TBPN Live - Anthropic’s Trust Nuke, OpenAI's new releases, Google Claims AI Crown | Diet TBPN
Episode Date: February 6, 2026Diet TBPN delivers the best of today’s TBPN episode in 30 minutes. TBPN is a live tech talk show hosted by John Coogan and Jordi Hays, streaming weekdays 11–2 PT on X and YouTube, with ea...ch episode posted to podcast platforms right after.Described by The New York Times as “Silicon Valley’s newest obsession,” the show has recently featured Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, Mark Cuban, and Satya Nadella.TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://Ramp.comAppLovin - https://axon.aiCognition - https://cognition.aiConsole - https://console.comCrowdStrike - https://crowdstrike.comElevenLabs - https://elevenlabs.ioFigma - https://figma.comFin - https://fin.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comGraphite - https://graphite.comGusto - https://gusto.com/tbpnLabelbox - https://labelbox.comLambda - https://lambda.aiLinear - https://linear.appMongoDB - https://mongodb.comNYSE - https://nyse.comOkta - https://www.okta.comPhantom - https://phantom.com/cashPlaid - https://plaid.comPublic - https://public.comRailway - https://railway.comRamp - https://ramp.comRestream - https://restream.ioSentry - https://sentry.ioShopify - https://shopify.comTurbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comVanta - https://vanta.comVibe - https://vibe.coSentry - https://sentry.ioCisco - https://www.ciscoaisummit.com/ai-virtual-summit.htmlFollow TBPN:https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So we've been thinking more about the Super Bowl that's coming up.
We've been thinking more about ads, the response to the ads, the back and forth with the ads.
Rune had a good post here.
Putting my media observer hat on, anthropic ads are pretty brilliant because they're dishonest in a way that's only going to rage bait open AI heads and certain industry insiders,
but are funny and striking to everyone else.
when you're a call option,
calling them a call option,
kind of a diss.
Savage.
Variance is good.
Mario Kart Blue Shell.
Are you familiar?
Do you have you played Mario Kart?
Do you understand?
Not enough to get the reference.
I played Mario Kart.
I think so long ago,
Blue Shells didn't exist,
but I've been playing with my kids,
and I've since learned the importance
of the Blue Shell.
The Blue Shell, it targets just the first player.
Just whoever's in first.
It's a great metaphor for what's going on here.
When you're in, when you're not in first place, you get the blue shell, you can take a shot at the leader without even needing to call them out.
So you can just say, the category is bad.
And everyone assumes you're talking about, you know who.
So I thought that was an interesting thing.
Trey says Sam Altman, the Konigseg collector.
Yes, yes.
Yes, that one.
Yes, deep dive.
Anyway, so everybody had a take on this yesterday.
It was perfect in how much kind of controversy it generated.
which is wildly entertaining.
I wanted to kind of, I'll read through kind of like my updated take.
I got a little bit of.
Processed.
Yeah, I got a little bit of pushback.
I said they were playing dirty.
Signal responded to me and said, not dirty at all.
So I wanted to address that.
Yeah, I was processing this more.
We obviously watched some ads yesterday.
We watched the Get a Mac campaign.
We watched the Bud Light special delivery one,
which is about Bud Light is in a castle.
They get an order of corn syrup.
They're like, we don't use corn syrup.
Must be for Coors Light and other competitors.
And so, like, I was processing them.
And, like, the difference there is that those advertisements are truthful, right?
Like, people that have had a PC have probably gotten a virus, right?
So when Mac is, like, riffing on that, it's, like, it's truthful, right?
Yeah, and they had some data to back it up.
It's not deceitful.
I would say, if I'm putting on my steel manning Microsoft in 2007 hat or 2003, I would say, hey, we do have Windows PC Defender.
We're fighting viruses and is it possible to get a virus on a Mac?
Probably is it is it is it possible to not get a virus on a PC?
Yeah and and on Microsoft side, people are like yeah no one makes Microsoft or no one makes viruses for your computers because you don't sell very
it's not very ROI positive.
