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- ⚡3,2,1..Clear!
⚡3,2,1..Clear!
Become the hero in someone's story..
Hi VentureTaler - Alex here!
This week I’m a day late but here we are with our 33rd VentureTale (and yes, I owe you one more for last week which I’ll share soon 😁), in which we take a look at a darker than usual topic but it’s one that deserves more awareness for sure. Another French company is entering our archive today and for good reason, as it tackles the number one cause of natural deaths in the world!
In today’s agenda..
The French startup restarting heartbeats outside hospitals!
An AI-first document management platform for your business!
Photo of the Week: Poland’s silent rise to prominence!
Also check out our podcast, available on YouTube, Spotify & Apple Podcasts.
New episodes dropping this month!
AI Agents Are Reading Your Docs. Are You Ready?
Last month, 48% of visitors to documentation sites across Mintlify were AI agents—not humans.
Claude Code, Cursor, and other coding agents are becoming the actual customers reading your docs. And they read everything.
This changes what good documentation means. Humans skim and forgive gaps. Agents methodically check every endpoint, read every guide, and compare you against alternatives with zero fatigue.
Your docs aren't just helping users anymore—they're your product's first interview with the machines deciding whether to recommend you.
That means:
→ Clear schema markup so agents can parse your content
→ Real benchmarks, not marketing fluff
→ Open endpoints agents can actually test
→ Honest comparisons that emphasize strengths without hype
In the agentic world, documentation becomes 10x more important. Companies that make their products machine-understandable will win distribution through AI.

When I was 18, my grandfather collapsed from a sudden cardiac arrest. I ran to get his doctor, brought him as fast as I could but ten minutes were too long! Everyone around kept saying it was the "best" way to go; no pain, no long illness. I agree today, but I was thinking back then, “was there anything else I could have done.?”. We were living in a small village in Greece. The answer, fifteen years ago, was probably no.



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