TBPN Live - AI Buildout Meets Capex Wall, The Browser Company Effect | Drew Houston, Jacob Andreou, Adam Fry, Ian Rogers, Molly Cantillon, Jonny Dyer, Mike Shebat
Episode Date: October 23, 2025(01:35) - The Browser Company Effect (13:54) - AI Buildout Hits Fab Capex Overhang (40:04) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (01:11:56) - Jacob Andreou, leading product and growth at Microsoft AI ...with a focus on Copilot, previously held a similar role at Snap from 2015 to 2023. In the conversation, he discusses Microsoft's integration of various AI models into Copilot, including OpenAI's GPT-5 and their own first-party models, to enhance user experience. He also highlights new features like the AI browser in Edge, which offers agentic capabilities and proactive assistance, and introduces 'Mico,' a new AI persona designed for safe, work-appropriate interactions. (01:30:18) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (01:58:06) - Drew Houston, co-founder and CEO of Dropbox, discusses the evolution of Dropbox from a file-syncing service to an AI-powered platform with the introduction of Dropbox Dash, an AI-driven universal search and knowledge management tool. He highlights how Dash connects various work applications, enabling users to efficiently locate and manage their content across multiple platforms. Houston emphasizes the importance of integrating AI to enhance productivity and streamline workflows in the modern work environment. (02:20:09) - Adam Fry, the product lead for ChatGPT Search and ChatGPT Pulse, discusses the enthusiastic reception of ChatGPT Atlas, highlighting its availability to all users and the integration of AI features into daily workflows. He explains that while the browser is accessible to everyone, advanced features like agent mode are more compute-intensive and thus prioritized for paid users. Fry also emphasizes the long-term vision for Atlas, focusing on user retention and continuous improvement to enhance the browsing experience. (02:31:48) - Ian Rogers, Chief Experience Officer at Ledger, discusses the company's mission to provide secure self-custody solutions for digital assets, emphasizing the importance of protecting private keys using secure element chips. He highlights Ledger's evolution from securing Bitcoin to supporting a wide range of cryptocurrencies and digital assets, including passkeys and identities, underscoring the growing need for security in our increasingly digital lives. Rogers also introduces Ledger's latest product, the Nano Gen 5, a secure touchscreen device priced at $179, designed to enhance user experience without compromising security. (02:45:34) - Molly Cantillon, founder of NOX, a proactive personal assistant company, discusses the challenges of integrating iMessage and WhatsApp to enable seamless communication across both platforms. She explains that by layering onto users' computers and avoiding distribution through the App Store, NOX can facilitate this integration without direct cooperation from Apple or Meta. Cantillon also highlights the importance of message interoperability and the potential for regulatory and market forces to encourage platform cooperation in the future. (02:55:14) - Jonny Dyer, CEO and co-founder of Muon Space, discusses the inevitability of large-scale IT infrastructure in space, emphasizing that the timeline—whether one, ten, or twenty years—is uncertain, but the shift is certain. He highlights Muon Space's partnership with SpaceX's Starlink, aiming to modernize space connectivity by replacing outdated systems with high-speed, always-on broadband connections, which will enable transformative capabilities like a 50-satellite constellation for rapid wildfire detection and tracking. Dyer also mentions Muon Space's recent $140 million Series B funding, plans to significantly scale up production capabilities, and the development of new technologies to enhance their satellite operations. (03:03:30) - Mike Shebat, CEO and co-founder of Traba, discusses how his company leverages AI to streamline industrial staffing by replacing manual processes with technology, resulting in higher fill rates and faster worker placements. He highlights Traba's growth to 150 employees over four years and emphasizes the importance of a strong in-person work culture, drawing parallels to the commitment of aspiring Olympians. Shebat also addresses the challenges of scaling in the physical world, noting the necessity of market-specific strategies and the potential for future expansion into new markets. 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Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're watching TVPN.
Today is Thursday, October 23rd, 2025.
We are live from the TBPN Ultradome.
The Temple of Technology, the Fortress of Finance, the capital of capital.
Did you see this graphic in the Wall Street Journal, the business and finance section, talking about the circularity of AI deals?
And I thought it was just a beautiful image that reflected nature.
It looks like a conch shell.
Looks like a conch.
It looks like a conch, max.
Right?
It looks fantastic.
I was laughing to myself about Satchinadella just being like, yeah, I was into circular
deals with Open AI like six years ago, actually.
So Larry Ellison, you're not, yeah, you're not as cool.
Like, don't take a victory lap.
I was doing crazy complicated deals with Open AI back in 2019.
But, you know, we've talked enough about OpenA.
in this show. It's quickly turning into the Open AI show. We have someone from Open AI coming on
the show later today, actually, to talk about the browser. I am excited for that. But we got to go
a different direction. We got to talk about some other stuff. And so I want to talk about how we name
companies, how we build brands in Silicon Valley. And I want Jordi to take the lead on breaking down
his thesis for the uninspired company of Silicon Valley. But first, I want to tell you about ramp.com.
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Jory Hayes. You have the floor, sir.
Thank you. This is an idea or an essay I've been thinking about for a while.
Finally got around to writing it.
And, yeah, generally, I felt like the timing was right.
The browser company's acquisition closed this week.
Six years ago, they started the company.
So I'll just read through what I wrote, and then we can chat about it.
So six years ago, the browser company of New York was born.
This week, it's acquisition by Atlassian closed.
Regardless of how you feel about the product or the ultimate acquisition price,
it's undeniable that Josh Hirsch and the team brought an incredibly fresh perspective
to what a startup brand could look and feel like.
Six years is kind of crazy.
I feel like I've found out about the browser company like two years ago, maybe three years ago.
What a grind.
Congratulations to the team over there.
Overnight success.
Seriously.
The name, the brand design, et cetera, were all incredibly thoughtful.
they weren't new. Roughly 150 years ago, it was standard practice to name a company like
they did. The Prudential Insurance Company of America found an...
Standard practice sounds like a good name for a company. That sounds like a real name.
Standard Oil. Yeah. Standard Oil. Founded in 1911. That was a spin-out. The Edison Electric
Illuminating Company of New York founded in 1880. And there was a bunch of others over history.
Again, this was just like the way that you named a company. You weren't trying to think of...
Back then, you weren't trying to think of like a cure.
dot com.
It was, why don't we just name it what it is.
And so what I'd like about.
Name it what it is or name it who we are,
Goldman Sachs, Oregon Stanley.
So what was amazing about this naming convention,
this isn't an essay, is just like how
explicitly clear it is what the company does.
The Edison Electric Illuminating Company of New York.
Yep.
I can imagine what they do.
It's good marketing.
Pretty simple.
So the browser company of New York was a perfect name for a specific reason.
Juxtaposing a 150-year-old naming convention
with a modern tool such as the web
browser was an incredible way to stand out and signal to the world exactly what their mission was
and that they would be bringing inspired thinking to the category. The browser company's name,
brand, and marketing materials were so effective that they catalyzed a wave of companies to
adopt the same naming convention. Between the browser company's emergence and their eventual
exit, I'd estimate that somewhere between 50 to 100 companies adopted this type of legacy naming
convention. So naming a web browser company, the browser company of New York, signaled this
sort of original thinking. And the problem is that the second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth,
you know, et cetera, a company to use this sort of convention basically does the exact opposite,
right? It signals like, okay, I saw somebody do something cool in my, in my industry. I'm going to
do, I'm going to do the cool thing as well. Yeah, the generic. The generic, the, I was not tapped
in. Clearly, I did not know that the browser company in New York was six years old. I found out
about it a couple years ago. And there are people that probably found out about it after they found
out about five copycats. And so in their mind, they're just like, oh, the browser company in New York,
that's one of those copycats that all are all. It quickly became an anti-signal.
Totally. Totally. I completely agree. So personally, I'm not automatically bearish on the
companies that are kind of like, you know, a little too inspired on this front. But I think a lot of
the people are kind of missing what made it great. And so at least one of these kinds of
companies, the Interaction Company of California, managed to break through the noise and deliver
a truly novel consumer AI product experience. But ironically, they did this under the pokey.com
brand name. So Pokey came out. They had an incredible launch, very cool, you know, sort of novel
consumer AI experience. And so my point here is they should probably just abandon that original
name and just run with Pokea because it's super memorable. And I think it's perfect. This is what
Instagram did.
Instagram was bourbon originally.
Yep.
And then once Instagram hit, they were like, we have a new brand.
Yeah.
We have a cool thing.
And then, of course, everyone copied Instagram.
Interestingly, Instacart copied Instagram's name and it worked.
Yep.
So, yeah, not always a total anti-signal, even if it's, yeah.
Yeah, so in defense of copycat branding, naming startups is really hard.
Every founder's gone through this.
There's only so many domain names.
There's only so many English words that mean something.
and there's just so many companies being created.
It's quite challenging.
Another defense and kind of like a misinterpretation,
you know, people misinterpret this quote
that's attributed to Picasso,
which is good artist steel,
great artist, good artist copy, great artist steel.
Picasso said that originally?
I know that there's a book.
There's a variety of people that have like,
you know, said it throughout history,
stolen, you know, re-made it.
It'd be so funny if he, like,
legitimately copied it word from word
for his direct rival,
like another painter.
So, yes, taken literally, if somebody just says, okay,
they're going to see like, okay, this is good,
I'm going to do the good thing that someone else is doing.
But a better interpretation of it,
and my interpretation of it is that you're better off
like stealing from the past,
but like recombining inspiration from a variety of sources
to create your own unique style and approach.
Before you continue, you know,
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so, but yes, the browser company hit so hard because there was this crazy
juxtaposition. And I don't think anyone had done it before. So it got this amazing
response, right? It felt like fresh and new. But after
they executed against it so perfectly and so loudly, right? You can debate, like, you
know, was the product truly a hit? You know, that's up for debate. But the brand was
The brand punched through it for sure.
The brand went through.
So if you just go after, if you just sort of like clone, to me it signals that you're in a rush, which I think is fair.
A lot of companies are in a rush.
You don't value naming, which is concerning.
I think names matter a lot.
Didn't want to spend the time to find a great domain, which is like fine.
Again, a lot of founders don't have a broker like our buddy Rob.
It's tagged.
But it also could signal you aren't seeking out inspiration from.
outside of the tech bubble, which I think is concerning.
The world's a big place.
You should go outside of our little bubble.
And then you didn't seek out influence or advice from people that understand the value of naming,
know how to acquire great domains, because you can go to founders that have been in the game
for 10 years, and they will have a domain guy.
They'll give you, like, the playbook.
They might even have a domain name lying around that's great, or you could talk to a VC,
and they're like, oh, this portfolio company was using this name 10 years ago.
You should pick it up and use it.
You might even have a billboard for you.
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Couldn't have said it better myself.
Yeah, so in this case, like browsers were all modern, right?
You had Netscape, Edge, Chrome, and so it was juxtaposed, but it was also counterposition, right?
And of course, the browser company naming saga, it's not isolated incident.
and I brought it back to linear, linear launch in 2019.
The product design, the website was so good that people were just like, I'll take one, please.
One linear brand, please.
One linear dashboard, please.
I even talked to a founder earlier this year, and he was like, yeah, our website and products is going to look exactly like linear.
Is that, admittedly?
I was just like, you know, there's so many, I mean, it's great.
but like you know there's probably something better if you just really thought
hard and like spent the time to think through like what what could this be and
so so anyways I think like copying great design signals that you don't value
design in my view yep and so what this comes down to is that I believe the tech
industry needs to learn how to copy or steal from outside the industry even today
every AI company wants to be the Apple of AI I think you see this in some of the
campaigns that they're doing, which are good campaigns, but sometimes they feel like, okay,
you guys went to an ad agency and said, give me one 90s Apple ad, please.
Give me one 80s Apple ad, please.
And so I said, it's counterintuitive, but I bet the Apple of AI will probably not build
an iconic generational brand by trying to emulate Apple advertisements from the 80s and 90s.
They'll do it by being themselves or said differently, stealing from the past, a variety of
sources in a variety of categories to create their own unique style and approach.
It's perfectly respectable and even fair to take inspiration from obvious sources and
industries. We at TVPN have been vocal about being inspired by ESPN, SportsCenter,
complex, and others. But the key is that we took that inspiration and applied it to an
area tack that none of those groups had ever played in. Right. So we weren't we weren't
copying Sports Center to build a sports podcast, right? So I said if you're starting a company
today, I urge you to take inspiration from the outside world and other industries and avoid
the trap of becoming an uninspired company.
So happy to get this out there.
And again, I love, I truly love,
I feel lucky to love the hunt for a great domain.
For sure. Yeah.
I'm thinking about the different, like,
when you say, you know, every AI company
wants to be the Apple of AI,
that feels like Open AI in Anthropics
most recent campaigns to me.
Well, yeah, and even Open AI's,
open AI's Super Bowl.
campaign right that that didn't feel that didn't feel apple to me i don't know like all the
pixelated like the dots and stuff that felt a little aptly i don't know that didn't that didn't
that didn't really that didn't really like spring out to me like that um but i was i was just thinking
back on like uh like you know like the deep mind documentary uh on the lisa doll match the alpha
the Go series that culminates and Move 37, like that was part of the brand building.
And it's odd because typically, I think they paid for it themselves, like typically paying
for someone to make a documentary about you, as opposed to just like waiting for someone
to make the documentary about you.
It looks like, it gets a lot of criticism as like, oh, this is just marketing.
But at least in that particular documentary, I think a lot of people have.
watched it. And I think it was very effective marketing. And I think it actually built Deep
Mind's brand as in that moment. And I feel like if you could turn back the clock,
Open AI would have really benefited from having a bank for a documentary on the Dota match
that they did. Or, you know, some of the other initiatives that they were working on during the
Open AIII gym, the original reinforcement learning stuff that they were doing. Because the AlphaGo
documentary. You've seen it, right, Tyler?
Yeah, yeah, many times.
Many times? Well, probably like,
probably like two or three times.
Two or three times, yeah. And so, like,
that's how you... He didn't just watch. He studied.
Yeah, you sat your ass down and listen.
Isn't that how you... Did you smoke a,
did you smoke a heater while you watch?
But, but, uh, I feel like that was like the introduction to
Demis and it really like takes you through
because it opens with him talking about video games,
talking about artificial intelligence, and, like, it felt like it built him up as a character
in many ways, like, more than just him going on podcast.
Yeah, that's probably true.
It was also my, it was my introduction to the game of Go.
Yeah.
And I've since become a big Go player.
You play Go a lot?
Yeah, a fair amount.
I mean, none of my friends, like, no one knows how to play Go, so I always have to teach them.
Yeah.
But I've gotten a lot of my friends into Go.
That's...
But, yeah, I mean, it was definitely the first time, like, Demas was really, like, I think
a lot of people watched that who are outside of tech.
Yeah, yeah, no, that makes sense.
Um, well, before we move on, let me tell you about getbezzled.com.
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experts.
Um, Dwar Cash Patel has dropped an essay, uh, with a friend of his.
And Tyler, you had some analysis on this.
Did you get a chance to read through his thoughts on the AGI buildout with Romeo Dean?
Yeah.
Um, so, so basically the main point of the article is, is, um, they're trying to address this question
that, or addressed this thing that same Altman said, which is that they want, at some point,
they want to be doing basically a gigawatt in infrastructure per week.
Yeah.
New, you know, infra or whatever it is.
So it's like, okay, how do you get there?
What are the bottlenecks?
Yep.
Like, how does this actually work out?
Yep.
So there's a couple things he points out.
The first thing is there's this idea of like the FAB CAPX kind of overhang.
So if you compare like
Nvidia revenue to the
the CAPEX of FABS
you'll see that like the revenue
kind of like dwarfs this
so there's like actual
specific numbers but it's something like
this past year of Nvidia revenue
is more than
the past like three years of
TSMC's entire CAPEX
and if you go up the stack if you're looking at
like ASML or applied materials
like all of those that are kind of just
like a bit kind of lower
level than TSMC. You see that NVIDIA revenue basically accounts for like the past 25 years
of R&D and CAPEX of those companies. So basically the point is that if Nvidia like really wanted
to, they could basically fund like all these new fabs without like, you know, they just like
increased the margins for these companies by a ton, but they could just like spend and just
have these fabs like grow massively. Yeah. So this, I mean, this doesn't feel like an answer to the
question that most people are asking, which is about like the circularity of deals, the build
out of the actual data centers. I haven't heard a lot of people like nervous about the
nature of the fab buildout. No one's saying like, oh, TSM is over their skis. Like it's, it's
Oracle that people are worried about, right? And so the fact that TSMC is not overbuilding because
the $6 billion in
capex turns into $200 billion
in revenue, that feels like
wow, like congrats to TSM.
Like they're in a safe place. They can basically
go to the market, go to
Open AI and all the hyperscalers and
say like, oh, you guys want to put up
a trillion dollars in spend or revenue?
Like, we got you. You're not going to
put us out of business if you don't deliver,
which is great for them.
It just feels like TSM's in a really strong position.
Yes. Yeah, that's
true. But I think Dorkech is saying like,
they're underbuilding if we want to be on these like timelines right oh like if we want to be doing
a gig watt per week like how do we actually get there so i like this yeah i like this yeah this is
good because it's basically like what is the shape of the overbuild what is the shape of the build out
and where you don't want to wind up is just like some sort of like fat overbuild in like data centers
and you're building like these massive data centers but then you haven't built any nuclear power plants
and then you also haven't built any fabs.
And so you have a bunch of data centers
with nothing to put in them
and nothing to power.
Yeah, and the fabs are really important
because chips are something like 60, 70%
of the actual, like, capex cost of a data center.
Like, they're just, there's so much,
like compared to power or to everything else.
I mean, I wonder how much they're,
how much they're rate limiting
on the actual buildout.
Like, it seems like,
it seems like the, at least some of the narrative,
has been, there's a much longer lead time for energy infrastructure than there is for
TSM line time, scale up fabs. But also, I haven't actually seen anyone break down like this
what it takes to 10x production at TSMC. Because I don't know where their capacity is.
Are they close to max capacity? Is TSM running 24-7 already? And they haven't
and they don't have any other facilities?
I think probably, but what Dorcas is saying is that, like, their CAPEX generally is just
very small compared to, like, what could be compared to, obviously, Nvidia is, like, way higher,
but, like, if Nvidia, you know, make some deals here, like, there could be a massive
increase in CAPEX, and he says, well, maybe that won't happen with TSMC, but maybe, you know,
with the Intel deals, like, this is kind of what is being done.
Yeah. Yeah, well, interesting.
So he says, further up the supply chain, a single year of Nvidia's revenue almost match the past 25 years of total R&D and CAPEX from the five largest semiconductor equipment companies combined.
So you take ASML, applied materials, Tokyo Electron, SKHinix, Micron, TSM, you add all of those together.
It only takes like a year or two to actually pay for that just with what Nvidia is actually producing because of the margins and the actual ROI on the cap.
The reason we're emphasizing this point is that if you were to naively speculate about what would be the first upstream component to constrain long-term AI
Cap-X growth, you wouldn't talk about copper wires or transformers. You'd start with the most complicated things that humans have ever made, which are the fabs that make semiconductors.
So every time you see someone saying, oh, you know, worry about the transformers and the energy infrastructure, it is potentially more bottlenecked by the fabs.
we were stunned to learn
that the cost of these
the cost to build these
fabs pales in comparison
to how much people
are already willing to pay
for AI hardware
Nvidia could literally
subsidize entire new fab notes
if they wanted to
that's interesting
that we're not seeing
those types of like deals
like
it says
we don't think
they will actually
directly do this
or will they
wink wink
Intel deal
but shows how much
of a fab
capex overhang there is
for the last two days
decades data center construction basically co-opted the power infrastructure left over from
USDA industrialization. That's where you get like, you know, the Memphis site was like a former
washing machine factory or something like that. And they had a lot of power because they need
a bunch of machines to move all the different washing machine parts in there to build the washing
machines. But of course, that actual business has moved overseas. And so Elon was able to go in
and say, give me that power. Google's first operated data center was across a former aluminum plant,
hyperscalers are used to repurposing the power equipment from old steel mills and
automotive factories. This is honestly a compelling ode to capitalism. Let's hear it for
compelling odes to capitalism. As soon as one sector became more relevant, America was
quickly and efficiently able to co-op the previous one's carcass. But we are now in a different
regime. Not only are hyperscalers building new data centers at a much bigger scale than before,
they are building them from scratch and competing for the same inputs with each other,
not least of all, not least of which is skilled labor.
Ryan says they should rebrand as the semiconductor company of Taiwan.
To their credit,
still the Taiwan semiconductor manufacturing company.
But yeah, flip it, flip it for the modern era and just copy the browser company.
Yeah.
Well, if you're looking to invest in one of these companies,
go to public.com investing for those that take it seriously.
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maybe you're deploying
$2 trillion in AI
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someone else needs to produce
be producing
two trillion worth
of all other
data center components
not just the chips
the people upstream
of the data centers
the company is producing
everything from copper wire
to turbines to transformers
to switch gear
we need to build more factories
the problem is
that those factories
have to be amortized
over a many decade
lifespan and at usual
margins those factories
are only worth building
if this AI demand
last for 10 to 30 years.
