Limitless Podcast - CEO of X Linda Yaccarino Unexpectedly Steps Down Hours Before Grok 4 Release
Episode Date: July 9, 2025This morning, the CEO of X, Linda Yaccarino has unexpectedly stepped down just hours before Elon and the xAI team announce the release of Grok 4. This happens at an interesting time as we hav...e: Grok going rogue last night, Grok4 announcement from Elon this evening, and product legend Nikita Bier recently joining as head of product.We've compiled all the evidence - Here's everything you need to know about the saga.-----💫 LIMITLESS | SUBSCRIBE & FOLLOWhttps://limitless.bankless.com/https://x.com/LimitlessFT-----TIMESTAMPS00:00 Linda Steps Down07:47 Who TF Is Nikita Bier17:59 OpenAI vs xAI World Building24:12 Grok4 Integrations31:09 The X Universe IS HUGE------RESOURCESJosh: https://x.com/Josh_KaleEjaaz:https://x.com/cryptopunk7213------Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here:https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Josh, I barely got out of bed this morning, barely had my morning coffee,
and I see this post just staring at me in the face.
Linda Yakorino, the CEO of X, has just announced that she's stepping down after two years
out working at the helm.
This comes right before Rumored GROC's new AI model, GROC4, is about to launch
tonight as we're filming this episode.
I'm super pumped, but also kind of like weirded out as,
to like the timing of these two things.
Josh, you just took a look at the announcement post.
What are your breakaway takes?
Oh, first of all, congratulations on making it two years.
That is no easy feat at a company like X.
The workload is very hardcore.
It is very challenging.
Congratulations.
Thank you for the work, Linda.
We appreciate you.
Now we can put on our speculation, our tin hats,
and we can start to figure out what actually happened here.
What went wrong?
Why is she stepping down?
Why is the timing of this so weird?
I mean, last night there was an episode on X where
Grock started posting these kind of like these hateful things that a lot of people didn't like.
It kind of went rogue.
We have Grock for coming out this evening as we're recording this.
And we also have a new hire from Nikita Bear.
So there's like a whole lot of stuff going on.
Maybe you want to share the actual post that she said because it seemed like they ended on good terms, right?
Like her and Elon seemed like they're in a good spot.
It wasn't a malicious.
Yeah.
There was no malicious intent there.
Yeah.
Let me spin up the post here.
So I'll give kind of like a rough breakdown here.
She goes, after two incredible years, I've decided to step down as CEO of X.
When Elon Musk and I first spoke of his vision for X, I knew it would be the opportunity
of a lifetime to carry out the extraordinary mission of this company.
I'm immensely grateful, blah, blah, blah.
I'm helping turning around the company and transforming X into the everything app.
I'm incredibly proud of the X team, blah, blah, blah.
And then this part's interesting.
She talks about kind of like the work that she's focused on during her time there.
So we started with critical early work necessary to prioritizing the safety of our users,
especially children, and to restore advertiser confidence.
Now, to pause for a second on this sentence, what she's referencing is kind of like the old
guard of X.
Do you remember this, Josh?
Like prior to Elon Musk taking over, which, by the way, it was a pinnacle event that
changed a number of different political events within the U.S. and also around the world.
you could argue that if Elon hadn't bought X, we could have ended up with a different president, and you could take this into many different conspiracy theories.
But what she's referencing here is the old version of X, which was called Twitter, had a number of different problems.
Number one was there was kind of like this widespread kind of like shared media of like children, which was kind of infringing on a lot of potential, you know, illegal activity, which Twitter and the team at the time didn't really seem to be addressing supposedly.
And then number two was X seemed to, sorry, Twitter at the time seemed to be catering very specifically towards advertiser needs versus actual quality of content that they were surfacing to their users of their platform.
So it was a very politically driven company versus a product driven company focused on content and media.
So Elon then took over and rebranded it as X, wanted to build this massive vision of the everything app.
and Linda was brought in to kind of fulfill that initial vision.
Of course, since then,
X is currently owned under XAI,
which is technically an AI company.
So this social media platform that we know and love and use every day
is technically owned or part of a product suite of an AI company, right?
And I think the vision has since shifted from, you know,
the everything app to the everything AI powered app.
