TBPN Live - AGI in 2035, SoftBank Sells Nvidia, Buffett Goes Quiet | Diet TBPN

Episode Date: November 12, 2025

Our favorite moments from today's show, in under 30 minutes. TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.a...ppEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.com/tbpnFin - https://fin.ai/tbpnGraphite - https://graphite.devRestream - https://restream.ioProfound - https://tryprofound.comJulius AI - https://julius.aiturbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comfal - https://fal.aiPrivy - https://privy.ioCognition - https://cognition.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Everyone has 10-year AGI timelines right now. It started when Sam Altman put out that post, like, Super Intelligence is just a few thousand days away. And at the time, it was kind of odd because, like, when he wrote that post last year, everyone was like, AGI is one year away. AGI is two years away. He was like fast takeoff time.
Starting point is 00:00:17 Like, everyone was very excited. And then he came out and was like, it's a few thousand days away. And so Sam came out and, you know, and he was kind of in his blog post of the super intelligence age, talking about, you know, maybe we're a decade away. Then Andre Carpathie goes, path he goes on Dorcasch just a couple months ago a couple weeks ago says a GI is a
Starting point is 00:00:33 decade away and then Dorcasch posts this this probability density of of when a GI will be achieved there's a chance that America does it there's a chance that China does it and the median the 50th percentile was exactly 2035 then you know that that that chart that like very schizo chart that says periods when to make money have you seen this no around on X and it's like it was created like I guess, about 100 years ago. People references it any time it actually aligns to events because it basically has years in which panics have occurred,
Starting point is 00:01:07 years of good times, high prices, and time to sell stocks, and years of hard times, low prices, and a good time to buy stocks. And so it's basically like astrology for stock picking, right? And what is it saying right now? 2035 is a year, they're predicting, is when a panic will occur.
Starting point is 00:01:26 Ooh, interesting. Well, that certainly aligns with all these AGI. timelines. There you go. And then I was looking at meter and this one will have to debate a lot more, but meter has been tracking AI's ability to complete long tasks. And it's growing exponentially. It used to be like six seconds. Now it's like two hours. And, you know, when you talk to anyone who's in the AI field, they'll tell you that the agents are getting more and more capable of handling longer, longer time horizon tasks. The question is, I feel like humans don't have a time horizon. I feel like humans, they're just born, and the goal is, like, survive, be fruitful, multiply, right?
Starting point is 00:02:04 Yeah. And so I feel like if you're tracking the meter data, you need to get out to like 30 years, like a full career, right? Like the prompt needs to be like, go make money. And then it just goes and becomes a lawyer and, you know, lives its full life and retires after 35-year run. And, of course, when you track out the doublings, one in 2035, the meter is projecting based on that log curve or that logs that log graph that AI will be able to have a time horizon in the in the decades my read on the meter data is that you know a GI 2035 again it's kind of it's made me the messiest the the least like definitive but what's interesting is that it just feels like 10 years is this consensus right now and there's much less diversity of opinion there aren't that many people saying two years
Starting point is 00:02:56 anymore. There aren't that many people saying 50 years anymore. Everyone's kind of saying 10 years. And I just wonder, like, let's put aside like, let's try and accurately predict when this thing happens. And let's just analyze it from a psychological perspective. And like, what does it mean when the tech community all has a consensus of something that's a decade? Like a decade away could just be what people say when they don't know. Like if you ask me when flying cars are going happen, I'm going to say a decade. If you're going to say when quantum computing, oh, that'll be a decade. Oh, Mars, yeah, that's a decade. Most people underestimate what they can accomplish in one year and underestimate what they do, what they can do in 10 years.