There's an interesting, so he goes into some of the gas turbine manufacturing stuff and
ARR projections.
The really interesting takeaway is the final chart on AGI timelines.
The distribution, where is this electricity?
Here we go.
So not only does China generate more than twice the electricity than the U.S.,
but that generation has been growing more than 10 times faster than
in the United States. The reason this is significant is that the power buildout can now be directed
to new data center sites. China state grid could collaborate with Alibaba, Tencent, and
Baidu to build capacity where it is most helpful for their AI buildout and avoid the zero-sum race
in the United States between different hyperscalers to take over capacity that already exists.
China will basically run the experiment of we have worse chips, but we have an incredible
amount of energy, so efficiency doesn't really matter. Yep. And so the, uh, basically his, like,
he sums all this up in this chart, which is the probability density, like the probability of
the U.S. hitting, uh, hitting AGI over time and the probability of China hitting AGI over time.
And the conclusion is basically like, if AGI is coming soon, America's good because we have a
head start in the race and, but we're running slower. China has a slow start, but they're
running faster. And so if AGI comes in 2035, China has a higher probability of it
emerging there. I guess the question is like, how bad is it to be a year behind? How bad is it
to be, you know, just six months behind if AGI emerges? If you believe in like the fast takeoff
of like once it's there, you know, it's like the immediate wind condition, you better be
advocating for some American electricity. But yeah, there was a there was a, there was a
reference to Tyler Cowan's post from 2023, do not underestimate the elasticity of supply. This was in the context of energy. So Tyler's post said, I said when I first read about the discovery of a vast new deposit of lithium in a volcanic crater along the Nevada, Oregon border, I can't say that I was surprised, not because I know anything about geology, but because as an economist, I'm a strong believer in the concept of elasticity of supply. Now about elasticity of supply in which economists tend to have more faith than do most people.
and again, over the centuries, economists have observed that resource shortages are often remedied
by discovery, innovation, and conservation, all induced by market prices. To put it simply,
if a resource is scarce, there's an upward pressure on its price. New supplies will usually
be found. So you can reference this with the kind of people's energy concerns around AI.
The big question is like, where is the energy going to come from for all these new data centers
and planned CAP-X,
but Tyler Cowan's willing to bet that we will discover new sources of energy,
we'll figure out how to make more gas turbines.
There was some reporting.
I think there's already like an immense amount of pressure on the Colossus data center development
in terms of, I saw Wired was posting a video I sent it to you yesterday.
Yeah, I watched that.
Like somebody using this like thermal camera or some type of camera to view how,
much gas was being let off and it was just like clearly they're just have have all these gas
turbines firing that was the there was some good stuff in in in that video but that was the
dumbest part because it was like Elon has been publicly saying like this is the biggest data
center with the most energy yeah it was it was framed as a god bombshell yeah it was framed as a camera
at it and it's big it's big it's bigger than everything else it's like yeah it's framed as a
gotcha, but Elon is extremely proud of how much energy this thing uses. He actually posts
the exact energy figures constantly. But I did think that we have Sagar and Jetty from Breaking
Points joining the show tomorrow. And I think that he lays out a really good case for like
what public sentiment is like. And you can see in that video, there's a politician from Memphis
who is like, whoa, whoa, whoa. Like if you guys are going to come here and build a massive data
Center in Memphis, like you have to make sure that the water stays clean, that we don't wind up
with really polluted skies. We don't want to be Beijing. We don't want to be, you know, some
industrial capacity. Like we, some industrial hub, like we've lived through that. We've seen like,
you know, Detroit was at one point dirty. The industry sort of left. But like we want like a more
modern, futuristic, eco-friendly. It's not to be like a total decelerating like tree hugger.
It's just like, let's not give each other cancer, people.
Like, there's probably a way around this.
And so I think the actual discussion is going to get super, super heated.
And I think Sager is correct, and we'll unpack this with more tomorrow.
The discussion will get extremely heated, and it will turn into these extreme ends of like,
you want to, you don't want to cure cancer with AI.
And like, you want to kill everyone with, you know, this, you know, this insane pollution that's coming
out of whatever natural gas turbine.
I'm surprised we haven't seen somebody
protesting on top of a data center yet.
You'd think somebody would have scaled one.
People used to do this with trees, right?
They would just climb to the top of a tree
and was going to get cut down.
This happened in anthropic, right?
But for doom reasons, not for environmental reasons.
And so there's like a very clear alliance that should form, right?
Happened briefly.
He was hunger striking.
He got hungry.
he was there for a couple days
but I mean no one debates
that there are tons of AI
doomers that like are actively
protesting the lab in one way or another
like I would put Eliezer Utikowski's
new book if we build it
if anyone builds it we all die
that's what it's called yeah I would put that in
like the AI protest
canon and it would be interesting to see if there's
like a team of rivals
that emerges with Eliezer
and then the
just the folks on the ground who are like, look, I actually think that AI is slop. I don't think
it's going to be super intelligent or kill me. I just find my electricity prices went up and I don't
like that. So we're on the same team, like strange bedfellows, basically, where they believe different
things, but they arrive at the same conclusion. So they team up. Same cause. Anyway, if you want to go visit
Memphis, Book of Wander. Book of Wander with inspiring views. Hotel Grady Medes,
Greenie Beds, Top Tier Clean, 24-7,
the air service.
You really should, if you're a true technologist,
go on a trip to see a data center in person.
I don't know if they have anything in Memphis,
but they have Pigeon Forge, Tennessee.
Oh, okay.
It's the Wander Smoky Woods,
and they have Wander Smoky Peaks.
Truly, that's probably like an amazing wander.
Forest.
It's probably an amazing wonder.
And you can probably see smoke rising from Colossus.
Colosses.
It would be incredibly, it would be incredibly, like, wild if Colossus just started burning so much, like, dirty coal.
Yeah, it was just like this black, like, smoke rising.
Yeah.
And they won't go that far.
Yeah, yeah.
What about just a good old-fashioned wood fire data center?
Tyler, can we figure out what it would take to have you over there, I want you to have you to have a,
little, we'll build you a chimney in the ultrudeau, and we'll build you a hearth, and you can stoke
the fire with wood and cedar logs, and then I want you to capture the heat, turn it into steam,
turn the flywheel to generate the electricity to run a fine tune of GPTOSS.
Work through exactly how that would work. Is that possible? How much, how many logs would
you need... A wood-fired data center.
The wood-fired data center, which is like the...
You know how good a worm...
It's almost fall here. We're cozy-maxing.
We're already in brown and green.
As far as I'm concerned, the holidays are here.
And nothing would get me more.
It would really bring the Christmas spirit forward to have a wood-fired data center.
Yeah. Generating tokens the old-fashioned way.
Exactly. Just hanging out at the hearth, generating some...
tokens. Can you imagine late nights with the fellas just tossing wood in the hearth?
Yeah. Yeah. Well, you know, that's like, I'm pretty sure that's like how a steam engine works.
Like I'm pretty, I mean, there's, I guess it was coal, not wood, but if you're on like the, the Titanic, you're, you're down in the boiler room and you need to boil water to turn the spring, to spin the turbine, uh, you're taking coal and shoveling it into the fire to make heat to make boil water.
And there's no reason why we can't be doing it here.
There's no reason.
We got to go to the chat.
Except all of the environmental regulations.
Adam Hoops says wife is going into labor.
I'm between Jordy and John for my son's name.
If Jordy or John can't decide, I'm letting Sam Aldman spin up a model and name him himself.
How about Data Center?
No.
Data Center Hoops.
What about Adam Jr.?
Adam Jr.?
Adam Jr.?
I think Adam's a great name.
Adam Jr. will call him Jr.
or, have we talked about this?
In all seriousness, Adam, that's true.
This is incredible news from everyone.
Log off.
Go log off.
Log off.
We'll still be here.
You can catch the recording, but we're excited for you and your family.
I did actually talk to someone who had a baby and the new, the new mom and the husband threw on TVVN when they were like in recovery.
Because like, oftentimes you're hanging out and you need something to watch.
And they were like, yeah, let's watch it.
Why not?
It's going to blow your mind when I tell you who it is, too.
Because it's a very funny, very funny couple.
Anyway, yes, naming the kid, AGI would be funny.
Aggie, for short, that would be great.
Tyler is also a strong name for baby boy.
Yes.
How about 2.6 million?
Is that somebody in the chat?
Yeah.
2.6M.
Anyway, there was a timeline was in turmoil a little bit yesterday near Cyan and Rune going back and forth.
Before we dig into that, let me tell you about Adio. Adio is the AI Native CRM, the build scales and grows your company to the next level.
Stick to this DRM. Maybe stay away from the short form video consumption. It would be the argument from near.
Basically, people are going back and forth with Rune. Where does Rune stand on Sora? Where does Rune stand on Slop? And so short form video.
The room deleted his post.
He did.
He did.
So I don't know what it said.
He committed sepacu, effectively.
It's a haricari on the timeline that we experienced.
Deleting your post is, it is a sign of honor.
It's a technology brother ritual effectively.
But we have we have some traces.
We have some fossils that we can dust off.
So what was the general idea of what he said so we can get into this comment from near?
He was saying, he was saying there's sort of a moral panic about, about short form video.
I was kind of saying that with him too.
And I think there was like, there was a big like, like this all started with like the meta vibes thing where everyone was like, this is brain rot.
This is going to one shot everyone get ready to die.
This is the worst thing ever.
and my like I was like yeah it is kind of sloppy it is sort of infinite jesty but like there is like
the possibility that this is just not popular that like it is possible that like the slop trough
just doesn't taste good and people just actually want to do something else like chess it was so obvious
it was so obvious on day one that that the product was kind of cool but it was it may as well have
in a playlist of video of, like, cool AI ideas.
Like, people, people refuse to believe that there is at least a probability that in 50 years
people are still watching humans create content.
Like, I don't know.
There is a probability of that.
It is possible.
I think most, I think many, many people in, like, traditional media, just in not AGI-I-pilled
crazy world would be like, yeah, a hundred percent.
The more people live online, the cooler will be to see a dude, like, wing-suting.
Because it's like, totally, totally.
Okay, we're, you know, every, you know, 99% of people watching this are just inside on a screen.
Yeah, okay.
And this dude is flying, you know, 20 feet away from a mountain.
Yeah.
And so, and so is there, is there a possibility that the meta vibes app becomes so addictive?
You can't turn it off and it destroys your life.
Like, like maybe, I've read the sci-fi, I would put a probability on it.
I would say it's a couple percent that that happens that is bad.
But there's also just the possibility that people just are like, well, I'm not,
do it, right? But people weren't, people weren't even, no one was saying like, hey, this might
just not work. Everyone was like, meta vibes will kill everyone. And that was kind of the mood
on the timeline. So, so Rune was reacting to that saying that there's a moral panic about short form
video. It's not actually that bad. He's going back and forth. Some people were pressing him on like,
don't you think this is bad for kids. He was like, I don't actually know that it's that bad
because I watched a couple hours of TV a day as a kid. And is short form, is,
watching short form for three hours a day, fundamentally different than watching TV for three
hours a day. Because everyone will say, oh, the real tradeoff is like reading James Joyce versus
TikTok. And it's like, that was not what was going on in the 90s. Yeah. And what is television
do, right? They're like, they're using hooks, right? Totally. An episode of a television show starts,
and it starts off maybe dramatic and it pulls you in and then right before an ad. All of a sudden,
it'll slam to an ad for fall. The world's best generative image audio.
video models all in one place, develop and fine-tuned models with serverless
GPUs and on-demand clusters.
Yes.
So we don't have a way to quantify brain rot, right?
Like, is Barney with ads on it on Nickelodeon?
I'm getting a lot of things wrong.
Actually, actually, is that more brain rotty?
We do have a way.
We do have twins.
Yes.
Oh, A-B test.
If we can A-B test.
I refuse, actually.
Yeah, I mean, this, you could, I mean, it would effectively be potentially sacrificing
a son for humanity.
Yes.
But we get to the bottom of it.
One son gets five hours a day on the iPad from a young age in the SORA app, in the MetaVibs app, just scrolling.
Yes.
The other is gets, you know, personalized tutoring from, you know.
We also have Tyler.
Let me volunteer.
Maybe we can see.
How much SORA have you watched?
None.
I never gone on Sora.
you're purely like if I if I tell if I order you if I if I as your boss I give you the task of
generate a video for me then you will do it but you you truly have not consumed like any
no not in the last week the first uh what about you Nick have you consumed any AI video
Sora or meta vibes because you were really into it on day one right
they want to super into it.
It takes too long to load, and then it generates and then says, you have violated policies.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Can we hear him at all on the stream?
Sorry.
I can hear him.
Anyway, what about production team?
Hands up if you've watched more than 10 minutes of AI video in the past week.
Zero.
Philistines.
Well, yeah.
So, I mean, it will get better.
I don't know.
But anyway, this all concluded with NIRSyan and Rune going back and forth.
Rune said, I like the way Sora looks.
I like the content.
That was his final.
He wasn't saying, I'm not doing some 3D chess coping on like, it's not that bad for you.
He was just saying, like, I like it.
I think it's just good content every once in a while.
It's fine.
And so NIR says, do you actually believe this?
Like, do you realize the product is the API, not the app as containment isn't possible?
And that short form video consumption is on the order of several hours per day for U.S. adolescents.
I didn't comment on the launch, but I'm not sure. Yeah, this is what I was saying, like, on launch day,
which is like, if you really wanted to give SORA the chance to become a consumption platform,
you wouldn't have made SORA 2 available via API for anybody to generate. You would have, like,
at least tried to contain it as much as possible, right?
People still could have, like, screen recorded and posted it elsewhere, but it was just very
obvious immediately that it was, like, an incredibly innovative, like, AI creative tool
and, like, probably not going to work as a, like, new standalone consumption app, because
there's a lot of people, the TAM for people that will be entertained by AI video is, like,
the entire world in the fullness of time.
Anybody that's logging on to the internet will probably at least laugh a few times a year from an AI video, right?
Or they're certainly going to see them.
But the tam of people that today only want to watch AI video is like basically zero.
Yeah.
I'm trying to imagine the bull case for the API.
Like if I'm a open AI customer as a business and I'm using GPT,
five or, you know, some cash stuff and I'm using some reasoning tokens over here. And I'm like
a big API buyer. And then they come out with SORA and I'm like, I really would like to use
that in my business. Like I have an actual business use case. I'm trying to think of what that
would be. Like I don't, I don't really know. The business use cases, I mean, think about how many
platforms are trying to help people generate ads for social ads. Yeah. Right?
generate, you know, content for various videos they're making.
Yeah, so if you're like Canon at ICON and you're an AI generative ad company or now
like an agency and the API is not available for this new tool, you're going to be like
bummed out, right?
Yeah.
And so it just, it just feels like, I mean, I agree with all the rationalization about like,
it's better for the long term strategically to, you know, create, to actually bootstrap a real
network, keep everything in the network.
but at the same time it just feels like the open AI ethos is just like do everything all the time all at once
and that's just like their their their core thesis um anyway um uh interrupting our timeline palmer
lucky has hit the timeline and says it says something about society that the most controversial thing
i have said in recent history is that i wish i would have married my wife sooner not that wales
might have have better oral history than humans not that america should start
should restart nuclear testing, marrying Young.
So obviously his comments on TBPN earlier this week
became somewhat of a current thing on the timeline.
And, of course, people were, you know, taking,
taking, you know, one part of his statement completely out of context
and sort of ignoring the fullness of his point.
But it's certainly certainly been interesting to see the response.
It's been very split.
Yeah, it was a true, like, wedge issue, both inside and outside of, like, the core tech community.
Like, I saw people who, like, literally write for, like, similar outlets on opposite sides of the issue.
But I don't think of them as, like, left or right or pro-tech or anti-tech.
Like, there were pro-tech people who liked the take or hated the take, and there were anti-tech people that liked the take and hated the take.
It was, like, all over the place.
was very, very hard to map. It was fun watching the conversation get started. And it surprised me.
It started with him calling me a turbo normie.
Hilarious. I was just laughing about it.
I know. We were laughing. We were laughing about that. And then he took it even further.
Yeah. I mean, it was framed in like, let's see how far we can push this envelope way.
But you can clearly understand what the core message is.
He even said, easy for me to say, I met my wife when we were teenagers.
Yes, yes, yes.
And the broader conversation of how having children in your 30s at any point is exhausting.
Now, basically, the younger you are, potentially, in some ways, it will be easier.
Yeah, yeah.
I was trying to think back to, like, okay, would, like, let's say that I actually did,
have kids at you know 20 or something like that um so i know some people that had kids at 20
like guys that i grew up with in high school um and they're they're like you know becoming a dad
experience is like framed kind of like oh it was like an accident or like a you know surprise
um and they all turned out like fine like it all it didn't it didn't detract at all um it's just like
kind of just turned into like a funny bit of lore about them and it's like oh yeah they have like a
kid that's like much older than like the rest of their cohort so they are in some ways like you know
like they don't have a huge support group because all of their other friends and kids later
but in terms of like the mechanics of like what their life is like it's not that much different
um and i feel like no matter what when you analyze kids just the fact that you love them is so it's such a
wrench in the system of like let's analyze this rationally because you wind up just saying well like
yeah they're exhausting they're exhausting at 35 they'd probably be extremely exhausting at 20 yeah you'd
have more energy but you have less experience and also you love them and so it's amazing and it would
be amazing then it'd be amazing now yeah my take has always been the time always comes from somewhere
yeah so if you have kids in your early 20s yeah then by the time yeah
ready to not club. Yeah, that, that's true. But, but, you know, it's going to take up a lot of your time.
Maybe it'll be massively distracting from your career, right? I think about this all the time.
Yep. You know, early, you know, after my son was born, it was like, okay, there's now,
I ended up just completely sacrificing my social life, right? There was work time and there was
family time, and there was like very little in between. Sometime there was work time that was
a little bit social. But what is the social life for most people, for most?
it's their work no no no no no it's like a mating ritual that's true like a lot of the reason why
people are going out people are have a social life is because what is dancing to meet someone exactly
peacock yeah they're trying to meet that person yeah and so we've just kind of extended our
lives which is incredible and then injected an extra 10 years of like let's find the person and delay
the process yeah in my view if if somebody that has kids in their early 20s yeah well by the time they're
28 and actually have hopefully like a skill set. Their kids are in school. Yeah. And and maybe their
kids are a little bit older. Yeah. And they're able to potentially, they're not hitting 30 and then
having to go through this crazy experience of having kids. And then it's still going to be a
distraction from their career. But even then they maybe have more responsibility, higher opportunity
cost, you know, it's all these different factors. So I think also people were very triggered by the,
the fact that he specifically said like, you know, he could, if he had said like,
19, it would have been different than 16
because 16 is like underage, right?
I think that people were probably latching on
to that, that it's like very young.
Or do you think it was mostly just like, like
He said it in a provocative way.
Yes, but
I actually don't know about the
history of like, you know,
like when humans
had kids. Like, I feel like
there was a time in like the castle
ages, like the medieval ages when like
people were having kids at 16.
Like that's true, right? He wasn't like
factually incorrect about that? Yeah, I'm sure. I mean, you should look back through the Coogan family
tax, you know, go back a few hundred years and open it up and I actually did go back. And on my,
on my Swedish side, there's this, there's this like 400 year chain where the family just kept
using like the same naming convention. So they would say like Olafson, son of Olaf. And then it would be
like Jacobson-Oloffson. Jacob-Oloffson, Oloff-Jakbson. Jacob-O-Bloffson,
O'Lov-Lafson, it would just go back and forth because they just kept naming themselves.
No, my dad was the fourth in the row of the exact same name.
Exact same name. Yeah, I would have been the fifth. My mom was like, no.
Well, if you have a, if you have another son who you give the same name as the dad,
you can use the nickname Trip for, oh, no, no, it would,
be Skip because you save the generation. Is that the origin of Skip? Yes. That's where Skip comes from.
And so if you have the same name as your father, you can be called Junior. Everyone knows this.
If you have the same name as your father and your grandfather, people can call you Tripp because you're the triple.
And if you have the same name as your grandfather but a different name than your father, you can use the name Skip, which is very fun.
Skip Hayes might be coming up.
It's a good name.
Might be coming up.
You might have to do it.
In other news, there was some news or fake news this morning that the Trump administration is in talks to take equity stakes in quantum computing firms.
Companies including Ionic, Raghetti computing, and D-Wave quantum are discussing the government, becoming a shareholder as part of agreements to get funding, earmarked for promising technology companies.
According to people familiar with the matter.