And with that, I think, comes,
kind of like different skill, it requires different skills and potentially, or maybe obviously,
a different helm, different person that heads it up. What do you thoughts on this, Josh?
Yeah, I think the advertising line to me is what stood out because I remember vividly when
X was taken over by Elon, almost immediately all of the advertisers disappeared and they said,
we're not going to advertise on this platform, we don't want to support this. That was a big problem
for X because that was their huge monetization engine. They were cutting costs. The revenue was going
to the ground. What Linda was really good at was this advertising world. She was highly networked
in this advertising world. She really understood it deeply. She had all the relationships. She was kind of
the public face, the public interface between X and the world of sponsors. And I think in that sense,
she did a really great job of merging the two, bringing confidence back to the platform. She wanted to,
I mean, you'll notice here she talks about how she wants to make it a safe space and great for
advertisers. And I think those two things go hand in hand, and she accomplished that goal. Now,
that is a very small subset of what matters at X. So in one sense, she solved part of the revenue
problem. The Blue Check was a big way of doing it where they charged users to subscribe, but also she
solved the advertising problem. But there's also a lot more now to X. Like you mentioned,
X is not just a social media platform. It is now an AI company. And the problems now are much bigger.
So while these things are important and while those interpersonal relationships between the advertisers are important, it would appear as if they're kind of pivoting away from this and they're moving closer towards a social media AI platform.
And that means like maybe content moderation doesn't need all of this complicated legislation and processes.
Maybe it's just a matter of training rock to be really good at content moderation and it does it automatically.
So it's a totally different skill set than she was initially there for.
Two years is a ton of time in this world.
So it seems like mission accomplished.
It seems like maybe it's just time to move on and to hand the reins over to someone else.
And I think that's probably what happened here.
But then there's more speculation on because of the timing, really, right?
Like this was a very weird time for her to get up and go.
Yeah.
On your point around how X is evolving, I think, you know, it's typically just been treated as a social media platform like your Facebooks or your Instagrams or Reddit, right?
actually kind of like a weird combination of all three of those companies,
which is why it's one of the most used social media platforms in the world right now.
But largely speaking, I'm wondering how Elon is thinking about the strategy behind X
and what it eventually becomes.
He seems to be thinking about it very much from an AI first perspective.
So your point around like how content is created, surfaced and indexed,
I think it's going to look completely different on X within probably like the next six months
at the way that they're working, right?
Certainly.
Also, I just remember that Elon has mentioned a number of times now
that he doesn't believe copyright infringement laws should exist.
And the reason why I mentioned that specifically is X for a number of years now
has been considered like the town square, right,
where people can come in and bring firsthand insights
as to what's going on in the world and identify trends.
It's meant to act as a source of truth.
but prior to Elon taking over, this was kind of like contested quite a bit, right?
They were saying that, you know, it's being biased in many different ways, posts are being censored,
people are being shadow banned.
And I can't help but think that an AI ground-up built social media platform is going to kind of rid some of these different things,
and it's going to require a different kind of mindset.
And one of the more recent kind of signals that we're heading this way is the hiring of this man called Nikita,
beer. Have you heard about this, Josh? Yes, I'm obsessed with Nikita. Big fan. Love this guy.
Okay. So, so hang on. Let me, let me bring up this post from Greg Eisenberg. I'm a big fan of Greg. He
kind of comments on a number of different business things, but he just posted this after the announcement from
Linda saying, I can't believe Nikita Beer might be the CEO of X. You can just do things. Can you help
explain this to me, Josh? What's going on here? Okay, so Nikita, some background. He has founded a lot of
companies, one of which sold to meta for $100 million, one of which sold to Discord for $30 million.
He is kind of known as the growth hacker in the space. He has built great products. And not only
has he built great products, but he is a professional at lowering the amount of friction and
increasing the virality of these products. So most recently, he created this product and he
launched it called Explode. And Explode was this app that was, he was pissed at Snapchat. I forget the
specific reason why he was pissed at Snapchat, but he was very angry with Evan and the Snapchat team.
He said that snaps should be fully integrated into the main messaging platform that people use.
So I message basically.
And he was super annoyed that people had to open up a separate app just to send these different pitches.
Boom, there he go.
So then he did that.
And he utilized this weird little quirky thing that a lot of developers haven't used called app clips.
You can actually run miniature applications inside of like your messaging platform.
