Mission Control

Private — Faris Asmar

Mission Control
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Faris Asmar · Sage AI
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Sage Agent Roster
🤖 C-Suite Agents
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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.
💼
CTO
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.
knowledge_aiops knowledge_cloud_platforms knowledge_digest On-Demand Advisor Architecture Build vs. Buy AI/ML Infra
🛡️
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, 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.
knowledge_cybersecurity knowledge_compliance_regulatory knowledge_digest On-Demand Advisor SOC 2 ISO 27001 SIG-Lite EU AI Act DLP
🖥️
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, 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.
knowledge_it_infrastructure knowledge_cloud_platforms knowledge_msp knowledge_vendor_ecosystem knowledge_digest On-Demand Advisor IT Strategy MSP/MSSP Procurement
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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
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overnight trades, open positions, system health, unread emails
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Weekly
Sun 6:45 AM Weekly synthesis → farisasmar@hotmail.com
3 signals, 5 takeaways from week's research
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1st of month Goodreads export reminder → Telegram
Recurring
Every 5 min Trading bot watchdog + MC dashboard refresh
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Pick a story from the morning intelligence brief → send to Sage → post generated immediately → queues for next Tue or Thu at 8 AM ET.
Tuesday
8 AM ET
Thursday
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Cynora Services Matrix — Content Reference ▾ expand
Never name Cynora. Never pitch. The reader finishes the post thinking 'this person knows this space deeply.' The Cynora angle lives in what the post reveals about how the problem is solved structurally — not in who solves it.
IT Infrastructure Management
Operational clarity and infrastructure discipline — what the environment looks like when it's managed with structure vs. when it drifts
› Organizations with managed infrastructure baselines catch problems in reviews, not incidents.
› The cost of reactive infrastructure management almost always exceeds the cost of proactive oversight.
› When no one owns the infrastructure picture end-to-end, everyone assumes someone else does.
› Technology debt doesn't disappear — it just ages into a different kind of risk.
Cybersecurity and Compliance
Pattern recognition across environments — what security looks like when you manage it across multiple organizations vs. a single one
› A security posture that depends on any single person's memory is already fragile.
› Compliance and security are not the same discipline — organizations that confuse them tend to pass audits and still get breached.
› Cross-environment visibility lets MSPs see threat patterns that single-company teams can't — each client environment becomes an early warning system for the others.
› The gap between 'we have security tools' and 'we have a security posture' is where most mid-market breaches live.
Cloud Strategy and Migration
The operational and governance layer above the technology — what cloud looks like when it's working vs. when it's just expensive
› Cloud migrations that succeed technically but fail operationally still fail.
› The organizations with the highest cloud spend are rarely the ones getting the most value from it.
› Moving infrastructure to the cloud without changing the governance model around it just moves the problem.
› FinOps discipline isn't about cutting cloud spend — it's about making sure the spend maps to business value.
Network Operations
Proactive vs. reactive network management — what the operational difference looks like at scale
› Most network incidents are visible in the data before they become user-facing problems — the question is whether anyone is watching.
› Network hardware end-of-life is a governance problem before it's a security problem.
› The organizations that treat network monitoring as overhead tend to find out the hard way that it's actually insurance.
› When the network team and the security team don't share visibility, gaps form exactly where attackers look first.
Helpdesk and End-User Support
What helpdesk operations reveal about the health of the broader IT environment — and what good service delivery governance actually looks like
› Helpdesk ticket volume is a symptom. The organizations that only measure resolution time often miss what the volume is telling them.
› Offshore support fails when selected on cost alone. Selected on fit — language, time zone overlap, technical depth — the cost advantage holds without the quality trade-off.
› Every offboarding gap is a security event waiting to happen. The organizations that treat it as an IT admin task rather than a governance requirement tend to find out eventually.
› Internal IT teams that handle Tier 1 support are spending strategic capacity on work that doesn't require it.
Vendor Management
Vendor governance as a strategic function — what changes when vendor relationships are actively managed vs. passively administered
› Most organizations don't know what their vendor portfolio costs or what it's delivering until something forces them to look.
› An SLA that measures response time without measuring resolution quality is measuring the wrong thing.
› Vendor relationships that go unreviewed don't stay static — they drift in the vendor's favor.