Starting point is 00:03:37 And in this situation, we're just like, yeah, we're estimating that we can just achieve AI in 10 years. When I personally feel like about AGI, like I'm convinced by these. Like, I feel like AGI is 10 years away. And I don't feel like I'm like coping or doing some sort of like mental logic jumps or something. It's just like if you actually force me to put a prediction down, I probably would say about a decade. Then I go to well, well, like how should I actually be changing my behavior? Like if something big is coming in a decade, it feels like you should actually, should not just be acting normally. It feels like there's some sort of preference falsification going on. Like how many, everyone's saying a decade. How many people are actually
Starting point is 00:04:20 acting like it's a decade like what should you be doing in the intervening years if it's a decade away like are you just supposed to like build technologies that are fun little dopamine rewards are you trying to like accumulate as much capital as possible before who plans around 10 years at all right people tend to go for things that they want today yeah in some ways right so somebody like let's say they're in their 20s yeah like I want to own a home yeah by the time by 2035 yeah they want that thing today and so they under but they might understand okay it's going to take some time to get there yeah but actually making real changes in your life for this like impending scenario that's hard to predict entirely it's very to very difficult and I don't know that you know it was maybe more
Starting point is 00:05:06 popular earlier this year to joke about you know uh what you know the golden retriever maxing right oh yeah we would we would talk about this right um but it feels like that dialogue has kind of changed. Tyler, what do you think about my take? What do you think what do you agree with? What do you disagree with? I think it's definitely interesting that people seem to kind of align around this tenure thing. I think there's also some sort of bias, right? If you think AI is coming in three years, you're probably not just going to be like writing blogs. Like maybe you're going to start a macro hedge fund. Maybe you're going to go work at one of the labs to really try to influence how it's going to happen if it's going to happen super
Starting point is 00:05:45 quick. So I think there's some sense of that. And if you really really, don't believe AGI is coming at all, then, like, you're also probably not going to be writing blogs about AGI. You're just going to be, like, doing your normal job or whatever. So I think there's some, like, confirmation bias there. Tyler's probably the most AGI-pilled person on the team. And so it's interesting that you're, you kind of day-to-day acts like everyone else on the team. Yeah. What's your biggest revealed preference? That's hard to say. Maybe just hanging out them the show. Yeah, just hanging out podcasting instead of going to university. He's just like, yeah, nothing matters. This clip of Alex Wang that's sort of going viral, people are dunking on it
Starting point is 00:06:24 because he recommends the kids learn to vibe code. And I just disagree with the haters. I think the haters are wrong on this one. And I was thinking about like, well, I have a kid, like, would I teach him to vibe code? And I was playing with Legos last night. I was assembling Legos. And from what I've done vibe coding and what I've done Legos, I'm like, this is going to be very fun. and this is going to be an activity that we do together. And I'm super, I'm like super in agreement that I think learning to vibe code is good. What do you think, Tom? I think, like, the point of view of, like, the people hating were that, like, oh, your 13-year-old should be, like, making B2B SaaS.
Starting point is 00:07:00 Which is, like, not, that's different than saying they should be vibe coding. Because vibe coding is just like, it's like basically playing a video game or it's like making Minecraft mod or something. That's, like, seems totally fine. Yeah, some of the criticism was like, you should just be doing. really hard things you have to ask is like okay should 13 year olds like only be hand coding like if you want to get them into maybe making doing engineering work is it yeah they be doing it with the pen and like what it what is the alternative when I was 13 I was working on little iPhone apps yeah and knowing the vibe coding tools that are available today I would have been able to
Starting point is 00:07:37 make way more progress I would have had a lot more fun yeah it would have been like having an expert software engineers sitting next to me kind of like paraprogramming, right? And so I'm on your side. I think people generally just don't like Alex because he's been wildly successful. He's basically the youngest, most successful person in the world. With Alex Wang, he's like, yeah, he's rich,
Starting point is 00:08:02 and I have no idea what the thing I don't interact with it at all. Fun fact, so in fifth grade in the yearbook, they asked like what you want to be. I put investor. Investor in fifth grade? Yeah. I didn't even really know what that meant. SoftBank's big profits jump this quarter came from Open AIs increased valuation. That SoftBank lifted higher by buying shares from employees and selling them at a higher price.