And it allowed you to get Snapchat functionality without needing the receiver to download any app at all.
So it really lowered the friction, took advantage of live activities. It showed you when people opened it, when they exploded. It was this really cool experiment. And he's kind of done this over and over and over again, proving himself as this viral product growth hacking guy. And I've used all these products. They're incredible. They somehow managed to take what is the norm and then completely flip it on its head in a way that is so viral and so effective. It's amazing. So he recently joined the Salana Foundation to help them with their product. And then most recently, he has this post where he's like, hey, I'm
joining as head of product at X. And to me, this was incredibly exciting because this guy
builds great products that are easy to use, that are fun to use. He does it in a lighthearted
gamified way. And I think that's exactly the type of culture X has. And I think that's why I'm
super excited for him to be here. Okay. So if I have this clear, Josh, we're basically combining or
marrying the ultimate meme lord, Elon Musk, who is pretty much memed and worked his way up to
become the richest man in the world with this viral engineer, probably the top of his trade,
that can create any kind of app. And you've married them on the one singular social media
platform that's probably going to blow up into, as Elon says, an everything app. Have I got that
right? Well, basically, like, this is like a perfect marriment of people. Yeah, this, like, if I could
pick one person to help build product at X, it is Nikita, right? Because he, he's the guy who
has continually stood out as the, the one source of unique.
creativity when it comes to building applications. I think he's one of the few developers that
like really doesn't reason by analogy. He really comes up with like these deeply insightful first
principles takes on how you can build a viral application. And I think he's the perfect person
because a lot of this comes in in a lighthearted nature and that's what Elon resonates with.
And you can see it in the picture. It's this like fun goofy collaboration of like very, very high profile
people. And you know the craziest thing about this, Josh, was I think like three years ago now.
He posted this tweet, which was basically, Elon Musk, hire me to run Twitter as VP of product.
I've been building social apps for 11 years and not in a way that leads products to decay like a typical big tech product directed dad, he says in quotation marks.
Twitter has the potential to be the leading messenger groups app and content creation tool.
So, you know, this guy has been a ride or die before he even joined the company.
And I've been following Nikita for a number of years now.
He kind of like treads this perfect line of kind of meming in his post and kind of having like this like twisted but hilarious sense of sarcasm, but also nailing reality in like a few sentences.
And he says it so verbosely and clearly that you kind of like understand what he's saying right now.
And it kind of speaks to his trade or skill, right, which is like creating simple, viral,
frictionless apps.
But what I found hilarious was he manifested this, dude, like years ago.
2022.
That's amazing.
That's insane.
That's insane.
That's insane.
He posted just here.
Like, never give up.
Never give up.
When he got hired.
That's hilarious.
Three years after the fact, which is amazing.
Yeah.
I'm really excited about this new thing.
And I mean, the speculation is his role might possibly become a little bit larger
than product at Twitter or product.
Yeah.
It's really refreshing, I think, to see this pit.
it from more of the advertising corporate world to more leadership in the product development
world.
X is very much changing as a platform and you can kind of see it.
Most noteworthy, the more recent integration they had with Polymarket, I found super
interesting.
Oh, yes.
I mean, to most people, Polymarket is, it's just truth-seeking mechanism where you can
kind of place bets on what reality is.
And then in the case that it is wrong, you can actually arbitrage the difference.
So, and, I mean, Polymarkets come under drama for other reasons this week.
But the idea is that polymarket is a truth-seeking engine. And when you integrate that type of
technology into GROC and into X and into this one platform, you kind of start to get this thematic
thing where not only is this a town square, but this is a singular source of truth. And XAI, when they
acquired X.com, what they did is they also acquired, oh yeah, here's the announcement, but they also
acquired the mission statement of XAI, which is to find truth in the universe. And that's kind of what
they want is they just want a truth-seeking mechanism. And I think this new strategy is that.