That's a good point and then Budlite's campaign was like truthful even though it was aggressive and that you could look up the ingredient list of their competitors and see that they did in fact use corn syrup.
Yeah and you can make your own decision on whether or not you like that.
ingredient but they were just drawing awareness to it and so and so my point is that I think that
anthropics ads are like closer to political attack ads and that they're sort of intentionally trying
to be deceptive right they haven't broken any laws yeah no they don't name chat chb t they're just
sort of like throwing mod at the whole category yeah so anyways i said they were playing dirty
i got some pushback on it i asked claude i said claude how would you define playing dirty
and claude said playing dirty generally means achieving your goals through tactics that are deceptive
unethical or that violate the understood rules and norms of a given context, even if you're not
technically illegal. It's the gap between what you can do and what you should do. A few dimensions
to it. It goes into deception, misleading others about your intentions, hiding information,
or creating false impressions to gain an advantage. These campaigns do an amazing job creating a
false impression of what ads in LLMs are going to be like. I do think the response, just to
chime in some random stuff, but I think the response to the ads, we were wondering, like, you know,
outside of the, you know, the TBPN, we love ads, ads are fine, and they're not going to do anything here.
We're strong supporters.
What will the public's reception be like?
Yeah.
Will Claude skyrocket to the top of the charts because these ads are so effective?
Will general consumers buy the line?
Yes, the chat apps are going to get weird with the ads or not.
And I was scrolling on Instagram Reels last night completely randomly.
I was not looking for anthropic content.
I think I followed the Claude account.
Maybe, maybe not.
It just targeted me.
It hits me with a vertical version of the ad.
It's called deception, I think, something like that.
No, violation.
Violation is one.
It's not called deception.
It'd be a little too on the nose.
I think there is one called deception.
There's a bunch.
They all have different names.
Anyway, it's called violation.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I remember.
So people were like the anthropic deception ad is deceptive.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So violation pops up and it's this,
and it's Claude AI.
And it has almost 6,000 likes,
even when it just got served to me, my interpretation was like, this is working, this is popular.
This is, it's not just beautifully shot. It's well edited for vertical.
Yeah, it's either, it's either really resonating or they're putting a mass amount of spend behind it or both.
This is the funny thing. So in this ad, you see the guy struggling to do a pull up.
He asks, you know, what's supposed to be an LLM, create a fitness plan for me.
And then the fitness bot says, hey, you know what else can help?
One inch insoles from height max or something like that.
And it's like this looks maxing thing, it's very funny.
I scroll up, what's the next ad that meta serves me?
An ad for a three inch inserts.
Three inch inserts.
And the ad is actually deceptive.
It says the guy can go from five, nine to six one,
that's four inches.
And so these are full shoes that have the inserts built in.
And for some reason I got in, even though I'm not
in the market for insoles, the algorithm just knows
that I love these ads because they're very funny
and they're very on trend with the looks maxing thing.
And so I get served.
these ads constantly this is all meta shows me is these is these height
enhancing shoes because I think I actually clicked on them and was like digging in
so you bought them right of course of course yeah you're trying to get to seven
feet that would be that would be good that would be good Tyler do you have something
on this yeah I was just say yeah so I saw on Instagram as well I saw some of the
cloud ads and in the comments I mean people were riding with clot they are yeah yeah
yeah yeah it was like normie yeah yeah totally totally yeah like they're winning the vibe
board they've been winning the vibe war with developers and they've been winning the
Dauvibor on Axe and now it feels like they're about to win the Vibe War.
I said two things can be true about the campaign.
It's brilliant, well-timed, and incredibly strategic for a few reasons I'll outline below.
And it's designed to plant a false impression of Chad Gipti's forthcoming ad product in the minds of
hundreds of millions of Americans.
They could argue, oh, we're not trying to do that, but you can't really kind of argue
with the effect.
So Anthropic accomplishes a lot.
The campaign entertains America, right?
It's wildly entertaining.
It's hilarious.
