Free — every week

The Frontier File

Free weekly intelligence covering what’s actually moving at the edge — and why it matters.

A digital rendering of a futuristic computer processor enclosed in a transparent glass cube, with glowing blue circuits and data streams surrounding it.

The problem

Every week, the frontier economy produces signals worth understanding. Most of them disappear before anyone connects the dots.

Staying current on frontier technology requires following lots of sources. They only tell you what already happened — a company raised, a product launched, a regulatory body approved something, a sector moved.

What rarely follows is the structural context: which companies this will affect three levels downstream, what the dependency chain looks like, why this particular development was predictable to anyone tracking the right signals, and what it means for everything connected to it.

So you read. You follow. You stay informed. And still, at the end of most weeks, the picture feels incomplete — because the pieces you collected were never designed to connect.

Each issue is built around one theme in the frontier economy and covers it the way the theme actually works: as a system of companies, dependencies, and structural dynamics, not as a series of unrelated updates.

You’ll come away from each issue understanding not just what moved, but why it moved, what it connects to, and what the structural picture looks like for anyone paying serious attention.

The Frontier File hits different.

Quantum and AI infrastructure

Autonomous systems

Precision biotech

Energy transition

New mobility

And more

Research-backed. Editorially independent. No stock picks, no investment advice, no AI-generated filler dressed up as analysis.

One issue. One theme. The full picture.

See the network. Not just the company.

Every company in Rabbt Insights exists inside a web of relationships. Suppliers, customers, partners, regulators, competitors. Each relationship carries strength, confidence, and direction — so you can see not just who is connected, but how, and what that connection means for the company you are studying.

A relationship graph depicting companies and their connections in the aerospace and aviation industry, including Archer Aviation, Joby Aviation, Wisk, and others, with nodes color-coded by type.

Every company sits inside a network of relationships. Each connection is typed, weighted, and analyzed — not just drawn.

Relationship graph of Archer Aviation (ACHR) with various connected entities, including FAA, United Airlines, Jony Aviation, Heart Aerospace, and others, showing their roles, Sig values, and relationship details.

Hover any connection to see what it actually means. Confidence and strength are explicit, not implied.

Archer Aviation's ecosystem network in Rabbt Insights. Evidence evaluated through June 12, 2026.

Person sitting outdoors on a wooden bench, reading a newspaper, with their face partially obscured by the paper. They are wearing a striped shirt and light blue jeans, with graffiti-covered walls visible in the background.

Reading the news stops feeling like collecting fragments and starts feeling like building a map.

Developments that seemed unrelated start showing their connections. Companies that seemed obscure start making sense within the system they operate in.

The frontier economy starts feeling less like a fast-moving blur and more like something you can actually track.

That’s what structured intelligence does, done consistently, over time.

What Frontier Technology Covers

Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence

The Space Economy

The Space Economy

Quantum Computing

Quantum Computing

EVs and Energy

EVs and Energy

Medical Tech

Medical Tech

Future Materials

Future Materials

The Frontier File is free. One issue per week.

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No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Written by operators who hold positions in the companies they cover.