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  <description><![CDATA[<p>Business operations, automation, and AI don't have to be complicated. Every week, Quanta Bits breaks down what's actually changing for mid-market companies: what's working, what's hype, and what operational leaders should pay attention to. Hosted by Reza Morakabati, founder of Quanta Management and MIT Sloan alum.&nbsp; The companion to the Quanta Bits newsletter.</p>]]></description>
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    <itunes:title>From Decks to Working Surfaces</itunes:title>
    <title>From Decks to Working Surfaces</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This week on Quanta Bits, Reza looks at a practical workflow shift: using agents to separate the source layer from the presentation layer. Markdown can hold the facts, owners, risks, dates, and decisions. HTML, dashboards, diagrams, and other visual surfaces can help people understand the work quickly enough to review and discuss it. The episode connects that idea to recurring operating artifacts like pipeline reviews, status updates, project timelines, campaign trackers, and monthly initiati...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>This week on Quanta Bits, Reza looks at a practical workflow shift: using agents to separate the source layer from the presentation layer. Markdown can hold the facts, owners, risks, dates, and decisions. HTML, dashboards, diagrams, and other visual surfaces can help people understand the work quickly enough to review and discuss it.</p><p>The episode connects that idea to recurring operating artifacts like pipeline reviews, status updates, project timelines, campaign trackers, and monthly initiative reviews. It also covers the broader pattern from the week: AI output is getting cheaper, review is becoming more important, and companies need clearer ways to inspect, route, and understand the work agents produce.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This week on Quanta Bits, Reza looks at a practical workflow shift: using agents to separate the source layer from the presentation layer. Markdown can hold the facts, owners, risks, dates, and decisions. HTML, dashboards, diagrams, and other visual surfaces can help people understand the work quickly enough to review and discuss it.</p><p>The episode connects that idea to recurring operating artifacts like pipeline reviews, status updates, project timelines, campaign trackers, and monthly initiative reviews. It also covers the broader pattern from the week: AI output is getting cheaper, review is becoming more important, and companies need clearer ways to inspect, route, and understand the work agents produce.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2026 11:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>The Build-It-Yourself Discount Is Expiring</itunes:title>
    <title>The Build-It-Yourself Discount Is Expiring</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This week on Quanta Bits, Reza looks at why the build-it-yourself AI moment is still exciting, but the cost assumptions underneath it are getting less stable. Anthropic's pricing and access changes are the hook, but the bigger issue is industry-wide: capacity constraints, massive data center buildout, model routing, and the gap between a cheap-feeling prototype and a recurring workflow that runs on real tokens and real infrastructure. The episode covers my own shift from Claude/OpenClaw towar...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>This week on Quanta Bits, Reza looks at why the build-it-yourself AI moment is still exciting, but the cost assumptions underneath it are getting less stable. Anthropic&apos;s pricing and access changes are the hook, but the bigger issue is industry-wide: capacity constraints, massive data center buildout, model routing, and the gap between a cheap-feeling prototype and a recurring workflow that runs on real tokens and real infrastructure.</p><p>The episode covers my own shift from Claude/OpenClaw toward Codex for parts of my workflow, why AI usage is a poor proxy for value, why companies should route work across models instead of using the most expensive model everywhere, and why leaders should keep building while checking the economics before workflows scale.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This week on Quanta Bits, Reza looks at why the build-it-yourself AI moment is still exciting, but the cost assumptions underneath it are getting less stable. Anthropic&apos;s pricing and access changes are the hook, but the bigger issue is industry-wide: capacity constraints, massive data center buildout, model routing, and the gap between a cheap-feeling prototype and a recurring workflow that runs on real tokens and real infrastructure.</p><p>The episode covers my own shift from Claude/OpenClaw toward Codex for parts of my workflow, why AI usage is a poor proxy for value, why companies should route work across models instead of using the most expensive model everywhere, and why leaders should keep building while checking the economics before workflows scale.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Sun, 17 May 2026 18:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>The AI Bill Needs an Owner</itunes:title>
