As OpenAI adjusts its video strategy, Sam Altman is setting his sights on the more ambitious track of 'intelligent agent clusters'. According to the Wall Street Journal's disclosure, OpenAI has secretly invested in an AI startup named Isara. The background of this startup is particularly striking—its founders are two 23-year-old AI researchers, Eddie Zhang and Henry Gasztowtt. Although the company was only established in San Francisco last June, it has quickly poached over a dozen top research talents from Google, Meta, and OpenAI itself, forming a technically profound 'elite force'.
Reshaping Collaboration Logic: Enabling Thousands of AI Agents to 'Communicate'
Isara's core vision is to build a software system capable of coordinating the collaborative work of thousands of AI agents. In the current technological context, while individual AI assistants are powerful, they often fall short when handling large-scale industrial problems such as biotechnology R&D or complex financial modeling. The challenge Isara aims to tackle is how to enable these 'robot armies' to achieve efficient communication and task division. Through its underlying architecture, AI agents with different functions can, like a well-trained army, automatically align goals, exchange data, and solve chain-reaction problems in complex industry processes.
From Lab to Industrial Frontier: Pioneering a New Paradigm for Autonomous R&D
This 'intelligent agent cluster' technology is seen as a critical step toward Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). OpenAI's endorsement is not only a financial injection but also signifies industry giants' recognition of the 'distributed intelligence' direction. In the biopharmaceutical field, this technology can allow AI armies to simultaneously simulate thousands of protein folding pathways, with specialized 'coordinator agents' summarizing patterns; in finance, it can link global market data in real-time for stress testing. This technological transformation, led by 23-year-olds, is attempting to prove that the next breakthrough in AI lies not in how large models become, but in how effectively they work together in groups.