The perfect, like, sycophancy that you can hear, you can hear the M-Dashes, the pauses.
It's amazing.
Really good.
Mother is the name of the agency that they're also putting themselves on the map ahead of the IPO.
I think in some ways, like certain audiences would know more about anthropic than Claude.
Even if you're just like generally interested in investing in AI, you're probably hearing about anthropic more than you're hearing about Claude.
It builds their aura with insiders.
If they spend $100 million on this campaign, and all it does is help retain a couple of like truly
elite researchers. It's worth it. What are you laughing at? I love it. Noah's saying
Anthropicus campaigning to get themselves banned. Just like with misinformation, just going way too
far and it backlash. That's just funny to me. It's somewhat continues. They're like fear-based messaging
that they've been they've been kind of riding with in general. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. At the essays.
Effectively rage baits open AI. They got they got fully baited.
Completely. Sam switched out of his like, you know, lowercase typing and was like, I got to go
upper case for this one. Lots of responses. And then the other thing is like it's going to broadly
damage consumer trust in LLMs. Some people will just be like wait like they've been kind of like
making money on me without me knowing right or can I trust every output as as like actually good
advice or am I being monetized so yeah and this is the one that you think could come back to bite them.
The other five are pretty good. Potentially I said Anthropic has consistently told the market
they don't care about consumer but I'm not sure the argument for ads is that they'll make LMs
free for people that can't afford to pay a subscription.
But Anthropic has already lost the race to serve billions of people, right?
I don't think that they're, when you look at when you look at Gemini's sort of traction,
open AIs, chat cheap to heat traction, like it seems like the race to get to three billion monthly
actives is kind of over.
So the question that kind of where I was taking this is can they deliver a luxury product
to a smaller cohort in the hundreds of millions to kind of iPhone numbers, right?
There's roughly like one and a half billion iPhones that are like active in the world.
Those people could all buy a cheaper Android and just cheaper devices, but they've paid a premium for the iPhone because they can.
And for many people, it delivers a better experience.
So I said the iPhone was not the first smartphone.
Claude was not the first consumer LLM.
The iPhone did differentiate on specs early, not unlike a model card, but Apple did eventually pivot to more emotional arguments for why you should be seen with an iPhone.
and it tells people you care about the environment,
that you don't have adult apps flooding your app store
and that you take privacy seriously.
These have had varying levels of success.
Every tech company was able to tell an ESG story,
and I can't imagine an Apple exact,
even saying the word porn today,
even though Steve Jobs was very pointed about it back in 2010.
He said, you know, there's a porn store for Android.
You can download porn.
Your kids can download porn.
That's a place we don't want to go.
So we're not going to go there.
Calling out the competition by name and dropping that is like,
yeah.
And the key thing here is that it was factual.
It was true.
It was true.
Like, it wasn't deceptive.
No, no.
And so I don't think, I don't think that was, that was edgy, but he wasn't playing dirty.
Yeah, yeah.
Consumers deserve choice.
It's great if they want to pay for ad-free tiers.
Most don't.
1% in Europe for Facebook, by the way.
That's the stat.
They all have the option to pay for Facebook, for ad-free Facebook and only 1% pay.
So consumers deserve choice, but they should not be misled about how ad platforms work.
Android has generated an immense amount of value for the world.
So as Google broadly.
let consumers choose, but let them choose intelligently.
Yes. My steel man is that they didn't cross the line,
they didn't play dirty because they didn't call out ChapT directly.
Okay, you can take that whatever you want.
But will something like this happen?
They are punching up.
They're punching up.
Yes.
There is a world where something like this will happen.
There is a world where the ads do get integrated in such a seamless way.
If you look at the evolution of Google's 10 blue links, it started with 10 blue links, no ads.
Then it was a very clear yellow box with ad and it was very clear that it was an ad and over time
the the UI evolved to be a lot less aggressive about telling you that it's an ad and the ads on
meta platforms do get creepy sometimes you talk about something and then you see the ad and maybe
that's just confirmation bias or some sort of cognitive you only notice the ones that are weird
so they all feel weird you see a lot of stuff that's you weren't talking about you'd
That doesn't trigger anything, but when you see the thing that you were just talking to your friend about,
I was just talking to you about sweaters, and I see an ad for sweater, I'm like, how did it know?