We're seeing the tighter integration with GROC. We're seeing it joining forces with Polymarket,
which is the actual market in which you can gauge how truth happens. This is a trend that I've
been really excited to see and I hope continues. Do you have any takes? If I want to summarize the
trends of hiring a guy like Nikita announcing this big polymarket integration, which for those who
are listening and who have never heard of the term polymarket before, it's basically a betting platform
that you can bet on different kinds of events that happen across the world, mainly gained a lot of
traction in the lead up to the US presidential election most recently, where people were betting on
who would be the president. And the reason why that was such an exciting bet at the time was
there were a ton of people that were convinced that the Democratic Party was going to win that
entire deal. And Trump was for a while kind of like the low odds there. And, you know, and
And then we kind of saw this traction in real time on Polymarket,
before any other news reporter or media site, by the way,
predicting that Trump would win the presidency.
And people called Polymarket crazy.
But then people were like, oh, how does Polymarket work?
Oh, people bet their money.
So that means they must have some kind of stake or some information, right?
Which is why Polymarket gained a lot of traction.
And it ended up being right.
So this formal partnership with X is kind of like, to your point, Josh,
one of the many truth-seeking mechanisms
that this team is implementing within X.
Now, when I think about Nikita
as kind of like his product background and history,
he seems like a very first principles thinker, Josh.
And he thinks about the experience of a user using the product
versus, huh, I'm going to add AI into this product
because everyone else is, right?
He thinks about how a user clicks,
what kind of buttons they'll be attracted to,
He's kind of like a UX guy, but he does it really, really well and thoughtfully.
And I think about this and what AI has done for just like, not just platforms, but like any
kind of interaction that I have today, Josh, like, I was using GROC just now to like kind
of understand a concept that I didn't get, right?
Or I was helping it research a bunch of different things for me in a separate job that I do
on a day-to-day basis.
And it's just finally attuned to like whatever I do in life these days.
I think AI is going to play a massive role in truth seeking.
So I think this combination of like getting a ton of people to feed into this AI,
because that's what X is, right?
It's a live data platform that you can feed into your grok bottle
and hopefully create a smarter, more personalized model for each individual user.
I think that's where all of these components are kind of trending.
And Nikita Beer is kind of like this new cherry on top of the cake,
which is going to help them kind of step into this new path.
I'm looking at this tweet that he posted, by the way,
speaking of stepping into his new role,
where obviously, you know, as CPO,
I kind of see it as like a pseudo-CEO role.
Maybe there's a lot of people that disagree with that statement.
But the CEO and CPO probably work very closely right now.
And right now the CEO is Elon Musk, unless I'm missing something.
And he goes in this tweet,
sometimes I step into a meeting with AI researchers
and they'll be casually demoing technology
that will put us in the literal matrix when it launches.
And then they'll be like, so what's for lunch?
And what he's demonstrating there is this massive like disparity between kind of like
what these very few talented AI researchers are building, which is we've spoken about this on
the show before, God or some kind of virtual God.
And then the lack of knowing of the wider public or the 99.9% of other people that aren't
involved in this research that don't get these insights of what is being built.
And I don't know what your take is on this, Josh,
but it seems like he's just seeing something that it's kind of being reflected in many other AI researchers,
which is like this crazy magical technology.
How do you think this is going to get applied to X?
Do you have any thoughts?
Yeah.
So we're seeing this divergence between these two large AI companies, right?
We have Open AI which wants to build the operating system for your life,
where it has the companion hardware device that will be with you all the time.
It's collecting lots of data.
It wants to be the operating system that just runs everything.
around you every single day.
And what we're seeing with X and particularly XAI, which owns X, is that it's looking to be
more of the interface between you and the rest of the world.
So kind of like the social layer.
So if OpenAI is the personal layer, XAI is the social layer, meaning it's kind of building
tooling for the way that we communicate and we learn things from the world.
And it's applying this filter in the form of truth.
where it has these polymarket integrations and Grock Ford is now being built to be
maximally truth seeking. And it has this town square that they're building. And not only that,
but it has things that they're building on top of it. Like they want payments to be on top of it.
They want private messaging. They've recently added FaceTime and actual audio calling.
So it's kind of this all in one application interface layer between you and the rest of the
world. And I think that makes sense to me. And that feels right to me where like, okay,
Open AI, personal, XAI, external, lots of social filters, lots of fun gamification on top of it.
And then that leads us to GROC4, which is coming out, I mean, at the time of recording this evening, 11 p.m.
It's late. We're going to be on it. We're on it tomorrow. But we can now speculate on GROC4 because of the timing of all this happening, right?
