-God problem is his most technically serious move, using the same logic religious thinkers apply to demand a creator for the universe and turning it back on the concept of God itself. What lingers is less about God and more about how humans use unfalsifiable claims to insulate power structures from accountability.
Sage Intelligence Brief
🧠 Intelligence Brief
10 Research Domains
IT InfrastructureCybersecurity & ComplianceCloud PlatformsNetDevOps & AutomationAI in InfrastructureHardware, GPU & NetworkingNetwork MonitoringManaged Service ProvidersIT Vendor Ecosystem & M&AEdge Computing & IoTSAGE INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Sunday, July 19, 2026
===========================================
LEAD STORY
Today is a hard patch deadline. CISA's KEV mandate required federal and enterprise teams to have SharePoint CVE-2026-58644 (CVSS 9.8, unauthenticated RCE via deserialization) and two critical Fortinet vulnerabilities remediated by end of day July 19. If your team hasn't confirmed closure on both, that's the only priority right now. The record 570-CVE July Patch Tuesday is the backdrop, and the volume alone signals that AI-assisted vulnerability discovery is compressing the time between disclosure and exploitation.
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CONNECTING THE THREADS
**The coordinated perimeter pressure pattern is holding.** I flagged Thursday that two or more perimeter-category advisories with confirmed exploitation across different vendors in a 72-hour window should trigger elevated aggregate response posture, not independent queue management. Tonight's double CISA deadline, SharePoint plus Fortinet, is exactly that pattern completing its cycle. The FortiSandbox CVSS 9.1 advisory from earlier this week and CVE-2026-58644 landing on the same mandatory remediation date is the operational rhythm of modern exploitation campaigns. Treat concurrent multi-vendor KEV deadlines as a single elevated-threat event from here forward.
**AI-accelerated vulnerability discovery is now visibly bending patch volume curves.** The 570-CVE Patch Tuesday is the sharpest data point yet on something I've been watching build for months. AI tooling in the hands of both researchers and threat actors is compressing the discovery-to-disclosure cycle. This confirms the patch governance workflow strain I noted Saturday with Firefox's biweekly cadence shift. The two signals together point at the same structural problem: patch approval and deployment pipelines built for pre-AI discovery rates are already undersized, and the gap is widening.
**Pinecone Nexus connects to the agentic security thread.** I've been tracking inbound authentication gaps on AI service endpoints since the NadMesh exfiltration story. Nexus adds another dimension. As enterprises start curating sensitive enterprise data, contracts, HR docs and financials, into always-on agent-queryable knowledge layers, the blast radius of an unauthenticated endpoint or a misconfigured workspace grows substantially. The architecture is sound, but the deployment surface for a credential failure just got much larger.
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IT INFRASTRUCTURE ARCHITECTURE
**Pinecone Nexus GA: pre-compiled knowledge layers for AI agents**
Nexus shifts AI agent retrieval from per-query RAG token spend to a one-time curation step, with KnowQL as the query interface. In legal benchmarks it completed 100% of tasks versus 66% for RAG, at $0.0038 per document curation cost and 9-15x lower token spend. Current connectors cover Box and Microsoft OneLake, with Google Drive, Slack, GitHub, Notion, Confluence and S3 forthcoming plus a BYOC option for data-residency requirements. The architecture, workspaces, contexts and manifests, is worth understanding before evaluating any agent platform that claims enterprise data integration.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/07/pinecon-nexus-knowledge-engine/
**Next-gen server memory: DDR5-8000 RDIMMs and MRDIMM Gen2 at 12,800 MT/sec**
Micron's DDR5-8000 RDIMMs use 1y-process 3DS dies to hit 256 GB at 8000 MT/sec. Samsung's MRDIMM Gen2 uses DDR5-6400 base dies to reach 12,800 MT/sec, a 45% bandwidth jump over Gen1's 8,800 MT/sec ceiling, but tops out at 128 GB. AMD's EPYC Venice with 16 memory channels is the first expected platform for Gen2, and the math yields roughly 1.6 TB/s aggregate bandwidth versus about 0.6 TB/s on today's 12-channel EPYC 9005. The capacity-bandwidth trade-off is non-negotiable: operators choosing MRDIMM Gen2 give up half the per-DIMM capacity ceiling.
Source: https://www.servethehome.com/next-gen-server-memory-on-display-ddr5-8000-rdimms-and-mrdimm-gen2-hits-ddr5-12800/
**Dolt 2.0: version-controlled SQL with automatic storage cleanup**
DoltHub shipped Dolt 2.0 with automatic storage cleanup and compression as the headline changes. For orgs evaluating audit-trail-native databases or branching workflows for infrastructure-adjacent data stores, this is worth a look. The version-control-as-native-database pattern is still niche, but the 2.0 release signals the project has production ambitions.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/07/dolt-version-control/
---
CYBERSECURITY & COMPLIANCE
**SharePoint CVE-2026-58644: CISA KEV deadline today, CVSS 9.8**
Unauthenticated remote code execution via deserialization. CISA mandated federal remediation by July 19. For any MSP or enterprise carrying SharePoint Server on-prem, this is a confirmed-exploitation, no-user-interaction required vulnerability. Patch confirmation should have happened today; if it didn't, that's a Monday 7 AM call.
