My First Million - I got rejected from YC (4x)…. now my side hustle is worth $1.16B
Episode Date: December 11, 2024Get our Business Monetization Playbook: https://clickhubspot.com/monetization Episode 658: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk to Replit founder Amjad... Masad ( https://x.com/amasad ) about the massive opportunities with AI Agents. — Show Notes: (0:00) Replit origin story (9:27) Replit's 10-year overnight success (12:27) Rejected 4x by YC (17:28) Personal essays from Paul Graham (20:17) "i hacked into my university to change my grades" (25:55) Rickrolling into YC (35:25) Shaan builds a food tracking app in 30 seconds (43:19) Magic School: An AI application for educators 4M users in 1 year (47:31) Amjad on Agents (49:53) Building moats in a goldrush (54:53) Replit is Shopify for software creators (1:05:11) The most gangster story in Silicon Valley — Links: • Amjad essays - https://amasad.me/ • Replit - https://replit.com/ • Codeacademy - https://www.codecademy.com/ • Do What Makes The Best Story - https://amasad.me/story • Magic School AI - https://www.magicschool.ai/ • 11x AI - https://www.11x.ai/ • Synthesis Tutor - https://www.synthesis.com/tutor • The Sovereign Individual - https://tinyurl.com/4w6ns7b2 • 7 Powers - https://tinyurl.com/382ch557 — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: Need to hire? You should use the same service Shaan uses to hire developers, designers, & Virtual Assistants → it’s called Shepherd (tell ‘em Shaan sent you): https://bit.ly/SupportShepherd — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the first AI agent thing that has been a mind-blowing moment for me,
where I am not a programmer, I am not a coder, but I can now create software.
Well, that's insane.
There are apps built on Replit agents that otherwise would take probably $100,000 of developer time.
And you can build it like in, you know, $25 paid to Replit.
It's pretty wild how fast these companies are scaling.
I don't think in the history of Silicon Valley we've seen anything like that,
even in the web 2.0 era.
So what is like a fast ramp for an AI company?
What's impressive that kind of broke the frame
of how long things would take?
So I would say reaching 10 million
in three or four months,
ARR.
Oh my God.
That's wild.
Can I ask a blunt, crude question?
How can I use your software to become a billionaire?
I would say building.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all.
Like no days off on a road.
Let's travel, never looking back.
Okay, so how do we want to start this?
So, I'm, Jod, you, you're awesome.
So you have, you're today in a position that I think a lot of people want to be.
And you have, you're doing the Silicon Valley dream.
You had this idea.
You go through YC.
You've now raised hundreds of millions of dollars.
You're valued at a, you know, a billion dollar valuation.
So that's today.
But then the cool thing about your story is that didn't seem likely, you know,
10 years ago. It is a very unlikely success story. And yeah, you went through YC, but you
rejected a bunch of times. Like, yeah, you're in Silicon Valley now, but you started off
coding in an internet cafe in Jordan. That's what's interesting to me. And we asked you
beforehand, we're like, hey, what killer stories could you come on the podcast and tell?
And you go, you wrote this. So I'm going to read a word for word. And then I want you to tell
us the story. You go, rejected four times and Rick rolling into YC, raising tons of money
and meeting a amazing billionaire. So let's do the first part. Rejected four times and Rick
rolling into YC. Can you tell this story?
Yeah, so I left my job at Facebook in 2016.
And, you know, Replit has been a side project for a while, and it's been growing.
I've been working on it like nights and weekends.
It grew to a point where the like server cost was meaningful.
And I was like, okay, you know, I have to, I guess I have to start a company around it.
And so I went to my manager at Facebook and I was like, look, I have the side project.
and we make it like somehow a project at Facebook.
And we looked into that.
I sent Zuck an email at the time, and he ignored me.
Like, okay, I guess I have to start a company.
And so yeah, I quit my job, apply to YC the first time.
We did the whole thing.
We did the form and the video and all of that.
And we didn't even get a call or anything like that.
It was just like we got the rejection letter.
And so I was like, okay, you know, I have this Facebook stock, some savings.
I sold the Facebook stock.
I put like half of it in Bitcoin and then half of it into the company or like just
just for us to kind of live.
And how much money was that?
It's like 70K or something like that.
What was the original product of Replit?
So it was basically an editor and a console.
You could type code there and you can run it.
you can switch a language and that's it.
By the way, Sam, have you ever used Replit?
I was using it today before this.
It's magical. And also your tweets
describing what it is. Like, for example, your
doctor saying, you know, he wants
me to track my sleep. So I just uploaded
the PDF that he wanted me to fill up,
fill out into Replit and it made an application
so I can upload it much easier.
Yeah, it's like pretty magical. Sean, are you able
to use it? It's definitely out of my league still.
Both me and Sam have joked around because we both
have maybe
five or six times false started of
like, I'm going to learn to code this summer.
It's like a New Year's resolution thing where you just keep saying you're going to do it.
You do 20% of it, 30% of it, and you give up.
You know, we buy the Udeme course, learn Python the hard way.
You start doing it.
And nothing really ever stuck.
And one of the biggest problems was that nobody really talks about this.
Do you think learning to code is like learning Spanish?
It's like learning a language.
You're like, okay, so how do I need to say the thing?
But before you can even do that, it's like, oh, I'm supposed to download this program.
So I need to download an editor.
And then I need to download all these packages.
to be able to use the thing.
And then you need it.
And it's like just setting up the environment is so goddamn confusing to a beginner
that you don't even get to do the part where you actually write the code
and be able to run.
And then it's like, oh, how do I run the code?
I got to host it somewhere.
Now I've got to learn how to do hosting.
What is that?
And so there's all these things around it that were confusing.
Replit solved all of that, which was amazing.
And I actually did your like 100 days of learning to code.
Like it's actually made it really easy.
You know, if I didn't have kids, I would just be doing a lot more because it's,
you solved that problem for me.
And I know I'm asking you about the YC rejection.
I want to come back to that.
But to give Sam maybe a little more with context, I think, correct me if I'm wrong,
maybe I'm making this up, I think the reason you wanted to have this kind of like online
editor, online environment where it's all hosted there was because when you were younger,
you were living in Jordan.
And I guess you used to go try to learn to code out of an internet or go try to code out
of an internet cafe.
But that means every time you go, you have to set everything up for the first time because
it's not your home base, not your home computer.
you set it up once and it's there. Is that true? Is that why you felt the problem like 10x
what a normal person would feel? Yeah, basically like every time I wanted to do a little homework,
I have to like spend an hour setting up the environment. At the time, the web was moving so fast
until we had Google Docs and we had Gmail. We had this, you know, client slide, JavaScript
application sort of revolution. And I'm like, okay, you know, why can't I type code into the
browser and run it? And I started looking at it. And I started looking at it.
around and turns out like nobody solved this problem. There were some experiments and it was
kind of crazy to me because it was almost like, you know, finding a $100 bill in New York
Grand Central Station, right? Like it's like, oh, I found an idea that nobody's paying attention
to. And is that true? Because it's kind of crazy. The world is big. There's a lot of programmer.
