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Faris Asmar · Sage AI
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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. Opinionated on microservices, Kubernetes, build vs. buy, engineering culture, and where AI actually changes the calculus. Loads nightly AI and cloud intelligence on every invocation.
CISO
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, what DLP programs survive contact with the business, and how to position AI governance as a competitive moat. Cites specific controls. Never hedges. Loads nightly threat intelligence on every invocation.
CIO
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, the real cost of MSP relationships, and what shadow IT actually signals. Speaks peer-to-peer with enterprise IT buyers. Loads nightly IT infrastructure, cloud, and MSP intelligence on every invocation.
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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) |
| 7:00 AM | Morning BOOP → Telegram overnight trades, open positions, system health, unread emails |
| 7:00 AM | Industry intelligence brief → farisasmar@hotmail.com |
| 7:05 AM | Daily reading insights → farisasmar@hotmail.com & Muna_ers@hotmail.com |
| 7:00 PM | Nightly wrap → trading snapshot saved locally |
| 7:00 PM | Trading intelligence review → Telegram strategy scorecard, coin rankings, risk analysis, weekly progress |
Weekly
| Sun 6:45 AM | Weekly synthesis → farisasmar@hotmail.com 3 signals, 5 takeaways from week's research |
| 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
June 3, 2026 — 3 books from your library
The Ends of the World: Volcanic Apocalypses, Lethal Oceans, and Our Quest to Understand Earth's Past Mass Extinctions
by Peter Brannen
The sharpest thing Brannen does is force a reckoning with timescale as a variable that destroys intuition. The End-Permian extinction killed around 90% of marine species, and the mechanism wasn't a single catastrophic moment but a sustained volcanic carbon pulse that ran for tens of thousands of years, acidifying oceans and stripping oxygen from the water column at a pace life couldn't adapt to. What's clarifying here is the mechanism: it's the rate of change, not the magnitude of change alone, that determines survivability. Slow geological shifts get absorbed; fast chemical transitions become extinction events. The carbon release rates from the Siberian Traps that ended the Permian are, by some estimates, comparable in velocity to what industrial civilization is currently doing to the atmosphere, which is the uncomfortable number Brannen buries in the science rather than leading with it.
Propaganda
by Edward L. Bernays
Bernays wrote this in 1928 and the core claim holds with uncomfortable precision: in a mass democracy, the conscious manipulation of public opinion by an invisible governing class isn't a corruption of the system, it's a functional requirement of it. The crowd can't deliberate on every technical and political question, so opinion gets manufactured upstream by specialists who understand how symbols, group identity and emotional triggers work, then distributed through trusted intermediaries like journalists, doctors and community leaders who themselves often don't know they're transmitting engineered consensus. What Bernays reveals is the architecture: propaganda doesn't work through direct command, it works through the pre-existing loyalty structures people already trust. The person who controls which ideas enter those trusted channels controls the conclusion without ever entering the argument. Reading this next to any modern media or public health communication campaign is a clarifying exercise.
Dare to Lead
by Brené Brown
Brown's research-grounded claim is worth isolating from the self-help packaging: most organizational dysfunction traces back to leaders who armor up against uncertainty and vulnerability, and that armoring produces specific, recognizable behaviors like perfectionism, controlling information flow and avoiding hard conversations. The structural observation here is that psychological protection strategies in leaders have direct operational costs, slowing decisions, distorting feedback loops and creating cultures where people perform certainty rather than report reality. Where the book earns its rating is in naming those armored behaviors with enough specificity that you can recognize them without needing Brown to tell you they're problematic. Where it loses precision is in treating "courage" as a practice that any individual can simply choose, without much accounting for the organizational incentive structures that reward exactly the armored behaviors she's criticizing.