Starting point is 00:08:26 And so there is a question about, is this too circular? It's unclear if SoftBank was really the price setter on this deal, but Just Dario is certainly... Just Dario is saying SoftBank books a capital gain on an investment. it hasn't paid for and recorded in its assets. There's a scenario where you would do this if you were a company that invested in a fund. Yes. And it's called maybe some capital,
Starting point is 00:08:52 but not all of it yet. And so you can show that there's a gain, even though you haven't paid, actually paid in the capital yet. Yes. But I think the way in which SoftBank is doing this. It doesn't seem illegal, but I think it's non-traditional.
Starting point is 00:09:07 Sophie over on X says SoftBank is selling its Nvidia stake. to fund companies whose main expense is buying from NVIDIA. The more important thing here is that this is not the first time Mossa has exited NVIDIA. He exited in 2019 before the run-up. He was then NVIDIA's largest shareholder, and he had a 5% stake in the company that he sold for $3.6 billion, and it would now be worth over $200 billion. Are people mad about this because they think NVIDIA is going to ripped further? Selling your stake in NVIDIA. Yeah, yeah. So basically, SoftBank is booking profits.
Starting point is 00:09:48 Sure. Open AI profits. They are then selling NVIDIA shares to fund the original investment in which they've already booked the profits on. And the number one driving force behind NVIDIA's growth is Open AI. Today we will get the soft bank completely sold out of NVIDIA, fear from bears on mainstream media and Wall Street. Does anyone do objective research anymore? SoftBank initially bought, its NVIDIA stake through the Vision Fund in 2017, then exited completely in January 19. They missed it. They lost patience, not the first time. Yeah, when did they buy this latest slug?
Starting point is 00:10:22 That's the question. SoftBank sold 32 million shares of NVIDIA in October, also sold part of its stake in T-Mobile for $9 billion. It's not the first time they've cashed out of the chipmaker. That's a funny way to put it. Despite the sales soft bank remains tied to NVIDIA through its other ventures, yeah, that makes sense. Warren Buffett says he's going quiet, the world's most famous investor. warns against corporate greed as he prepares to hand over the reins of Berkshire Hathaway.
Starting point is 00:10:46 The 95-year-old will step back from day-to-day responsibilities at Berkshire at the end of this year when he retires from his role as chief executive. Craig Abel, of course, is coming in. Investors have long seen Buffett often called the Oracle of Omaha as a corporate folk hero interspersing guidance on his portfolio company's performance with life and business advice. He noted, for instance, that requirements for executive compensation disclosures backfired, as business chiefs engaged in a race to earn more than rivals. What often bothers very wealthy CEOs, they are human after all, is that other CEOs are getting even richer, Buffett said, envy and greed walk hand in hand.
Starting point is 00:11:25 Buffett added that Berkshire should try to avoid future CEOs who are looking to retire at 65 or who want to become, look at me rich, or initiate a dynasty. Look at me rich. Buffett has never been photographed doing a money spread. wearing Valenciaga, Rick Owens. Yeah, so he took the pledge to give away, to give away his wealth. And so it's going to be a pretty big changing of the guard.
Starting point is 00:11:55 There's that interesting stat that like, if you go back 30 years ago when Buffett was 65, he was, I don't think he was close to the richest man in the world. He compounded a ton in, his third 30 year run, like from 65 to 95, he had a particularly good run that took him from pretty rich to one of the richest people in the world. It's very rare. We just don't see that many business executives or that many people broadly where that's like the highlight of the career is 65 to 95. Buffett has commissioned no plays, no poems, no symphonies, no operas, no
Starting point is 00:12:35 ballets, funded no paintings or sculptures that will outlive him, endowed no theaters, choirs, orchestras, built no monuments, monasteries. Is this true at all? He's committed to giving away half of his wealth. So, like, some of the money is going to wind up with the opera, I imagine, just because it's going to go out and get diffused amongst all the different charity efforts. It's not going to all go into one thing. Howard agrees with him on this. He says, he's right. The greatness does not come about through accumulating great amounts of money. which is what he is known for. But beyond that, it's fortune cookie-level advice.
