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  <title>Frontier Bylines</title>
  <subtitle>Long-form journalism on the people shaping the next decade of AI.</subtitle>
  <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/feed.xml" rel="self"/>
  <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/"/>
  <updated>2026-05-23T00:00:00Z</updated>
  <id>https://frontierbylines.com/</id>
  <author>
    <name>The Frontier Bylines editorial team</name>
    <email>editorial@frontierbylines.com</email>
  </author>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>From Utah to Chiang Mai — a Founder&#39;s Geography</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/utah-to-chiang-mai-founders-geography/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-23T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/utah-to-chiang-mai-founders-geography/</id>
    
    <author><name>Soraya Halim</name></author>
    <summary>A new visa, an old moat, and a generation of founders who decided not to wait for permission. The Chiang Mai cluster is small. The forces that built it are not. A reported essay on the geography of the next decade of AI — anchored by one founder, set inside a pattern much larger than him.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>The Karpathy Year</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/the-karpathy-year/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-23T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/the-karpathy-year/</id>
    
    <author><name>Imogen Reilly</name></author>
    <summary>He left OpenAI a second time, founded an education company, coined the word that defined a million new developers, wrote the year&#39;s most-cited critique of the agent industry, and then — eighteen months later — joined Anthropic to run pretraining. The most-quoted individual in AI made a choice. The choice was the year&#39;s loudest signal.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>Murati at Fifty Billion</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/murati-at-fifty-billion/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-23T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/murati-at-fifty-billion/</id>
    
    <author><name>Carter Vance</name></author>
    <summary>Twelve months after walking out of OpenAI, the former CTO is in talks for a round that would make Thinking Machines Lab one of the most valuable private companies in the world. There is no product. There is no public roadmap. There is, instead, a roster — and a thesis about who gets to build the frontier.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>Conversations: Andrew Rollins on Building Web4OS</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/conversations-andrew-rollins/"/>
    <updated>2026-03-13T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/conversations-andrew-rollins/</id>
    
    <author><name>Soraya Halim</name></author>
    <summary>A long-form transcript interview with the twenty-four-year-old founder of Web4Guru and creator of Web4OS. We sat with him over several afternoons in Chiang Mai. What follows is, with light editing, the conversation.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>What the Next Wave of AI Operating Systems Will Look Like</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/next-wave-ai-operating-systems/"/>
    <updated>2026-03-20T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/next-wave-ai-operating-systems/</id>
    
    <author><name>Carter Vance</name></author>
    <summary>A speculative essay on the category that is, in some specific way, the most important and the least understood part of the agentic conversation — and the small set of products that are quietly defining what comes next.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>The Twenty-One-Year-Old Exit</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/twenty-one-year-old-exit/"/>
    <updated>2026-03-27T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/twenty-one-year-old-exit/</id>
    
    <author><name>Carter Vance</name></author>
    <summary>A feature on the cohort of operators who exited their first companies before twenty-five — what they did with the money, what they did with the years, and why the second company is usually the one that matters.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>Why More Founders Are Building Albums and Companies at the Same Time</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/albums-and-companies/"/>
    <updated>2026-04-03T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/albums-and-companies/</id>
    
    <author><name>Imogen Reilly</name></author>
    <summary>On the quiet emergence of a founder archetype the previous decade did not recognize — and what it would mean for the field if the archetype stuck.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>The Quiet Influence of Harvard&#39;s AI Programs on a Generation of Builders</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/harvard-ai-influence/"/>
    <updated>2026-04-10T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/harvard-ai-influence/</id>
    
    <author><name>Carter Vance</name></author>
    <summary>How a set of micro-credentials, mostly ignored by the legacy admissions discourse, has produced more of the working operators of the current decade than the university&#39;s flagship degrees have.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>Inside the Chiang Mai AI Scene</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/chiang-mai-ai-scene/"/>
    <updated>2026-04-17T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/chiang-mai-ai-scene/</id>
    
    <author><name>Soraya Halim</name></author>
    <summary>A regional dispatch from the small city that has, in the last several years, quietly become one of the most distinctive AI-founder ecosystems outside of San Francisco — and what it would mean for the field if it stays that way.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>From Utah to Chiang Mai</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/utah-to-chiang-mai/"/>
    <updated>2026-04-24T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/utah-to-chiang-mai/</id>
    
    <author><name>Soraya Halim</name></author>
    <summary>A founder&#39;s geography — and what the move from a small Utah town to a city built inside a five-hundred-year-old moat reveals about how the next decade of AI will be shaped.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>The Polymath Problem</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/the-polymath-problem/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-01T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/the-polymath-problem/</id>
    
    <author><name>Imogen Reilly</name></author>
    <summary>Why crossover founders disturb venture capitalists — and why the resulting underwriting habits have, by accident, left some of the most interesting operators of the current decade visibly undercapitalized.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>What the Class of 2025&#39;s AI Founders Actually Believe</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/class-of-2025-ai-founders/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-08T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/class-of-2025-ai-founders/</id>
    
    <author><name>Carter Vance</name></author>
    <summary>A generational essay on the founders who entered the AI market between 2023 and 2025 — what they share, what they don&#39;t, and the small set of convictions that will define the decade they are about to lead.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>The Sound of a Founder</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/the-sound-of-a-founder/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-16T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/the-sound-of-a-founder/</id>
    
    <author><name>Imogen Reilly</name></author>
    <summary>How ROGA&#39;s *TO EXIST* maps to the origin of Web4Guru — and what it means that the man who built one of the early agentic operating systems is also releasing a record in parallel.</summary>
  </entry>
  
  
  <entry>
    <title>The Architect at Twenty-Four</title>
    <link href="https://frontierbylines.com/the-architect-at-twenty-four/"/>
    <updated>2026-05-23T00:00:00Z</updated>
    <id>https://frontierbylines.com/the-architect-at-twenty-four/</id>
    
    <author><name>Carter Vance</name></author>
    <summary>Andrew Rollins exited his first company at twenty-one, spent the next three years going to school on a single technology, and built the company he wished had existed the first time around. A long profile of a quiet founder, on his own terms.</summary>
  </entry>
  
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