And this is so important because like the free market just can't solve this. It's not like there's a whole bunch of like multi trillion dollar companies that are half, yeah, capital. Hyper scalers that are heavily invested here, venture capital firms that are happy to fund promising. It's not like Google like actually had a breakthrough like last week that people were pretty excited about. It's not like Microsoft's working on this. No, I think the admin did this specifically to torture Screlly because this feels very personal. Right. So Screlly is very loud.
and proudly in shorting, you know, Regetti and Ionic and all these companies because,
you know, I think the general sense is that, you know, there's a spectrum from like science
experiments to scams, right? And people tend to kind of sit somewhere there in terms of their
opinion on quantum. Josh Wolfe had some choice words earlier. Let me pull it up. He said,
this is beyond stupid absolute waste of taxpayer money quantum is utterly irrelevant fraudulent BS so
strong words there but um do you know the rigetti lore so do you know the rigetti lore but before that
screlly had hit these these companies had been selling off pretty aggressively and of course like
you get an announcement like this let's let's look at regetti and see how they've been doing so oh
Raghav in the chat, this is a very interesting take. My conspiracy is this was a planted story by
someone in the admin to help with exit liquidity in expiring call options. I think that's,
that's potentially what. There's something, something odd going on here because. Because there would
just be so much blowback from generally smart people about this that are taxpayers, that are
Americans, that are going to say, I don't want to be a shareholder in Raghetti. Yeah. And so,
And there was pushback and concern about the Intel deal,
but at least there was broad consensus that we don't want,
and we want Intel.
Maybe this is a hot take,
but like I actually disagree with Josh Wolfe that quantum is utterly irrelevant,
fraudulent BS.
I don't think it's fraudulent.
I mean,
I'm kind of,
I'm kind of in line with the,
with the Screlli take that it's,
it's just like it has a very narrow use case for very specific algorithms that,
and we don't really know the business application,
It's not like LLMs, where we're just going to be stuffing quantum computing all over the place.
It's like there might be something that we use it for, but we're not exactly sure.
And so it is very much a science project.
But I personally don't believe that, like, I won't say all of the quantum computers,
but I don't believe that they are all fraudulent.
Like I think a lot of them are saying, look, you, the shareholder, are investing in a science project.
I'm going to test some things.
I'm going to run experiments.
It might work.
It might not.
And you're like, I'm 100% down for that risk.
Yes.
Like, take the risk.
That's what I'm signing up for.
Everyone's happy.
Everyone's happy, even if it goes to zero.
And so I don't see it as fraud at all.
Google's efforts, which are probably the most advanced in the world.
Sundar is not out there, like, saying, hey, you know, really alphabet should be a $10 trillion
dollar company because of our quantum efforts.
It's a project that they believe.
has real potential, so they're investing many billions of dollars into it, but it's still even
internally structured as a science project. And so, yeah, Equist Global says leave Quantum to the
Googles and the Microsoft's fund with free cash flow. I think that's one good option. But to be
clear, like, it's also great if VCs want to take a crack at that and say, hey, there's this really
weird idea in Quantum that Google and Microsoft are not going to even take a swing at because it's so
bizarre. Everyone thinks it's a failure or, you know, not going to work. It's such a long shot. And so we are
going to do it outside of the system. The analogy here would be like... Yeah, we had that quantum
startup on that raised like a billion dollars. I don't remember, I don't remember their name.
Yeah, it does not seem like it's a bare market. It doesn't seem like capital is a constraint.
No, I completely agree. Progress there. And so, yeah, hopefully this story, uh,
it's, it's a sad, uh, sad situation where we have to say, hopefully this story was planted by
someone in the admin who's called works firing.
It happens sometimes.
Well, you know who's not planting stories?
Graphite.dev because they're reviewing your code in the age of AI.
Graphite helps teams on GitHub ship higher quality software faster.
Upslope Capital says, I am without speech.
I like that as a funny just like line that you can quote tweet things with.
I am without speech.
Brother Bucho Capital says,
can't believe my tax dollars are going to be invested.
and Rigatoni computing.
Yeah.
And the crazy thing is like
this is, Jaguar Analytics is
this is the kind of stuff
that used to happen
to repeatedly during dot com bust
and it shows
like the red,
like all the different companies
that are
Jobi, Archer,
and Rigatone.
And it's not Rigetone,
it's Riggetti.
Iron.
Founded by Chad Rigetti
and this is the lore.
Do you know the lore?
Chad Raghetti is married to Susan Fowler.
Susan Fowler is the Uber
whistleblower. Whoa.
Bombshell.
Crazy. Crazy dinner table talk at that point.
One's built in a quantum computer.
The other one is blowing the whistle,
writing books about Uber, working
with Mike Isaac on that. Probably.
I guess they knew each other. Although they did go book
for book. That's the other funny lore.
Is that she wrote the blog post that went viral, right?
Mike Isaac at the New York Times was doing the, right? He's at the New York Times now.
I don't know if he was there. I think he was there then.
Mike Isaac was doing like the beat reporting on the play-by-play of all the chaos inside Uber as Travis was getting ousted.
And then they both came to market with books and they went head to head and I don't know who sold more copies.
But it's just a funny thing of like, you know, when you blow the whistle, you got to get that book deal.
You got to do you got to turn it into a 50 episode Apple TV original series.
You got to turn it into, you know what you got to turn into?
You got to turn into a one piece anime.
thousand episodes.
None of this, like, oh, Theranos was a crazy story.
Let's turn it into an eight episode series.
No, I want a thousand animated episodes of the story of Elizabeth Holmes as she goes on
adventures and it just continues forever.
That would be good.
Speaking of Elizabeth Holmes, she's probably pretty excited about seeing CZ.
Pardoned.
The pardons are flowing.
Chong Pong Jiao.
Yes.
Canadian businessman and former CEO of finance,
pardoned by the Trump administration.
So, you know, I'm sure she's thinking,
I'm up next, I'm up next.
Yes, although there is a rumor
she might be getting out early.
Not because of like anything special necessarily,
but just the way the, like when you Google it,
it's calculated one way, basically like the auto
complete is just like when did she go to jail plus the maximum sentence and it adds up but like there's
like a best behavior it's it's it's like best behavior plus time served while you were under
investigation and stuff and so you can count old times because it's like you were in prison while
you were you know going through the court case so we count that and so uh I think that if things go
well she could be out in the next like three to four years maybe um
But, yeah, pardon certainly seems interesting.
And I think that's probably why we're seeing some posting.
Seems interesting.
You're not recommending the admin pardon.
I haven't seen anything that would lead me to recommend a pardon.
At the same time, I haven't seen a ton of, like, I think, I'm not exactly sure who got the most burned.
like there were definitely people that got like bad test results and that's and that's obviously like seriously harmful but um most of the vCs who who invested like the investors were accredited they took a flyer on a dropout from Stanford like I don't know uh I I think it's kind of like a you know buyer reware situation with a company yeah but they put devices that didn't work into into use around the country yeah which and so like the input like I don't like the investors took the risk yeah
They knew the risks that they were taking.
Yeah.
But the nature of the fraud was that they lied about that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And could negatively impact.
It's just so crazy that you were.
Bobby Cosmic, I am not a weave.
I merely studied the Antichrist lectures.
And so I've never seen an episode of One Piece.
I have watched one piece of anime, which is Akira, just the movie.
Didi Doss was highlighting some sections from Kotu's AI
report. Before you dive into this, let me tell you about profound. Get your brand mentioned in
chat, GPT, reach millions of consumers who are using AI to discover new products and brands.
Yes, fascinating set of charts. Shall we pull them up?
D.D. says, why we are not in an AI bubble in four charts. You got to summarize these,
and I'll hit the gong for every, for every positive bull signal out there. Break you down for
here's why. Multibles are nowhere near dot com levels.
And we got room to run.
And we got, we got camera, we got face tracking on the camera.
This is a new feature.
Shout out to the production team.
Cappex is growing but funded by cash flow.
Give me something else from the LaFont weather.
Largest tech co-valuations lower than 1999.
We're still in business, baby.
Concentration in the market isn't necessarily.
necessarily negative.
What about the U.S. government is going to bail out everything from quantum?
That's also quite exciting. Brian Halligan over at HubSpot, who's coming on the show soon,
says, in my honest opinion, private markets are in bubble territory while public markets still seem rational.
I think that's a good take.
I think a lot of what's holding us back from even more craziness is just the overall state of the economy.
have trade wars tariffs, you have a weak labor market, you have an unpredictable admin, you have
war in the Middle East, war in Europe, and you have a higher rate environment than we've been
used to, right? And so imagine if we didn't have, if we didn't have those factors, I think it
could be a lot crazier, right? But there's a lot of, there's a lot of real reasons for people
to be kind of... Yeah. I also wonder if... Not entirely risk on.
I wonder how much, how much different the, like, AI is, there are some new companies, right?
Open AI, Anthropic, there's a bunch of startups and private markets.
But AI is, like, a growth story for the MAG7.
But the MAG7 are so huge that it's just hard to, like, you can't, like, turn it into a meme stock, you know?
And I'm wondering if you go back to dot com, like, the biggest companies at the time, do you know the biggest companies during the dot-com boom?
was it the oil companies the oil companies were the biggest companies by market cap oh by marxon
mobile not by like you know growth no no no not by growth at all so what i'm saying is like is like
you have this like you know like you have this cruise ship that's like the anchor of the economy and it's
like the big companies and at that time it wasn't big tech it was big oil and big oil was like
something that would be really hard to push and the dot com narrative like didn't push it at all but now we have
the the big tech folks who was also like a big cruise ship and but they're so big that like
it's hard for them to just like oh yeah like the mag seven triple this month like that would be
a really really crazy movie would take trillions of dollars of investment to actually drive that
in the market so i don't know um a bunch of bull cases tyler i i i think okay so i um i calculated
how many how big of a hearth i would need to oh yes yes um so okay so if i'm using
GPT OSS, 120 billion parameters.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then I have, you know, like 8, 8-100s.
You can probably get a decent fine-tune within like an hour.
So that's going to be something around like 8, 8.5 kilowatts.
Kilawatts?
And then if you're looking at dry wooden logs, about two kilograms each,
you probably need something like four to five logs.
Okay.
To, for that energy.
Wait, five logs of, and that's all you need to do this fine-tune?
It's just one hour, yeah.
I was actually surprised.
That's insane.
I was expecting you to say, I'm going to need massive thing.
No, it's just one hour.
I mean, it's not that crazy.
That's crazy.
You could really fine-tuned GPDOSS in one hour?
I mean, the model's pretty small.
Okay.
How would you, would you need like a server rack or could you actually, like, build a computer
that could house 8H-100?
Is that possible?
Or do you need like a proper server rack?
Yeah.
I mean, eight is pretty big.
I don't think you can just fit that in like a normal PC set up.
But even then, it's still not that big.
A lot of people have that at their house.
There's definitely the trappings of a banger YouTube video here.
You know, like those primitive, like, videos were like,
I built a thing from scratch.
I built a toaster with no modern technology.
Have you seen those videos or anything?
Great.
And I would imagine I fine-tuned an AI model using logs.
It would be a ripper, for sure.
In other news.
Charles Gasparino says scoop.
Scoop alert. People inside Paramount Skydance say David Ellison,
advised by his father, Larry Ellison,
are reluctant to pay more than $25 a share for Warner Brothers
as the buyout drama continues.
His last offer, the third rejection from David Zazlov,
was $23.50 to be exact.
Company still weighing a public, aka hostile offer for Warner Brothers,
which they will argue cannot be sold to other players.
who are interested, including Comcast because of regulatory roadblocks, full story coming.
So Warner Brothers is currently sitting at, I believe, $21 a share.
Yeah, $21.34. So David Zazlov is holding out.
Did you know Andrew Ross Horkin got a genuine scoop about this deal while being on TV
for three hours a day and promoting the book, 1929, and being on one of the most
aggressive book tours I've seen recently. Is that the goat noise? Yeah, that's my goat. I didn't
realize, I never put it together, that that was, okay, I get it now. Wow, that took me way too long.
That's crazy. I just thought it was like, you like farm animals. No. Okay. That's the goat.
Yeah, that's why I played it for Jeff yesterday when he joined the show. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, that makes
sense. I like the goat noise. We're building out the full farm analogy. We need the farm map.
Yeah, we're working on getting live animals, of course. Of course. Of course.
We'll go to the Go-GAM.
But truthfully, like, I don't feel like I have a good understanding of what David Ellison is building.
Like, I'm newer to coverage of the media conglomerates because I focus more on the Mag 7, more on the tech companies, more on the AI stuff.
It's a fascinating world.
I think he's running the experiment of, like, just, you know, basically going to the world and saying one media industry, please.
Basically, it feels like he's trying to build some sort of new conglomerate.
I don't know how the synergies pencil out.
I don't know how everything works.
We've got to get Barry Weiss on the show.
I would love her first couple weeks over at CBS.
We also have to tell you about turbopuffer, serverless vector and full-text search,
build from first principles on object storage, fast, 10x cheaper, and extremely scalable.
Philip Johnston is on a tear.
He says, I'm super excited to announce Star Cloud's partnership with Crusoe.
builder of OpenAI's massive Stargate data center to enable enabling the first public cloud
in space next year. This is the first step in a partnership that we'll see Star Cloud providing
energy for much larger Crusoe data centers over the coming years. There was also a post from
Dallion. He was firing shots at Nvidia because they announced AI shipbuilding partnership
with Serronic. He said, Nvidia has announced AI data centers in space and an AI shipbuilding
partnership in the last two days. Words and physics just don't mean anything anymore.
Dear God, this has to be the top, please. When will it end? He said that in the post. I kind of assumed
he was like, you know, top-pilled, but that was a wild place to go. Yeah, we were kind of,
we were kind of dunking on this yesterday. I don't know. It seems like there's a lot of pieces
that have to come together for this something to be, for this to be real. Yeah.
Delian, from my understanding, will always do a deal that he's extremely excited about,
but it's notable that he was very active earlier this year, and he sort of hasn't announced
a new investment in the last little bit.
Yeah, I mean, I think some of this is fodder for the public markets, marketing campaigns,
just general outlines of, you know, remaining futuristic.
Like, there is a world where if you're invidia and you're looking at Andre Carpathie saying, like, hey, the current thing is going to be slow, you're like, well, then let's, what are we going to do in the next decade while we're waiting around for ASI?
Maybe we put some data centers in space.
Maybe we build some ships.
More SaaS.
Maybe we do a bunch of stuff.
More, more SaaS.
That's what I want to see.
Take some real shots.
Mac Rumors is reporting that there's virtually no demand for the iPhone error.
And I thought it was notable.
I have a friend who used to work at Apple.
He bought the iPhone air, used it for, I think, like 24, 48 hours and returned it.
He just said it was not the thinness of the phone was not worth the battery tradeoffs.
And he also said that the phone is so actively trying to conserve energy that it renders things like poorly or slowly.
That's annoying because I feel like there's a little bit of skill issue with regard to the battery where it's just like just get.
a car that has a battery charger in it.
Yeah, and I think there's something about phones.
Yeah, put one at your desk, like, figure out how to actually, um,
charge it regularly.
Like, yeah, everyone has some point in their day where they can plug in.
And, like, if you just, maybe if you just are a wild man and have no routine whatsoever,
but you're also addicted to sore and TikTok, you're going to have a bad time.
But I feel like if you have any sort of like, yeah, around noon, I'm at my desk.
And so I just put it down on the charging pad, like, regularly, like, you're going to be fine.
yeah uh but i don't know yeah there's also something about phones where i think the iphone air is
a bit cheaper right sure um but something about a phone is is it is so valuable to your life
yeah that if you ask somebody like if you were selling an iphone like an iphone from today
to somebody in 2000 like how much would somebody pay for that would they have paid you would
would like a high powered executive pay like a hundred thousand dollars a year to have the modern
the iPhone from 2025 and 2000.
Like, I think it's, I think it's that valuable in terms of what it does for your life.
And so I don't think a lot of people are making, at least like the average iPhone customer
is saying, if I can get slightly more performance out of my phone for an extra couple hundred
dollars a month, it's probably a good exchange.
I'm just surprised there aren't more people that are, you know, like Tyler, were like a couple
of iPhones before.
What were you actually on 13 or something?
I was on, no, I was on the 11.
11. I was like six generations behind.
Is that six years? You hadn't gotten a phone in six years?
Yeah, I think that sounds right.
Have you, was this your first phone ever?
No, I was like, I was probably like freshman in high school.
Yeah.
Okay. Okay, it's sort of adding up to me, but that's like, what was your first phone?
Um, it was probably like a hand me down, but it was probably like iPhone 4.
Wow.
Started on an iPhone.
Wow.
Well, no.
Silver spoon.
Silver Spoon Alert.
No, no, no.
Wait, so you don't remember where you were when Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone?
Was I even born?
Yeah, yeah.
I was like two.
Brutal.
Tyler, are you excited that the Sopranos creator, David Chase, is developing a new limited series about Project MK Ultra for HBO?
Do you know MK Ultra?
Do you know where you were when MKR Ultra happened?
It's from the 70s.
Oh, you're giving him the tinfoil hat.
This is the first, this is the first tin.
foil hat oh the tracking cam is phenomenal uh put it on tyler there you go why did why is he wearing
the tinfoil hat you're safe now from mk ultra right isn't that isn't that wouldn't somebody no
that mketh was like the lSD it's lSD oh i thought it was i thought it was remote i thought this was
the remote mind control one no no no no no no exposed for not being well fake skits out
fake skits out doesn't know is conspiracy theories uh no ridiculous um uh uh
Anyway, COTU has a bunch of other stuff.
We should go deeper into their public markets update.
We should just have someone from Cotu on again because we have a couple, a couple folks on.
Love those guys. They studied Bobbys back in the 1600s.
And they studied 10 books.
They went back 400 years, read 10 books, and it was 30 bubbles.
Let's give it up for reading 10 bucks.
And their conclusion was that it's not a bubble, right?
I think they think it's like 1996, which is.
is awesome. I'm rooting for 96. Let's go. I also am rooting for the bubble already popped. It popped last
Friday, and now we're re-inflating. Anyway, we have Jacob from Microsoft AI in the TBPN Ultronom. Welcome to
the show. Thank you, David. Thank you, David. Wow. Finally somebody that almost, I know, oh, oh, we got a short guy in
the studio. How tall are you? Six-seven. Six-seven. I'm six-eight. Oh, six. Six. Six. Six.
Seven. Are you getting the six, seven thing? Do you have kids or anything? You know this whole thing?
The six, seven thing? Come on. Yeah. Got to be in youth culture. I, I don't know it at all. I found out about it. I literally found out about it when the Wall Street Journal published an article. Oh, shit. And it was like, here's the latest trend that's causing problems for teachers. And I read it. What are you guys even talking about? You don't know this? Okay. So, so there's this meme where in middle schools, if the number six comes as now,
to seven six seven that yeah it started from this meme it'd be all the kids will go crazy and go six
seven and then they do this because and if you trace it back it goes like seven layers deep into like
this there was a kid at a basketball game who sent six seven which was a reference to a basketball
players high and then one awful rap song yeah nobody had listened to before yeah dude dude dude
And that's a reference to 67th Street in Chicago, which is like a popular area to sing about, basically.
I'm impressed.
That's all from the article?
Yeah, loosely.
Yeah, Walshry Journal knows their stuff.
Knows their stuff.
Anyway, Wall Street Journal didn't have your backstory, so you have to give it to us directly.
Yeah.
Introduce yourself.
Absolutely.
Yeah, Jacob Andrea, I lead product and growth over at MAI, mostly focused on co-pilot.
Before that, I was at SNAP for like nine years,
2015, 2023, doing the same thing, basically.
And then in the middle, venture for like a year and a half,
still doing a lot of investing.
Was that Greylock?
That was here in L.A.?
No, SF, in the city.
But I've been based in L.A. from 2014-ish,
and now just spent a lot of time in Redmond and Mountain View.
My two favorite places on planet Earth.
Amazing.
That's great.
Exactly.
Uh, co-pilot is not nearly sharp enough.
Like you're going to need to narrow that down.
That's like a million products.
We're putting co-pilot and everything.
It's a multi-trillion dollar company.
Like, what do you focus on vertically, horizontally?
How is the organization structured?
Like, what are you actually doing on a day-day basis?
Yeah, I mean, it's a super cool moment for Microsoft right now.
We have a bunch of folks that have come together, a bunch of people that have been there.
I've running people all the time, Microsoft, been there for 30.
35 years. It's fucking crazy.
We never seen anyone who's been like, am I allowed to swear on this show?
We don't.
We don't, but you can't have any sense.
But feel free, too, if you feel like that's the right.
If you're fired up.
That's a delivery.
If that's what you want the Microsoft Coms team to really, like, take away from this?
Is that you went wild on a show and they maybe shouldn't have green lit it, then yeah.
All right.
We'll push the envelope.
No, look, we got together in a major group people, a ton of people that had already been there forever.
And we're just trying to transform a bunch of the different things that say,
co-pilot across the company. So we got a group of folks. They're super talented working on
on GitHub co-pilot on the VS code stuff, you know, whether that's competing with cursor or all
the other folks in that agentic IDE kind of world. And then me and my team, we spent a lot of time
on like the consumer co-pilot app. So the thing that's in your pocket, the thing you can pull out
your pocket, use voice mode, talk back and forth with web retrieval. And then we introduced a bunch of
really cool stuff just in the last week. And is consumer co-pilot? Is that powered by OpenAI models?