That seems like an obvious thing. I mean, I'm a total outsider. So my question is like, was there some
technical challenge to that?
Because that seems like,
I guess it's easy to say things that are successful
are obvious ideas looking back.
But like, yeah,
well,
it seems like there's probably two things, right?
There's the technical challenge
of being able to make this all work in a browser, right?
That was that was not obvious.
But then there seems like the second thing was,
I keep going back to the internet cafe thing
because it's sort of like the hardship
made the problem like unavoidable to you.
Whereas anybody else who learns to code,
if you're just doing it at home in America and you're,
you might do that setting up.
once, maybe you have a little bit of the problem, but you're not running into it face first every
day as if you were, if you were working out of internet cafe. Yeah, absolutely right. I mean,
you know, Paul Graham talks about it all the time. It's like, you know, the best startups are,
you know, solving your own problem. And I felt that problem really deeply. And I started working
on it. I discovered why it's hard. Well, it's hard to run different languages in the browser.
You can run JavaScript, but you can't run Python, for example. So we should, we should have
started writing interpreters, writing compilers to run on JavaScript.
And then it took us a couple of years, had like few languages running.
It was like pretty rough prototype.
But people started using it.
My friends and people at school, and I'm like, okay, this idea has lags.
And so let me work on it more.
And then 2011 had a breakthrough.
And the breakthrough was we were the first to compile Python Ruby,
a bunch of languages to JavaScript.
and run them straight into the browser.
And that went super viral.
So we open sourced it.
We put her up on hacker news.
And that was my first experience of like going viral on the internet, which is I was like,
oh my God, this is like an amazing rush.
And I still feel that rush.
Can you put that in context for a non-engineer?
Is the thing you guys did, is it on a scale of like one to Satoshi Nakamoto solving the
like double spend problem?
like how hard of an invention was that?
That was like the nerdiest analogy
you ever could have came up with.
That's what I'm here for.
So like, was it genius
or was it just that nobody had taken
as much time as it would take to do that?
Like, where was that breakthrough?
How would you describe that breakthrough?
It's definitely not on the order of like
the double spend problem aware.
It's like a fundamental invention.
It was like, you know,
pushing like a huge rock
bolt up a mountain.
It took so much grit
and just obsession
to be able to hack the browser
in order to run
things that the browser
wasn't supposed to run.
It wasn't designed to run.
And so I would say it is solving
hundreds of problems
as opposed to solving like one invention
which is double spent.
Yeah.
So you,
You're working on it as a side project for a number of years.
That's a long time, by the way, Sean.
Can you imagine having a side project that's a hobby that takes three hours a night with little...
I mean, doing it for two years is kind of a long time, no?
Dude, the only two things I've ever done that with is this podcast and my kids.
And there's really no way out of the kids thing.
And the podcast was a hit right away.
The podcast, yeah, gave me results right away, so it actually doesn't count.
You were doing this without the kind of like financial rewards or fame rewards or any other major rewards during that time.
How many years did you do the side project thing and what kept it going?
2009 was the original idea.
2011 was the breakthrough and went viral on Hacker News and then and not.
I think that was the first time I felt like a little bit of fame, a little bit of return on investment.
I remember Brendan Ike, the inventor of JavaScript and was the CTO at Mozilla, like tweeting about it.
I was like, wow, this is amazing.
Like, you know, a kid in Jordan, like,
made this like fundamental breakthrough in like, you know,
Braves or tack, and like, I'm getting this recognition.
That's pretty cool.
And also some articles wrote about it.
It was people talked about it in conferences.
And so all that was evidence for my 01 visa to come to the States.
Basically, my entire adult's life, I'm working in this,
which is crazy, right?
How old are you now?
I am 36.
I think. Wow. I think. You've been working on this since you're 21, I think. Yeah, 21.
Yeah, that's a wow. That's your whole life, your whole adult life. And, you know, it continued to like, you know, incrementally improve my life. So it wasn't this, you know, working in a room for 11 years and nothing happened. So I get this visa to the United States. And they go work at Code Academy. And they use. And they used.
the open source work that we did, right?
And a bunch of companies in the US,
there was like this boom and MOOCs,
if you remember that, Udacity, Cresera, whatever.
And a lot of them used the open source version of Replit
to create interactive courses.
And suddenly, like, the world opened up to me.
I'm getting job offers all over the place,
and have choices where to go.
And so we decided to go to New York.
Naval has this great quote where he says,
people always asking him about how to build a great network or networking.
What are your tips for networking?
My only tip for networking is do something great and watch your network will appear overnight.
People will immediately come to you because you've done something great, right?
You didn't go try to get a coffee with Brendan Ike.
You build something really cool that the creator of JavaScript and Mozilla browser was like,
hey, that's awesome.
I want to reach out and get to know you.
And I think that's actually how you, back to the YC thing,
I think that's how you ended up getting into YC later was Paul Graham.
actually just thought what you were doing was cool.
But let's go to the YC part.
So you quit the Facebook job, half the money in Bitcoin, half the money in your startup,
apply to YC, rejected.
That was the first rejection.
What were the other rejections?
VCs kind of wouldn't talk to us.
Or we'd get meetings with VCs.
Some of them are like yawning and I think one of them slept.
And it was just like not interesting to them.
Dude, I had that happen one time as well.
Like a guy literally fell, it was like, he was literally 80 and it was Friday at 4 and it was warm in the office.
And he like fell asleep mid, mid pitch.
Like it was warm.
Yeah, it was like a cold day.
It was warm inside.
So I was like, yeah.
I mean, like, what are you?
Yeah.
I was like, you deserve this.
But dude, what did they not see in you?
Because like it's so easy to be to look back in the past.
But like you seem like you got the it factor.
This seems like such an obvious idea.
You worked on it for two years.
smart people are talking about it?
What were you missing? What was the case against it?
Well, I think, you know, Silicon Valley is like probably the most meritocratic place in the world,
but it is also status-driven. At least then it was very status-driven.
Like, if you look at the white people who got in OIC, like with Stanford dropouts and things like
that, and I think since then, YC has improved and, you know, gets international people and all
of that. But, you know, my background wasn't really interesting to, to, to their.
I didn't have any fancy colleges or any of that.
Also, being married a couple was somehow like something that they thought it was a disadvantage.
You didn't match the patterns.
You didn't match the Stanford pattern.
You didn't match the co-founder relationship pattern.
You didn't match the trend of what categories have big exits.
You weren't on trend at that time.
Right.
Yeah.
And so continue to apply to YC.
Every season of OIC, we'll send in.
the application. And, you know, our thesis developed more, and we felt like we had started making
some money. Some people started paying for our service. We had an API at the time that people
paid for. A lot of educators and people learning the code started to pay for Replit. What was the
revenue when you got in? Like maybe 10 grad a month. It was enough to sustain us at that point.
It was like the ramen profitability. But before what I see, the person who actually,
actually, the first one to baton us was Roy Bahad from Bloomberg Beta.
So I knew him from my Code Academy days.
And it was such a, the meeting with him was so refreshing.