And realistically, it knows because you just went on Facebook, you found that sweater, you bought it.
It knows that we're friends, we're DMing, we're talking, we're literally friends on the platform.
And so it's like, look, Geordie likes this, and they're hanging out all the time, sending each other to DMs.
Why don't I just show John what I just sold to Geordie?
That makes perfect sense.
That's something that can be done with just stock vanilla machine learning at, you know, core AI.
inside Facebook and meta and they do that very effectively but it can feel sort of creepy
sometimes and some people get creeped out by it the idea that an interaction like that might
happen is not complete science fiction it is possible and so they are sort of warning that if you
want to make sure that this never happens it's our pledge that's not even on the table yeah now
the big question is when's anthropic launching ads we got to get them we got to get them to launch ads
well I don't think they can now Zach Kukoff says every time I see Anthropic and opening I try to
distinguish themselves with comms marketing, I realize how much we are replaying the PC wars from the 90s,
Anthropic, tasteful, elegant, opinionated, prosumer, expert enterprise.
Open AI, populist, broadly appealing, low consumer, low consumer plus typical enterprise.
Yeah.
Yeah, so Anthropic is the Apple and OpenAI is the Microsoft.
And they're also aligned with Microsoft, owned in part by Microsoft.
It would be interesting to hear Dario just talk for an hour purely about just,
the risks of advertising in AI.
That would be powerful.
Certainly wouldn't have been as effective as dragging open AI
in front of hundreds of millions of people.
But Matt Turk says, regular startup.
We close a few customers and shipped some new features.
Good week so far.
Anthropic.
We destroyed our main rival with our Super Bowl ads
and tank the entire software category in public markets
by announcing some plugins.
Good week so far.
Oh yeah, we barely even talked about this.
But Anthropic launched a lawyer in your pocket.
they launched a legal tool or they announced it.
I don't know.
Is it actually available in the app yet?
I don't really think it competes with Harvey.
No, no, no.
So I don't think it does because they're selling it
direct to consumer, I believe at least.
But it seems like an amazing product.
It seems like the demand for this would be incredible.
Yeah, it will compete with Legal Zoom.
Legal Zoom is down 15% since this announcement.
Sure, sure, sure.
It's now a $1.38 billion company.
Yeah, sort of.
I mean, Legal Zoom is a little bit different
because you can actually file you in corporation documents.
And they've faced pressure from Stripe, Atlas for a long time on the front,
and a bunch of other LLCs and whatnot.
But, I mean, truly, like, if you're getting a job and your employer gives you an offer letter,
like taking that to a lawyer can be really expensive if it's your first job.
You're probably not going to review it.
But just being able to just forward the email in or integrate your Gmail and just say,
hey, I got this offer letter.
Like, does anything in here look weird?
Is there anything I should ask about?
I don't have a ton of leverage, but I want to understand this document.
Claude should be able to do that and make it.
makes a lot of sense. And I expect OpenAI to launch this product like ASAP.
He over on X says, TBAH, the Anthropic ads are good, but I think they're a bad idea. Normies
are not going to think, wow, this is what ChatGBT is going to be like. I better subscribe
to Claude.com. They're going to think, wow, this is what AI is going to be like.
Rune agrees. He's not biased at all. He says suicide bombing strategy. It's bad for them,
but worse for Open AI. You almost have to respect it.
Claude also announced a new model from Anthropic, of course. Introducing Claude Opus 4.6,
We have Shaltow coming on the show at 1230 to discuss that.
It's the smartest model and it got an upgrade.
Opus 4.6 plans more carefully,
sustains agentic tasks for longer,
operates reliably in massive code bases
and catches its own mistakes.
It's also our first Opus class model
with a one million token context window in beta.
What was the benchmark that stuck out to you, Tyler?