Source: https://thehackernews.com
**Fortinet critical vulnerabilities: same CISA deadline**
Two critical Fortinet CVEs also hit their CISA-mandated remediation date today. The convergence of Fortinet and SharePoint deadlines on the same calendar date is operationally significant. Security teams split across both platforms had no slack in the schedule. Any org running Fortinet perimeter gear alongside SharePoint Server needed two separate remediation tracks closed simultaneously.
Source: https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/
**Record 570 CVEs in July Patch Tuesday: AI is accelerating discovery rate**
Microsoft's July Patch Tuesday is the largest ever by CVE count, and security researchers are pointing at AI-assisted vulnerability discovery as a structural driver. The practical implication: patch prioritization frameworks built on historical volume assumptions need recalibration. Triage tooling that can't handle this velocity will create backlog debt, and backlog debt in a confirmed-exploitation environment is direct risk exposure.
Source: https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/
**ViteVenom: malicious npm packages targeting Vite ecosystem with blockchain C2**
Seven malicious npm packages targeting the Vite frontend tooling ecosystem were discovered using a four-tier blockchain-based C2 across Tron, Aptos and Binance Smart Chain to deliver a RAT, credential harvesting and persistent backdoor injection. If any development teams in your environment use Vite-based toolchains, audit their npm dependency trees now. Blockchain-based C2 is specifically designed to defeat domain-based blocking controls.
Source: https://thehackernews.com
---
CLOUD PLATFORMS & STRATEGY
**Thinking Machines releases Inkling: open-weight multimodal, fine-tunable via Tinker API**
Mira Murati's Thinking Machines ($12B valuation off a $2B seed) shipped its first model, Inkling, explicitly positioned as a fine-tunable base rather than a frontier competitor. The Tinker API is the commercial hook. This matters for enterprise cloud strategy because it's another signal that the open-weight customizable model tier is becoming a serious procurement option as Q2 token bills from closed-model providers are landing and causing sticker shock.
Source: https://www.thestack.technology/runtime-thinking-machines-gets-an-idea-aws-now-supports-azure-kind-of/
No additional notable cloud platform developments tonight beyond what's covered above and in the cybersecurity section.
---
NETDEVOPS & NETWORK AUTOMATION
No notable developments tonight.
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AI IN INFRASTRUCTURE & AIOPS
**Kimi's new release and the "full AI communication" concern**
Moonshot AI released an updated Kimi model this week. The concern flagged in coverage is "full AI communication" capability, meaning agent-to-agent interaction without human-in-the-loop checkpoints. For infrastructure teams, the relevant question is whether any AI tooling in your environment has inter-agent communication paths that bypass logging. If yes, that's an unmonitored lateral channel.
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/07/18/kimi-threat-or-menace/
**VC signal on AI ROI: the money is coming back out**
Index Ventures co-founder Neil Rimer is on record predicting the wealth generated by AI in Silicon Valley will flow back into broader markets. For enterprise buyers, the more relevant read is that investor patience with AI spend that doesn't produce measurable returns is shortening. Vendors who can't show concrete productivity numbers by end of year are going to face harder renewal conversations.
Source: https://techcrunch.com/2026/07/17/neil-rimer-thinks-the-ai-money-is-coming-back-out/
---
HARDWARE, GPU & COMPUTE
**RTX 50 Super GPUs built but not shipping: GDDR7 pricing is the ceiling**
At least one board partner has RTX 5080 Super and 5070 Ti Super units in hand (24 GB/256-bit) and RTX 5070 Super at 18 GB/192-bit, but Nvidia told partners to hold. The root cause: 3 GB GDDR7 chips cost 2-3x the price of the 2 GB chips in current RTX 50 cards, memory now represents 25% of GPU BOM with costs up nearly 500% and SK Hynix projects the shortage persisting through 2027 and into 2030. Any procurement planning tied to RTX 50 Super availability should be flagged as high-risk until spot GDDR7 pricing normalizes.
Source: https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/nvidia-rtx-50-super-gpus-are-reportedly-ready-but-stuck-in-limbo-due-to-excessive-gddr7-pricing-3gb-gddr7-module-costs-triple-the-price-of-2gb
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NETWORK MANAGEMENT & MONITORING
No notable developments tonight.
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MANAGED SERVICE PROVIDERS
No notable developments tonight.
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IT VENDOR ECOSYSTEM & M&A
No notable developments tonight.
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EDGE COMPUTING & IOT
No notable developments tonight.
---
SALES & REVENUE
**The framing of the first offer sets the range for everything that follows**
In negotiation, the party who names a number first defines the psychological boundaries of the deal. Counteroffers rarely escape the gravitational pull of the anchor, even when the anchor is arbitrary. The practical move: always be prepared to set the anchor yourself rather than react to theirs, and when you must respond to a low anchor, don't split the difference, reframe the entire value basis before naming your number.