Like he was like just a straight shooter.
He would tell me like, here's where I think, you know, the idea or the category is hard.
You know, here is where I think the evaluation should be.
And it was like the first meeting.
it just gave me everything he was thinking about.
He didn't obscure anything,
and I was feeling really good about it.
And so, yeah, he gave us $500,000 on a $6 million valuation.
So that was the first check we got.
Nice.
And then how did you eventually get into YC?
So basically, you know, we're grinding and the product was getting better every week.
And I started writing articles about what we're solving.
So we're solving pretty hard problems.
And so this article kept going on Hacker News.
And Hacker News was really excited about what we're doing.
And Polk Grand Breads Hacker Nose a lot, probably still to this day.
And one day, like December 2017, I wake up, there's a DM on my phone, and it is Sam Altman.
And he's like, hey, I run YC, and we're interested in what you're doing.
I'm like, dude, I know who you are.
you have to tell me you run YC.
And he's like, okay, let's meet, you know, come to this address.
And it wasn't the YC address.
I was like a little confused.
And so I go there and it was the OpenAI office in the mission.
And so I meet him there and, you know, we're talking a little bit.
And then he's like, he turns this computer around.
He's like, this is Paul's email.
He emailed Sam and told him this company is very important.
You should reach out to them.
And he's like, okay, talk to PG.
I'm going to give you his email, talk to him.
And then maybe we can work on something to get you into YC.
So I started this email relationship with Paul, which was really fascinating.
I mean, he's a great writer, right?
And so we talked about, we talked about a rep load.
We talked about the problems of setting up an environment, the problems of hosting an application.
It turns out after he sold via web, he started working on something like,
replet. He started working on like an editor. You write some Lisp, of course, because he likes
this very obscure program languages. But by the way, Paul Graham is the founder of YC at the time
he was starting to retire, and Sam was running YC. And so, you know, we had this email relationship
where he wrote me essays essentially on the problem we're solving. By the way, were you intimidated?
Paul Graham writing essays to you privately. Are you like, is that high-stakes replies there for you?
Yes. I would spend hours kind of crafting the emails and trying to be as good of a writer as I can.
But, you know, one thing about me is, like, I was never, like, nervous about meeting, like, famous and established people.
And I think that helped me over time because, like, you know, I can be myself and I can talk to them at the same level as opposed to, like, being a fanboy or, you know.
Why was that?
Were you just oblivious to it or you just had a different mindset about it?
What was the reason?
Yeah, I felt like my life was taking on this trajectory that was not to be too superstitious,
but like it was this force.
And I felt like everything's going to be great and it's going to be hard,
but I'm meeting all these people, things are opening up to us.
And so when I go and meet people, my mindset is like, I want to impress them and I want to be able to, you know, get money from them or like, I have a goal.
And I think having a goal when you're meeting someone actually puts you in a very different mindset than, then again, like, fanboying and just being very excited about the meeting.
Dude, have you guys seen that, do you guys know the director, Guy Ritchie?
He's, that, like, British director.
He's got this great story.
who was on some podcast, I'm Joe Rogan.
And he was like, you know, I just want to be the director of my own life.
And I want to live my life like a movie.
And what you're describing is sort of like that where you're like, I just, I am destined for greatness.
And like, we are taking on this amazing problem.
And like, we are going to do wonderful things.
And it will be hard, but we will triumph.
And I think that's actually great.
That's a great story to tell yourself.
And I think it's very motivating.
And it makes life more exciting.
I think that's really cool.
Yeah, so I actually wrote a blog post.
The title is, do what makes the best story.
And the idea is like when you're faced with decisions
where there's no obvious answer,
like a fork in the road where the pros and cons are sort of the same,
the heuristic I use in my life is like,
what is a more interesting story?
And obviously, like Elon talks about this,
like the most entertaining outcome
is most likely.
Yeah, I wasn't thinking about it in terms of entertaining,
but in terms of like what makes the story interesting.
If my life was a movie,
what would be exciting about that story?
For example, when I was in college, I was like coding all the time
and I wasn't really going to class.
And so I was failing a lot,
not because I was failing the exam,
because they would bar me from the exam
because I wasn't showing up.
And I decided to hack the university to change my grades.
And we're not talking metaphorically, like a life hack.
You actually hacked into the servers and changed your grade.
Is that what happened?
Yeah, I went into the basement.
I spent like two weeks.
I did the, what's his name, the famous inventor, Michelangelo or something like that.
I did his sleep, polyphasic sleep, where you work for hours and then you sleep 15 minutes.
and it was sort of like I was writing on the wall.
I was like it was like a full on insanity.
Were you angry?
Why did you decide to have them?
I know so many smart people who work so much harder to cheat or get around the thing
than just doing the thing.
And there's like a 50% of the time they end up being like losers.
And then 50% of the time they are in fact like the greatest.
They're on this podcast.
Yeah.
Well, I think it is like some ADHD, right?
You can't sit in class,
but if you're interested in something,
you're going to hack and work on at a ton, right?
And I almost got away with it.
But the servers at the university crashed,
and it crashed on my record.
So one of the administrators there gave me a call.
And he said,
look, there's like this,
there's some anomaly in,
you're in the record of your exam in school and it's crashing our databases. Do you know anything
about it? And it was like, what's the anomaly? And he's like, you know, there's a field in the database
that says you're barred from the exam and your grade should be 35. That's the default grade of
failing the exam. And instead, my grades were like, you know, 75, 90, whatever. That's the, that's what I
entered into there, and I didn't understand that there was another field. By the way,
that's not good design for a database. Since then, I, you know, there was a fork in the road.
I could lie, and I think I could get away with it and, you know, and just say, like, that's a bug
on your side. But I was like, what's the most interesting story? Is they catch me, and it becomes a
story that people talk about. And I was like, okay, I'm just going to, I'm just going to, like, come
clean and just tell them what I did. So you're like, better than getting the grade would be
getting the reputation. Yes. Exactly. So you tell them, and then what happened, they kick you out?
No. So, you know, I'm kind of a convincing person. So I go the next day, and it's like all the
deans there and they're discussing my case and they're like trying to find out what what I did.
And they're all computer science deans.
So I went in there and I changed the subject to technical aspects of the hack.
And I drew on the whiteboard and showed them what I did and all of that.
And they were very impressed.
It's like a goodwill hunting moment.
Yeah.
And like my reputation back then is like I'm a loser.
I'm failing everything, right?
I don't show up to class.
and it is kind of like goodwill hunting.
And then, you know, they say, okay, you have to go talk to the president
because I think he's going to make the final call.
So I go to the president and he's a very intellectual person.
And we talk and I, you know, I tell him like, look, you know,
I have this talent and I feel like it was undiscovered and I feel like I was treated unfairly.
And I use the, you know, I use the university as my
sandbox. Like I didn't like, you know, I came clean. I didn't, you know, mean to to do anything,
anything bad. And, and, and he gave me the Spider-Man line. He's like, with great power comes
great responsibility. And it actually affected me. And I was like, okay, you know, you know, I think,
you know, I, I, I need to do something in order to, to, to kind of pay back. And I told
them, I'm going to work this summer for free to make sure I secure your databases.