You said, yeah, I think it was Arc AGIV2.
It's now at 69%.
I think previous was, I believe it was five
which was at, I want to say 55 around.
So like pretty sizable upgrade.
In terms of just the vanilla, go and ask a question,
it's been able to get you a pretty good answer for like years now.
But it hasn't been able to go and pull a bunch of financial data together,
fact check it all, put it in an Excel sheet.
This is what they're pushing.
And this is what Cluoso investments is so excited about.
Ooh, says Cluoso.
Anthropic Upd's AI model to field complex financial research.
So Opus 4.6 is designed to carry out financial research
and other work-related functions.
The company's expansion into new areas, including legal service,
has rattled Wall Street and sparked concerns
about which companies and services will be disrupted by AI.
The SaaSpocalypse is upon us.
We will be asking, Sam Altman, is software dead?
Are we back?
Are we back?
Who knows?
So OpenAI unveils Frontier a product for building AI co-workers.
This is in the Wall Street Journal, and Open AI also posted about it.
The new platform launched amid market fears over AI's disruption.
to software is aimed at helping businesses develop AI agents that work alongside humans.
And so there are some interesting questions here about...
Think of these as like AI co-workers that are actively trying to take your job.
Like they're trying to help, but they're also like want...
They want your title, they want your comp.
Yes.
They want to learn everything about what makes you great and they want to get them.
Maybe they're just trying to empower you, Dordy.
Maybe they're just trying to make you a better you.
Maybe they're just coming over, just cracking jokes, trying to distract you while learning so that they can take you back.
Literally do both.
They can literally do both.
Frontier works with OpenAIs previously announced AI agent building tools and makes it easier
for businesses to combine sources of data that agents need to perform tasks.
The agents will be able to process information from various sources and complete tasks like
working with files and running code, OpenAI said.
So no more copy paste everything into your chat GPT Enterprise Edition.
It should have access to your network, plug into all your different systems, you'll be
able to write API bindings, I imagine.
And there might be some forward deployed engineers or some associates from Open AI that are helping you actually on board fully to the agentic workflows that have been promised.
Yeah, they're hiring how many consultants to help with this go to market?
They are hiring hundreds of AI consultants to boost enterprise sales.
There we go.
Job creation.
Yeah.
This is a great gig.
I would highly recommend jumping on this if you're in this, if you're in this market.
Open AI is hiring hundreds of new staffers to expand a technical
consulting team that helps large corporations develop custom AI applications and agents to automate employee tasks according to a person
knowledge with the company's plans. The hiring effort could help it beat back a competition from arch rival Anthropic
Which has also upped its game in catering to enterprises. It comes as open AI
Prepares to launch a new enterprise offering that would unify
Business's efforts to use AI the chat GPT maker is expanding its number of technical consultants also known as four deployed engineers who can customize open AIs model
using a client's own data.
These engineers can, for example, help T-Mobile develop AI
to respond to customer service requests
or help into it provide its customers
with tax preparation services.
So you have all this data, you want to do long-context
reinforcement learning on it.
Long-context reinforcement learning has been very, very successful
in the coding world because Git has a complete history
of every line of code that's been written, every comment,
why it happened.
You have this perfect record of everything
that happened when you built a piece of software,
And there's a ton of open source repositories.
You can download all of GitHub, basically, and see how software is developed.
So you can train the model on that.
Yeah, let's pull up an image.
There's a little graphic here that they made.
From openAI's frontier, openaI.com slash index slash introduce.
Yeah, and if you can zoom in a little bit at the bottom, you have your system of record.
You have business context, agent execution, evaluation and optimization.
Your agents, open AI agents, third party agents, that feels significant, right?
They want to be the orchestrator, right?
And if you want to bring in some other folks in to help out,
great, at least for now.
And then they have interfaces, which they're,
Chad GPT, Enterprise, Open AI Atlas,
and other business applications.
I'm a little upset that they didn't go
with a Mad Max theme, like Gastown.
I like the Polkats, I like the mayor,
I like the deacon, I thought that was a fun metaphor.