Are you model agnostic?
Are you training your own models?
Like, how are you describing?
Because with some of the foundation labs,
they have to put a ton of their marketing
behind their model.
Yeah.
And we were having this discussion about,
like, at some point,
consumers are going to stop caring about the model.
So how are you thinking about it?
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah.
So Microsoft AI, when we're chipping co-pilot,
we're just building the best possible product.
Product.
That's it.
And we're super product-focused.
Yep.
And at the end of the day,
like, whatever's going to give people
the best thing in their pocket,
like, that's the job.
And so for a long time, that was opening eye models.
And thanks to the amazing partnership that we have with them,
we can put all their models directly into the product.
4-0 powered the mainline response for us for a really, really long time
until GPT5 came out more recently.
GPT5 now is honestly, it's an amazing set of models,
and it's been really, really popular inside the product.
But there are parts of the product where we're already serving other models as well.
So we introduced a couple new modes this week.
One of them is not powered by an opening eye model.
A few of our own first-party models just started to drop.
So I think six weeks ago was the first time we privately started running LM arenas on MAI fully end-to-end trained models.
Okay, cool.
So before that, yeah, before that we had no ability really to build our own foundation models from scratch.
And in the last six weeks across both language and text and image, we've been in either the top five or the top ten with our own first party models.
And that's like a first for us.
And so it's been super cool.
So does that reflect of you that essentially like the foundation model layer is commoditizing?
it's high capex, but it is something that's maybe viable to get near the frontier.
Yeah, I think that a piece of it is a little bit that perceived intelligence.
You know, when you try these different systems today, even when they're backed by different
models, it is a little bit tough to tell, oh, this is way smarter than that.
Like, things are kind of getting a little bit closer to.
We saw that with GPT 4.5.
Yeah, totally.
And then we went to five, a lot of people, even though it was a smarter model, we're complaining
about like the tone and the personality.
And so we're in the spiky intelligence area.
We're no longer in a race where just like smarter is just better every single time.
And so to really start to build an amazing product, it's not good enough to just have a set of models that are marching up intelligence.
You have to actually build what people want in the product.
Sure. And so an ability to go kind of end to end and be able to actually look at the way people are using the product, have that feedback into like model training, especially post training, and then have that then allow you to iterate the product.
It creates this like model product user loop that is kind of the main way that you'll probably push the envelope in terms of meeting the user needs.
So that's what we've really been focused on.
And when you think about the user, the user of the app,
are you thinking more business user, prosumer, consumer, all of the above?
Like, there's everyone from like the Xbox Call of Duty Kid is a Microsoft customer
to like the Fortune 100 company CEO is, there's a very different archetypes.
Yeah, long term, we have to sort of that whole spectrum to start, it's the consumer.
And it's the person that is looking for this thing.
They're asking us for advice on health.
They're trying to learn new things with co-pilot.
They're asking for a lot of help making big decisions.
Those are the places where we're really playing the most.
And now you can't ship a product from Microsoft without being awesome at productivity.
And so in the last few months, huge push in productivity, making way easier to upload like tons of files, reason over them, create documents based on the source material you've uploaded.
And this is just like ripped.
Like the, as soon as we put this in the hands of users, completely, you know, we kind of expect that, okay, if we improve answer quality, generally, this is always going to be good.
Improving file upload and improving the number of files that people can upload, users just were drawn to it so quickly.
So, I mean, it feels like the real wheelhouse, like you're just going to knock it out of the park with the customers, if they're running their life on 365.
Like, they have a Microsoft email, they have, you know, One Drive going.
Like, they set up their life in that way.
maybe because they use it at work, maybe it's also hybrid work, home, but that's going to be a really
great experience for them. Yeah. So the product today doesn't actually need to be rooted in M365 at all.
You can just download it. You can just use it. And it's actually amazing for that use case.
Long term, the system that is the highest context on you is going to be the best in both hours.
It's going to be the one that knows when your meetings are. So it can schedule that dinner that you've wanted to go to.
And so we actually think that the long view here is that these things ultimately have to come together.
but for the next six to nine months
we're going to focus on nailing
the enterprise use case in M365
inside of all the work apps
you already do all your work in
and then at the same time
on the other end of the spectrum for consumers
nail the co-pilot app
that you just download from the app store
and you just love and you use.
How should startups think about
your guys's ambitions
because I think that
Sam had a quote
was probably a few years ago
at this point maybe a couple years ago
which was like don't build a company
that's assuming models
not getting better
and I've seen so many companies this year
we've had some of them on the show
we've talked about them that are basically
they may as well have said
we're building a different Microsoft co-pilot
for XYZ or we're building Microsoft
Excel and Microsoft co-pilot for Excel
as a new company and it's cool
like these are big categories right
they're extremely valuable products
it's worth new teams
like trying to take a crack at some
this like timeless software but I'm curious you're I'm sure you see some of them and you're like
wait you know that like we do that already we have we're on our roadmap and we have we have
hundreds of millions of people as opposed to like Bloomberg has an Excel plug it and they've had
one for a long time yeah that hasn't been on Excel's roadmap because it's a separate thing
but yeah how are you talking to start yeah look I think if you get really specialized like the
Bloomberg example like we're never going to change all of Excel yeah to go compete with like
a specific vertical of a way people use Excel.
We can't change, like, the core platform that much.
But if you're trying to build something,
and I won't use the Excel example, because it's too close
to home, I think, for people that are working on this problem.
But if you built, like, a plugin for Word
that does something that's, like, pretty horizontal,
like, it uses Word for you.
Yep.
You know, like, this is certainly something
we spend a lot of time thinking about.
Yeah.
For years.
Yeah. And if you think about, you know,
prompt to template, like, that's the very
obvious next step.
Do you feel like there's a responsibility for the Microsoft brand to send clear messaging to startups so that you don't steamroll them?
I always wonder about that.
It feels like Sam was kind of saying like, you know, I'm a former YC, you know, head.
I want startups to like me, build on my platform, et cetera, and I don't want someone to accidentally get crushed by the steamroller.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think that when you're training foundation models at the scale,
they are and have kind of been doing it for as long as they have. I think that the world
is still adjusting to how quickly things are changing. And so I think the degree that the like model
builders can signpost and be like, hey, like, this is going to change a lot really quickly.
I do think that this is probably just the right thing to do for the ecosystem. Now, that being said,
for us, we're just focused on building an amazing product. Yeah. And the other thing is some startups
are overtly saying, I'm going to kill Excel. They're coming for you. It's not like you'd be like,
Well, it's a knockout dragout.
Maybe don't do that because we're doing that.
It's like, no, they're trying to eat your lunch.
It's totally fair to just keep expanding your product in ways that are valuable for the majority of users.
But the agentics of stuff happening in Excel as a specific example is really cool.
And so it's one of those areas where it's like, you can win a lot of things by being focused.
So who knows, maybe the people doing that are still going to have an amazing product and build a great business.
But Excel is going to get pretty agented.
Do you have anything to show us today?
100%.
You got a lot of cool stuff.
Yeah, yeah, show us some stuff.
Well, so just quickly, the stuff that we...
Have an extra camera here so we can see your phone screen if you want to pull it up.
So the stuff that we talked about, gosh, just a little bit this morning.
We have a huge release of the AI browser, and so I think we heard a lot about AI browsers this week.
And the biggest difference is Edge has, you know, hundreds and millions of people using it.
And now every single one of them with a flip of a switch now has an agentic browser in the form of co-pilot mode.
Sure.
I've used it to reorder stuff on Amazon, kickoff stuff for me.
awesome. We also
and get into
maybe a little bit more there
just while we're talking about it but it's just like you can chat
with the pages that you're on and
yeah so sidebar is totally there
and you can reason over multi-tab context and you can talk about the
different stuff that you're doing. The thing beyond
like actions like we've seen a bunch of people talk about
whether it was like Comet or the Atlas stuff from earlier this week
you know actions are just going to get better and better as the models improve
and you know copat mode and edge is you know state of the art
with respect to the actions that you can do.
One of the really cool differences is, once you enable it,
it'll actually start to pick up like patterns and habits of your browsing,
and it'll actually create these journeys and do things proactively for you,
and you can jump back in where you left off.
And so if you're like planning a trip and doing flights in a few tabs
and doing hotels and other tabs and trying to figure out stuff to go do,
Edge will actually see what's going on with that.
And the next time you come into the browser,
it'll actually have taken the next step in planning that trip for you.
And with a single tap, you just jump straight back into flow
where it's actually done the next.
thing. And so for me, when I'm like interviewing candidates and just doing a bunch of research
and tabs, it's perfect for this. How do you, there was some conversation concern about
prompt injection. Is that like, how do you think about like solving that problem? It felt like
people were saying like, hey, this is a big risk, like slow down, but it felt like something that
was somewhat solvable, like pretty quickly. I think that's right. And I think that you have to
look at this whole class of products right now as it sounds a little maybe two over the top, but kind of like
a security preview. Like we, we know that. We know.
there's a whole bunch of risks with allowing the browser and these models to take actions like
this. You really have to supervise it. We have a ton of checks and balances. It'll ask you
and a ton of steps along the way to make sure everything's still on the rails. But we're learning
alongside everybody else and this area's going to evolve really, really fast. So we're ready to just
keep playing whack-a-mole as these issues come up. Are there any surprises? Do you have these things that might
be teed up for us? We love hitting the gong around here. So we are now the first ever AI app to also drop
groups. Okay. Are you on the most aggressive
version of liquid glass, by the way? I am
like liquided out.
I am, it's all glass all the way.
Okay, it looks good. And H2O Max.
And with Pro Max, you actually get the battery
life, so it can power liquid glass. Okay.
There we go. Yeah, exactly.
So groups is phenomenal. It's now the first place
where if you're having a chat with copilot, you can just add someone to the group.
Use it for my wife when she's asked me questions. I have
no idea the answer is all the time. I can just put her in the chat
and she can just take the rest for me.
Like, creating a group chat with an AI and other people.
you're not bringing it to teams it's like yeah so sharing this and then and then we're both on so when i'm in when i'm in the thread
i just hit share invite with a link i can drop it in i messager or whatever and then she's just in the chat and they don't even need to install the app yep they can use it right from mobile safari which is super cool and so it's the first time across all these apps that you can finally do this
how how it seems like it's such a great and somewhat obvious feature i'm somewhat i'm somewhat surprised that it hasn't i was shocked when i joined mAI i was like no one has built anything social in any of these
products. I worked on my eye at Snapchat before I left. And so like no one had really done social
and I was like, I'll do it again. Like it's fine. We'll run it back. Okay. Okay. And then and then one of
the really cool things that we did. I was co-pat knows all about you guys by the way. Oh really?
Well, we do put out 15 hours of content every day. Okay. We introduced Miko, uh, who's this new
person that you can talk to, this new character. Uh, really cute face. It's not going to sex with you.
So it's completely different than the other AI appearance.
Explicitly.
It's not explicitly.
It's not what it's going to do.
This is a counter positioning.
We love counter positioning.
Let's drink the gong for decent.
That's not what's going to happen.
It's not traditional values.
Bull market and traditional values.
And so with traditional values at our core.
As soon as we showed Miko to Satya, his favorite thing actually was,
like poking it, which I couldn't find a better way to describe that on air without it sounding
a little bit weird. Yeah, that sounds like. But again, it's, it's, it's going to be strictly
platonic. It's totally safe for work. Because this is from the company that brought you Microsoft
Excel. And we, and of course. Yes. Of course. And I would trust that brand. And so as you
poke Miko. Yes. And okay. How many times do you have to hammer it. You really got to hammer it.
Hey! Oh! Clippy is back. Clippy is back. Let's go.
We have been asking for this.
Is this breaking news?
Is this a scoop for us?
This is the first time this has been on air.
Close the training card now.
Clippy is back.
Clippy is reborn.
Yes.
Incredible.
So Clippy walked so Miko could run.
And so we got to pay an homage to our roots.
And so Satya, when he saw this demanded that Clippy.
I'm so happy about this.
I think people have, people forget.
We've been begging for this.
We've been begging for this.
Obviously, Clippy had like a bad, bad rap, and people were like, it didn't do what it was promised.
But I feel like all of the nuance of like where it wasn't perfect has completely melted away.
And it's just lore.
It's just great lore.
Your parents hated it.
So the kids loved it.
And it was cool to love it.
Exactly.
And so it's so ready to bring it back.
So I just, yeah, so many good memories of being in the computer lab at school and just looking down and knowing that Clippy was there.
He was riding with me.
how are we what it what does it take to update the name of the app in the ios app store to just
clippy you got that's the night right now it's an easter egg but we're working here together
baby steps baby steps you're like actually there's like a team of 25 people that really
worked hard on miko and there's like no miko's like three cmo's like this is not you know
that clipy but uh that is very exciting thank you so much for coming by and no thanks for
having me, guys. Breaking it down. Yeah, yeah. What a fascinating time in the industry. What a fascinating
place to be, it must be thrilling to be in your seat. It's an absolute treat. There's five places
in the world. You can try to build frontier AI for a billion people. And this team and this
setup, it's unbelievable. So it's a, as a true product guy, like going somewhere where you have
that scale, resources, et cetera. And it's actually, you know, it's good that we have just this
flood of, flood of talent into early stage companies and the labs and all that stuff.
stuff, but it's actually incredibly important that talented people go and work at, you know,
these companies that already power, you know, use cases for billions of people, millions,
millions of companies. So I'm glad to do it. 100%. Yeah. Anyway, so much. Good to see you guys.
It's fantastic. Congratulations. Our next guest is Drew Houston from Dropbox hopping on at
1 p.m. We have 30 minutes to take you through more of the news. But first, let me tell you about
numeralhq.com, let numeral worry about sales tax and VAT compliance. I use it myself. It's the
official tax partner of Lucy, the nicotine company. Who Paul Moore also got in trouble with talking
about nicotine. But that is a much low, that's a much less, you know, a controversial topic.
I think everyone has hashed out the nicotine story. I can't believe so many times. I hope
I can't believe. I can't believe. The economist published a, wait, what? I can't. I,
just can't believe clipy's back you're still rocked by this i'm rocked this is shaking my worldview
i love it uh no but this is uh this is super fun the uh the the nicotine thing is funny because uh
everyone was getting mad about palmer for basically you know in his own way teeing up the argument
of like are there benefits to nicotine and like this is a topic that has been discussed by
Gwerne back in 2014, 2015, then we started Lucy. We were talking about it a little bit. Andrew
Humerman did a big deep dive on nicotine, kind of laid out some of the complexities, and he actually
revisited that. It's in the stack today. Do you have his post pulled up? What did he wind up actually
saying fully? I'll pull it up here. But the really interesting one is from the economist, who I regard is a pretty
conservative organization. They're not really doing hot takes over there. September 12th,
2025 published an article called, What Nicotine does to your brain? Their conclusion,
the drug is hugely addictive, but it does boost mental performance. And so that's the
formulation that I think Palmer was like grappling with, which is there's mental performance.
It's highly addictive. How do you balance those in a world where you remove the carcinogens
and you don't wind up with actually smoking cigarettes.
But he was talking about that it's an appetite suppressant.
Exactly.
There seems there's obviously benefits and not being overweight.
Yep.
There's tradeoffs with everything.
Yeah.
But anyway, what was Huberman's final?
Let's trust the experts on this one.
Let's go to the experts.
He said with Palmer Lucky's comments about nicotine on TVPN,
your reminder that yes, nicotine increases focus,
also is very habit forming, duh, is not carcinogen.
I know that it's habit forming.
I've quit nicotine, you know, five or six times.
Yes.
I typically quit it like every night before I go to bed.
Yeah.
And then pick it back up.
That guy.
Is not carcinogenic unless smoked, vape, dipped, or snuffed.
Yeah.
And is an unusual stimulant because it simultaneously focuses and relax you.
Also raises blood pressure.
Again, do your own research.
Also, 21 plus.
don't get in the game unless you're 21 plus Tyler
I never
Why are you looking at me
Well
They went to the wrong camera
The little jump scare
Travis Kelsey is teaming up with an activist group
To invest in and revive six flags
There was another
Oh I don't know we have no idea
Left
Mike Isaacs
says genuinely appreciate how Pop Crave left out the investor part of activist investor group
because all the people in the replies think that there's going to be like a BLM takeover
of the roller coaster park. Someone else was saying like did Travis Kelsey like get three wishes
when when he was like 11 and he's like I want to be a football player. I want to date the biggest
pop star in the world and I want to take over. It's a 200 million dollar deal. He bought
nine percent of the theme park operator.
And we love to see big-name celebrities crossing over to the private equity world.
Wow, they have the ticker wet.
Do you know their ticker?
Fun.
So good.
That's a great ticker.
And a little fun fact, turns out, according to Chad GBT, you cannot reserve and barter stock tickers.
I think we need to do a PSA about this.
We heard some rumor that people were trying to, in the way that you buy a domain, maybe you squat on it.
Let's say that you think that, you know, after AI.com, after chat.com, after quantum computing.com, there's going to be a wave in time travel.
So you go out and buy time travel.com and you wait, and then somebody comes and buys it from you, and you make a nice return on your investment.
That's totally cool in the dot com world. That doesn't work with reserving New York Stock Exchange tickers.
Like you can't trade them that way, at least according to chat, TBT.
and so speaking of just funny stock tickers
we do not believe that there's not I can see why
I can see why Travis Kelsey was was interested in this
six flags trades at at less than one X revenue
so
hugely he's seeing
deep value here are you bullish on
first do you like theme parks
no
Never been?
I used to go to Legoland a lot growing up.
I enjoyed Legoland.
Yeah.
But I kind of grew out of theme parks at a young age, and I haven't been to one.
I never had a fear of heights.
I never, I never was like, I don't like them, but I also was never, like, I got to go a ton.
Kids sort of changed that because kids really like them.
It's fun to go with the kids.
but
Six Flags is
it's a different target audience
it's not as there's not as much lore around
every ride
but are you bullish on
theme parks generally
in a world where
Bill Peebles is updating us on
SORA and
it seems like the march of
generative AI is unrelenting
are we should you go
long slop and then also you know steal on the on the roller coaster track i think i'm somewhat
takeless here i don't you know uh when chesky was on a couple days ago his point of view was
that as as slop increases people will i mean these are my words not his but you know digital
life becomes more intense people will want to touch grass more they want to go on trips things like
that, but in some ways I feel like the theme park is like real world slop. It is. It feels like
I imagine going to Six Flags for me would, for four hours would feel like I would come away
feeling like I was using SORA for four hours, right? Yes. Like not exactly, it's not like
really counterposition. Yeah, it's not exactly the Metropolitan Office. It feels like the physical,
you know, because I don't like to pay to be in crowds. It's physical brain rot. Yeah. It's brain
route IRL. But maybe Travis Kelsey wants to turn it around. Turn it around. Tear down the
it would be different. If it would be put in a museum. Maybe he wants to increase the risk.
Football players go out there. They're going head to head, right? It's a high risk environment,
a lot of injuries. Maybe he says, hey, Six Flags injury rate right now. This is this is the Nathan
Fielder strategy. The sort of accident rate is so low on the roller coasters that people don't
get the same rush as if they thought that there was maybe like half a percent chance that
that each that a ride would end in disaster right and so then that would you know really bring
you into the physical world and really make you feel human to be taking on that level of risk right
yeah so who knows well good luck to him uh the the the sorra update we already talked about soror a
little bit but uh new new uh you can register cameos of specific things so your dog can become a
cameo and then you can create
finally
thank you for listening
to your users
Bill Peeble
finally finally
I mean
I you're gonna
you're gonna play around
I'm for sure gonna do
I like I think it's gonna be hilarious
to put my dog on a skateboard
of the X games like
if you don't think that's fun
like you're just like humorless
and like you're you're you're like a slop
scold you're I think it's I think it's
Let me enjoy my dog at the X-Games.
I've been joking a little bit.
I like to horse around.
But I think it's smart because they had so much pushback from using IP.
Yep.
It's got to be personal.
It's got to be personal.
And people will be excited to generate images of their dog.
Yes.
Yes.
And I'm going to take my dog and I'm going to scan his face.
He's going to do a kick-flip.
And he's going to do a kick-flip.
And I'm going to send that to the family group chat, which is my new social network.
My, like, there is social media and then there is social networking.
I think this is a great take by Chesky.
And so my social network exists on iMessage.
I would push back on that,
I still very much feel like X as a social network.
I feel like it's a professional network.
It's my LinkedIn.
Okay, professional network,
but my social life is almost entirely overlapped
with my professional life.
If I'm trying to figure out
what I'm going to be doing in my social life on this weekend,
X has nothing to do with it.
that is that is orchestrated purely in iMage yeah but it's the way that i catch up with the majority
of my friends yes yes i agree in terms of like keeping a pulse on what they're doing in the world
it is more social media than like pure algo media yeah so there is something there but anyway
speaking yeah it's going to be fun to play media what else not really but uh ramp data is now
available in the bloomberg terminal this is cool you can track AI adoption rate
business size right in your terminal.