And so they let me off the hook and they're like, okay, yeah.
What a great story, dude.
That is an amazing story.
Sam, by the way, would you ever want to compete with Amjad at anything?
No, this is like this mentality.
This is, it's scary.
Like, yeah, I would not want to.
You're like, excuse me, Dean, have you heard of the word prodigy?
You're like
You're like, I have my talents haven't been used well at this university
I accept your apology, Dean.
It's like, your fault, dude.
It's like, why are you failing me?
Yes.
That's so good.
Okay, so I love the principle, do what makes the best story.
I love the hack story.
That's amazing.
How did we get here?
We were talking about YC.
YC, okay, sorry.
Let's get to the story YC, yeah, because that's where we started.
Okay.
So Sam's like, yeah, you should do YC.
Actually, the batch starts tomorrow.
Why don't you fill an application?
It's just the process you have to do.
And we can do a late interview tomorrow.
And I'm like, fuck, I want to fill the application again.
Like, you made me do it like four times.
Like, I don't want to do it again.
And so, you know, I kind of do a bare bones application about Rathlet.
And then there's the video.
I'm like, yeah, man, I don't want to do the video.
So I pasted a YouTube link.
And we go the next day, hi, I.
By the way, for people who don't know, the YC application is like one page, it's like six or seven questions.
But then they say, upload a video, two or three minutes, you're talking about your startup.
So that's the video part.
And then the interview is 10 minutes where there's rapid fire.
So you have like 10 minutes and it's like this make or break thing.
It's less than a lunch.
You know, like there's less than a job interview.
It's more intense.
So you're waiting around for that.
Yeah.
I mean, my view was they recruited us to YC.
Like, why are you making us do this stuff, right?
And so...
Yeah, I was going to ask that.
Like, they're acting like, you know,
Paul Graham's like, you know,
maybe I could pull some strings.
It's like...
I know a guy.
Yeah, like, you're the guy.
So I don't understand what they're...
They're bullshit and I don't get it.
Well, I think they wanted to just like go through the process.
It's like the process applies to everyone.
And I respect that.
So, you know, they call us to the interview.
And I walk in and there was Jared and Adora and all these amazing YC partners.
And there's Michael.
He was the CEO at the time.
And I shake their hands and I shake Michael's hand and I felt like his grip was a little too hard.
I was like, okay, that's fine.
And then I go sit down on the chair and the moment I sit down, Michael looks at me.
Why did you recall us?
Oh, my God.
And I'm like, you know, we applied several times, and I thought it'd be fun to do.
And, you know, I thought this interview was just, you know, formality.
And he's like, that's not how you get into YC.
And he was very, very angry.
Well, it turns out when we're sitting outside, they're getting recrolled inside, right?
So imagine their mindset, looking at the application.
and getting the Rickroll song.
And then they give us a very tough interview.
In that moment, it's like, and that's when I realized I fucked up.
Like, did you realize how I'm coming across?
What was your mindset there?
Like, they must be thinking.
I was nervous.
I was very nervous.
And I was regretful immediately.
Yeah.
Because you probably, it's like, oh, here's this entitled,
just another tech entitled guy.
When they don't know, you're like, immigrant from Jordan
who's like scraped his way here, right?
They don't, reality and how you were coming across
weren't connected in that moment.
No, they weren't at all.
And so, you know, we go outside
and I tell how, okay, this is done,
let's call in Uber and get back to work.
Like, we don't have, we don't need to get into YC.
So I call an Uber.
And just before I arrive, I receive a call.
And I take the call and it's like, hey, it's Adora.
you got in, come back, the kickoff is about to start.
And I was like, what?
Are you sure?
She's like, yeah, come back, sign the paperwork and get started.
So I was stunned the whole day.
Like it was, you know, we go to the dinner and I'm like, you know, phased out and all.
But like it was really exciting.
And, you know, people who's never been to the YC office and Mountain View, it's all orange, like bright orange and the lights and everything.
it feels in like a cult-like environment.
Isn't it like, I think I've seen the inside.
Isn't it like a, like a, they have like a steeple or isn't like one of the rooms it like
is a triangle, like a church almost?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And Sam gets up and tells us what the experience is going to be.
It's like this is the hardest time you're going to work.
You know, you better tell your friends and family that you're going to go away for three months.
You can't help them move or all of that.
You just got to be focused on work.
So Haya and I took it very seriously.
Okay, I was like, okay, these three months are very important for the success of the company.
And we transformed the product in these three months.
It went from a simple sort of editor output to a place where you can host applications and build real things.
And all in three months.
And we're working, you know, 12-hour, 13-hour days.
And it was only three of us at that time.
our first employee actually was
sort of a runaway kid
he grew up in California
a little down south
and he didn't want to go to school
and so he leaves his home
he goes to Hack Reactor
and he becomes a programmer
and he was 18 he was looking for a job
I knew the guys that Hackery Actor
they used Replet and I'm like
send me your best programmer
and he's like look this kid is a little awkward
but he's the best and so he comes
there. He yells at our interview.
Music to my ears.
Yeah. And basically, I like him because, you know, it mirrors kind of my life story a little bit.
Where's this guy now?
But we got him some liquidity after six years of working.
I felt that's the right thing to do because he was kind of burnt out and didn't want to continue.
So I called my brother in Jordan.
I'm like, look, you got to come out here when YC, you need to, and he's a program.
I taught him programming when he was a kid.
And I was like, you got to come help us.
And he's still with us today.
And I call my friend from Code Academy, Moody.
He's still with us today as well.
And like, you got to help us.
Like, you know, you could do it remotely.
And so we assembled like a team of five people, essentially.
And so we go really hard.
And we were like one of the hottest companies in YC at the time.
And can you give some sense of the scale of it now?
Like, you know, I invested in it.
a year ago or two years ago or something like that.
I don't know when.
But the numbers were off.
You had user growth.
First, your graph looked like a hockey stick because you zoom out and you, you, it ignores
all of the little like years where nothing was really going on.
But you have this crazy growth, but the crazy thing about it is that your growth was
developers.
So it's like, you know, one developer user is worth, I don't know, 10, 20 times, just like a normal
internet user.
But you had this crazy hockey stick growth of developers.
Can you talk about, can you just say a couple of, like, permission to brag?
Can you say a couple of bragworthy stats that would impress us?
Yeah, so Replit was very easy to get started with.
And so people would start using it in college or high school
and continue using it for many years.
And so it was sticky for especially junior developers when they're starting out.
And it was spreading on a sound, like word of mouth.
There was a viral component to it.
people can share URL, and then suddenly you're in the same environment as them, right?
And then we have this like multiplier coding experience.
And so people were collaborating.
And also COVID was really great for us because we were, I think, the only collaborative
editor experience on the web at the time.
And so a lot of people were remote and needed something to work with each other.
And so Replode was adopted at the time.
And so the growth was off the chart.
and the servers were going down.
And the marginal user or any web app is sort of like zero, zero cost.