    <title>The AI Bill Needs an Owner</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[AI adoption is moving from experimentation to operations. This week, I look at why the "AI bill" needs an owner, not just because of tokens and software spend, but because AI work touches workflows, data quality, reviews, exceptions, trust, and accountability. The cloud era gave us CloudOps and FinOps once spend and ownership became too messy to ignore. AI may be heading in the same direction. The emerging work looks less like one big AI team and more like a set of operating roles: AI workflo...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>AI adoption is moving from experimentation to operations. This week, I look at why the &quot;AI bill&quot; needs an owner, not just because of tokens and software spend, but because AI work touches workflows, data quality, reviews, exceptions, trust, and accountability.</p><p>The cloud era gave us CloudOps and FinOps once spend and ownership became too messy to ignore. AI may be heading in the same direction. The emerging work looks less like one big AI team and more like a set of operating roles: AI workflow owners, agent coordinators, AI cost analysts, quality leads, and context and data stewards.</p><p>I also cover signals from Microsoft Agent 365, Cisco&apos;s agentic AI research, AWS agent payments, Anthropic finance agents, and the strange but telling rise of wave-powered floating data centers. Plus, a quick After Hours note on 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>AI adoption is moving from experimentation to operations. This week, I look at why the &quot;AI bill&quot; needs an owner, not just because of tokens and software spend, but because AI work touches workflows, data quality, reviews, exceptions, trust, and accountability.</p><p>The cloud era gave us CloudOps and FinOps once spend and ownership became too messy to ignore. AI may be heading in the same direction. The emerging work looks less like one big AI team and more like a set of operating roles: AI workflow owners, agent coordinators, AI cost analysts, quality leads, and context and data stewards.</p><p>I also cover signals from Microsoft Agent 365, Cisco&apos;s agentic AI research, AWS agent payments, Anthropic finance agents, and the strange but telling rise of wave-powered floating data centers. Plus, a quick After Hours note on 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 09 May 2026 13:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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    <itunes:title>The AI Replacement Math Got Less Clean</itunes:title>
    <title>The AI Replacement Math Got Less Clean</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[This week’s episode looks at why the AI replacement math is getting more complicated.  AI tools are starting to feel less like chatbots and more like junior analysts, but the economics are not as simple as “AI is cheaper than people.” Compute capacity, token costs, model availability, and human review time all matter.  I also cover OpenAI and Anthropic’s massive compute commitments, GitHub’s move toward usage-based Copilot pricing, Google Cloud’s agent control plane, and why AI adoption may s...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>This week’s episode looks at why the AI replacement math is getting more complicated.<br/><br/>AI tools are starting to feel less like chatbots and more like junior analysts, but the economics are not as simple as “AI is cheaper than people.” Compute capacity, token costs, model availability, and human review time all matter.<br/><br/>I also cover OpenAI and Anthropic’s massive compute commitments, GitHub’s move toward usage-based Copilot pricing, Google Cloud’s agent control plane, and why AI adoption may start to look a lot like cloud adoption: useful, fast-growing, and eventually a CFO problem.<br/><br/>Plus: a quick After Hours detour into Six Days of the Condor and Three Days of the Condor.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This week’s episode looks at why the AI replacement math is getting more complicated.<br/><br/>AI tools are starting to feel less like chatbots and more like junior analysts, but the economics are not as simple as “AI is cheaper than people.” Compute capacity, token costs, model availability, and human review time all matter.<br/><br/>I also cover OpenAI and Anthropic’s massive compute commitments, GitHub’s move toward usage-based Copilot pricing, Google Cloud’s agent control plane, and why AI adoption may start to look a lot like cloud adoption: useful, fast-growing, and eventually a CFO problem.<br/><br/>Plus: a quick After Hours detour into Six Days of the Condor and Three Days of the Condor.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2026 13:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>447</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:title>The Chatbot Became a Workforce</itunes:title>
    <title>The Chatbot Became a Workforce</title>
    <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sun, 26 Apr 2026 11:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>502</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>The UI Was Never the Moat</itunes:title>
    <title>The UI Was Never the Moat</title>
    <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 14:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>486</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>Evaluating Your AI Vendor Stack</itunes:title>
    <title>Evaluating Your AI Vendor Stack</title>
    <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2026 14:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>551</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>CEOs Took the Wheel</itunes:title>
    <title>CEOs Took the Wheel</title>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 17:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>396</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>Back to the Terminal</itunes:title>
    <title>Back to the Terminal</title>