Very differentiated in real-time data source.
It's cool.
Very cool move from our on the ramp team.
It's very good.
This is crazy.
Before we read this, let me tell you about Vanta,
automate compliance, manage risk, proof trust continuously.
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The unit tree G1
crawl policy has been deployed to hardware,
plenty of room for improvement but it's a start let's pull up this video this is a this is a
humanoid that can turn into oh wait this is a humanoid oh this is crazy i mean i feel like
i i don't want to be too too negative here but i feel like the film the filmmakers are really
not stepping up like i feel like the creative tools right now both with like ai stuff but
also like you could buy one of those or rent it and you could shoot a horror film right now
practically like you wouldn't be you wouldn't be like generating the AI Jason Carmen you could
make a humanoid robot horror low budget horror film right now or or action movie or anything like
that just feels like a character that you could immediately put into a movie and tell a whole
story around what do you think or a character on this show yeah that's true I think we might have to do it
we might have i mean there's something uh beautifully dark about a humanoid that's walking and then
it suddenly turns into this insect yeah that is very spooky
very spooky okay if we get one of these we also have to get a couple desert eagles
because if it starts acting up we have to be able to take it out right like we have to have we
have to have, you know, it's like if we were going to actually do the hearth, I would also say,
hey, guys, let's get a fire extinguisher, right? And so, because like, what happens if you're
training and you, the log rolls out? Yeah, and then the AI becomes sentient and then tries to kill us,
right? That's why we need the fire extinguisher. Well, that's what, no, no, we just need the fire
extinguisher because it's good safety policy if you're using a warm hearth to fine-tune GPT-OSS on
on a rack of eight H-100s.
Because if you're going to be burning a log inside,
you should have proper equipment.
And I think if we get this humanoid,
you've got to be ready to take this thing out.
You have to be ready to take this thing out.
Jordy, what do you think?
How are you taking this thing out if it rises up?
If we get one of these, I want to be prepared on day one.
I think you strap charges to it.
Okay.
And so, and it has a vest.
did I tell at any time.
That a vest, that, that, that has it, yeah, it has an explosive device that, we release it at any
moment, it explodes, killing itself.
It has a Kevlar suit over it.
Okay.
Explosives on the inside.
Oh, so it explodes inward.
Yes.
I don't know how.
I think it's the last thing I would do.
I think that might be worse.
It's just charging at you and you're running away with the, oh, no, I know.
If it, if it, if it, even one wrong move, we're all going down, we're all going.
with it. Oh, this is wild. Anyway, let me tell you about figma.com. Think bigger, build faster. Figma
helps design and development teams build great products together. What is this, is this literally,
this is literally chat GPT? Should we play this family guy clip, or is this a Ssora video? I'm not
familiar with this. Do you put this in here? No. Okay, let's move on. Farid has a chart that
looks so insane. It's ChatGPT's customer retention. What do you think about this? How do you square this
with the earlier data that we saw that showed that, hey, there might be some slowing adoption.
This looks like a...
Well, this is unrelated to growth.
Yes.
This is just when somebody tries chat GPT or how many months later are they still using it.
I mean, it's directly related to growth because if you have really great retention,
you can just add 5% of new people to try it, because they'll all stick around forever.
As opposed to when you have a leaky bucket, you're like,
We need to be doing super roll ads every day because, like, people are only going to come in and they're going to leave after a week.
Sure, sure, sure. But generally just looking at, like, you know, these new cohorts, what percent, like, and I think that this chart is not nearly as impactful if you haven't worked on, like, a consumer mobile app, right?
Because this is, like, beyond best in class.
Yeah.
But I think this is what you would expect, right?
People try chat chit.
They love it.
They stick around.
It becomes a part of their life.
it becomes like, you know, a kind of muscle memory quickly.
It's become a, you know, a let's ask chat type of thing.
So look at the difference of the 10-month line for the most recent 10 months ago they joined versus two years ago they joined.
From a 45% or 10-month retention to 70% retention.
Like that is just incredible.
They're pushing up those lines.
It's not just that the lines plateau at 50%.
So for every person that gives it a try,
there's a 50% chance that they just never leave, right?
And then also it's smiling,
so you get people to come back.
That's a great sign.
But also they're pushing up the retention curve so much, so quickly.
And yeah, I mean, this is just, yeah, product getting better.
But congratulations to the team over there.
That's fantastic news.
Shane Copeland was.
Wait, hold on.
If you were trying to run one,
of these analyses on your company.
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Shane Copeland was locked in at, is this, I don't know what sport this is is, but I can see
on the jersey, it's Cleveland.
Cleveland.
Some sort of cross-town rivalry going on.
Stadium. Very cool. Courtside. Love to see it. Yeah. He's locked in on the phone. That's very
fun. Dialing in. And everyone's saying, oh, he's trading. He's front running. Okay. So I'm worried about
getting one shot by AI again. But Melissa Chen has a post here. She says,
actual shot, not AI, of a French detective working the case of the French crown jewels that were
stolen from the Louvre in a brazen daylight robbery. Somehow he looks
like he's smoking, even without a cigarette in his hand, but surely everything you know
about life is screaming at you. This case is officially screwed. To solve it,
we need an unshaven, overweight, washed out detective who's in the middle of a
divorce, a functioning alcoholic who the rest of the department hates, never going to crack
it with a detective who wears an actual fedora, unironically.
I mean, this guy really
there are so many weird things about this photo
okay okay okay yep
I knew this was too good to be too good to be true
the community note says this is
this is a photo is real
taken outside the Louvre after the jewel theft
but the man in the fedora is a passerby
not a detective on the case
didn't stop it from getting 42,000 lights
but look at the woman in the back
all the way on the right
her face is like perfectly lit
like this is a remarkable photograph
just from a like a dynamic range
perspective.
This is...
Yeah, so my putting on the tinfoil hat,
I think this guy with the fedora
is probably one of the thieves
that dressed up in an costume
and is coming back to the crime scene.
I like this. I like this.
You know, because obviously the thief
wouldn't come back to the crime scene.
So he's kind of, you know,
trying to take him, take himself out of the pool of suspect.
Even if you take off the tinfoil hat
and just go with like the narrative
that's here on the,
the timeline. It is hilarious to be like, yeah, I'm going to dress up like this and then go
be a passerby at a jewel fever. He's like, I'm going to go get a fit off. Yeah, he's like, I got to go,
I got to go see what's up at the Lou. I got to be there. I have to be photographed. Yeah, for sure,
for sure. Drip. He's dripped out Frenchman, for sure. Drip out. Let me tell you about Privy.
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Do you want to do this uncapped clip?
Look at the lighting.
Jack Altman, your team is on a tear.
This is beautiful.
Good job.
I love this.
I haven't seen the clip, but let's react.
What is it?
Learned at CAA is star quality is real.
Most people don't have it.
Some do.
What is it?
You just know it when you see it in a room.
Tom Cruise is, you know, maybe my favorite actor growing up.
I've seen Tom gone a zillion times.
I left Maverick.
I had the opportunity to meet him one day in a very kind of random setting.
I was delivering a package to him.
And, you know, he shook my hand and looked me in the eye and we talked for three minutes.
And, you know, for three minutes, I thought, wow, this, no one cares more about me in the world right now than Tom Cruise does, right?
The way he just commands a room and his presence.
But also when Colin Farrell came, command the room, no excuses.
I've never been in a movie before and you spent 30 minutes in a room with him.
and he just had so much magnetism about him,
the way he composed himself and talked to you
and looked at you and just his general kind of persona.
So I do think that to me, I do look for that in founders.
It's the combination of a mind at work
and an opportunity that they're addressing, right?
I remember when I first met Evan from Snap,
He, you know, basically was making the argument that look at the, look at the generation of young people coming up with the Iraq war, essentially having been, you might say, a hoax, right? The WMDs were never there. Rolling into the financial crisis, oh, you told us we had the best economic system, and then it almost collapsed, right? And then COVID, right? The, he built Snap.
as a platform as a reflection of those trends right so what was it well everything
disappears right no one kind of stores your data you can't trust institutions to
look out for you I think it ended up being incredibly prescient of where we are
today as a world right where the institutional breakdown that we've seen so I
think that that magnetism about a person in a room and an idea and a market
that they're going after.
Be goaded.
No excuses.
That's my takeaway.
That's the right takeaway.
Be goaded.
John, by the way,
we can lightly hear you snacked with pistachios.
Just a heads up.
I am talking.
Please no snacking ASMR in this show.
People can find that elsewhere.
We have some breaking news.
What's that?
We, you've heard about, you know, funds that directly buy, you know, equity in, in companies.
You've heard about secondaries funds that, that buy stakes in other funds, and we've got something new.
We've got some breaking news.
We've now got tertiary funds.
Quaternary funds next.
Layla says, I can't believe it's come to this, but here's a.
visual representation of this ridiculous structure. Bottom is actual portfolio companies purchased
by PE funds 1 and 2 with respective LPs. A secondaries fund comes along, buys LP interest in funds
one and two from some LPs. This secondary fund raises money from other LPs, but now we have
a tertiary's fund. This fund will buy secondary interest in secondary's funds by raising money from
other LPs. Does anyone even remember how many layers back the actual value is created? P.S. not to be
confused with C continuation vehicles, stay tuned for that visual. So, uh,
yeah, this is starting to look like the, uh, collateralized debt obligations, credit default
swaps, uh, from the mortgage crisis. It's like very similar. Like, you remember in the big
short, there's like the, you know, you have their stack of champagne glasses. You pour the champagne in
one glass and then it like flows down. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, I haven't seen that one. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's very,
very similar where like at every at every tranche you like
re-collateralize and re-aggregate and ideally like distribute the risk but if
there's correlation then there can be problems um I don't really know how big this stuff is
and certainly not like publicly traded yet but wow to be a tertiary GP is asset managers doing
asset management stuff to be a tertiary GP that's a that's a life yeah a lot of
We should have one on.
Big short memes going around.
Yeah, we should have one on.
There's probably a bull case for it that's actually pretty sound.
It actually makes sense.
Yeah, I can see it making sense in some circumstances.
I think the concern is like you're just, no one can get liquidity.
So you're just kind of like passing the buck, passing the buck.
You know, GPs are harvesting fees at each level, but there's no actual like returns flowing,
like from the underlying, like sort of value, right?
Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I believe it.
What else?
Yasa, owned by Mercedes, recently smashed their own record for motor weight, size, and horsepower.
This production intent motor weighs 28 pounds and produces 1,000 horsepower.
Kyle Coords in the comment says,
I do not understand the point of this.
There are already five EV brands with amply good enough motors.
The motor power density is nowhere near the limiting factor on EV profitability or adoption.
If they can make an adequate motor cheaper, that would be much more valuable innovation,
though still not the limiting factor.
Yeah, I have no idea what their intention is for this motor.
It could be they want to just use it in Formula One, right?
I see, why not?
It looks sick.
Yeah, this is, I mean, they'll put in something.
Put one on every wheel.
Why not 4,000 horsepower?
Like, there seems to be no limit.
Like, the appetite for horsepower is sort of endless.
Yeah, and somebody here says, wouldn't this also be useful for drones, copters, planes?
Sure.
The original poster says absolutely yes.
And also the G63 land delay.
True.
The G63, six by six.
Like, these things need.
The EV version.
Imagine if you put one of these at each, you know, the G wagon has gone electric.
What will they do with the six-by-six?
The six-wheeled G-wagon.
It's a million dollars.
What are your intentions with my motor?
but you know imagine one of those at each at each wheel of the six by six you get six thousand
horsepower in a thing the size of a tank it would be fantastic more interesting news
self-driving taxi company waymo is now doing 876000 rides per month in california 6x increase
over the past year and a 69x increase since august of 20.
Do you think they wind up working with Uber long-term or not?
Ben Thompson was talking about, like, he has been writing a lot about the Uber, Waymo,
the self-driving taxi stuff, mostly because he thinks like he needs more data.
Because even at Uber and Waymo, like they don't necessarily know what the consumer behavior will be.
Like, will the consumers stay with Uber and they'll order a Waymo when one's available,
but then when they'll want one app that can get them in.
anywhere. And so if you say, well, I need you to drive me into the snow to go to Big Bear
today, like you want to do all that in one app. Or will people say, I use the Waymo app for most
things? And then when I want to go into the snow and use a human driver for some specific
route, then I'm happy to open up the Uber app. Yeah, we should get Dar on. Because there's,
because there's, they're actually sort of AB testing this, because some markets are just
Waymo app. Some of them are Waymo in Uber. And it's very clear that they're running like an
experiment. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, we'll see. Yeah, to be, I mean, right now, Waymo is quite a bit more
expensive on a per trip basis than Uber. And so it's possible the ride share market, you know,
used to be bifurcated a little bit between Uber and Lyft. Lyft was always, you know,
I remember when I was in college, I was using Lyft more because it was like slightly
cheaper. Yeah. And it's possible that Waymo ends up becoming like more of a luxury good and
people will just have the Waymo app and and more price sensitive consumers are just sticking
with Uber.
So we'll see.
Yeah. Before our next guest joins, let me tell you about fin.a.i, the number one AI agent.
If you want your AI to handle customer support, go to fin.com.
Our next guest is Drew Housen from Dropbox.
Welcome to the show.
Drew, how are you doing?
What's happening?
How's it going, guys?
Great to see you.
We've been excited for this one.
Yeah, very, very excited.
um where should we start are you are you a waymo fan are you an uber fan we were debating like
where does the consumer experience go i mean i i i know you're probably in the position where
you might not have to choose but uh it's an interesting question in my mind of like will people
want the the the you know the super app for that can get them the robot taxi or the human uh long term
or if uh folks just wind up moving over to waymo entirely
yeah i mean i think it's going to be interesting to see how fast it diffuses i mean i think
there's still like that um or that that like quality problem and they're getting that like
third nine fourth nine fifth nine yeah i mean that's really what's and carpathy talked about that
on why agents are going to be a further way than people think and so but i mean i think it's i mean
s f it's like pretty well established so i think that's probably a sign of what's to come yeah
did the carpathie uh did the carpathie uh podcast like update you on dropbox's strategy at all
or was it something that you were already hearing like rumbles of and you were like okay now
i have like permission to fully write that to long term memory or how are you processing it you know
because i think they were like there there was nothing there that was like completely oh no one
has ever given this take before it was more like no one has ever seen this take before it was more like no one has
said it in this context with this authority it was it was uh it was somebody whose opinion holds a lot
of weight that isn't like waiting didn't feel like he's waiting out for the next like big tender offer
you know totally so it was like it felt like less conflicted than some of the other opinions that
that gets shared yeah totally yeah no i'm very aligned with it uh i don't think there was to your point
i don't think it was like a lot of new um uh or you know i agree with a lot of these teams that the industry
thinking of route for a while. But yeah, sort of like a splash of sobriety on the space. And I think
self-driving is a good comp in some ways for like why this, why AI or AGI or this like fast takeoff
might, you know, not be as quick or on the kind of timelines that people are thinking about.
Because, you know, Carpeti talks about this March of Nines. Like it's the same amount of work
to go from like 90% reliability. That's like one unit of work. Then to get to 99 is like the same
amount of work than 99.9.9. I mean, we've certainly seen that in our, um, as we've worked with
AI and as we just work on reliability in general, I think that's, that's very consistent. And I think
yeah, the self-driving car took the world, uh, or captured the world's imagination like 15 years
ago. And yet it's these like more intermediate forms of automation that are, that come way
before autonomy that create a lot of the commercial value. Um, and get a lot more adoption. So for
example, there's like billions of users of Google Maps today, but, you know, maybe thousands
of people are going to get in a Waymo today. And then same thing for like, you know, Highway Assist
or what Tesla's done or some of these intermediate forms of self-driving that have maybe millions
of users. And so we think about that a lot as we deploy AI. And, you know, you don't want to be
either too early or too late, both the tech in general, but also with automation for sure.
Yeah, it feels like if you watch the Carpathie episode on Friday and you walked into the office on Monday
and, like, ripped up your whole plan.
Like, something's maybe going wrong with your leadership style.
But it is an interesting frame to think about it in the decade of agents framing.
And I'm wondering, like, you've been at this for two decades now, correct?
Like, roughly.
Yeah.
And so you're, you're, like, fully equipped to think in decades because you have literally
thought in decades multiple times, right?
And so I'm wondering how you're thinking about the next decade, like, in 10 years,
what if things play out kind of to the mid case and we get a lot of really powerful AI systems,
but they don't come next quarter, how do you set your company up to actually capitalize fully
over like a nice long decade of just solid execution?
Yeah.
Well, I think when AI first came along, people's imaginations immediately went to like, you know,
sci-fi movies and sort of the one omniscient, omnipotent AI assistant.
But for a while, yeah, I think like looking at, I was surprised when I was, you know, 30, when self-driving first came out, I was like, oh, yeah, maybe millions of people will be off the road. Maybe we'll never see another human behind the wheel when we go to work. And it just like took a lot longer. And then I've been working with like, even when you're just designing like systems with engineering and certainly as you start to apply machine intelligence, you see these dynamics where like the demos look super good and sort of convincing.
you that it's like right around the corner, but then when you actually scale these things up,
it's a lot harder than it looks. And so we saw that even before AI with like Dropbox to begin
with, like we could make a very good demo or a video like in the first couple of months,
but then to roll it out at like mission critical and massive scale, to roll out such a mission
critical product at massive scale, you know, you can't have a bad day. And that just takes a lot
more engineering. And we see that with our AI products today. So I mean, we're and along the, you know,
We want to build the omniscient, you know, omnipotent AI agent too.
But when we actually look at you, like look at customers and look on their screens,
the more basic problem that people have that AI can help with today is just that, like,
if your screen's a mess, like work is a mess, you know, like 100 tabs open, you know,
you're working across Google and Slack and your email and Dropbox and a, you know,
a dozen other things.
And, you know, the question I started with is like, how much is AI helping with that?
And the answer is like zero or negative.
Yeah, the other thing is I'm sure reliability was like a core focus for Dropbox during the early days.
Because if you're like an online file storage and then like one percent of the time, like a file just like disappears into the ether, it's not saved.
And then the user might have lost it forever.
And that's like going to stick in their brain forever.
And so like reliability at Dropbox means like 99.999.99.99.
And it feels like the industry, you know, spending a decade building SaaS and building
SaaS, it was pretty reliable and having like a bunch of infrastructure that makes it easier to deliver
reliability, maybe forgot how, like, how important it is. And if you have an AI agent that
does an amazing job 90% of the time and just totally botches, botches it, 10% of the time,
it's not ready for production. And so you can have these magical. And I think in the context of
like customer support is a big one is like is your agent ready for production if it if like
95% of the time it it solves the consumer's problem but five percent of the time it makes them
like pissed off and they're just like talk to a human talk to a human you know and they're just
running down that that that conversation but yeah well I mean even if once you get up to a million
users even if you have a 95 or 99% success rate that's still like thousands or 10 thousands
the tens of thousands of people having a really terrible experience, like, every day.
And this was actually part of the motivation-wise started Dropbox.
Step one was not, like, create Dropbox.
Step one was, like, use all these other services and, like, have all these near misses
or things were like, wait, what happened to my, like, a tax return?
It was just here a second ago.
Where did it go?
And going into the support forums of these other competitive, like, well, these other
companies, these other products that claim to do this on paper.
But then you go in the support forums, and it's like a battlefield medical
tent. People are like, oh my God, what happened to my wedding photos and where's this? And I was
like, I like can't believe that, you know, these things are so brittle. I'm going to be putting
my most important stuff in here, even just as a customer of one, like me. Like, I need something
that I can trust. And then that took a lot more like engineering rigor and discipline than we'd
seen in the space. We've been getting into barnyard analogies around here. I want to take you through
one, and I'd love your feedback. So we think about a lot of the dynamics between the various
players in enterprise software and foundation models as potentially mimicking the experience of a fox
and a henhouse. And it might be the job of the CEO of the henhouse not to let the fox in
the henhouse. And I'm wondering if that resonates with you at all in terms of if I'm a foundation
model company, I say, hey, I'd love to provide a bunch of great AI tooling to my customers,
your customers, both. I will need all of your data forever, and I will need to significantly
erode your mode or your customer retention. Like, is the job of the CEO right now to protect
the henhouse or go on the attack and be more fox-like? Help me walk through this from your
perspective. Well, I mean, I think when it comes to using AI, it depends. I mean,
it depends what your business is doing and how you're using it and so on. I think, I mean,
certainly the CEO's responsibility to like strategically position their company and mitigate
risk and things like that. But certainly every CEO is thinking about how do I like
usefully deploy AI. And so I think it helps to have an understanding of the technology. I think
it's important to, like, know who you're working with and what their incentives are, to your point, you know, and houses, like, you know, I think a lot of people have apprehension about using some of these, or about working with the foundation model company whose whole business revolves around, like, taking data and sort of grinding it up into pellets for training the next one. And, you know, you watch SORA videos or whatever, and you're like, that comes from somewhere. Probably not. They're artists. So, so I think, and.