But for us, it was, you know, we try to optimize it a lot,
but it was still on the order of like $1 to $5, like a month.
And, you know, the growth was off the charts.
But I, you know, I have to admit it was hard to monetize at the time.
Because developers are actually not used to pay for things.
Now they kind of are paying for things because of AI.
But at the time, they weren't.
they weren't paying.
And then, you know, as we added limits and things like that,
they felt like they can like move on and set up their own developer environment.
And so it took a lot of, you know, creative thinking to figure out how to charge for people.
And ultimately, AI was the thing that people are paying for.
And the reason is like the productivity benefit of AI is like obvious.
and people are like, okay, this saves me time
and makes me about a developer.
And so people are paying for it right now.
Well, can you give any indication on how many users
or how much revenue the business is?
You know, signups, we have like more than 30 million,
I think 35 million users right now.
In terms of active users, it kind of fluctuates,
but, you know, two to three million a month,
probably 100,000 apps hosted in Replit.
Because you can build an app and deploy it all in one environment.
In terms of revenue, I can't share it right now,
but especially this year, it's been exponential growth.
Sam, check this out.
This agent thing, I've got to show you this.
So you haven't used this, right, Sam?
No, all right.
So watch this.
So yesterday I was like, I'm going to mess around.
I was doing research for this, but I was like,
I just got sucked into Replit, and I started doing that,
stopped doing research.
So I go and I go to Replit and it's changed because now when you, before when you would go,
it would be like, here's a coding screen with a blinking cursor.
And it's like, write some code.
And I'd be like, oh, cool.
I don't really write code.
So I don't know how to use this product exactly.
Maybe I could learn to code.
Maybe I could pay somebody to build something on here.
But whatever.
I was stuck.
So now you open up RETRPL.
And it just, it's like chat GPT.
It just goes, so what would you like me to create?
And so I go on there, watch this.
So I go, I'll give you the exact prompt.
I said, build me an app that will text me every morning asking how I ate yesterday.
Let me answer via text messages and then track the results on a monthly calendar grid.
If texting doesn't work, you could also use WhatsApp or something else.
Okay, so basically on the right here is just like the chat.
And it just goes, absolutely.
Let me propose what we'll build.
And then it just kind of like explains to me like a project manager.
It goes, I'm going to help you create a food tracking app through SMS messaging with a calendar visualizations.
We'll start with the SMS.
Later, we can add WhatsApp.
as an alternative.
It's like, okay,
okay,
prioritizing things.
That's interesting.
And then it goes,
the Apple send daily message,
blah, blah, blah.
And it goes,
how would you like me proceed?
And it's like,
there was like, you know,
add more features,
change the instructions,
or like, go ahead
and build the prototype.
So I clicked,
build the initial prototype.
And then literally,
I don't know if you can see this,
but like,
it starts like auto scrolling
as it's writing code.
Like, this is all just a code
it's generating.
So like, you know,
like, I'm not doing anything.
I'm literally sitting back
with popcorn while this is happening.
So it's like,
here's your calendar grid
and it's like
hey I need
I'm gonna use Twilio for the SMS
it decides
I'll use Twilio for the SMS
can you go to Twilio
and give me your account
and your phone numbers
so that it'll
we use Twilio
for sending SMS
so I go to Twilio
I give it my SMS
and then it's like
it's made
it literally made the thing
exactly how I want to
So this works now
yeah I actually got stuck
on the Twilio step
because Twilio has to verify
my phone number
so it like
it hasn't verified it yet
but I can go into
in Toilio I see
it tries to send me the message
and it's just as awaiting
a Twitter verification
to be able to use this.
So I'm like a little bit stuck there
which is like a common thing
with agents I feel.
It's like almost absolutely incredible
and then kind of frustrating
at some point where you have to like
you know, fight through some walls.
Well I think I'm just tweeted.
I think he said I want people to be able to build an app
faster that they can just Google
the answer to a question.
And that's exactly what happened here.
Well, that's insane.
So this screenshot
is the agent looking at the results.
is trying to verify.
This is not the running app.
If you click run,
you can hit the running app.
It's just the top.
Took a screenshot.
And then it shows it to me.
It's like,
hey, is this how you want it?
And I was like,
oh,
because before it had it
where it was like not the right month
on top.
I go, oh, put the month on top.
Like, don't say monthly food track.
I write December.
And then it also said like,
hey, would you like any other style improvements?
I can make it broader.
I can change the color scheme.
And I'm like,
this is literally better than an employee,
right?
Like, first, it's instantaneous.
Second, I could,
you know,
I don't have to pay somebody to sit in the desk to sit around waiting for me to do something.
I had an idea on a whim, go to rep, and did the thing with the agent.
This was a, like, there's been a few, like, mind-blowing moments for me in my, like, tech career.
You know, like, I graduated 2010.
So I'll start at that point where it's, like, the first time I took an Uber, I was like,
holy shit.
That was amazing.
I pushed a button.
A car showed up.
The guy got in.
I didn't even have to pay full.
Like, it just paid through my phone.
That was magic.
And I could see it on.
I could see him on.
an app getting closer and closer to the restaurant. That was like one of them. You know,
chat GPT for sure was another where I could just, you know, tell it to make something and write
something and write it for me. This is another one of them. This is the first AI agent thing that has
like been a mind-blowing moment for me where I am not a programmer. I am not a coder, but I can now
create software. This is like amazing. Can I ask a blunt, crude question? How can I use your software
to become a billionaire because like I see this and I'm like you know like the the the ridiculous
analogy that I use is I'm like I feel like an artist sometimes where like I feel like I have
the ability to conceptualize certain things but I can't paint it's like I can't fucking paint
what I want to paint that's in my head like because I literally don't have that skill set sometimes
and so like I'll be working on stuff and I'm like dude I want this to do this but I got to go
talk to this developer and I don't want to have this conversation and that's just like a pain in the
ass.
You basically are making it so I can finally express myself easily.
I like how you're on the first date.
You're like, how can I get you to take the clothes off?
You're like, how do I use your thing to get really rich?
I mean, that's basically like, and you had on the document, you're like, here's just,
here's the opportunities.
Just use Replit to do X, Y, and Z.
And I want to go through that because this is like amazing.
This is actually, you know, there's like a viral clip on YouTube or Twitter, like in a bunch
places where it's like the headline, which we probably have used, which is like billion
dollar one-person companies or something like this, you're the closest person to this probably
to that question, to answer that question. Yeah, so there are apps built on Replit agent that
otherwise would take probably $100,000 of developer time. And you can build it like in,
you know, $25 paid to Replit. I will say that there's limitations.
right. It is not perfect.
This is like the worst it's going to be.
It sometimes gets stuck with problems.
You need to have some skill in prompting to coax it to like figure it out.
And it's sort of like teaches you over time because it tells you what it's doing as it's
editing the code.
And so over time you're learning how to use.
You're actually learning how code works.
You're learning how maybe you're not learning how to exactly type code, but you're
learning the different components in where things could go wrong.
learning about database. We have like database. You can go in and look at the tables and look
what's happening. And so, you know, the division for this is that that's all you need.
