Twenty new tasks shipped this month. More than twenty new skills behind them. A new way to talk to the platform, and our first real database integration. I had to count twice to make sure. Behind the Glass The biggest visible change is Vic. You'll see him on the Start screen, and he handles something the platform has been missing: figuring out which task to run. Upload a file or describe a situation, and Vic looks through everything we've built to date, then offers to run the right one. Hand him ten rent rolls and he parses them at once. Hand him a list of addresses and he can pull demographics, traffic counts, satellite imagery, and zoning in parallel. The point of Vic is that you don't need to know the task library to use the task library. That capability is the reason most of this month's new tasks exist. We shipped eight Bulk lookup tasks (demographics, employment, traffic, satellite, zoning, property data, comps, buy box fit) because Vic is most useful when he can fan out across a list. We went deeper on the diligence side: Audit T12 Operating History, Underwrite Multifamily Rent Roll (with an interactive dashboard), Extract Rent Schedule from Lease, and Conduct Virtual Site Visit. And we filled in pieces of the data layer that working CRE professionals quietly depend on: Pull Current Interest Rates, Pull HUD Housing Data, Pull Labor Shed Data, Find Tax Benefits and Incentives for a Property, Generate Land Development Property Overview V2. The platform also got faster and quieter. Speed improvements across the board, and a handful of conversation bugs that I'd been grumbling about for weeks are now gone. The Unlock The story I want to tell is how Airtable showed up on the platform this month. A Founder Member we're building a custom task for was trying to keep a rent comp database alive in a stack of Excel files. Every time he wanted CRE Agents to use those comps in a task, he had to upload them, which meant the AI saw a snapshot, not the living database. So we built it as a cloud-based, queryable source the AI can read from and write to the same way it would query any other structured data. There's now a template CRE Comp Database any of you can copy into your own Airtable account, connect to CRE Agents, and ask Vic to populate or pull from. Over the coming weeks, existing tasks will start using your Airtable databases automatically when they're connected. That whole capability exists because one Founder Member had a real, specific problem with how his data was organized. This is the pattern we've hit our stride on this month: the custom task one of you asks for becomes the new skill, tool, or task that the rest of the platform inherits. If you haven't sent in the custom task you want us to build, that perk is one of the best ones, and it's also the thing that keeps making the platform sharper for everyone. The Horizon More existing tasks will get the Airtable treatment over the next few weeks, meaning your comp databases, your owner lists, your deal pipelines, all become living context the AI can read from instead of files you re-upload. Visual Apps (Artifacts) continue to roll into more tasks. And the parcel-boundary problem I flagged last letter is close to solved (we implemented satellite images this month, so we're close!), which will unlock the topography, wetlands, and frontage analysis that's been waiting on it. Bigger Picture Since the last letter, both Anthropic and OpenAI shipped new flagship models. Claude Opus 4.7 went live April 16, GPT-5.5 on April 23. Both arrived with notably different language than past releases. The pitch is no longer "ask it questions" but "give it work." Both models do a better job of catching mistakes mid-task, calling out when they lack information, and reading images (charts, PDFs, site plans). Anthropic also previewed a third, more powerful model called Mythos that they declined to release broadly, citing security concerns about its ability to find software flaws. What this means for CRE: CRE Agents is model-agnostic, so every one of these releases makes your AI coworkers better without us changing a thing. Most CRE professionals I talk to (outside the CRE Agents users) are still using AI as a better answer machine. The shift happening right now in the underlying models is what changes that. Real work, done dependably, on real estate problems. Don't hesitate to reach out with any questions or comments you have. Otherwise, until next month! Spencer