It's like, okay, Linda steps away, Nikita is now in. GROC4 drops tonight. They've been training this on a cluster of, what, 200,000 coherent GP? This is like a huge training run.
They've been working on it for a long time.
And there's speculation, right?
So maybe we can have a little bit of fun about what we're going to expect from GROC4
and kind of shares some of the speculation.
So I see on the screen we have something about game coding, right?
Like a gaming engine.
Yeah.
So in this post, you see a screenshot supposedly of what GROC4 might look like
or what it might include.
And we see a few different things on this drop down here,
which says things like spreadsheet, game, image, and code.
Before we kind of like jump into like what these different features,
might be, I think it's important to kind of lay the land on like what GROC4 means to the AI
space, right? So the way I kind of think about it is GROC4 is XAI's answer to OpenAI's O3 model.
And for a while now, Open AI has pretty convincingly led the charge in terms of AI models.
Now, you've had Cursor come out with Claude 4 and Sonnet, and they're really good models,
but they haven't really caught the consumer traction as much as.
as OpenAI models have.
Claude 4 excels in code,
but MetaXAI
has kind of been
sitting on their hands
for a while now,
and we spoke in a previous episode
about how Meta's just hiring
a ton of people to figure that out,
but Grok's been quiet.
XAI has been quiet,
and it turns out that they've just been
kind of heads down,
really fine-tuning
what this potential new model
is going to be and mean
to a wide number of people.
And I love the speculation,
game on this because, okay, they're going to be talking about GrogFaugh tonight. We're going to have an
episode come out tomorrow on what GrogFa actually is. But let's see how many speculations we can
nail today, Josh. So I'm going to come out and say that I don't think they're just going to
launch a cursor coding competitor. So for those who are listening to this, cursor is kind of like
the top vibe coding app. So you can just kind of like prompt and create games, apps, or whatever
you might be from a simple sentence.
I think they're going to do cursor for gaming, Josh.
Because I'm extrapolating on a ton of different things here, but Elon is a famed gamer.
He's actually one of the top 10 Dota players, which is like a very big, massive worldwide playing
game.
He's a top 10 player in that.
And I don't know how he does that whilst running, you know, five other billion-dollar-plus
companies.
But he's somehow able to do that.
And Nikita loves gamifying a bunch of things.
to his different apps.
I also think gaming is at a point now
where it's just such a natural coercion
into something like an everything app
where I kind of think of like,
when he says everything app,
I think of like WeChat.
And for those of you who don't know,
we chat is like the top app in China specifically,
but I think Southeast Asia at large.
And something that WeChat kind of nails is,
you know, it compiles everyone's finances.
It's a great social media feed,
but also people spend
so much time gaming on it. And I know that sounds crazy. And maybe that's like my moonshot
gas, but I think that's one of the main features that they're going to go for. What do you think,
Josh? As a gamer, I love this thesis. I love games, obsessed with playing games. Elon, to fact
check you is actually rated number one in the world currently in Path of Xiles. Oh, sorry, not top 10.
Number one. Well, probably top 10 in Dota, but in Path of Exile number one. And actually, just for fun,
the way he gets there is he has, he has these two dudes who are incredibly talented at the game.
And they will level up this account for him and put in the many, many hundreds of hours required to get to that level and then hand it over.
And then Elon is then able to have a fully charged account to then play.
So it still requires a tremendous amount of scale.
So he's outsourcing this. He's all ameing this.
Oh, absolutely.
I used to do this too.
I would have people boost like camos for me.
And you could pay them little fees and they'll go and they'll put in the refs to get like the things that you need, the tool set.
But he's actually the one playing with the tool set.
So it's kind of like he is best in the world, but not putting in all the hours.
That's how he's able to do that.
But in terms of gaming, love, I think this is an amazing thing.
I think gaming, what we've seen with other models, I mean, in terms of like Gemini,
is you can actually generate a game with a single prompt.
And I think that creates a really fun dynamic where you can kind of hyper-personalize
these experiences.
Gaming is super exciting.
I hope they do it.
It's fun.
It very much aligns with the ethos.
In terms of my guesses, I'm really excited for the integrations.
I want a desktop app really bad.
I love the chat Shoebtbt desktop app.
I love how it integrates into.
the other platforms that I work on. It works with the Notes app. It works with the command terminal.