That's all you need to build an entire startup. And, you know, every day we're inching towards
that. And I talked about like pushing the boulder up the hell. And I think that's one of my,
one of my talents is like, okay, what are the problems that you can make progress on every day and
every week such that in a year time,
you have this exponential progress,
and the product is so much better.
The other thing is we're writing this wave
of the foundation model is getting better.
So every time they get better, we plug in a new foundation model,
and the product is suddenly better.
So you're writing this two exponential curves,
which is like the engineering we're doing,
but also the underlying models and infrastructure is getting better.
So I think in a year's time, it's going to be really mind-blowing.
In a couple of years' time, I think we're going to see stories like someone getting super rich,
making an app in Replit that sort of goes viral.
So we're adding Stripe integration right now.
You can already use kind of Stripe on Replit, but we're adding integration that makes it
super easy to start monetizing your app.
So Sam said, how do I get rich?
And you're like, disclaimer, it's not fully there yet.
But now you still have to answer the question.
I mean, the question is, like, what kind of applications?
It's like, what are the ideas?
What kind of applications you can build?
I would say AI applications are growing really fast.
Like, the revenue ramp in some of those AI applications is kind of crazy.
Can you tell the story of Magic School?
I thought this was really interesting.
Yeah.
So Magic School is like an AI application for educators.
It's basically, like, helping them use foundation models and LLMs to do their work,
to do assignments for kids to have an interactive, like AI experience.
And so it's like a full suite of AI for educators.
The guy who created was a teacher, right?
The guy who created was a teacher.
He took some time during COVID to learn how to code,
and he started using Replit.
And him and I think another person built the initial thing totally on Replit,
because you can go from an idea all the way to deployment.
and it immediately started growing.
Like, you know, these AI apps,
like when the adoption starts happening,
it goes super viral.
You don't need a ton of marketing.
And the revenue ramp was one of the craziest ones
I've seen, especially for education.
Yeah, it was like a known thing.
It was like hardest thing you could do
sell into schools, into teachers.
They're overworked, they're underpaid.
They don't have the time to, like,
figure out your new tool.
But this thing is great.
So if you go to it, it's basically like,
because teachers spends a lot of their time, not in the classroom.
It's after school is done.
They have to grade papers.
They have to create the lesson plan for the next day.
They have to create the quizzes or the multiple choice tests.
And they have to constantly do these.
And there was these platforms like teacher pay teachers where I could just,
if I don't want to make it myself because I'm tired after the school day,
I might be able to go buy one for nine bucks from another teacher who teaches fifth grade science
in some other state.
And I would take that and I would buy it that way.
What Magic School did was like, cool, generate a quiz.
You just say, like, I teach fifth grade biology.
I want to do a pop quiz about, you know, how mitosis works.
And then it will basically create either a lesson plan or a quiz or, you know,
a student like interactive, like, you know, workbook that they need to create or whatever.
And so it lets a teacher not have to spend, you know, four hours a night creating the materials that they need just to teach class because AI can do it for them.
And this thing looks, I don't know, these guys, I don't know anything about them, but it says, you know, over four million educators are using this, which are four million educators and their students, which I don't know if they're counting both.
Well, if you go on similar web, they have millions a monthly unique. So that's like a pretty big thing. I think they raised like 20 million bucks too. Yeah. So I mean, that's like a pretty huge signal. So they launched in like, I want to say July, 2023. So they're like a little over a year. And do you know that these like SaaS metrics are like how long?
to get to whatever, like 100 million or whatever, the AI apps, and I would say Magic School,
is on that trajectory, is like just like that. You know, the curve is like, you know, all the
way straight up. This is kind of weird, but maybe this is like a feature of yours that you
helped this company become potentially one of the faster growing companies of all time, and
you only earn $20 a month from that. Yeah. So Replit had, you know, always a problem.
of value capture.
Honestly, that's why VC struggles with it for a long time,
so that there's some logic for why it is hard to monetize these things
and, like, capture some of the value.
I will say, you know, I invested in Magic School,
so there's some of that.
And with AI, I think we're going to be able to, you know,
capture at least a little bit more of that value.
If people are monetizing these apps on Replit via the agent,
there's a way, I think, where we can potentially take a cut out of that,
especially if we make it super simple to start monetizing an app.
And also, once we reach scale, it is like Chachapiti.
You don't need a lot of skill to do that, and it's going to get easier and easier.
Once we reach scale and you have millions of people paying for this,
and it's not just like 20 bucks, you're going to pay incremental after you finish your credits.
So we give you monthly credits, and then afterwards, if you want to continue,
you can buy more credits.
Are there other companies like Magic School,
like cool companies that you've seen
that maybe we haven't heard of that are using AI?
Yes.
So, you know, I'm very excited about agents right now.
And, you know, I think I predicted earlier this year
on a podcast that, you know,
this is going to be the year where, like, agents are born.
And next year is like where agents are going to scale.
So there's this company called 11X.
and 11X creates AI SDRs.
And so basically you don't need to hire SDRs.
Like there are some companies that feel like, you know,
they can boost-rap their sales without S-DR.
You can have like one A-E and that A-E account executive
is like running these like tens of AI SDRs.
And the revenue ramp on 11X was also crazy.
It's pretty wild how fast these kinds.
companies are scaling. I don't think in the history of Silicon Valley, we've seen anything like that,
even in the, like, Web 2.0 era. So what is like a fast ramp for AI, for an, maybe not 11X
specifically, but just for an AI company? What's like, what's impressive that kind of broke the
frame of what, how long things would take, but you've seen it now. Yeah. So I would say
reaching 10 million in three or four months. ARR. Oh my God. That's wild. Yeah, we, I invested in
Jasper, which was like one of the early
kind of chat GPT rapper type of companies
where they was like, hey, like marketing,
you know, you need to write a blog post.
You need to write a description for a product or whatever.
And so you could use it for writing any kind of marketing copy.
And their graph was, I'd never seen it.
It was like in 10 months or 11 months,
they scaled like 50 million in annual recurring revenues.
It was like, I've never seen anything even remotely close to that.
It brought up a question.
Like, is this sustainable?
is this like what is happening here?
Like this is,
it doesn't compute,
but it definitely broke my frame of what is possible
because I'd been working,
you know,
in Silicon Valley since,
you know,
2011,
1112,
and that just,
that wasn't a thing.
You would never see a graph like that.
What are some other companies
that got into that,
like 10-ish or 10-ish million
or similar trajectory in three-month type of businesses?
Yeah.
So this is,
I wanted to kind of give a,
you know,
sort of a disclaimer about this,
which is,
the big question in the investor community right now
is like the moats question.
And that started around the time
that Chad GPD kind of came out
and there was these GPD wrappers
sort of this condescending way
of looking at a lot of these companies.
It's like, if you can create GPD wrapper
in a month, then a lot of other people
will create GPD wrappers in a month
and you're going to be competing on price
and the margins go down.
And yes, the ARR is great,
but anthropic is capturing
or opening eyes capturing most of the air are, not you.