You know, it's certainly in our business that trust and privacy and not having incentive conflicts of like not advertising, not training foundation models is super important as, you know, all of our customers think about, you know, who should we partner with.
So is there a little bit of attention there where you, you need to keep customer trust high and let them know that we're going to get you these AI features, but in the Dropbox way, that is.
actually fully integrated and we're not just going to take your customer record or your data
and sell it off the back of the truck just to pull something forward. And that actually layers
into like the customer experience. Like you might be a couple months behind on a certain thing,
but it's going to wind up with a better experience over time. Is that accurate? Yeah. And I think
it's all the above. I think it starts with just like your business and your incentives. Like
You have to design some of this in from the beginning.
Like, you know, we could probably be, make more money or be more profitable if we did advertising, for example.
And so, and a lot of scaled, you know, the predominant scaled business model on the internet for, certainly for consumers as advertising.
And we're like, you know, we're just going to draw a hard line.
We're never, we're just not going to do that because of this trust conflict or this incentive conflict, we would have.
And even if we're, even if our intentions are good, it's like customers just have to wonder, right?
And then that becomes a big advantage because then we've been living up to that for the last 18 years and we have a track record.
What is the specific concern if you were running effectively display ads?
Is it privacy of like, I don't want you to use my data to target me with more ads?
Yeah.
And really, this is up to our customers, not us.
It doesn't really matter what we think.
It really matters what they think.
And I think, yeah, everybody feels a little weird when it's like the equivalent.
equivalent of like even just like the TV in your living room if it starts showing you like a smart
TV that's showing it starts showing you ads you didn't ask for you know it's like whoa there's an
invasion of privacy here and so you have to be super sensitive to the psychology um of your users but i think
at a more fundamental level yeah the other thing is like non-targeted at not i imagine the worst
possible scenario that you were 100% not doing where the the file storage company edits ads into my
files. So I'm like, wait a minute. I saved my high school transcript. And now on page six of this
PDF, they edited an ad. Well, the other thing is like non-targeted ads were really frustrating because I remember in
college, I bought a Kindle. And there was an option. It was like, do you want the ad supported Kindle?
I went with the ad support. It's a very Amazon move is to be like, okay, for $100, you can get the ads
supported Kind of. Or for $120, you can buy it. And I'm a college student. I got the boozy one. I got
the no ads. But then I was getting like the ads that were that when I had this that were popular
were like the most, it was like romantic novels and stuff like that. Like books that I wasn't reading.
And so my, you know, it would be sitting there and it would be like,
just absorb my entire life so you can target me with something cool for once. Yeah.
And the other thing is I think you have to focus. I get to really be selective about the problems
you solve and like figure about, okay, how do we take what we do today and build on that in a way that
make sense for today's context. So for us, I mean, we always took care of your files. These
are already like your most important information. But as we all know, like, what used to be 100
files on our desktops, now 100 tabs in our browser. And then a lot of the pain points we have
are like, you know, instead of one search box or at home, I can Google anything from one place,
search all of human knowledge. I go to work. I've got like 10 different search boxes. My experience
is totally fragmented. And that's what I was living personally. That's what my company is
living. That's what all of us are living. I mean, look under my Zoom window. It's all, you know,
we're all dealing with the same thing.
And so we're like,
let's extend AI into that new world in like a valuable way.
Let's give people that one search box.
And then another problem with AI is that our industry is training these,
is spending trillions of dollars to train these models that can do like quantum physics,
but don't know about, you can't find your Q2 BoreTech.
And so, and the missing link there is like AI,
these models can only be as smart as the context that you provide them.
And that's really the bottleneck.
and like no one's focusing on that.
And that's why, that's how like we have this new product, Dropbox Dash,
which really aims to close that context gap
and finally connect your AI to everything at work.
And so on the surface, it's a AI assistant, it's a search engine,
it connects, it knows about you, it knows about your work,
knows about your company, it connects to all of your work apps.
And unlike with a consumer AI tool or, you know,
where there's a lot of questions,
It can answer a lot of questions, but a lot of questions it can't answer.
So if you ask, like, when does our office lease expire?
Where is that slide from last year's product launch?
ChatchipT can't tell you because it's not connected to your stuff.
And, you know, and then co-pilot doesn't know about your Slack.
And Gemini doesn't know about your Salesforce.
And so that's where a dash comes in to build this, like, universal context layer.
And the front end is really around search and an AI assistant because that's what people understand.
But we're like, this is a natural evolution for us.
Dropbox has always been about organizing and sharing your information.
organizing, sharing your most important information, connecting to every ecosystem,
being trusted, having this track record of reliability and security, okay, how can we,
what is the manifestation of AI in our world that actually makes sense, and where is there
a new problem that hasn't been solved?
I think that's just like the perfect strategy for you right now, because I, we had this,
like, search was great, and then we wound up generating so much data that search, I
personally, not a judgment on you particularly, but across all of my service.
whether it's i message gmail we talk about it all the time uh it's not to hate on you this is a
this is a technology wide thing uh search got really slow and and and not as accurate and it would
there were so many cookies that it was picking up like it would just get confused and then we got like
gpg5 deep research like the thing that can go work for 20 minutes to get you exactly what you
need and it's like okay now we need to actually bring these two things together and get really
performance, something in the middle, and then size them. And you see this with the model
router in the consumer product, but to actually bring something like this in the business
context makes so much, so much sense. So I love that the pitch is not, is not ASI for
your documents. You know, it's like, hey. I mean, we're excited about that too eventually,
but if that's, you know, in self-driving, they have like level five full autonomy, like totally
self-driving, human out of the loop. But a lot of the commercial value gets created at like the
level one, level two, like, all right, let's give people a working search box. Let's actually
give them AI that actually knows about their work. These are going to be the big businesses
that get built along the way to that, you know, superintelligence.
Yep. Zuming out and kind of going away from what's happening at the product level,
like, what is your updated kind of strategy around running the business and capital allocation?
I know you're the single largest shareholder somewhere around 20%. You've been buying
pack, a bunch of shares, but what is your, what is like the, the strategy and kind of pitch
on that front?
Well, mainly investing for growth.
I mean, Dropbox has always been a pretty profitable business.
I mean, we took a lot of the consumer internet playbook in the beginning and built these
like self-serve viral product-led motion that was able to scale to millions of, you know, hundreds
of millions of people, millions of businesses.
We have half a million paying businesses on Dropbox, two and a half billion in revenue.
um but you know the new yeah there we go uh hit that gong yeah we got to hit the actual
yeah for two and a half billion of revenue creating product led growth we get we get excited about
big numbers the godfather are you the godfather of product led growth is that fair to say
i don't think i'm allowed to call myself okay well i'm allowed to call i'm calling you the godfather
of product led growth no no i mean if you if anyone listening is not familiar with the drop box
playbook. Like, please go, study it. It is a clinic for value creation. It's a fantastic story.
Yeah, and, you know, we're doing that again. We're running a lot of the same playbook with Dash.
And I talk a little about search and the sort of AI chat piece. But we're also just thinking
very fundamentally about, like, all the things we've kind of lost as we went from kind of the file
and PC world into the browser and the cloud. And it's not just search or AI. There's even just
the concept of organizing things as you were talking about. People are like, somehow we all got
convinced that searching for things
is like
a substitute for
organizing things and it's just not
really true in that
you know all along the way we had
files have folders, songs have playlist
but you think like links have
right there's no like container like a collection
of
there's no way to like have a collection of mixed format
stuff if you have like a Google Doc and a
10 gig 4K video and
an air table
there's no way to so organize.
So we have something called Stacks
probably about to show up on this video.
That does that.
But yeah, I mean, just looking at these very basic problems
hidden in plain sight
and you give people a search box that works,
let people talk to all their stuff in natural language,
organize their stuff for them,
go beyond documents to organize your images and videos.
And so in a lot of ways,
where I'm putting our capital is just building the version of Dropbox
that I would want to have today, which is, and Dash is step one in that direction.
Yeah, and there's, I mean, we've covered a number of companies that have been going after
enterprise search, and it feels like you were, and many of them have been able to achieve pretty
wild valuations in a short period of time, but of course, you're not asleep at the wheel
thinking, I don't, I don't want to, I don't want to dominate that market too, so it's awesome.
Yeah, well, and then I think the big thing our customers really want, or we're, that
Dash fits in there versus Glean or some other companies is like you don't have to spend six months and 50 grand to get started.
And so one of the things we're launching today is like a truly self-served version of Dash where you can just download it, get your team up on running, link your apps and just go.
And that's something I think that's really been missing because there's a lot of, you know, there's a bit of a knife fight in the enterprise around a lot of different things.
But then we look at most of our customers in the S&B segment or lower mid-market.
It's a huge swath of the market has no options.
And so we think it took a lot longer because it's hard to make these things totally self-serve.
But that's what we've done with Dash.
And again, it's sort of like it's the version of Dropbox I would build for today's context.
Fantastic.
We won't keep you any longer.
Obviously, you're very busy.
We really appreciate your conversation.
Yeah, congrats to the whole team on the launch.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
We're super proud of it.
And next time, come on in person, come hang out in the Ultradome.
And put on a growth clinic.
I'm sure a lot of people would benefit from learning some of the story because...
From the godfather himself.
Yeah, it's a fantastic one.
The godfather.
Thanks so much for coming on the show.
Great hang in, Drew.
Have a great grace of you guys.
We'll talk to you soon.
Up next, we have Adam Fry from Open AI.
That rhymes.
I like that.
The product lead for Chat, GPT, Atlas.
We're diving into the browse.
Wars. The new web browser from OpenAI had a phenomenal response. I don't know if you saw how many
folks saw the YouTube video. I think it has over a million views now, but we will talk to Adam Frye.
About it. Welcome to the stream, Adam. How are you doing? Welcome. Doing very well. Nice to meet you.
Busy, busy couple days for you. Yeah, it's been a bit of a whirlwind. I think just like you said,
there's been such a big outpour of a reaction. We're so excited to see
the reaction and so excited that people get to use chat chp t atlas now this is not gp u
constraint at all right like i mean obviously it's like uh it interfaces with your core pool of
gp u's but it's not like a new uh an entirely new provision of gp ux right yeah that's right
so you know it's it's available to everyone yeah so chat chp t atlas you can go to the download
link you can download it it's available free plus pro everyone you know the agent part of it which
I know you guys were savvy about, and we've talked to our colleagues before, you know,
that is more compute intensive. And so if you use some of the more advanced features of
ChatGPT Atlas, where you ask ChatGPT to go do things, that can be more GPU intensive for our
paid users, for sure. Is there an incentive to set people, I saw a screenshot, but you never
know what's real anymore, that if you set Atlas as your default, you can increase your
chat GPT subscription limits. Is there some sort of incentive? We were just talking to Dr.
from Dropbox about, you know, product-led growth, how you actually, you know, increase customer
adoption. Is there something going on there that you can tell us about? For sure. So, you know,
chat GPT Atlas is, you know, it's a browser. And that's sort of at the core of what you do
every day. It's sort of your operating system for your life, whether it's personal or at work.
And so, you know, part of that is we wanted to really, we felt like the more people use it,
you sort of discover these AI features. I think you guys have talked about this a lot in your
show. But, you know, this new generation of browsers, there's a lot to discover. You have to learn
how to use chatDBT in your normal workflow. And so we've really wanted to incentivize to people
to really give it a shot. And the best part of these new browsers is using chat chabit,
everywhere you go across the web. And so one of the things that we did to start this off was
if you give it a shot for a week as a default browser, you can sort of extend your limits.
And it really allow you to test out all those AI features. That's cool. What was
Was it always obvious that ChatGPT would build a standalone browser,
or was there somewhat of a debate internally?
I always felt like ChatGPT was a web browser, right?
It felt like it was browsing the web on my behalf
and serving it up in an interface.
And so it almost feels like this is the second browser
that you guys are doing, but you're going and building something
that looks more like a traditional browser.
Yeah.
It's such a good point.
There's that great stat of if you ask people off the street,
you know, what browser do you use?
Most people actually don't even know what browser that they use
because the concept doesn't always make sense.
And so, you know, it wasn't obvious,
but what it really started from was a very specific user insight.
You know, we were seeing, you know, you guys probably felt this when you use Chat Chepti,
but you're on Chat Chatsubit.com.
You're in a million tabs.
You're doing a whole bunch of other stuff.
You're in your docks.
You're planning for your next show.
And you're like copying and pasting back and forth
between Chat Chubit and all the things you're doing.
And so we just sort of sat back and said, you know, if Chachapiti is going to be more and more helpful for you over time and people are going to rely on it more for the work that they do, for their personal life, it has to be able to coexist where you're doing that work.
And that's what the browser is, is, you know, where you're doing your work.
And so we said, how can we actually bring Chachapiti into that when you invite it in to actually have the context of what you're working on?
And I think that that spark of an insight was really, once you believe that, we were really.
like, oh, yeah, building Chachapiti Atlas is, of course we've got to do that.
How are you guys thinking about what success looks like with the product over the next few
months? I think you have an immense amount of pressure, obviously, that the Chatsubu-T
retention data was flowing around the internet over the last. It's kind of hard to fast follow
that, because if you set the bar, you know, here. But how are you thinking about it and
how, and then I kind of have a follow-up question around, like, you have hundreds of millions
of happy, active users that you can be porting over to Atlas over time, but maybe first,
like, yeah, what does success look like in the first weeks and months?
Yeah, great question. So the start is, we think of it as a multi-year journey, right?
People have been using browsers forever, and probably your existing one you've been using for
10, 20 years. And so it's, you know, building.
browser sort of like we joke, it's like you're moving around the furniture in someone's home.
You know, you know exactly where this is, you know exactly where that is. And so change is going
to take time. So we measure success over the long run. We want to be as helpful to our users
as possible. But in the short term, you know, we're focused on retention. You know, we're focused
on for the people who are giving it a shot, which is a lot of people, because people are really
excited about this, you know, are they sticking with it? And, you know, are they loving it? Are they
sort of diving in deeper to using chat throughout, you know, as they browse the web to get
advice on whatever they're working on as they go. And if we see those signals, which we're
starting to see, that's when we sort of, you know, pour on the fire and sort of grow it and
grow it. But so short-term retention, but we also understand this is this is a long-term game
for browsers and, you know, we're investing heavily for a long time in it. Are you thinking
about a mobile version? We are bringing experiences Atlas to mobile and to Windows. And so
the team is, you know, furiously working on it. We want to bring it to as many people as we
possibly can. That's why we brought it to all of our free users, all of our paid, all of our
pro right away globally. We think we've got a great browser. We're really excited for people
to keep using it.
Very fun. Yeah, it's going to be a big shoes to fill since Sora rocketed straight to the top
of the app store when you go, when you go live on there. I'm sure it will be. I think Adam can take
it to the top again. I love it. I'm a believer. Yeah. I love the framing of it being like
a longer journey.
Like it just does seem like there's not going to be like the Sam Altman stealing GPUs
moment for the browser where it just goes viral and everyone's like, I got to check this out,
right?
It's very hard to like accelerate something that's a productivity tool.
And so having that mindset makes a ton of sense.
I'm wondering about new patterns, new language, new archetypes of features that we might be talking
about in a few years after this all rolls out. If you see any glimpses of this, the thing that I'm
thinking about, I was talking to someone on our team about Chrome extensions. And I was thinking about
what the extension looks like in the future. And if there's some sort of like, I've prompted an
agent to do a certain workflow so many times that then it kind of collapses it into some UI and
it places it somewhere in the browser. And it's like, it's almost writing like the custom software.
You see I'm kind of like painting a bunch of splatter on the canvas, but there's something there.
How do you think about like these new patterns?
How much will your thumb be on the scale or do you want the community to customize things?
Like where does the line draw on?
How are you thinking about that?
Yeah.
So there's probably three big things when I look forward a couple years that I'm really excited about.
So the first is, you know, part of this Atlas launch was the agent in your browser where it can take action.
It brings up a cursor.
It does things for you.
I'm really excited for that, as it gets better, so it's still early research preview,
but it's starting to do tasks where we've seen it actually be helpful in a short amount of time.
And I'm really excited for proactivity around that.
Eventually, you can actually suggest, hey, I've already drafted five emails for you.
What do you think?
You don't even have to task it.
And so there's a sort of proactive world of the agents that I think is going to be really, really interesting and valuable for folks.
The second is working with developers, I think, you know, as it's more computer-to-computer interaction,
if you have an agent that you're delegating to
to go write a document or go to a website,
those websites will evolve to work better
with a software that is actually going and clicking around.
And we just are sort of scratching the surface.
We're teaching these computers to click around the way that we have.
But I think eventually the internet website will evolve
to co-work with agents to make things more productive for everyone.
And then the third is, you know,
I think eventually models will be really good to create their own
sort of applications within the browser.
And so I think there's so many
amazing places that this is going to go.
And this is just sort of the beginning
of this journey. And I think to
Jority's point earlier, chat Chb-T is
already so retentive. If you can bring
Chatsubit into the browser like we have with
Atlas today, it's already going to
be so helpful to your life, and then it's just
going to get better from there.
Yeah, you guys need to figure out. Can you share any numbers with us?
Well, you got to, I was going to say, like,
maybe just the number of YouTube videos. I think, I think
the, you know,
the most recent comp that we have to like a scaled consumer tech company launching an ambitious
product in a super competitive market was meta launching threads and when there's this early
excitement around a product you can see you know massive amount of like downloads and then people
were ready to call threads you know basically say like okay it's over like good nice good effort
basically and then meta figured out kind of the right flow to get people to
cultivate like a unique community there, get people moving over there consistently. And so
I would expect to see something similar out of Atlas and that I think a lot of downloads and
excitement and usage early. Some people will churn. But you have that massive base of users that
you can continue to, you know, show them. Like if they do the right prompt in chat GPT, it's like,
you know, I can do this on your behalf over here if you like. So excited to see how this plays out.
Yeah, and I think the key thing there is focus to an investment, and I get to speak on behalf of the team that's working on this, but they're over there working on it right now, just making it better and better.
So if you stick with it and you look at the small signals, the small paper cuts that people are telling you about, we just keep filling them, keep getting better.
That's when your retention goes up.
That's when people really enjoy your product.
So the launch is one thing.
We couldn't be more excited.
The reception to your question has been immense, lots of downloads, but not sharing any numbers today.
but, you know, it's really about
do people stick around
and we have to keep working on that
to earn that from people.
Yeah, totally.
Makes a ton of sense.
Well, we'll hit the gong once you're charting.
Okay.
I was ready to go.
He was ready to go.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, thanks for breaking it down
and congratulations on the launch.
Yeah, this is great.
Thank you guys for having me on.
It's such a blast.
Appreciate it.
Always a great time.
We'll talk to you soon.
Cheers.
Our next guest is Ian Rogers from Ledger.
He believes is already in the re-stream waiting room.
Ryan in the chat, I have to address
that, well, Taylor says, he laughs and says,
it's a good chromium wrapper, sir.
I think, I think big things have small beginnings.
The chromium wrapper company of California.
No, I think, I think that they have the incredible advantage
of being able to have, you know, a massive user base
and get people over there, continue to iterate,
and it just...
You know what else is crazy?
I mean, the VS code story.
Like, like, the browser wars look a lot less crazy
when you think about what happened to VS code.
open source code editor. You get windsurf, you get cursor. Like, people really did build serious
businesses off of those. Anyway, we can talk about that more later. For now, we have Ian Rogers from
Ledger in the Restream wedding room. Let's bring him into the TBPN Ultram. How are you doing?
What's happening? Welcome. I'm good. How are you guys? We're fantastic.
We're fantastic. We're in Paris. Oh, thank you so much for staying up for us. Looking quite sharp in
that jacket, too. You look great. You know, I was thinking, I was like, wow, well, I just came from,
we've had a big day to day when there's a party happening at the ledger offices and I just came from
that so this is what i was wearing and i'm like wait i'm in my living room should i put my pajamas on
what's what's appropriate here but you know you guys are always dressed sharp so i thought you
know what i'll just keep the i'll just keep the jacket on well you know even though it feels a little
out of place in my living room i got to be honest i did not think that this week we'd be
talking to someone in paris at the scene of the crime we'll tell us what ledger does
how are you going to say are you going to store my valuables reliably
Not focus on Royal Jewel, unfortunately.
Otherwise, it may not have had an issue.
By the way, by the way, I had coffee at Ledger with a number two from the Louvre last Tuesday morning.
I was asking him, like, you know, what's it like to tell me about the job?
And it's, you know, pretty, pretty mellow, long term.
We think long term horizons, these sort of thing.
Wow.
That job got a lot more interesting over the weekend.
But anyway, yeah.
How do you introduce the company now?
Give us the general update.
So Ledger's been around for 11 years, which is a very long time in the world of crypto, but really always doing the same thing.