Starting point is 00:13:08 It's not wrong, but that's about it. His partner, Charlie Munger's contribution to architecture was to fund factory-like college dorms in which a majority of the apartments don't have windows. Isn't that UCSB? Where is that? Yeah. Have you been to that dorm?
Starting point is 00:13:22 You made the donation. Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's some reference to it on the campus, but they abandoned the plans to build a windowless dorm. It's so Soviet. It's extremely Soviet. I don't know why they wondered. I thought there were fake windows
Starting point is 00:13:40 and they were like TVs essentially, but they would show like outdoor scenes. It should be a vertical TV windows that you can just put SORA on. Is it safe to take the other side of this and just say that like he was about to create the greatest lock-in of all the time. I mean,
Starting point is 00:13:53 what if he was basically saying like college students spend very little time in their actual dorms? Yep. Because they're out and about in the world. They're studying. Totally. Library. They're at events.
Starting point is 00:14:02 Totally. They're really just using the dorm to sleep. Why don't we create common areas that have windows and outdoor area that then you go in your pot? This is Eric Adams floated a similar idea to a munger calling for stripping legislation that promises each citizen, each city citizen window access this past March. You don't need no window where you're sleeping. It should be dark, he said. The $2,000 dividend could come in lots of forms. Let's play the clip.
Starting point is 00:14:28 You know, it could, the $2,000 dividend could come in lots of forms and lots of ways, George. You know, it could be just the tax decreases that we are seeing on the president's agenda. You know, no tax on tax on overtime, no tax on social security, deductibility of auto loans. So, you know, those are substantial deductions that, you know, are being financed in the tax bill. Tyler, do you feel like this delivers? How is that going to help the day trading community? Yeah, I was planning on doing rampant speculation with this $2,000. What am I going to do now?
Starting point is 00:15:05 You're basically, you're basically fully, you've already committed the funds, right? Yeah. Yeah, I've already placed a ton of parlayes. Yes. So, like, what am I supposed to do now? What are I supposed to do now? I can't pay my parlay bill with a tax decrease on auto loans. Yeah, you're not looking for passive income.
Starting point is 00:15:24 You're looking for massive income. Bro, I'm looking for massive income. They should put a button on the IRS website that allows you to either receive the $200 Stimmy check, or if you press the button, you have a 50-50 chance of getting either $4,000 or zero. I really think a lot of people would press that button. Two of the world's biggest data center developers have projects in NVIDIA's hometown that may sit empty for years because the local utility isn't ready to supply electricity. 48 megawatts.
Starting point is 00:15:55 What are we doing? That's child's part. The Data Center for Ants. Calm down people, Masa's son is a male. Kathy Wood. Him selling Nvidia today means Nvidia has plenty of upside left. It is. It is. I mean, it just comes down to he will take, he's selling Nvidia. He's going to give that money to Open AI, and then Open AI is going to give it to Nvidia.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Yeah. Sold. Jan Lacoon. He's out. He's out. He's out. He's out. He's out.
Starting point is 00:16:21 He's out from meta. He's going to launch his own startup. Tyler, what's your reaction? Um, I mean, this is pretty big news. I think people have kind of expected this for a while. Yeah. Uh, basically since Alexander Wayne came in, um, because Alexander Wayne kind of, in some sense, like took over as like the chief AI person at meta, which was not enough room in this town for two AI.