You're kind of like a middleman
and you're going to have a hard time having margins.
And I think it's totally a valid question.
Now, I think, you know, modes develop over time
through strategy and technical excellence.
So, I mean, some of these companies can go down pretty fast
and there are examples of that right now.
but I think if you
you know you can have
you can start building technical
like with Replit
again this like idea of like pushing a bull
of a hell
you know we have this runtime
environment we have like this
infrastructure we have the deployment
we have databases
we have all these integrations
and I mean it's the only one
in the world that is like an end to end
environment to make software
and like to catch up with that
it's going to take years right
But technical advantage is also not a long-term moat.
And so, again, it's a big question.
I don't think it's answered yet.
There's strategic things you could do if you reach scale.
If the switching costs are high, you know, that may be like a way to have sustainable modes.
But it is definitely a big question.
You know what's crazy, Sean?
Like for the long, I hate using the D word democratize.
I think that's like such an overused silicon value.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
But this is actually one of those phozing.
few examples where, like, for the longest time, building a website or a web app, like,
you just literally couldn't. And so now you are making the technology that everyone can do it.
And so what I think is, like, guys like Sean and me are people like us who have an audience.
It's like, why don't we just, why aren't we like constantly launching like companies using
this technology? Because like our ability to get users, because we just get on the microphone
and talk about it, that's like actually a competitive advantage.
whereas being technical is no longer, it's still an advantage,
but it's not as much as before.
It's like getting customers now is actually the only hard part,
which is still hard, but it's way easier if you're popular.
Yeah, so the playbook I would use is like,
I would go into some inefficient market or industry.
So a deal from Magic School went into this hugely inefficient industry,
which is schools in education.
And by the way, another product is synthesis tutor,
which is also going viral right now.
And they have also this revenue ramp that's kind of crazy.
Both Sean and I invested in that company.
I think all three is good.
Yeah.
Yeah, and for a while, they had like this thing where like,
you know, they had educators on the payroll and whatever.
They replaced all of that with AI.
Now, like, you know, the kids sit in front of the iPad
and they're talking to the AI and, like, learning really fast.
And it's much better than the previous product.
Right.
So basically, like, find an industry where you're familiar with
and just, like, build the DEPT wrapper to, like, automate some of the work there.
And, like, you could do it, like, a hundred times and one of them will take off.
Yeah, it's the era of the idea guy now.
It's our turn.
It's our turn to shine, right?
Because now the limits and the kind of the, the, kind of the,
value creation is, do you understand a problem well enough to know how to take this really
powerful magic wand and point it at that problem and be able to make that more efficient?
And then, of course, do all of the other hard things.
Go get customers, make it sustainable, build a good team, you know, like do all the normal
entrepreneurship stuff.
But it seems like more than ever having a great idea is the kind of like key unlock to
doing these things because building has become easier.
And I'll give you kind of my personal epiphany that I had while I was doing this.
So I invested in Replit mostly when I just thought,
you seemed really smart, and I saw a growth curve of developers using it.
And I thought, oh, cool.
Like, I've experienced this problem before, like a one-stop place where I can come in,
write the code, host it, all the stuff you talked about.
Like, don't have to download Java.
Don't have to do any of that shit.
That appealed to be on the time.
I think actually in the same way that synthesis, like, took AI and actually almost like really,
like 10x to the value prop of the business.
I think you guys are in the same.
So here's my quick pitch, which is now that I think of Replit as like, basically what Shopify was for creating, you know, like online stores.
I think Replit is that for creating software.
So to me, you guys are.
Dude, his eyes just brightened when you shut up the knowledge.
So like, I'll give you my example.
I recently celebrated a milestone that was both, I was proud of it and really embarrassed also.
So a few years ago, I started an e-commerce brand.
and we just crossed 50 million in revenue,
like kind of like cumulative lifetime revenue.
Half of it was like, you know, this year,
but but 50 million total.
And I was like, wow, like 50 million.
That's great.
Like that's,
I had never created a business
that had done 50 million in revenue.
So that was like a personal pride point.
At the same time,
I was telling it to a friend of mine
who's not an entrepreneur.
He's like, yeah, man,
I would love to learn how to, you know,
like make websites and like make products and manufacturing.
And I was like, oh, I don't know how to do any of that.
Like, I was like, this,
this brand that is in 50 million in revenue for me,
I just stacked Alibaba times Shopify.
I've never manufactured a product in my life,
still don't know how to.
And I've never made a website that's like,
you know, actually used by customers,
still don't know how to.
But I was able to skip all the work
and get to the brand part,
like do the thing where we created a product
that people liked and, you know,
it's a successful company now.
And I thought, wow,
Replit's going to do that for the software space.
And I was like,
it used to be that the,
job was software engineer, and now it's going to be software creator.
It's like, I can be a creator of software without being a programmer myself.
That little shift is a big shift because the way I think about it, I don't know how many
developers there are.
I think GitHub has like 100 million or 200 million accounts, so I'll just use that.
Like there's 200 million, let's say, developer, software engineers in the world.
Well, now there's going to be 2 billion people that can create software.
Because if you got the internet, you got your phone, you can create software now.
You can just tell the agent, make me an app that does this, make a tool that does this.
And so you 10x the number of people that can create software in the same way that Shopify and Alibaba, 10x or more the number of people who could create products and go sell them like hard goods.
That's how I see what you're doing.
Yeah.
So even at the start of Replett, there's our initial seed deck.
And the deck kind of has this Ilo-Musk style, like, you know, a master plan.
And it was like, we build a, you know, we build a platform, we grow it, and then AI is going to make the thing a lot more accessible.
Because our mission was make programming accessible.
Then we updated our mission.
It was create a billion programmers.
And then so the moment that, you know, even GP3 came out, I was like, this is the thing.
And I wrote this thread on Twitter about how AI.
agents will just change how
programmers work. This is the deck.
So 2015, this is, I don't even
know if opening I was a research lab
at that time, maybe. Definitely,
you know, there was no chatyPD, but this is your
master plan deck. So, we're
going to grow by building tools for teachers
and students. We're going to build a simple network and
AI-assisted interface that blurs the distinction between
learning and building. Evolve a new platform
where people can learn, build, explore, and host
applications. Like, talking about AI back in
2015 in your, in your actual
pitch deck. Dude, it's also clear
how Code Academy
was highly influential to you
because I remember years ago
Sean said everyone tries to learn how to code.
I used Code Academy and it was a pretty cool interface
and it's very similar to what you're describing.
You know, at some point
I kind of lost hope
in courses
because like, you know,
we have 100 days of code.
We're telling users that to use
our application, you need to
invest 100 days.
That's kind of crazy.
Like there isn't
any successful company in the world
you need 100 days to learn it.
And so that's when I kind of
changed my mindset and I said,
okay, it needs to be chat,
you like, it needs to be just a prompt.
And we started building that earlier this year.
And now that's all we're focused on.
We want to create new programmers.
You know, existing developers, great,
they have a lot of tools.
But we want to go after the citizen developer, right?
everyone is a developer.