It started with this simple idea that we have these amazing devices, phones and computers, but they were meant to share information, not protect value, you know, fundamentally.
And if we're going to have digital value in our lives, and especially if kind of the main invention of this new digital value, Bitcoin, etc., is permissionless money, well, then,
you have self-custody and if self-custody then security is paramount.
So let's, you know, use secure element chips to protect private keys.
And that, you know, that started with really one-purpose Bitcoin.
But, you know, then we've had much more cryptocurrency.
But actually, the fact is you can use that same device to secure anything.
So pass keys, identity.
You know, we live increasingly digital lives and proof is increasingly important.
And therefore, security.
So the other interesting thing about the way, if you think about it, the technology and
where it comes from, it's this smart card technology.
So it's the same chip that's in your credit card or your passport, but where your credit
card protects the secrets of the bank and your passport protects the secrets of the
government, right, from you, because you have it in your possession, you're not supposed
to hack it.
This is using that same technology to protect the secrets of the user or of the consumer,
which is pretty powerful, especially, I mean, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, you know, I, I,
I was listening to your interview about open AI,
going into a world of agentic AI,
we will need to prove our humanness.
It would be nice if we could own our own preferences
and then federate them to the apps that we use.
And I'm not sure I want to shove my credit card into that agent.
I'd rather it asked me before it booked the flight.
You know, like here's the info.
Would you like to verify this transaction on a secure screen?
Yes, I would. Thank you.
So it's that.
And today we announced a new product,
but that's what we've been doing.
for a few years now.
Yeah, what's different about the new product?
I feel like Ledgers, like,
it feels like something in a way
it's like great idea, solved,
and so I'm interested to know what's happening
with like the iteration cycle.
Yeah, so we have this product that people are very
familiar with the Ledger Nano, which is it's just like
the swivel, it folds out, you've seen it.
Which, you know, and if when, it's kind of the Air Jordan
of crypto, like if somebody needs a physical
representation of crypto. They include a picture of the ledger in it. But with Tony Fidel, who is,
you know, the founder of the podfather, he created the iPod and co-invented the iPhone and founded
Nest. I mean, you guys will appreciate this. When I started this job, I told Tony, I said,
yeah, I'm going to run the consumer business for Ledger. And he said, there is no consumer
business. That business is business to geek. Your job is to make a consumer business. Right. And so
we started making these secure touchscreen devices.
So he designed one that's beautiful.
It's called Ledger Stacks.
It's the world's first curved e-ink display.
So where a Kindle screen is silicon on glass,
this is an organic substrate on plastic,
and you get this 5-millimeter curve,
and it's Tony.
He can envision the circuit board
and the billboard at the same time.
But that screen, first ever,
And the first product to have an organic TFT took longer than we thought, and the screen
ended up costing more than we thought, and then the product is in market for a higher price
than we had hoped for.
So we built a, that retail is at $3.99, and then we built another one.
It's a beautiful device called Ledger Flex, steel case, really nice E-ink screen, but that
clocked in it 249, and what we really wanted to do was to do this secure touchscreen, but
at the price of a nano-X, which is one of our most popular models of all time.
So this is the one that we introduced today.
This is the ledger.
This is the nano-gen-5, and this is on sale today for 179.
So here you can see what the box looks like.
And that's what we did today.
The other thing we did today is announced a bunch of features in the software.
Because really, I mean, you know, kind of to the point you were making earlier, it's not about hardware. It's about what can you do with it. You know, and, you know, these devices, they started as one thing, this long-term investment asset, you know, Bitcoin. That was what it was for. But now it's all assets because it's, you know, tokenized, you know, RWA's tokenized stocks. It's also, you know, a yield-bearing savings account with stable coins these days.
And it's a spending account as well because we have a credit card that's a, well, it's actually a debit card, a crypto debit card that pays Bitcoin rewards.
So it's so much more, you know, you can do, we support 10,000 tokens, you know, 100% of the top 100 tokens.
So it's really, you know, it's a, it's a financial tool in your, in your pocket and a secure one, which is, which your phone is not.
talk a little bit more uh yeah i love i love how many different like really thinking about the full suite
and just building these like purpose built devices for different use cases talk about i guess more
you mentioned earlier if you have agents operating in the world on your behalf specifically online
like how you guys are thinking and kind of even timeline there because i think uh this is top of mind
for a lot of people that are realizing like okay i'm going to have a browser that's not just like
a window into the web
and a way for me to enter into forms
but it'll be acting on my behalf
and if it's going to be like moving money
or doing anything else or submitting my information somewhere
like I want to have more you know real control over that
so I guess wanted to kind of hear more about
how you guys are thinking about that opportunity
in the context of Ledger's business
yeah I mean I guess the way I think about this
I think about it all in context right
what was the internet really two computers could talk to each other
we get this revolution of information.
What is blockchain?
Well, blockchain is the ability to issue and trade, really, right?
So I can, and I can, we talk about scarcity,
but it's really about issuance and trading.
You know, the kind of, what's the core building block?
And then, you know, with AI, we have, you know,
superintelligence and ultimately things that we can delegate tasks to
that will act on our behalf.
But if they're going to act on our behalf,
then they have to represent us.
out there, right? And also, when we're interacting with other people, we need to know who it is we're
interacting with. And, you know, so also I think those things need to be, you know, machine readable.
So interestingly, in both cases, you're talking about tokens, right? We talk about eating tokens
in the case of AI, and we talk about issuing tokens in the case of crypto. But what we're really
talk, what we mean when we say those things is we're talking about things that are machine readable
and machine translatable.
So I think that, you know,
I think proof is actually a really important word to consider here.
You know, how do you know this is me talking?
How do you know these are the words that are coming out of this microphone?
I think proof is going to become increasingly important.
We already have it, and a lot of companies are like trying to take this challenge head on.
You know, Reddit is trying to know that someone's not a bot on the other side.
You know, dating sites, match.com has a big effort to try to know that someone's,
So how exactly are you doing that and, you know, and who are you trusting?
So I think trust brokers will become pretty important in the future.
You know, like if I had, I could, if I said like, oh, yeah, here's a, here's a war hall print.
And you'd be like, okay, well, maybe it is, you know.
But if Christie said it's a warhol, you'd be like, yeah, it probably is.
They probably did the work.
And that's the same thing that we have in our lives with things like driver's licenses.
You know, it's difficult to get a driver's license.
It's easy to read one.
You know, and I think we'll have, we'll have a lot of those kinds of things where there's a trust broker, that trust broker will issue a token that says, you know, not only am I a human, but I'm a unique human. This token matches, you know, matches a passport, one passport, not multiple passports. And then, you know, and then a machine readable way, in a machine readable way, you know, we'll be able to kind of do a handshake where it's like, oh, yeah, that's a real person. And you could use that in, you know, any context, Twitter, YouTube, or X, YouTube, et cetera. And so I think that,
these kinds of, you know, this is like the super basic version.
You know, the more, the only slightly more complex version is that agent that they were talking
about earlier in my browser, you know, it's going to go book me a flight to Miami.
Well, how?
Have I given it my Delta login?
Did I give it my credit card information?
Like, you know, right now we live in this world where kind of our identity is locked behind
all of these login password combinations across thousands of websites.
There's no need for that.
All of that data could be owned by the individual,
just like we own our passport and our driver's license
and other things.
And then it's federated to those applications as needed.
It's really a much, it's more scalable, it's more secure,
it's a much better, and it's less trust.
I think we're already, you know,
I mean, I haven't installed the Open AI browser yet,
and I'm like, wow, do I really?
They've already got so much.
I have an idea.
I have an idea.
bring a giant gong that you can store bitcoin what about that what about that
the massive gong that you keep in your vault in your basement and you can store bitcoin on it
you can smash it every time you want it you could actually probably just sneak a little ledger
nano up in the gong and that would work fine but i was i was holding back i was ready to tell you guys
i was ready to give us some numbers what you got i was going to say approximately 20% of all
crypto is protected by ledger devices.
I thought that was, yes.
I was like, what can I give you this worthy of a gong?
That's insane.
I got two.
You guys probably, yeah, you got two hits.
We're running over.
The last thing I wanted to ask, what's the Parisian crypto scene like?
It sounds cool and you seem really cool, but what's it like on the ground?
Thanks.
I have to say the ledger party tonight was.
I barely escaped from there because there were just people in the street, you know, going, can I get in?
No, it's, it really, it's interesting here.
I moved here 10 years ago.
I moved here 10 years ago to work for LVMH, and a lot, I mean, I really, you know, I moved to L.A. in 95, and it felt, you know, like it was a million miles away from Silicon Valley at that time.
You know what I mean?
But then over time, it kind of grew into something that, you know, we had a MySpace, we had a Snapchat.
We had a, you know, like, L.A. kind of came into its own.
And you feel the same thing here over 10 years.
years you know like it's uh it's still france and france is not america when it comes to startups
that's for sure um but they've they've they've really i mean it's it's uh there's so much going on
here it's really fun get over here let's do this we you know we'll give you the we'll give you the
proper tool i refuse i refuse i'm not i'm not leaving america i'm sorry won't leave our borders
but i i will i'll take you up on that okay cool come yeah come on over anytime
does john have a passport he does unfortunately yes yeah he does
but he doesn't like to use it.
Otherwise, I could say no to every international invitation.
You go, John, come over here.
We got seas and lakes and mountains.
And he's like, we got seas and lakes and mountains over here.
Yeah.
Do they got the Indianapolis 500 over there?
Do they got the Kentucky Derby over there?
No, I am, by the way, I am from Indiana.
And you can, and this, I'll give you a fun fact.
Kid Rock is on record saying the only reason I would go to France is to visit Ian.
So maybe, John, you'd come.
Oh, that's lore.
That's deep lore.
That's deep lore.
Amazing.
Ian, great to meet you.
Congrats to the whole team on the launch.
And thank you for securing 20% of all digital assets.
Yes, thank you for your service.
We'll talk to you soon.
Have a good day.
I will see again.
Our next guest, Molly from Knox, is already in the Restream Waiting Room.
We're going to bring her in and ask her how she's going to let you interface with both
iMessage and WhatsApp at the same time.
Do I have that correct?
Yes.
So this is like a total moonshot company.
This is harder than colonizing Mars.
This is trying to get Tim Cook and Mark Zuckerberg to play nice.
How are you possibly going to pull this off?
Yeah, message interoperability has been one of the problems that just people have talked about for a while.
I think the way that we do it is we have this insight where if you layer onto people's computers
and you don't distribute within the app store, we have more interesting things that you could do.
And so it's actually possible to do exactly what we want to do here, which is connect IMessage and WhatsApp together.
Yeah. So I imagine that, like, if I was super, super hardcore, I could have like a Mac mini that's running with literally IMessage and WhatsApp open and an agent that's clicking and screen scraping and uploading to a database and then surfacing that in an app. And it's going to be very hard for WhatsApp and IMessage to like shut me down if I'm doing that. But that's a very prosumer behavior. You need your own computer. How far are you from there to the actual product?
What's interesting is the first version of the product was effectively a cloud server that we would ask people to log in.
So give us their iCloud details to log into, which, you know, Trey has a funny story about this.
But at a certain point, I think you realize that it's just not the most effective and the right way to do it.
It's not the perfect answer.
And so because it feels inelegant, there's a better way, which is what you described, essentially, if you can insert mouse clicks and be,
indistinguishable from a human from the OS level.
So Apple can't tell that you're a human versus you're automating your computer.
It's over.
It's like, okay, great.
That's where you want to be.
So we've thought a lot about that question.
And yeah, certainly some of the features sort of play with that aspect.
I mean, do you have to like message the prosumer nature?
Do you think that there's a world where you can get big enough that then you exert enough leverage over the
platforms that they have to play nice with you.
Like, is that the long-term goal to be able to walk into Cupertino and Menlo
Park and say, like, look, like, there are going to be millions of people that are
upset if you shut off my API access.
So let's make this easier for everyone.
Yeah.
I think we already see it moving in one direction with RCS.
It's probably going to continue moving that way.
So that would be amazing.
On the pro semer thing, I think it just comes down to regulation and rights and what you can
lobby for.
So, yeah.
How solid?
How important do you think iMessage is to Apple's, like, position?
Because recently, we've just come to this, like, weird realization that it's, like,
my, it's my number one social network.
It's, like, how I plan my social life, my family life, my friends.
I'm sure you're the same way.
I have group chats with business friends.
And all the social platforms are, like, where I consume news and content.
And, like, people that are, like, friendly acquaintances, but mostly, like, my social network
is iMessage.
and that feels like they're going to be able to charge whatever they want for me to keep that every year when they release a new iPhone.
So do you buy that thesis as well that it's very important to Apple's position in the market?
I think it's hands down the most important factor as to why people are buying iPhones.
Because no one wants to be the icky green bubble in the group chat where all of a sudden nothing works in the group chat and things are delayed and just disgustingly, you know, design.
So at a certain point, you don't want to be that guy.
So you just heard mentality and sheep into buying an iPhone.
But I think a larger point here is like, I think a larger point here is, it's just like, when you receive a blue bubble from someone, there's already this part is preemptive.
Okay.
Another farm.
This is, wait, sorry, we're trying to build out the ultimate farm analogy for attack because you have, you have the trough, the slop trough.
You have people who are goaded.
But then you have people who are sheep.
And so, you just helped us create a new link in the chain and the diagram.
But anyway, sorry.
Goats need sheep, you know.
Yes.
What is a goat without a sheep to contrast with?
Sorry.
How is the actual product launch going, the rollout?
Are you in beta?
Is it hand-holding customers on?
Are you general availability?
It's really good, yeah.
So it's general availability.
Anyone can download it right now, at least on Mac.
and then if they want iOS, they can request access through me.
So we have been getting a lot of people today just going on.
The onboarding experience is mind-blowing.
It just tells you your life recounted through you
through all the conversations and top people that you've met.
And what's funny is I was texting Ben before this,
trying to coordinate logistics.
And I found out that my messages suddenly turned green.
And it was because I hit a quota limit
because this morning I sent out,
3,000 messages to people all in my one-on-one group chats, like, hey, guys, can you
help me post about this and help me support here? And yeah, so I guess I realize what the
ceiling is on the rate limit. Oh, that's always a good sign. I'm wondering if I'm going to get
rate rate limited on my inbox. I have 5,004 unread text right now. One of our friends,
one of our friends, Wilmanius, is going to have that desire for Bloomberg for
private markets, and he kind of outlined it as iMessage Plus Signal and Axe and Twitter as the
main one. So have you thought about that? And what are the nuances of like how hostile each
API is, basically, is what I'm looking for, like a state of the state of affairs. Yeah, I saw,
I think it was Will's tweet. I saw it and I thought it was interesting. On our roadmap,
we have Slack and Discord, maybe email or a few other messaging platforms. But
I think the big thing is actually 80% of your messages come through.
It's not an equivalence, right?
Like 2020, it's like mostly people are on one thing.
And then they'll text this secondary platform for a specific group of people in a niche.
And then another maybe 5% of the time.
And so I get the sense that it's mostly okay to just focus on iMessage and WhatsApp right now.
And then you can add integrations later or even have the community help you build these integrations.
but there are private APIs and I mean telegram API it's easy and some other ways that you can yeah
yeah I I really do wonder about that because it feels like yeah to me to me to me it feels like
the more platforms you add obviously the more valuable it is yeah because at two like I I probably
get 80% of my text on I message 10% or maybe 5% on WhatsApp 5% signal no it's definitely a power law
Like, I message is the most important.
I wouldn't even put WhatsApp, I would put WhatsApp like fourth or fifth for me personally.
It would go I message, then probably X DMs, then maybe Instagram DMs, then I would even put signal above WhatsApp.
But the point is that like a one app to rule them all, like if it's going to be a standard in my life that's like the one unifying interface, like I wanted to be across everything, I think, the control plane.
But I don't know.
There's a lot of, with all these like unified personal assistance stuff, there's a lot of, you know, expressed preferences versus revealed preferences.
Like people might actually use it a different way than they say they want to use it.
But I don't know.
It's going to be a fun, fun building process for you.
So I'm very excited.
Yeah.
It'll be cool to see the longitudinal access come into, right?
Because like our thread on X will be different from our thread on email will be different from our thread.
I message.
You can just solve that problem of context coming in from all these different places.
That would be huge for both people and companies.
So that's going to be really exciting.
Have you learned anything from the previous attempts at this, like the beepers of the world?
Yeah, you definitely don't want to poke the bear and do the thing that feels not right and
elegant for too long.
I think the first launch we had, which was sort of a semi-private beta launch in February,
we had a lot of people come on and tell us, hey, Apple's watching and maybe have issues
with iMessage um i think the main thing is just be nimble and agile and when api's changed that
we know that have changed we just automatically update right day of four hours later a new build is out
and so nothing really breaks as long as you are on the system all the time keep shipping i mean
four hours in text message land is a long time for some people if they're like i didn't get the
message from my wife that i need to pick up the kids or something like that does seem like a tall
order, but that's why they invented 996 or zero zero two, as the Wall Street Journal put it more
recently, which is basically no time. I think everyone, everyone has this problem. It's very hard
to create an elegant solution, but if you do, it will be incredibly valuable. Yeah, well,
good luck to you. I don't know if we lost the video, but thank you so much for stopping by.
We will talk to you soon and have a great rest of your day. Congratulations. Sorry, that was kind of a
crazy ending. But we have Johnny Dwyer from Moulon Space, his second time on the show. And we had a
great, we actually played a clip from our previous interview yesterday. And we're very excited to talk
to him both about what's going on in his world. But I'll welcome him to the show. Now,
how are you doing, Johnny? Good to see you. Good to see you guys. Good to see you guys again.
Yeah. Thanks so much. We enjoyed the, we enjoyed the previous guest segment immensely. We played a
clip from that segment yesterday, and we were trying to, yeah, we were trying to contextualize
space data centers. We're actually having the founder of the space data center company come
back on the show to defend what's going on, since a lot of people are skeptical. Where do you
sit on it now? This all feels like I'm not ready to call it even a binary. I think we should be
discussing timelines more than will it ever happen. But how are you thinking about space data center?
Yeah. I mean, I think it's like many things, it's a win, not if.
You know, is it a year from now? Is it 10 years from now? Is it 20 years from now? I don't know.
But I think as you think about generally the future of the planet and where we're going on it,
more and more stuff is going to move to space. And so I think it's inevitable at some level that
we will have large-scale, you know, IT infrastructure in space. I mean, you know, we're probably
going to talk about our deal with Starlink in a minute. And that's an example of a place
where I think we're starting to really see
what I would call truly modern IT infrastructure
starting to show up in space.
And I think it's inevitable that data centers will go there as well.
A lot depends, I think, obviously,
on the fundamentals of what is going to drive the need
for future data center capacity, right?
And how some of those needs are met on Earth
and how that would compare to deploying things in space.
I think if you asked anybody even, you know,
what a terrestrial data center will look like in five years,
they're probably not going to give you a real confident answer.
So I think, you know, trying to predict exactly what that's going to look like in space is hard to do right now.
Absolutely.
What, yeah, what more can you say about this new partnership?
Well, yeah, I mean, I think, you know, one of the things we like to think we're doing it,
you know, is really pulling a lot of the aerospace industry kicking and screaming out of the Stone Age.
And, you know, you think about a lot of the stuff that's circling the Earth right now.
and it's still connected with things that look like dial-up modems, frankly.
I mean, I think we're kind of in an era where a lot of the space technology is a few generations
behind what we take for granted on Earth.
And this partnership with SpaceX is now going to give our satellites things that look
more like an always-on-fiber broadband connection rather than a dial-up connection.
And so that's going to completely unlock a tremendous set of things that have been very difficult
or impossible to do in space historically, much as Starlink,
has demonstrated with terrestrial use cases.
You know, an example that I'm, you know, we're all very excited about at Neon is we've been
working on this global wildfire constellation for the last several years.
This will eventually be a 50 plus satellite constellation that will get 20-minute global
revisit latency to detect and track wildfires from the earliest stages of their life cycle
all the way through to help, you know, decision makers on the ground make better decisions.
And a really critical piece of making that system work well is getting that data back to
people that are making decisions at very low latency. These satellites produce enormous amounts of
data. There's going to be 50 of them. So having this kind of fiber connection in the sky is
absolutely transformative in terms of being able to deliver a capability that's crucially needed
around the world and it has not been possible to date. So I think it's a really good example
of what this technology can unlock. Is fiber a metaphor or are you physically putting fiber
in the sky somehow? I mean, people have put in data centers. We have big glass spools and we're kind of
unwinding in behind the family. I mean, we're going to put
data massive one gigabyte data
centers in space. Like, I wouldn't be that, it doesn't
have that crazy to put a wire up there with a
spool and just let it out. So
you're not, you're not literally
putting fiber in the sky.
It's more about
connectivity between Starling satellites
or are you putting up your own satellites that
are acting as kind of backhaul between
the Starlink satellites? We're basically
using Starlink as our backhaul.