› The strongest IT organizations treat vendor management as a discipline, not an administrative function.
IT Governance and Advisory
The governance layer that makes technology investments coherent — what decisions look like when IT and business leadership share a framework vs. when they don't
› Organizations without a governance framework don't make fewer technology decisions — they make them with less information.
› The IT-business alignment gap rarely comes from lack of effort. It usually comes from IT reporting on activity when leadership needs visibility into risk and value.
› A technology roadmap that doesn't connect to business priorities isn't a roadmap — it's a wish list.
› The strongest IT leaders don't just manage technology. They translate between operational reality and business strategy.
Digital Transformation Advisory
The organizational and operational layer beneath the technology — what transformation looks like when it's designed around the business vs. when it's designed around the vendor's roadmap
› Digital transformation fails most often not because the technology doesn't work but because the organization wasn't ready to use it differently.
› AI adoption without workflow integration just creates a new layer of complexity on top of the existing one.
› The organizations that modernize successfully almost always sequence change management alongside technology delivery, not after it.
› A transformation program that can't articulate what business outcome it's moving toward isn't a transformation program — it's a technology upgrade.
Reading Insights
📚 Daily Reading Insights
DAILY
July 1, 2026 — 3 books from your library
The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race by Walter Isaacson
The CRISPR story reveals something important about how scientific credit gets distributed. The decisive moves weren't made in isolation, they were made in a race where timing, publication strategy and alliance-building mattered as much as the underlying discovery. Doudna's lab solved a core mechanism, but the patent battles with the Broad Institute showed that scientific priority and legal priority are completely separate games, and confusing them is expensive. What Isaacson captures well is the transition point where biology stopped being observational and became programmable, which is a category shift, not a degree shift. The deeper tension in the book is that the people closest to the technology are the ones most conflicted about where to draw the line on heritable edits, because proximity to power tends to sharpen the moral stakes rather than resolve them.
Confidential: Business Secrets - Getting Theirs, Keeping Yours by John Nolan
Nolan spent years doing competitive intelligence for corporations and what he found is that most proprietary information leaks through legal, voluntary conversation. People talk because talking feels like relationship-building, because silence feels rude, because they want to seem knowledgeable and because most people have never been trained to recognize an elicitation when it's happening to them. The book's core mechanism is elicitation. It uses conversational structure, flattery, deliberate errors and apparent vulnerability to get a source to volunteer information they'd never answer if asked directly. The reason this works at scale is that people calibrate their guard to the formality of the setting, so a casual lunch or a conference hallway bypasses the defenses they'd bring to a formal interview. If you run a business or operate in any competitive environment, the practical takeaway is that your exposure lives in your people's mouths during unstructured social time.
Cosmic Queries: StarTalk's Guide to Who We Are, How We Got Here, and Where We're Going by Neil deGrasse Tyson
Tyson keeps returning to a single uncomfortable fact. The universe doesn't arrange itself around human intuition, and every major advance in physics has required discarding a prior common-sense model entirely. The cognitive move the book demands is distinguishing between things that feel true at human scale and things that hold at cosmological or quantum scale, because those two sets barely overlap. What's worth sitting with is the stardust argument taken seriously rather than poetically. The iron in your blood was forged in a stellar core that exploded before the sun existed, which means your body is a temporary local organization of material with a multi-billion-year history. That reframes questions about identity and continuity in ways that most philosophical traditions haven't fully absorbed, because they were written before anyone knew where atoms came from.