    <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 12:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>353</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
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    <itunes:title>AI Captures Labor Spend (2026-03-21)</itunes:title>
    <title>AI Captures Labor Spend (2026-03-21)</title>
    <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2026 12:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>517</itunes:duration>
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    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
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  <item>
    <itunes:title>Episode 2: &quot;Adoption at Machine Speed&quot;</itunes:title>
    <title>Episode 2: &quot;Adoption at Machine Speed&quot;</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Everyone says "AI adoption" but nobody means the same thing. This week: why the definitions problem is killing more AI projects than the technology, what BCG's survey of thousands of CEOs reveals about the "pragmatist" majority, and why MIT says 95% of AI projects never make it past pilot. Plus: the fastest-growing open-source project on GitHub is an AI agent that got banned by its own infrastructure provider, and a 1968 novel that reads like an AI governance case study in 2026. ]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Everyone says &quot;AI adoption&quot; but nobody means the same thing. This week: why the definitions problem is killing more AI projects than the technology, what BCG&apos;s survey of thousands of CEOs reveals about the &quot;pragmatist&quot; majority, and why MIT says 95% of AI projects never make it past pilot. Plus: the fastest-growing open-source project on GitHub is an AI agent that got banned by its own infrastructure provider, and a 1968 novel that reads like an AI governance case study in 2026.</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everyone says &quot;AI adoption&quot; but nobody means the same thing. This week: why the definitions problem is killing more AI projects than the technology, what BCG&apos;s survey of thousands of CEOs reveals about the &quot;pragmatist&quot; majority, and why MIT says 95% of AI projects never make it past pilot. Plus: the fastest-growing open-source project on GitHub is an AI agent that got banned by its own infrastructure provider, and a 1968 novel that reads like an AI governance case study in 2026.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Sun, 15 Mar 2026 20:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>431</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
    <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
    <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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    <itunes:title>The White Collar Reckoning</itunes:title>
    <title>The White Collar Reckoning</title>
    <itunes:summary><![CDATA[Anthropic published actual data on who AI is displacing, and it's not who most people expect. The most exposed group? People with graduate degrees earning 47% more than average. Computer, math, business, legal, and management roles are all above 90% exposed. But only 33% of that work is actually being done by AI today. That 61-point gap doesn't close on its own. It closes when leadership decides how fast to push, what to measure, and who's accountable.   Also this week: Jack Dorsey cuts 40% o...]]></itunes:summary>
    <description><![CDATA[<p>Anthropic published actual data on who AI is displacing, and it&apos;s not who most people expect. The most exposed group? People with graduate degrees earning 47% more than average. Computer, math, business, legal, and management roles are all above 90% exposed. But only 33% of that work is actually being done by AI today. That 61-point gap doesn&apos;t close on its own. It closes when leadership decides how fast to push, what to measure, and who&apos;s accountable.</p><p><br/></p><p>Also this week: Jack Dorsey cuts 40% of Block&apos;s workforce and Wall Street rewards him. AI models fail nuclear de-escalation simulations 95% of the time. Google&apos;s NotebookLM generates full cinematic video from your documents. And Burger King puts an AI coach in every employee&apos;s headset.</p><p><br/></p><p>Companion to Quanta Bits Issue 6. Full newsletter with sources: quantabits.beehiiv.com</p>]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anthropic published actual data on who AI is displacing, and it&apos;s not who most people expect. The most exposed group? People with graduate degrees earning 47% more than average. Computer, math, business, legal, and management roles are all above 90% exposed. But only 33% of that work is actually being done by AI today. That 61-point gap doesn&apos;t close on its own. It closes when leadership decides how fast to push, what to measure, and who&apos;s accountable.</p><p><br/></p><p>Also this week: Jack Dorsey cuts 40% of Block&apos;s workforce and Wall Street rewards him. AI models fail nuclear de-escalation simulations 95% of the time. Google&apos;s NotebookLM generates full cinematic video from your documents. And Burger King puts an AI coach in every employee&apos;s headset.</p><p><br/></p><p>Companion to Quanta Bits Issue 6. Full newsletter with sources: quantabits.beehiiv.com</p>]]></content:encoded>
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    <itunes:author>Reza</itunes:author>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2026 10:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
    <itunes:duration>306</itunes:duration>
    <itunes:keywords></itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
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