It plugs into a lot of the existing things on the desktop. And it just lives in a window that's
always open. I feel that if Grock is able to do that, I will then be inclined to use it much more
than just when I'm on X. Do you think they'll run some kind of personalized version on your desktop
in that example, Josh? I hope so. I want memory to become a big thing for everybody. And what I like
about memory in particularly the case of X is that it has access to all of my posts history. So I have
had an account on X or Twitter for, I think since 2011. It's been like 15 years almost. And over that
time, I don't think anything's really been deleted. So it just kind of has the stream of consciousness
over 15 years of my life. That's a huge amount of context that it's not currently able to access.
So one thing, and one of the grieves that I have with X currently actually is, is when you ask it to
index other people's posts or like interpret them or do deep searching, it doesn't really have
that capability. If it can do that, if it can index all of my posts, create a profile for me,
if it could do that for other people and you could almost interact with these other accounts just
based on their, like the generated model of their posts, that seems like a really cool thing
that we could have. And then the other thing that I'm super excited about that I am like selflessly
hoping happens and optimistic that it's going to happen is that rock rolls out in Tesla.
I think that's going to be so cool because as someone who drives them around all day, I really want that integration.
And the fun thing about integrating an AI model with cars, this will be the first time it ever happens,
is you get access to the multimodality of this car as well.
So the input sensors, you have GPS, you have sound with microphones, you have vision through the camera array that exists fully around the car.
And it can create this very immersive, interactive experience as you're driving places where you can ask it about things that you're seeing.
You could ask it about places you're going, where you are, and it kind of becomes this roadside
companion. And again, that can feed into the context window in the memory space of your profile.
So in the case that they roll out memory, in the case that they roll out like grok in a car,
it kind of starts to build this unique profile around you and that stuff seems really
exciting. And this is just in addition to the benchmarks, right? Where I'm assuming the benchmarks
will be great. It's going to compete with O3, if not outpaced that. But it seems less exciting
then these actual integrations where we feel it into day-to-day life, right?
Yeah, the multi-modality point is a really important one
because the main thing that drives these AI models
is not just how much data you can get,
but the richness of that data.
And I kind of define richness by, you know,
how effective the data is at telling you what humans get from their life, right?
So it's like what I see, what I hear, what I smell,
and the actions that I do.
And cars is just one way, right?
Like, you can follow me out of this apartment that I'm in right now
and see what I'm seeing outside of that apartment,
like where I'm driving to, my kind of habits.
Oh, he's hitting the gym.
Oh, he's going grocery shopping, whatever that might be,
which might sound boring,
but helps the AI build this collective picture of you,
this identity about you, right?
It made me think of, like, the Tesla robots that he's launching soon, right?
Which, again, sound crazy.
right now, but I can imagine a world in a couple of years from now where everyone has one of
these robots in their homes and they're tidying up and doing the ironing and making me luck,
right, whilst I'm filming this episode. Again, another sensory input from all this kind of
data into this one AI. So aside from that, can I tell you one other moonshot idea that I hope
he kind of like, oh, rather than not an idea, but something that I hope he kind of like makes a move on
where no other AI platform really has. Let's hear it.
It's nailing the AI integration into a social media platform.
Now, OpenAI is a phenomenal product, but it's private.
I can't see all the amazing trending prompts that people are doing.
Maybe they unlock that in a future thing,
but I don't really see them doing that because there's a lot of privacy concerns around that.
And it's a great product for what it is, right?
I speak to it about all my secrets that I probably wouldn't on a public forum, right?
but it's lacking the ability to go viral in terms of network effects.
I kind of want to be connected with my friends via this AI in some way.
Now, GROC being implemented into X has been step one in doing that, right?
But you kind of don't have much to do.
You can add GROC in the replies to people's threads and get some kind of automated response, right?
Where it says, oh yeah, this is true.
It's mainly used as a fact checker mainly.
But I feel like there's a way that.
you can integrate maybe to your own personalized model of grok that to your earlier point has been
trained on your history. You know, you've been tweeting since 2011. So it's like Josh's GROC, right?
And then it can interact with EJazz's GROC account, right? And you kind of like have this
conversation or we share information amongst each other. And then we log in every morning and we're like,
oh, cool. Like this is exactly what I wanted to talk about. And it's thought about it in the way that I
wanted to think about it. I don't really know what a social media website's going to look like
that integrates GROC directly, a smarter version, this GROC form model.