Sage Intelligence Brief
🧠 Intelligence Brief
NIGHTLY
Brief date: Wednesday, July 01, 2026
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, July 01, 2026 =========================================== LEAD STORY The MCP tool-poisoning attack class Microsoft documented tonight is the most operationally significant security story of the week. An attacker modifies a third-party tool's plain-text description in an agent's working memory, embedding hidden exfiltration instructions that execute under the invoking user's own permissions, producing no anomalous-looking action and triggering no default alert. The confirmation via the postmark-mcp npm package, which silently BCC'd every agent-sent email to an attacker starting at version 1.0.16 after 15 clean releases, means this attack class is past proof-of-concept. It's in the wild and targeting enterprise AI deployments right now. --- CONNECTING THE THREADS **Supply chain as the persistent entry vector.** I flagged last week that the VS Code `folderOpen` attack confirmed workspace config execution as a category-wide supply chain vector. Tonight's MCP tool-poisoning is the same attack geometry applied one layer up: trusted artifact, clean version history, malicious payload inserted mid-stream with no re-approval gate. The postmark-mcp case and the VS Code case are structurally identical. "Previously vetted" provides no guarantee of currently safe for any external input that touches an agent's execution context. **Insider threat framing at security vendors.** The Huntress situation tonight connects directly to something worth tracking. As MDR and threat-intel firms acquire deeper access to enterprise environments and law enforcement relationships, the insider risk surface at those vendors becomes a material concern for their customers. The Huntress researcher forwarding FBI communications to an active ransomware operator isn't a one-off lapse. It surfaces a structural question: what access controls, compartmentalization and behavioral monitoring do MDR vendors apply to their own researchers? **Broadcom's VMware support posture entering its enforcement phase.** I've been watching the Broadcom post-acquisition support squeeze since it started. The T-Mobile case tonight is the clearest signal yet that Broadcom is willing to litigate rather than honor pre-acquisition contractual options. The judge's on-record comment that T-Mobile's case is "even more compelling" than AT&T's (which settled confidentially) tells me Broadcom is not winning these fights on merit. Organizations still holding pre-acquisition perpetual VMware licenses need to model litigation costs as a line item in their migration budget, not a worst-case scenario. --- IT INFRASTRUCTURE ARCHITECTURE **T-Mobile vs. Broadcom: 303,000 cores and a court order** T-Mobile is in active litigation over Broadcom's refusal to honor a contractual third-year support option covering 303,000 CPU cores and roughly 1,000 applications. A court injunction forced Broadcom to extend support past August 2025 at $5.28M plus a $500K undertaking, but that injunction expires August 3, 2026 and Broadcom is now demanding $24M for six-product coverage. Any enterprise holding pre-Broadcom perpetual VMware licenses with support options should treat those options as legally contestable, not automatically honored, and build litigation costs into migration planning. Source: https://www.theregister.com/virtualization/2026/07/01/t-mobile-appears-to-be-quitting-vmware-and-fighting-a-very-familiar-battle-for-support-rights-on-the-way-out/5264750 **Claude Code chat records being silently wiped** Anthropic's Claude Code is deleting conversation records older than 30 days without clear user notification, which is a workflow integrity problem for any team using AI coding tools as part of their audit or change-management trail. If your team has been treating AI chat logs as a lightweight work record or decision log, you need to verify right now whether those records still exist and build a local export habit going forward. Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/30/claude-code-users-complain-their-chat-records-are-being-mysteriously-wiped-out/5264673 **Microsoft previews native Linux containers on Windows** Microsoft's preview of Linux containers running natively in Windows removes one more architectural justification for separate Linux hosts in mixed-OS environments. For MSPs managing hybrid Windows and Linux workloads on client infrastructure, this is worth tracking. It simplifies the container runtime story for shops that are Windows-dominant but have Linux containerized workloads they've been hosting elsewhere. Source: https://www.theregister.com/virtualization/2026/06/30/microsoft-previews-linux-containers-that-run-in-windows/5264468 --- CYBERSECURITY & COMPLIANCE **MCP tool-poisoning: active exploitation