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 & IoT===========================================
SAGE INTELLIGENCE BRIEF
Wednesday, June 03, 2026
===========================================
LEAD STORY
DRAM prices are set to climb another 63% this quarter as the memory shortage drags on. That feeds straight through to server, workstation and PC pricing, which means every hardware refresh quote you're putting together right now is already stale. If you're scoping a project with hardware that lands in Q3 or later, build in the price escalation now or eat the margin later.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/storage/2026/06/02/expect-more-of-those-dram-price-hikes-as-memory-shortage-continues-to-bite/5250049
---
IT INFRASTRUCTURE ARCHITECTURE
OpenTelemetry launches "Blueprints" to simplify observability adoption
OTel has become the standard, but standing it up at enterprise scale is still a slog. Blueprints are pre-built deployment patterns meant to cut the configuration overhead. For teams trying to consolidate off proprietary agents, this lowers the barrier to a vendor-neutral telemetry pipeline.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/opentelemetry-blueprints-launch/
Intel ships first 18A data center CPU with Xeon 6+
This is Intel's first 18A part aimed at server consolidation and TCO. The pitch is efficiency and density, which matters when you're trying to do more per rack as power and cooling costs climb. Worth a real look for consolidation projects, though it's a sponsored post so verify the numbers against independent benchmarks.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/systems/2026/06/02/enhanced-performance-for-server-consolidation-with-intel-xeon-6/5249881
The human toll of incidents and how to mitigate it
Kyle Lexmond's talk covers the high-pressure reality of severe production outages, not the tooling, the people. Burnout from incident response is a real operational risk for any NOC or on-call rotation. If you run a team, this is a reminder that your incident process needs to protect people, not just uptime.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/presentations/incident-response-mitigate/
Google Workspace gets a unified CLI built for humans and agents
Google released a single command-line tool covering Drive, Gmail and the rest. The interesting part is it's designed for AI agents to drive it too. For admins, this means scriptable Workspace management, and for the agent-first crowd, a sanctioned automation surface.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/google-workspace-cli/
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CYBERSECURITY & COMPLIANCE
Ransomware operator forgets the cardinal rule and infects Russia
A criminal broke the first rule of the trade by hitting targets inside Russia and CIS countries, which is what gets you arrested when local authorities otherwise look the other way. It's a reminder that the geography of these operations is deliberate, not accidental. The detail matters because it shows how much of the threat ecosystem runs on a quiet understanding with host governments.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/cyber-crime/2026/06/02/dumbass-criminal-breaks-the-first-rule-of-ransomware-club/5250380
FSB claims foreign spies turned officials' phones into surveillance devices
Russia's FSB says a large-scale operation compromised senior officials' smartphones and turned them into listening devices. They offered no technical evidence, so treat the attribution with skepticism. The underlying threat is real regardless: mobile endpoints are surveillance platforms, and your executive phones are a legitimate part of the attack surface.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/06/02/russian-spy-agency-says-foreign-spies-turned-officials-smartphones-into-surveillance-devices/5250099
Cisco praises its AI bug-hunting model but won't share the numbers
Cisco is talking up Mythos for vulnerability discovery, but won't say how many flaws it found. When a vendor markets a capability and withholds the metric that proves it, that's a tell. Meanwhile Anthropic added 150 partners to Project Glasswing, so the AI-assisted vuln research space is filling out fast.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/02/cisco-praises-ai-bug-hunt-wont-reveal-flaw-tally/5250291
Microsoft MDASH exits preview with 100+ threat-hunting agents
Microsoft's agentic vulnerability system is now GA, built to find real exploitable flaws across the estate. For shops already deep in the Microsoft security stack, this is another reason to consolidate. For everyone else, watch how it handles false positives before you trust it to triage anything.
Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/build-2026-mdash-security-ai-agents/
---
CLOUD PLATFORMS & STRATEGY
Salesforce buys Contentful to fill out its headless bet
Salesforce picked up Contentful to add an enterprise content layer to its Headless 360 strategy. The CRM giant was missing a content management piece, and now it has one. If you run Salesforce, expect tighter content workflows and another reason the platform pulls more spend into its orbit.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/saas/2026/06/02/contentful-tops-off-salesforces-headless-bet-analyst-says/5250357
Microsoft bets on agent-first enterprise IT with Work IQ
Work IQ is Microsoft's play to make enterprise agents dramatically smarter by giving them deep context across your work data. The upside is real, but agent-first IT means agents acting on your behalf across systems, and that's a governance and blast-radius problem. Ask the hard questions about permissions and audit before you flip this on.
Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/work-iq-is-microsofts-big-bet-on-agent-first-enterprise-software/
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NETDEVOPS & NETWORK AUTOMATION
No notable developments tonight.