Starting point is 00:16:44 Not enough room for chief scientists. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And so, uh, yon is like very goaded AI researcher. He's been in the game for like super long to. today he's like very much seen as being bearish on LOM. Sure. He doesn't think they can reason. He doesn't think they can like do novel tasks or whatever. So he's been like very outspoken about that. I think that's maybe part of the reason why he's, he just has kind of a different vision from
Starting point is 00:17:10 from Zuck and Alexander Wang. I forget exactly what it's called, but he has like another kind of path that he sees to AGI. He's he's still a professor at NYU, which I think is where he does most of his research these days. So I think he'll probably just stay in academia. Does he have any active classes going on this semester, because if he does, we should send you onto the campus to study. Do we have an update from Brian Johnson? He came back from his trip. He was on psychedelics. I feel like I'm expecting him to fall in love with at least one fast food restaurant. I want him to flip around on at least one and say, okay, yeah, I'm an in and out guy now. he's been he's been quiet um i i do wonder if he'll if he'll update on anything or if he's just
Starting point is 00:18:02 like so so powered through that it just will not affect him at all because like wasn't he was kind of framing it as like i'm this is like a big deal it seems like he got through it just super fine saw a very viral post of somebody saying i don't think it's a good thing that billionaires can talk about taking schedule one drugs publicly with no repercussions did seem that he was doing it like this seems like still such a gray area where you can get it prescribed by a doctor but it's still schedule one he posted an update uh on on his experience he also talked about more about why he says there's potential uh it's potentially a longevity therapy for psilocybin expands lifespan and mice um it can uh reduce inflation markers tied to aging it can
Starting point is 00:18:56 brain entropy, breaks rigid patterns, and boosts long-term cognition and flexibility. And yeah, I don't know. I kind of agree with that, with that person who is saying like they shouldn't be able to talk about it publicly. I feel like he should have a disclaimer or something because there's going to be, there's people, he's such a huge audience that there's going to be some people
Starting point is 00:19:19 that just look at what this is and just run straight in the early podcast era. Yeah. You had Tim Ferriss. who to his credit was like doing work on himself yeah and would share what he was doing yeah but he would talk about doing things like ibegain yeah yeah which is like a great you know super powerful psychedelic yeah and he wasn't directly saying hey i think you should go take this but when hundreds of thousands of people like follow tim for health advice it sort of is like an
Starting point is 00:19:51 indirect uh it's somewhat of an it's it's somewhat of an endorsement even if it's not directly so no no I mean I 100% think some people will see this and be like oh looks like he had a good experience let me jump straight to exactly his protocol which is clearly not accessible for the average person like he has been building up a tolerance to this particular chemical for probably a decade and so it's going to hit him very differently than it will someone who's not in the same place we were joking yesterday about like, oh, if he wanted to like really challenge himself, he would have been at like a crowded concert or something. And there were going to be people that see this post and wind up actually doing that and winding, wind up in a very, very rough spot. I did see some
Starting point is 00:20:38 people responding and saying, I took a similar dose to this and basically ruined my year. I have joked in the past, it's like, are psychedelics going to fix your life or just doing the tasks that you've been avoiding? Is that going to make you feel relief? Yes. Is that going to make you feel better about your life. It's like that meme of like the anime ninja. If you're tired, do it tired. If you're sober, do it sober. If you're sober, do it sober. 2016, so almost 10 years ago, it says digital addiction, digital addiction is going to be one of the great mental health crises of our time. And Blade says, Unk had this thought and immediately was like, how do I profit from this? The greatest to ever do it, TBH. Like if you're if you're trying to
Starting point is 00:21:23 like layer up like the the open AI is bad like case like you don't start with like the product's too addictive like I don't think that's the claim the claim is like it uses too much water or it like it like one shots people or it does erotica or it's like AI slop but very few people are saying like oh yeah people are on their phones too much and it's because of open AI now people are on their phones too much but it's because of Instagram and it's because of like social media actually not the AI because of SORA. I think it's a little bit too early to say that. I don't think it's working that well.
Starting point is 00:21:57 Certainly short form video. Have you ever been in like the gym or in a coffee shop and seen someone scrolling Sora? Like over in the shoulder? I haven't seen it. I meant vertical video broadly. Totally, totally. Which is I guess, I guess like a good take here, which is like how do I profit from this? I got to make an AI version of it.
Starting point is 00:22:16 That's probably like more of what they were thinking. In terms of actually profiting on, on like digital addiction, it doesn't seem like it's going very well. 4-0 seems to be extremely addictive so much so that... For a very small amount of people, like absolutely. Yeah. For sure. Yeah, and we don't know how many people. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:36 And we hope you have a wonderful Veterans Day and we'll see tomorrow. See you more. Good-bye. Cheers. Thank you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.