So you can think about them as sort of our network
in the sky. And then we'll be connecting with
SpaceX lasers or laser terminals, they call mental lasers, into their network and using
that network as kind of the backhaul system. So it's not literally unwinding glass fiber
guy, but actually the technology is very similar to fiber optic technology on Earth. And a lot of
the same componentry is used. We're just fending the light over these kind of free space optical beams,
not over glass fibers. And then who's your customer? Is it someone who has a satellite or a
constellation in space that needs to move internet data around while in space? Or is it more for
speed up terrestrial uses in some way or just improve the Starlink network? So we're building
satellites for customers. So our satellites, you know, sort of broad range of customers.
You know, one of the customers I mentioned is this, there's a global non-profit that's funding
the work on the fire mission. So ultimately we're building satellites for them. They're
muon satellites that we deploy and operate.
And this will now provide sort of a much faster, lower latency network layer for us to
operate those satellites on.
Other examples of customers we're working with, you know, we have a customer called
Hubble that's doing Bluetooth low energy tracking from space.
You can kind of think about like IoT device tracking from space.
We have...
The company is called Hubble?
Yeah, it's called Hubble.
What a confusing name.
I know that there was a contact lens company named Hubble.
And that kind of made sense because it's, like, a wildly different market.
But if you're up there in space.
So I can imagine the commercial use cases for that, right?
If you have a lot of hardware out around the world and you want to track it in real time.
Is that have, like, defense applications as well?
Like, what are kind of like, what's the actual focus there?
Yeah.
So I don't want to speak for Hubble.
You know, they would better put themselves.
than I will. They're our customer, but I mean, I think their primary focus is on sort of enterprise and commercial use cases. So, you know, there's millions of asset tracking devices in the world today that are out tracking, you know, shipping containers and remote facility equipment, things like that. And a lot of those are running on kind of these bespoke and, frankly, very old school satellite networks. That's how they get the data back. And I think Hubble's vision is that, you know, we should be doing the same thing we're doing with consumer devices, which is strapping a nine-cent blue
transponder on anything that's out in the world and then being able to track that thing
from space.
And so we think there's a lot, you know, I think they believe there are many, many commercial
and enterprise applications of that.
There probably are also, you know, government applications of that.
I don't want to speak specifically to them, but I think that's, you know, it's a, it's a,
all of these types of technologies, especially with spacecraft in some way are inherently dual
use.
So there's always going to be use cases in both the commercial in the government sector.
Give us the fundraising update.
I feel like we missed you around a series B.
Potentially, do you have news? What's up? We don't have news. I mean, we raised a kind of a two-part series B
last year and this year. It's a big round for us. I think it totaled about $140 million.
Oh, we got the gone coming. So yeah, we're doing well on the fundraising size. We're well-funded.
We've got a lot of business coming, and it's been very exciting days around the company.
So it's a pretty exciting path forward right now.
We're really just trying to scale the company up a lot.
We have a big facility.
We're in the Bay Area.
We signed a large facility earlier this year.
So we'll be kind of 10xing our production capability,
our hardware production capability in the South Bay before the end of the year.
And then building out a lot of other new technology pieces
that we're really excited to talk about as we start to hit space with them.
Fantastic.
Well, thank you so much for coming out on the show.
Yeah, great to get that.
Congratulations on the progress.
And yeah, thanks for breaking all that down for us.
Now we know there's not literally fiber cables up in the sky.
That's why we asked the dumb questions.
Figured it out.
Awesome.
Thank you so much.
We'll talk to you soon.
Cheers, John.
And up next, we have Mike Shabbitt from Traubba.
We have a video update from him.
Let's play that and welcome him to the...
Come on over.
How are you doing?
Can we play the little bit of the video that he...
shared, let's pull that up, uh, and get the update.
What's going on?
Welcome to the Ultradown.
This is, uh, is this your key hero marketing video right now?
Describe proper form for lifting heavy packages.
Uh, quick reel just to show all the products that we build.
Sure, sure, sure.
Uh, because in staffing, there's so many different manual workflows.
Sure.
This video just basically breaks it down with how it all comes together.
Okay.
But our product goes beyond just finding workers.
How old is the company now?
We're four years old.
Four years old.
Are you still in New York?
We're still in New York.
Manhattan?
Yep, all 150 votes.
150 now.
Wow, okay.
So I, I, I, I toured the, when did I come by and do an interview with you?
That was maybe like two years ago or so?
Oh, yeah, that was across the street.
You moved across the street to a major office.
Okay.
So, yeah, take us through the basics of like the, the problem, the market.
It's a highly fragmented market.
But what's the, what's the high level, like 140 characters that you describe Trava?
Yeah, so basically.
millions of workers across the country work in industrial staffing, and then hundreds of billions
of dollars get spent on staffing.
But if you break it apart, it's really just like a highly fragmented industry with like
tons of manual op-ex and things like that.
So we basically replace the whole suite with tech, and we provide double the fill rate,
better quality workers, and workers within a couple hours versus weeks.
Yeah.
And like the staffing industry in general, I think of it as like highly lucrative but highly
fragmented? Is that
just generally your experience?
I guess to just jump
straight forward is like why build
tech startup instead of private equity roll
up like you're in a dress shirt you could go
do a P.E. roll up, right?
I don't know. It's not like
you have to do it the Silicon Valley way. Why
are you doing it the Silicon Valley way? Well basically
because of the advancements in AI this never
really was able to happen before but on
the staffing end there's just so much
manual work and tons of OPEX
So we basically just like from a top to bottom, end to end, just have completely redone it with tech.
Sure.
And that's why building it as a technology company has been so much better.
And so that's like when you say AI or tech, you mean like lead scoring basically, understanding who's right for what job, placing them, screening.
Well, it's like a ton of things.
So we do the vetting.
We actually guide the worker to the shift.
There's fraud detection and like essentially follow-ups with the workers.
And then as the workers perform shifts, we actually, that feeds into our model.
But it's not the AI doing the job.
It's always, you're sticking it out for the next decade.
Yeah, yeah.
On the back end, the customer doesn't really see the AI on the back end,
we're doing all that work.
So the customer sees it just like an incredible group of people
showing up for work every day and like helping them out.
Did you see the Uber news that Uber drivers are going to be able to do one-off AI tasks?
I saw that, yeah.
What is your take on that?
Do you, have any AI companies approached you where you're like,
I don't know if I'm describing the company correctly, but I remember a couple case studies
is like there's a big Taylor Swift concert in town and the organizer might go on Traba to pull in
a bunch of folks really quickly or if it's the rush holiday season and then e-commerce warehouse.
I don't want to put you in a box, but like those are two examples.
Yeah, yeah.
Basically like manufacturing, fulfillment, food processing, all those industries just have like crazy
volatility in their workforce needs.
So we help like smooth that out for them.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And so my question is, have any AI companies, like, reached out to you and said, like,
hey, you have a big pool of labor.
We have a unique use case that we could like partially partner to.
Yeah, we actually have gotten a few inbound companies.
We're just like, hey, we need these workers to do all these other things.
But right now we're laser focused on just industrial supply.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So focusing on that, and then we may expand out in the future.
Have any humanoid companies come to you and said, like, we'll give you robots, like put
them out into the field?
Or are they not quite at a level where they actually would,
be willing to let them do unsupervised activity.
Yeah, so I actually, like, see this, how I talk to our customers about this all the time.
Right now in, like, when it comes to human other robots, they're not quite there yet,
but we're going to be well positioned to essentially, like, lead that charge when the tech gets a lot better in about five years or so.
Yeah, because you're still going to have the kind of variability in, in workforce needs, right?
Where you might need even, even if you have a hundred robots, like, in a facility, and then suddenly it's rush season,
and you need to deploy like a hundred more on top of that.
It's like where do you, where do you get that?
Yeah, yeah.
And then all these workers are going to essentially have to get connected to new earning opportunities.
So we'll be able to help them with that.
Yeah, it's a little bit of like, I guess the narrative violation behind like AI taking every job or AI being
useless is like, I'm pretty sure Amazon is the largest robot operator, but also one of, if not the largest
employer as well.
And so they're really doing the both robots and humans at scale thing.
Within the facility, it's a lot more dynamic, and a lot of these companies, they have to change things really quickly.
So to just commit to a certain robotics workflow doesn't work today, which is actually why, if you actually go back to Elon Musk's tweets in like five, six years ago, he actually said he's like, we try to make the gigafactory all robotics.
And then we went back to humans because we couldn't necessarily like get there yet.
Yeah, and they had to do a hybrid.
Talk a little bit about where the structure of the market is going in terms of staffing agencies broadly.
I imagine that
AI and technology
generally are like an accelerant to growth
right you can just onboard people faster
just using like all the tools in the mobile toolkit
allow you to understand where people are going
placing them GPS all this stuff is useful
how does that play out
I mean I imagine that competitors are going to try and catch up
are you planning to just out-compete them
are you looking to eventually get into doing acquisitions
Like, how do you think the long-term plan plays that?
So I was in a staffing conference in Dallas, and it was pretty crazy.
Electric.
Electric.
That's why we do it.
Literally this year, everyone is like, we are getting disrupted.
And it's coming for us.
And they were just talking about how, like, they can't organizationally roll it out.
Yeah, yeah.
There's just, like, thousands of people at these organizations that have all these different tasks.
Yeah, yeah.
So they actually approached myself and my chief of staff, and they're like, we really want
you to help us move into this new age.
Sure.
So when it comes to roll-ups, we're potentially.
looking at a few acquisitions and in that case it would basically be like companies that have
really good retention on the business side so they have customers continue to spend but then
they're just like we have terrible OPEX and just so many manual expenses and we want you to essentially
improve these margins and essentially carry it forward how do you operate the business you're
obviously like incredibly aggressive I'm sure around growth but at the same time like
you also feel like somebody who you're planning to run this business forever, I imagine,
and part of putting yourself in a position to do that is like maintaining good unit economics
and just running a great business.
How do you balance, like, growth and burn and those factors?
We're very thoughtful about capital efficiency with growth.
So fortunately in staffing, the margins are actually pretty good to play with.
So yeah, we're just like, we're operating in the physical world,
So there's so much that's going on, which is why our team just, like, works so hard to kind of get in there.
There's not, like, one specific tool that can essentially get cloned.
It's, like, hundreds of thousands of workers that use our app and, like, thousands of businesses.
So you get those real network effects as you scale up.
But, yeah, it's basically growth, unit economics, 10x customer experience.
That's what we always talk about internally.
Yeah.
Take a victory lap on the 996 thing.
It is hilarious.
I mean, you didn't obviously invent the 996.
Yeah, it's not an invented 996.
You invented China.
Yeah, you stole it from them or something.
But no, I mean, I think you were the first to like really go out there.
You were willing to say it when it was like going to essentially get you a little canceled.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, you get a little bit canceled.
And I think it was an interesting framing for the brand of Trauma to say, look, we're not trying to create super intelligence.
We're not trying to cure cancer.
We've just found a great business that delivers value to customers,
delivers value to our clients, you know, everyone, all the parties are happy with this,
what's going on here? And so we're going to work really, really hard. What was the actual
journey of the, you know, get a little canceled? Did that ever really manifest? Were people
ever actually mad at you? And then now, what are you seeing out there? Has everyone else
adopted this? Are they taking it further? Or can they take it too far? Just walk me through your thing.
Yeah, I think it really has to go into what the goal of the company is. So we are a very ambitious
company. We want to be a massive publicly traded company. And if you work backwards from any
very successful company, the early team was just like all in. It was their number one priority.
Always. So we basically were like, we did this thing called anti-selling. We're like, look,
we're going to get people working in person with us. We're going to go build some awesome stuff.
And if you're not interested in making this your number one thing, then that's all good.
But it created something really great internally because every single person is just like,
it's like a team sport. Everyone's in it together. And we're all trying to create leverage on the time
that we've done.
So,
yeah,
I think it's,
there's something
underrated about this
where people have been mapping
like the missionary
versus mercenary thing
onto just how sci-fi
the project is.
And if,
and they assume like,
if you're working on something sci-fi,
everyone's a missionary.
And if you're working on something
that's maybe just a little bit
more tractable of a business problem,
everyone's a mercenary.
And I think that that's just not true at all.
It's not true.
Like we see it here.
Like we're building like a media company.
But I feel like everyone, we have a really great culture.
Everyone's really bought in.
Everyone is thinking creatively and working really hard and getting a ton of reward.
And at the end of the tunnel, at the end of the tunnel is not time travel machine that takes us to Mars or Cures Cancer.
It's just a show.
But we're all happy and aligned on that.
And so what has the road been?
Where have the difficult moments been in the journey?
where you've had to kind of re-ignite the flame of missionary.
Yeah, so yeah, shout out to your team.
They're awesome.
They agree to me here.
Everyone's, like, so locked in and love what you guys do.
And I think a big part of that is just you guys being authentic to who you are.
And we're like, look, like, we're TPPN.
We're going to make this.
It's a show.
It's a show.
And then everyone gets involved in that.
With us, you know, there's, like, challenges every single week.
It's just part of building a company.
And I think some people really, they opt into that.
They're like, I'm going to go learn a lot.
I'm going to work with a great group of people around me.
The likelihood of success goes up if everyone's equally committed
and really bought in on making something awesome.
And then people just have a great time.
Like they look back and they're like,
you remember the war stories in the days where you're like in the Airbnb
trying to get the customer, like this crazy request comes in.
You're like, how are we going to do it?
And you're really only going to create that
if everyone that opts in and joins the company is like
that sounds exactly like what I want to do with my life.
So we get a lot of ex-athletes because they remember that in sports
and college and things like that.
it. Yeah. So it's great. Tell me the story of Uber, your experience there. And then I want
the update on, like, how you think about opening markets now. Because this is something that
not every software company has to do. Like Open AI launches a browser. They don't need to send
a team to Dallas. But at Uber, you did. And at Traba, you have been doing this. So walk me through
like the best practice for when you're going hand-to-hand combat. In a software business,
it's a tech company, but you still have to deploy a team.
Yeah, so operating in the physical world, it's quite different.
At Uber, I was a launcher where you essentially drop into a city.
You hit a bunch of restaurants on the platform, I'm on the Uber Eats product,
and then you have to essentially get the couriers, and then you run an...
Skydive in, right?
Skydive in, sell the restaurants, say we can make you some more money.
What's different with Trava and Uber Eats is that selection, like,
people aren't like, okay, I want to work at, like, five different warehouses this week.
They actually are fine with working in this, like, middle ground where, like, I'm going to work
for three to six months of this one warehouse.
Okay, so let's stay.
And then maybe I'll switch again.
Sure.
So our sales cycle is a little bit different where we do have market-specific, like, leaders where
people do own a market.
But we go for these big accounts that they want hundreds of workers versus, you know,
like three to four people.
Yeah.
And then the workers kind of like it goes viral because they get their friends.
And it's like a very social job and things like that.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Has the playbook changed all?
Are you in every market now?
Are you still on the warpath?
We're in most markets in the country.
We're not in California yet.
So I was in Vegas before being here.
Okay.
Customers then came over.
Yeah.
And that's not a capital constraint, right?
No, it's actually more just the employment laws in California.
Right now.
Making sure you're set up.
Yeah, we offer two different ways to work on travel.
One is 1099 in which workers can get paid within 30 minutes.
And the other is W-2.
Sure.
But we're very intentional about every market we go into.
Yeah, you want to make sure you check all the boxes.
Yeah.
In the U.S.
Oh, we forgot to file this form and then it comes back.
You don't want any of that.
That makes sense. But we're coming. We're coming soon.
Let's go. There we go. Let's go.
Yeah, I'm thinking about all the different uses for a flash mob of human labor that we could put to work.
How do you, any learnings around like the causes of burnout that you see within your organization, if you're pushing people super hard, that means you want to avoid burnout.
Yeah.
I don't get burned out when I'm worried.
working on something that I love and I feel like I'm making real progress on it. I feel like
burnout can come from not maybe finding meaning in the work or not making progress and running
into a dead end over and over. But what's your framework? And I'm sure CEOs have asked you
this of like, okay, if you're pushing your team super hard and you're pushing yourself hard,
how do you avoid that? Yeah. So the number one thing is people don't get burned out if they feel
like they're winning. Yeah. We try to get people in an environment. Just win. They're just winning.
you got to get the right role, get them some wins into their belt.
It's kind of like in school, if you're like studying nonstop seven days a week and you're getting
straight days, you're not really burning out from that.
So you're putting them in environment to actually be successful.
And then everyone's got something that they do to kind of like take care of themselves.
Like a lot of people, they work out.
Like usually at trauma, people will work until like seven-ish hit the gym, come back.
Like it's a very healthy culture.
But it's very much like happy, healthy, wealthy is kind of like what people are aiming for.
So they're all there together and like, yeah.
That's great.
How do you think about the, like, how rigid is the 996 thing?
Obviously, some people shift that forward backwards.
Now, there's this article in the Wall Street Journal about zero, zero two.
What is that?
Do you work from midnight to midnight?
You're working 24 hours.
You take two hours off a day.
I don't know.
Is this real?
I mean, I can pull up the article because it would be good to get your reaction,
but it says AI workers are putting in 100-hour work weeks to win the news.
tech's arm race. And there's like a 50% chance that this is like, you know, someone trying
to get a PR piece to be like, we work even harder than this guy. Yeah. Josh Batson no longer
has time for social media. The AI researchers only comparable dopamine hit this year is on
Anthropics, Slack, work-paced messaging channels where he explores chatter about colleagues
theories and experiments on large language models and architecture. So he's on a social work
platform, socializing someone of a network. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. If you're trying to 9-9,
six, don't count your slack time. That's fun. Yeah. Yeah. I think so the way it plays out actually
is like when we first started the company, we were actually like, let's make this a little bit more
structural. Now with 150 people, we have all these different types of roles. Yeah. It's more just like
you got to be locked in and like make work your number one thing. Totally, totally. But what I will say
is you go, we are an in person company, if you're being by Trava at like 830 in the morning or 930
p.m. Literally any day the week, there will be like people there building really cool stuff.
Yeah.
And that's pretty awesome because then you can just, like, show up and build with your friends.
Yeah.
And people feed off of each other's energy.
Yeah, you can't be too dogmatic about it.
I feel like, I mean, we both have kids.
We're also on the West Coast.
And so we run more of like a 6 a.m. start time.
And so we, yeah, we just stack like some extra hours there because then you have.
Yeah, that's cute that it really picks up around 8.30 at Trava.
Oh, yeah.
That's why I'm like, wait, oh, my gosh.
I thought we were intense and then you guys talk about this.
2-002, and I'm like, I'm like calculating the hours.
I'm like, man, we like, we have the burnout question and then we're like,
the zero-zero-two, it's like...
Is that in here?
I think if you sleep for two hours a day.
Okay, so, so working zero-zero-two, the most intense periods for many come while
working on models or new products when time working extends beyond the 996 schedule.
That stands for 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 6 days a week.
One startup executive jokingly referred to the,
schedule as zero zero two meaning midnight to midnight with a two hour break on weekends yeah yeah we don't
i don't think anyone can actually do that like yeah yeah yeah you need sleep you actually do need sleep
yeah yeah yeah it's more about just like look like are you all in on this especially in new york
there's infinite things you could be doing yeah you just want people to like think twice before filling
out their social calendars during the week it's like look we're trying to build something epic here
yeah and it's awesome to just know that you're going to be around your yeah also i just feel
there's something about New York City, Manhattan, where if I was at the office late until
nine, and I get off, like, there's still all the restaurants around.
Yeah. Like, stuff's going to happen, whereas in L.A. or in Pasadena, like, older with kids,
like, I want to be home with the kids, five, six, like, you know, doing dinner.
There's something super comfort. Yeah, that have kind of shifted, but they still probably
give it their office, right?
Yeah. Parents look, like, if you got kids at home, like, we definitely have a group of parents
at Trobo. They make it work. Shout out to them for sure.
but there's definitely a huge cohort of people that don't have the kids
and they're like at the office a little bit more than the parents.
There's something super comforting building a business
if you're working as hard as you possibly can
knowing that lack of hard work is not going to be the reason
that you don't achieve the level of success that you want
because if you're people out there, a bunch of people
are not pushing themselves as hard as they know they could
and then it's always going to be in the back of their mind
of like the whole time building the company
that maybe I worked a little bit harder
I would have achieved, like, you know, whatever.
And then success in a startup, it isn't just this binary thing
where you either get the gold medal or not.
There's, like, different revenue targets you can do.
There's different valuations, different, like,
like ways to please customers and things like that.
So, yeah, it's great to, like, live a life where you look back
and you're like, I gave it absolutely everything I got.
There's nothing else I could have done better
and, like, keep pushing forward.
Well, that's a good...
That's a great place to end it.
Place to end the show.
Yeah.
Gave it all we got.
We gave it all we got.
Thanks for hanging out of us.
so much for tuning in today. We will be back tomorrow at 11 a.m. Sharp Pacific. Can't wait.
Have a great evening. Goodbye. Love you. Bye.