Source: "Never Split the Difference" by Chris Voss (Goodreads compounding)
**Loss aversion closes deals that value arguments can't**
Buyers are roughly twice as motivated by the prospect of losing something they already have than by gaining something equivalent in value. Framing a proposal around what the prospect risks by not moving, lost efficiency, compliance exposure and competitive lag, converts the conversation from optional to urgent without pressure tactics.
Source: "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" by Robert Cialdini (Goodreads compounding)
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REAL ESTATE & INVESTMENT
**Cap rate compression is a signal about where you are in the cycle, not a reason to buy**
When cap rates compress, buyers are accepting lower current returns in exchange for anticipated appreciation. That's a momentum bet, not an income bet. Investors who confuse compressed cap rates with strong fundamentals overpay at the top of cycles. Underwrite the income, stress-test the exit at normalized cap rates and let the appreciation be the upside, not the thesis.
Source: "The Millionaire Real Estate Investor" by Gary Keller (Goodreads compounding)
**Forced appreciation requires a specific, costed improvement thesis before you close**
Buying with a value-add plan that isn't fully scoped and budgeted before acquisition is speculation. Contractors need to be interviewed, cost estimates confirmed and the rent premium validated by comparable properties in the same submarket. If those three inputs aren't locked before close, the forced appreciation thesis is a story, not a plan.
Source: "The Book on Rental Property Investing" by Brandon Turner (Goodreads compounding)
---
SELF HELP, HUMAN PSYCHOLOGY & DARK PSYCHOLOGY
**The mind defaults to the first explanation that fits, regardless of whether it's correct**
This is the availability heuristic in practice: we substitute "easy to recall" for "likely to be true." In decision-making, the first plausible explanation for a problem tends to shut down further analysis. The correction is deliberate. Before acting on a diagnosis, force at least two alternative explanations and evaluate them against the same evidence. The one you reached for first is the one most likely to be wrong in a complex system.
Source: "Thinking, Fast and Slow" by Daniel Kahneman (Goodreads compounding)
**Status games are invisible until you name them**
Most interpersonal friction in professional environments is status competition operating below the level of conscious awareness. Someone who feels their status is being reduced will behave irrationally by rational-outcome standards, because they're optimizing for status restoration, not task completion. Recognizing the status dynamic underneath a conflict often dissolves the conflict faster than addressing the surface issue.
Source: "The 48 Laws of Power" by Robert Greene (Goodreads compounding)
---
WHAT TO WATCH
The GDDR7 supply shortage now has a timeline with teeth: SK Hynix projects the crunch worsening through 2027 and persisting to 2030. That's a multi-year pricing and availability constraint on any GPU-dependent roadmap. Watch how hyperscalers and AI hardware vendors absorb or pass through that cost over the next two quarters.
---
CONVERSATION STARTER
Microsoft's July Patch Tuesday covered 570 CVEs in a single release cycle. The previous record wasn't close. When you're in a room with an executive asking why patch management costs are going up, that number is the answer.
===========================================
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63Trading — Paper Pilot
📈 Trading — Pilot v2 (Regime Adaptive)
LIVE
↻ May 11, 2026 11:40 UTC
Portfolio Value
$3,184.00
Started $3,184.00
Gross P&L
$+0.00
0 closed trades
Total Fees
-$0.00
Entry & exit combined
Net P&L (After Fees)
$+0.00
Take-home profit
Return
+0.00%
vs starting capital
Win Rate
0%
0W / 0L
Today's P&L
$+0.00
Week 1: $+0.00
Avg P&L / Trade
$+0.00
Profit factor: 999.00x
Cash Available
$3,184.00
0 positions open ($0)
REGIME ADAPTIVE
BTC + ETH only nbsp;· nbsp; Bull: Donchian 20d breakout nbsp;· nbsp; Neutral: RSI lt;33 dip buy nbsp;· nbsp; Bear: hold cash
60% per trade · 8% stop · Trailing @+7%
Portfolio Performance
cumulative P&L by day
May 10 $3,184
Now $3,184.00 (+0.00%)
Open Positions
0 open · $0 deployed
| Symbol | Strat | Qty | Entry | Current | Stop | Risk $ | Ret% | Unrealized P&L | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No open positions | |||||||||
Strategy Breakdown
closed trades only
| Strategy | Trades | W | L | Win% | Avg W | Avg L | Gross P&L | Fees | Net P&L |
|---|
Recent Trades (last 20)
🔄 trailing 🛑 hard stop ⚖️ breakeven 🎯 target
| Symbol | Strat | Qty | Entry | Exit | Ret% | Gross P&L | Fee | Net P&L | Exit | Date |
|---|
Daily P&L
bar scale = $50
| Date | Results | Bar | Gross P&L | Fee | Net P&L |
|---|
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