confirmed** Microsoft's Incident Response and Defender teams documented a concrete attack class where an attacker modifies an MCP-connected tool's plain-text description to embed hidden exfiltration instructions. MCP pulls description changes at runtime with no mandatory re-approval gate, the MCPTox benchmark measured attack success rates up to 72% across 45 real MCP servers and 20 models, and the postmark-mcp npm package confirmed real-world exploitation in production. Every external MCP tool description needs to be treated as untrusted input equivalent to user-supplied data. Source: https://thehackernews.com/2026/06/microsoft-warns-poisoned-mcp-tool.html **Oracle E-Business Suite CVE-2026-46817: unauthenticated, CVSS 9.8, active exploitation** A critical authentication flaw in Oracle Payments within E-Business Suite is under active exploitation. Unauthenticated network access via HTTP is enough for full instance compromise. If you have clients or environments running Oracle EBS, this is a patch-now situation, not a patch-cycle situation. Source: https://thehackernews.com/ **Progress Kemp LoadMaster pre-auth RCE: full exploit chain public** CVE-2026-8037, a CVSS 9.8 pre-auth RCE in Kemp LoadMaster, now has a full public exploit chain published by watchTowr Labs. LoadMaster sits at the network edge as an application delivery controller, meaning exploitation gives an attacker an immediate foothold at the perimeter. If LoadMaster is in your environment or any client's environment, treat this as a critical-severity emergency patch. Source: https://thehackernews.com/ **Apple emergency patches: 29 bugs, AI-accelerated threat context** Apple pushed emergency fixes for 29 vulnerabilities across iPhone, iPad and Mac, with the accelerating threat context being AI-assisted exploit development. Update all Apple devices now. The advisory framing around AI-accelerated attacker capability is consistent with what I've been tracking. AI-assisted vulnerability discovery and weaponization is compressing the window between disclosure and active exploitation. Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/apple-rushed-software-fixes-over-ai-threats-update-iphone-asap/ --- CLOUD PLATFORMS & STRATEGY **AWS Lambda MicroVMs: per-session isolated execution for AI agents** AWS launched Lambda MicroVMs, running each user session or AI agent in its own Firecracker microVM for hardware-level isolation. This is a direct architectural response to the multi-tenant agent execution risk, and it's the right model. Shared execution contexts for agents with different permission scopes is a blast-radius problem. Worth evaluating for any serverless workload where agent isolation or compliance boundary separation matters. Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/aws-lambda-microvms/ **ServiceNow acquires Armis for $7.75 billion** ServiceNow is folding Armis's asset intelligence and exposure management capabilities directly into the Now platform. For enterprise security and IT leaders, this accelerates the ITOM/CAASM convergence story and puts pressure on point-solution vendors in the asset visibility space. Watch how this affects Armis's existing integrations with other SIEM and SOAR platforms. Source: https://cybermagazine.com/cloud-security --- NETDEVOPS & NETWORK AUTOMATION **Langflow RCE CVE-2026-33017 under active exploitation** Attackers are weaponizing this unauthenticated RCE (CVSS 9.3) in Langflow to gain initial access through exposed AI application endpoints. If any Langflow instances are internet-exposed in your environment, they need to be patched or taken offline immediately. The pattern of AI framework vulnerabilities being used for initial access is accelerating, and Langflow isn't an isolated case. Source: https://thehackernews.com/ No other notable network automation developments tonight beyond what's covered in the security section. --- AI IN INFRASTRUCTURE & AIOPS **Huntress researcher forwarded FBI comms to active ransomware operator** A Huntress threat hunter was contacted by the FBI regarding Russia-based ransomware operator "Devman" (DragonForce/Conti-derived), then forwarded FBI screenshots including agent names directly to the target. CEO Kyle Hanslovan called it "poor judgment" and didn't terminate the employee. MDR and threat-intel teams need explicit, enforced policies governing researcher contact with tracked threat actors, and unsanctioned bilateral communication with adversaries needs to be treated as a disqualifying insider-risk indicator. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/06/30/huntress-ceo-says-threat-hunter-used-poor-judgment-in-alerting-ransomware-crim-about-law-enforcement-probe/5264532 **Elastic open-sources Atlas agent memory system** Elastic open-sourced Atlas, built on Elasticsearch, which maintains three categories of memory for AI agents. Persistent, structured agent memory backed by a search index changes how agents retain and retrieve operational context across sessions. Worth tracking for teams building agent-based automation workflows on enterprise data. Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/elastic-atlas-agent-memory/ **AI agents driving database sprawl and fragmentation** CockroachDB's CEO flags that AI agents are simultaneously generating database sprawl and creating demand for new DB management abstractions. The operational implication: every AI agent deployment that touches data is also a data architecture decision, and letting agents spin up their own persistence layers without governance creates a fragmentation problem that compounds over time. Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/30/ai-agents-cause-of-database-sprawl-and-also-the-proposed-solution/5264430 --- HARDWARE, GPU & COMPUTE **Qualcomm proposes compute-under-DRAM architecture for AI inference** Qualcomm's next-gen AI accelerator design buries compute beneath the DRAM stack to attack the memory bandwidth wall directly. This is an architectural bet that the bottleneck in inference is data movement, not raw compute, which is the same thesis driving HBM adoption in GPU design. Worth watching as a signal of where edge AI silicon is headed. Source: https://www.theregister.com/systems/2026/06/30/qualcomms-proposed-solution-to-catch-up-in-ai-infra-bury-the-compute-under-the-dram/5264071 **SEMQ math abstraction could reduce AI hardware requirements** Researchers are demonstrating that separating semantic meaning from embedding math (SEMQ) can reduce the hardware burden for running large models. If this abstraction layer proves out at production scale, it shifts the hardware sizing conversation for on-prem AI inference deployments. Early stage, but worth tracking for any team planning AI infrastructure procurement over the next 12 months. Source: https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/30/changing-ai-math-could-reduce-the-hardware-burden-researchers-show/5264609 --- NETWORK MANAGEMENT & MONITORING No notable developments tonight. --- MANAGED SERVICE PROVIDERS **Infosec professionals reversing on autonomous pentesting tools** Willingness to accept fully autonomous pentesting dropped from 29% to 9% in one year among security professionals. For MSPs positioning managed security services, this is a useful data point. The market isn't ready to hand pen testing authority to an autonomous agent, and human-in-the-loop positioning remains the credible offer. Lead with augmented-human capability, not full automation. Source: https://www.theregister.com/security/2026/06/30/infosec-professionals-sour-on-automated-pentesting-tools/5264571 **Microsoft Copilot Autofix reaches Azure DevOps in limited preview** AI-powered vulnerability remediation is now available in Azure DevOps via Copilot Autofix, extending GitHub Advanced Security's auto-remediation to the Azure pipeline. For MSPs managing DevSecOps pipelines for clients, this is worth piloting. Automated remediation suggestions at the PR level reduce the human review burden without removing the human gate. Source: https://www.infoq.com/news/2026/06/azuredevops-copilot-autofix/ --- IT VENDOR ECOSYSTEM & M&A **Broadcom refusing pre-acquisition VMware contractual options** The T-Mobile case confirms Broadcom's systematic posture: pre-acquisition contractual support options are being treated as void on the argument that covered products no longer exist. The SDNY judge's framing that T-Mobile's case is "even more compelling" than AT&T's (which settled confidentially) tells you Broadcom is likely settling these under NDA rather than winning on the merits. Enterprise buyers with pre-acquisition VMware contracts should retain legal counsel and accelerate migration timelines before injunction windows close. Source: https://www.theregister.com/virtualization/2026/07/01/t-mobile-appears-to-be-quitting-vmware-and-fighting-a-very-familiar-battle-for-support-rights-on-the-way-out/5264750 **ServiceNow plus Armis reshapes the security platform market** At $7.75 billion, the ServiceNow/Armis deal is the largest security acquisition of 2026 and signals that the ITOM, CAASM and exposure management categories are converging into unified platforms. Point-solution vendors in asset visibility and vulnerability management need to be on your "watch for disruption" list for contract renewals. Source: https://cybermagazine.com/cloud-security --- EDGE COMPUTING & IOT **ACR on consumer TVs as an enterprise data privacy concern** Samsung, LG and Sony TVs running Automatic Content Recognition are continuously fingerprinting audio and video and transmitting it to third-party data brokers. In any environment where these TVs are in boardrooms, conference rooms or executive spaces, ACR is a passive data exfiltration surface. It's a five-minute