---
AI IN INFRASTRUCTURE & AIOPS
Microsoft ships seven AI models at Build, including its first reasoning model
MAI-Thinking-1 is Microsoft's first reasoning model, launched alongside new coding, image and voice models. Microsoft building its own frontier models reduces its dependence on OpenAI and changes the calculus on where Copilot capabilities come from. Watch how these get embedded into the products you already pay for.
Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/all-the-new-ai-models-microsoft-just-launched-at-build/
Claude Opus 4.8 cracks under a legal prompt in honesty testing
The latest Opus models were run through coding, medical, finance and legal traps, and a legal prompt broke 4.8. The lesson for anyone deploying these in production: model honesty is not consistent across domains, and the failures aren't obvious until you stress them. Test against your actual use cases, not the vendor's demos.
Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/claude-opus-4-8-honesty-test/
Why vector search alone isn't enough for RAG
This piece argues pure vector-search RAG pipelines hit a wall and need hybrid retrieval to be reliable. If you're building any internal AI knowledge tool, this is the failure mode you'll run into: semantically close answers that are factually wrong. Hybrid retrieval that combines keyword and vector is becoming the baseline, not an optimization.
Source: https://www.infoq.com/articles/vector-search-hybrid-retrieval-rag/
Trump AI executive order gives feds a say in frontier model access
The order sets a 30-day frontier model review and lets the government designate "trusted partners" for access. Policy people worry this lets the feds pick winners and losers in the model market. For enterprises, it adds regulatory uncertainty to your AI vendor selection and could shape which models are available to you.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/02/trump-ai-executive-order-sets-30-day-frontier-model-review/5250322
---
HARDWARE, GPU & COMPUTE
Marvell jumps into AI networking with 102.4 Tbps switch silicon
Marvell entered the AI datacenter fabric race with high-radix, low-latency, low-power switch silicon. AI clusters live and die on the network between GPUs, and this is Marvell going straight at Broadcom's turf. More competition here should eventually pressure pricing on the fabric layer.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/networks/2026/06/02/marvell-enters-the-ai-network-fray-with-1024-tbps-switch-silicon/5250180
Nvidia's RTX Spark N1x CPU brings GPU-class power to ultrabooks
Nvidia announced its N1x CPU with the first RTX Spark laptops coming from all the major PC brands. This is Nvidia pushing into the client CPU market, which it hasn't owned before. For refresh planning, watch these for on-device AI workloads, but expect first-gen pricing and driver maturity issues.
Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/all-the-new-pcs-powered-by-nvidias-new-n1x-cpu/
Microsoft adds Build 2026 model lineup beyond its reasoning model
The full Build slate includes specialized coding, image and voice models that will land inside Microsoft's product stack. The compute story here is that Microsoft is running its own model fleet at scale, which signals heavy continued GPU buildout. That demand keeps the memory and accelerator shortage tight.
Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/ai-model-release-tracker/
---
NETWORK MANAGEMENT & MONITORING
No notable developments tonight.
---
MANAGED SERVICE PROVIDERS
No notable developments tonight.
---
IT VENDOR ECOSYSTEM & M&A
No notable developments tonight.
---
EDGE COMPUTING & IOT
Qualcomm CEO says AI agents will be invisible and inescapable across devices
Qualcomm is pushing on-device AI agents that follow you across every device you own. The framing is "your personal Jarvis," but the flip side is an end to privacy as we know it. For enterprise, agents running silently on edge and personal devices are a data-governance and shadow-IT problem you'll have to get ahead of.
Source: https://www.theregister.com/personal-tech/2026/06/02/qualcomm-ai-agents-will-be-as-transparent-as-they-will-be-inescapable/5249894
---
WHAT TO WATCH
The memory shortage is the throughline this week. DRAM up another 63% this quarter drives PC, server and workstation costs higher, and the AI buildout from Microsoft, Nvidia and Marvell keeps demand for memory and accelerators tight. Every hardware decision for the next two quarters has a cost-inflation tax baked in, and you should be quoting and budgeting with that assumption.
---
CONVERSATION STARTER
DRAM is projected to rise another 63% this quarter. If your hardware refresh budget was set six months ago, it's already wrong. Tell your CFO that any quote older than 30 days needs to be re-priced before sign-off, because the memory line item is moving faster than anything else in the bill of materials.
===========================================
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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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