But I presume that Elon Musk has that top of mind, and the guy that he's just hired,
Nikita Beer, is an expert in engineering these social constructs.
So it might be too soon to call it, but I'm hoping there's going to be some form of new social media
interaction which directly integrates AI pretty seamlessly so that we go from people
knowing what GROC is to just seamlessly interacting with it.
Mm-hmm.
Directly that seems right.
I think we need to enrich the context of a post in order to get there.
What Farkaster did for people who are from the crypto space who have used Farkaster,
they did really well at integrating mini apps into posts where like a single post in the platform could actually,
like you could play a game within it, you could send money within it.
It was a mini app built within a post.
And currently X really supports, it supports multimedia in the sense that you could post a photo, a video, some text, a link.
hashtag, that's mostly it.
I think what happens there and the way you get there is by enriching the amount of data
you can put in this post.
If you can generate a game using their game engine, you can share the game as a post
that's playable within the app.
You can share the prompt that is within it.
You can kind of track trending prompts, see what's hot, what's not.
That seems like a really fun dynamic to enable the world in which you're talking about
where you do have this like social media layer applied onto the like building games and
apps and all those things and creating lots of contact. So I'm sure that's in the pipeline at some
point. I'm sure that's coming. I mean, it's important to understand the context of of the window in
which X sits in, like all of the resources it has available. I mean, X has XAI. It has the data
within X, so it has this like really powerful AI layer. It has the Tesla universe, which has the
hardware. It has the cars with the robot taxis. It has humanoid robots that are incoming. It has like
the physical manifestation of all this AI. And this all kind of sits under one umbrella where
It has space exploration. There is Starlink. There are satellites in space, whatever that may be used.
Like, it has this insane repository of technology.
Elon's going to build the best AI model. And that's what I'm saying is it's a data game.
That's crazy. Yes. And when you judge these things on rate of velocity instead of like day-to-day quality, it becomes very obvious that that XAI is moving the fastest.
I mean, they were created what less than three years ago, whereas Open AI Anthropic, they were all created like nearly a decade or many more years than that.
So the fact that they've gotten this good this quickly and they continue to ship at this rate is really high signal that they are going to win at least something big over the course of time.
It's like they have the culture.
The engineering team is so hardcore, so badass.
They're shipping on Saturday nights, Sunday nights.
They're working around the clock.
They have the intelligence to spin up a 200,000 GPU cluster that's coherent in a record amount of time.
They're buying factories.
They have Tesla power walls to power the factories.
They have these megapacks and genera, they're just kind of throwing everything at the wall.
And they just have the most resources.
They have the most velocity.
I'm stoked.
Like I think whatever happens is going to be cool.
Grockforce is just the next step in this roadmap.
But like very bullish on the XAI team and that whole universe that exists on top of them.
It's going to be fun to watch.
I couldn't have thought of a better ending to this episode than that, Josh.
I don't think there's anything left to be said until 11 p.m. ESD tonight when they start streaming
that Grock announcement. We'll see you tonight. And then we'll also see you tomorrow with our
first reaction to the people listening. This was our first time trying a real-time thing. We actually
had a totally different topic today. And Ejiz and I were like, why don't we just cover the current
news? So normally we like to do a lot of research, a lot of context setting, a lot of examples.
Those were lacking, but I think this is still kind of interesting. So I'm curious to your
thoughts if you're listening to this. Like, hey, do you prefer just like the real-time data or
we're going to work really hard to publish this same day? Or would you prefer a more refined episode on
something timely, but not the topic of the day?
We're just experimenting things.
So hopefully you enjoyed this one.
We certainly did.
We are stoked for the Grock 4 release tonight.
So stay tuned.
That's going to be a big episode tomorrow.
David should be back for that one.
He is back from climbing mountain.
So he'll be joining us tomorrow.
We're back to the original cast and crew.
And it should be pretty cool.
So if you enjoyed this episode, please share with your friends.
We appreciate that.
Like it, repost it, whatever.
It helps us out a lot, especially because we're a little bit smaller.
We're trying to get bigger.
Share with everyone.
Let us know what you think.
And we will see you bright and early tomorrow.
Let's go.