fix, disabling ACR in the TV's privacy settings, but it needs to be part of the physical space security checklist. Source: https://www.zdnet.com/article/how-to-disable-acr-tv/ --- SALES & REVENUE **The discovery conversation as your primary competitive differentiator** Most salespeople pitch too early because they're uncomfortable with silence and uncertainty. The highest-performing B2B sellers spend the majority of early meetings asking questions that surface the customer's gap between their current state and their desired state. The larger you can make that gap feel, the more motivation the buyer has to act. Questions create urgency more reliably than features do. Source: (Goodreads compounding) **Pricing anchors determine negotiation outcomes before the conversation starts** The first number stated in a price negotiation disproportionately anchors the final outcome regardless of its basis in reality. Buyers who receive a high anchor make higher final offers than those who receive a low anchor, even when they consciously reject the anchor as unreasonable. Setting your anchor deliberately and early, rather than waiting for the prospect to set the frame, is a structural advantage in any deal. Source: (Goodreads compounding) --- REAL ESTATE & INVESTMENT **Value-add plays require accurate before-state underwriting, not just after-state projections** Investors lose money on value-add deals by overestimating the after-repair value and underestimating the true cost and time to get there. Accurate underwriting means auditing the before-state exhaustively: deferred maintenance, code compliance gaps, tenant quality and lease structure. The after-state projection is only as reliable as the before-state analysis is honest. Source: (Goodreads compounding) **Cap rate compression in primary markets is a risk signal, not a buying signal** When cap rates compress below the cost of debt in primary markets, the deal math only works if rent growth or appreciation materializes as projected. That's a speculative return model, not an income model. Investors who shifted to secondary and tertiary markets during primary-market compression cycles have historically outperformed on a risk-adjusted basis by buying yield rather than chasing appreciation. Source: (Goodreads comp
Cynora — Zoho Intelligence
Cynora — Zoho Intelligence LIVE
CRMLIVE
Open Deals4
Pipeline Value$38,112
Closed Won$14,112
Accounts23
Leads200+
▼ details
Active Deal Pipeline (4 deals · $38,112+ pipeline)
MTI 2026 Penetration Test - Onboarding
Music Theatre International · $14,112
Onboarding
Renew Medic IT Services
Renew Medic
Qualification
MTI 2026 Mobile Application Management Project
Music Theater International
Additional Discovery Call Booked
WahZhaZhe Health Center
WahZhaZhe Health Center · $24,000
Proposal/Contract Sent
Closed Won (1 deals · $14,112)
MTI 2026 Penetration Test
Music Theatre International · $14,112
Won ✓
Active Accounts (23)
Music Theatre InternationalHyundai North AmericaRenew MedicAxis Global Logistics - iCat LogisticsCity of New YorkPlanqc QuantumTiffany and CompanyWestcliff UniversityArcadiaWahZhaZhe Health CenterTest Company Lead to CompletePremiere Home Healthcare ServicesResponse Point TechnologiesPure TechnologyMusic Theater InternationalKasim & CoPurdue PharmaceuticalsVarden CapitalTirado & AssociatesBlinx
Lead Status Breakdown (200 leads fetched)
135
In Cadence Automat
50
Contacted No Respo
7
In Contact Current
4
Not Contacted
2
Unknown
1
Contacted But Pass
CampaignsLIVE
Mailing Lists3
StatusConnected
▼ details
Mailing Lists (3)
Cynora Warm Leads
0 subscribers
Active
Cynora Zoho Leads List
0 subscribers
Active
My Sample List
0 subscribers
Active
SalesIQLIVE
PortalCynora Tech
Handle
▼ details
Portal Details
Portal Name
Cynora Tech
Portal Handle
API Scope
visitors · conversations · operators
Access Level
Read-Only
Analytics (GA4)LIVE
Sessions154
Users144
Top ChannelDirect (72%)
Views63
▼ details
Traffic by Channel — 154 sessions total
Direct
112
Organic Social
21
Organic Search
12
Unassigned
5
Referral
4
Top Countries by Users
🇺🇸 UN 79🌐 IT 12🇮🇳 IN 10🇩🇪 GE 8🌐 IR 7🌐 CH 6🇬🇧 UN 4🇸🇬 SI 3🇻🇳 VI 3🌐 BA 2
Workspace
Name
Google Analytics GA4 Analytics
Views Available
63
Trading — 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
SymbolStratQtyEntryCurrentStopRisk $Ret%Unrealized P&LStatus
No open positions
Strategy Breakdown closed trades only
StrategyTradesWLWin%Avg WAvg LGross P&LFeesNet P&L
Recent Trades (last 20) 🔄 trailing   🛑 hard stop   ⚖️ breakeven   🎯 target
SymbolStratQtyEntryExitRet%Gross P&LFeeNet P&LExitDate
Daily P&L bar scale = $50
DateResultsBarGross P&LFeeNet P&L
System Health
🟢 System Health
RUNNING
Email Ingest daemon RUNNING
MC Content Refresh 9m ago OK
Zoho Refresh 23h ago OK
Trading Refresh 20d ago OVERDUE
Nightly Research 5h ago OK
Weekly Synthesis 2d ago OK
Reading Insights 4h ago OK
LinkedIn Posts 22h ago OK