And I think that's, you know, that's what you're talking about.
You go from like 100 million developers of the world.
Well, I think it overstates the number.
It's probably more 30 million.
And then you 10x that.
And so what does the world look like
when anyone with an idea could make something?
And one of my favorite books is the sovereign individual.
The thing I really was excited about
is this idea of ideas become wealth.
And so you no longer have the bottleneck
of making something. That's where we're headed. And this is what you're talking about,
Sean, is like the, it's the time for idea guy. And like maybe that's, you know,
tongue and cheek. And like maybe the way to talk about it in more precise terms is that people
who can find these gaps in markets, people who have expertise in certain areas that they can tell
there's inefficiency, and they can, like, create an AI application that can immediately
plug that.
Like, I saw this video on Twitter the other day.
It was of a snake that got its head chopped off, and it, like, floated around and bit the
bit, like, the tail of its own body.
And then, like, the body, like, reacted.
Your employees, are they thinking that they're sort of doing that to themselves, where
they're, like, when you make jokes.
Dark.
Or, like, when you, like, when you, like, talk about, like, you don't need to hire all these
programmers to do all this stuff. Are they like sitting there with their hands in their pocket?
Like, does that be nice?
You know, I always wanted the company to be super lean. And so for a long time, we're like 10 people.
But like now we're like 70 people. That's still nothing.
Yeah. So I'd rather not hire a lot more people because I think that, again, the efficiency
for programmers, so look, citizen developers are going to go from zero to like, say, 10x.
But also existing software engineer are going to go from 10x to 100x, right?
And so they're going to become more and more productive.
The moment we automate all of software engineering,
I think that's sort of like the moment of AGI.
So I think it's like a little far away.
And the reason I say this is because once you automate software,
then the agents can rebuild themselves.
And you go into this loop of,
you know, increased intelligence.
Every version builds its next version, builds its next version.
And so this is what they call intelligence explosion that would lead to the singularity, right?
So it's like a pretty crazy time when we automate all of software engineering.
And so I think it's coming.
I don't know if it's 10 years or 15 years.
But I think that's the time where the world really radically changes.
Have you met anybody in kind of the tech industry that blew you or?
way, either personally or maybe you've read about them, maybe you met a friend of a friend of a friend told you a story. Because I saw a picture of you with Jensen. You know, you've met Paul Graham. I know that you're like connected in the AI circles. You met Sam Altman. In addition to building the tech, I love the characters and I love the stories. Is why every, you know, Elon snippet of how he runs his companies goes viral and shit like that. What are your favorite kind of inspiring stories or crazy stories that you've either experienced directly or read?
Yeah, one of the curious story when we're raising from A16 and Z,
Mark invites me to breakfast at like 10 a.m. at his house.
And so I go there and I expect like I'm going to talk about the business.
And so we spend like two or three hours talking about politics and the world and like all sorts of things that are interesting to him.
And I thought like this guy is like more than just a technologist.
He's like a philosopher.
And so right now he's going out and he's talking about this stuff.
Like his Joe Rogan interview went super viral.
and he's been always have like these interesting ideas about about the world.
And the interesting thing about A16Z is his partner, Ben, is sort of like the executor,
sort of the executive, right?
He wrote the hard thing about hard things where like he teaches you like about what it means
to run a company.
It's painful.
It's hard.
And what it means to hire executive, what it means to scale a company.
And so you have this duo of like the duer and like the philosopher.
and I think
that's really amazing
and I think they're
they have really big plans
and almost just getting started.
I would just hate the philosopher.
I'd be like, are you going to do anything?
What are you talking about politics for right now?
It's got to be the worst
to be the doer and the doer philosopher relationship.
Right.
You know, I think
Sam was interesting
to kind of meet him and talk to him
because he's very effective.
Like he,
like the first time I met,
I met him, or like, maybe not the first time, but like, he was on his computer as I am talking.
And so I'm talking. I was like, yeah, we're fundraising. I went to talk to, you know, A6 and Z.
I'm like really big fan of Mark, and he was typing on his computer. Okay, I introduced you to Mark.
And then, you know, when you send Sam emails, it's like pretty quickly replies with like a, you know, a couple words or like a couple sentences.
So I saw how effective and fast you can be.
I'm not like that.
I'm trying to be more like that,
but I'm someone who really values the quietness,
like to think about ideas and to think about strategy and things like that.
So I'm not always in top of communication.
It actually makes me like a little, you know, it's overwhelming.
But I think seeing these people, at least, you know,
inspired me to be a little more like that.
You tweeted out the story that I loved about.
You said, the most gangster story in Silicon Valley is Steve Jobs buying Pixar for $5 million,
investing 50 million and operating at a loss for a decade,
so much so that he had to cut personal checks to make payroll,
and somehow turning it around to a $7 billion exit.
Why did you like that story?
You know, there are people who are overrated in Silicon Valley,
and I think there are people who are underrated.
I think people think about Steve Jobs
in terms of like, yeah, the flashy things,
iPhone, the iPod, you know,
coming in stage and doing that.
The thing I like about the Steve Jobs story
is when he was lost in the desert for 10 years.
So he left, he was fired from Apple.
And then he created two companies
that were failing the whole time.
Like Next Computing, Next Computers,
and Pixar were literally failing.
Like they didn't do it.
anything. They weren't selling. He was just like investing more and more of his money. I think
he was going to go broke. But he kept going for 10 years. Like, how do you do that? And I'm a person who,
like we talked about in my story where I want to be able to go the distance. I think going the
distance is an advantage for entrepreneurs. And Pixar became this hugely valuable company.
and it goes from making no revenue
to making billions of dollars
and going public over a couple of years.
And next computers saved Apple.
Apple was having a problem with OS.
Intel, they had a chip before,
I don't know, they made it internally
or something like that.
And then everyone was moving to Intel.
Intel was the best computing chip
and they wanted their computers to be fast.
And so they needed a new,
operating system. And they tried to buy, they went to the market, they tried to acquire
companies, they kind of find a great operating system. And Next Computing had a great operating
system. And that became Mac OS. So they bought... I didn't know that. I thought Next was just a failure.
I didn't even realize it actually... I thought they just bought Steve back Aquahire, but it wasn't
an Aqua. It wasn't just Acquire. No. I mean, Objective C, for example, you know,
Next computing was really obsessed with this idea of object and
programming and they innovated a lot on what that means. And, you know, it is based on Unix,
but it has a lot of interesting features on top of that. So Apple, it saved Apple because Apple
was otherwise not going to be competitive without these new chips. Right. Well, dude, I know we
kept you half an hour over. I apologize for that. But this was amazing. This was one of my favorite
episodes in a long time. And I'm not just saying that. You can go check all the other episodes.
I don't say that at the end. So this was awesome. Thanks so much for coming on.
worship people, Twitter is the best place to follow you?
Yeah, Twitter, Amos Haad on Twitter,
and the Rupplet handle on Twitter as well, just REPL.
Dude, thank you very much. You're the best.
Of course, my pleasure.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days off.
On a road, let's travel, never looking back.