They went with something a little more enterprising,
but I think Frontier's
good name. I don't know. It sounds good. Why is Tyler? Tyler's laughing?
I'm getting flamed in the comments. What's up with Tyler's hair today?
Yeah, what happened? Did you, did you use shampoo nor conditioner? I need a haircut.
I need a haircut. Maybe maybe you need a hat. Maybe you can grab one of those Tdpn hats over there.
You'll be good. Don't worry. Alphabet sales hit record spending to double. They're going all in on AI.
Google Parent Alphabet reported an 18% jump in fourth quarter revenue driven by growth in digital
advertising. Sales reached nearly $114 billion ahead of analyst expectations. Net income,
34.5 billion, a 30% increase compared with the period a year earlier. Company reported a record
$403 billion in sales for 2025. Profit, $132 billion. Not too bad. Google, like other technology
companies, plans to spend tens of billions of dollars to develop AI models and build the data
centers needed to train and run them. The company said it expected to, uh,
to spend between $175 billion and $185 billion in CAPEX in 2026 up from $91 billion to $93 billion in 2025.
So they're like doubling, which is it's exponential growth.
Really?
Get ready for some AI progress.
Yeah, somebody, I don't have it pulled up, but somebody was saying that the, the,
the 2026 projected CAPEX will be more than the lifetime CAPEX for Google up to 2021.
So in a single year, they're going to eclipse that, which is just insane.
Bucco had a good take.
He said, Google CapEx on purpose, tell the market, this is what it will take to defeat us before IPOs hit.
Yeah, certainly nerve-wracking if you're competing with them, but they have the edge on the capital side and the capital war over Anthropic and Open AI, but the race is still real.
Yeah.
Add and cloud growth acceleration justify the recent surge in alphabet stock, but blowout
CAPEX forecast still takes one's breath away.
The motto for the artificial intelligence race today should be, if you've got it, spend it.
That's a message that meta-platforms took to heart during its fourth quarter report last week
when the Facebook and Instagram parent announced plans to spend up to $135 billion on CAPEX compared to
about $72 billion last year.
Google managed to up the ante Wednesday with its own plan to spend as much as $184,000,000,
billion this year, which would be about doubles last year's outlet. Google's annual revenue has now top
400 billion, about twice as large as metas. Still, that new spending target, even for a company that has
been firing all cylinders lately, takes one's breath away. Google has both the political and financial
capital to lay such a bet. The company's Gemini 3 model has put it on top of a heap of performance
for AI models, while the unmatched distribution of its search engine and products like Gmail have
quickly driven adoption. Google said Wednesday that it has more than 7303.
50 million monthly active users just on its Gemini app, which only represents a portion of Gemini's
actual users because it's vended into all the different products. What's going on in the chat?
4-0 Army has entered the chat.
Interesting. They're hitting the chat with hashtag Keep 4-0.
They want to be heard by Sam Alden.
My question is, like, when does the AI build out stop? Because if you're constantly investing more and more,
Where does the cash flow come from?
Like, as an analyst, you look at this and you say,
okay, they're spending, you know,
50% of their revenue or 40% of their revenue
on the AI build out on data centers,
but how long will they need to do this?
Like if they have to do this forever,
then you just permanently have a worse business
because you're just constantly buying the hardware.
Well, yeah, I mean, you get a massive capability increase,
lots of labor moves into data centers,
and eventually maybe you can enter a scenario where it makes sense to continue to increase
CAPEX because revenue is accelerating even faster.
Richard says Google is a company that doesn't do hype for them to go and increase
CAPX from 90 billion to 180 billion is probably the most bullish thing.
Long-term investors can see as it shows the scale of future revenue growth.
I'm shocked that at this stage most still don't understand this.
Google made $163 billion in CFO last year.
and is now planning to spend $180 billion in KAPX next year.
Now, deaf think acceleration is coming, but wauza.
I'd rather go bankrupt than lose the race.
Joe Wisenthall says the average person on Earth is watching 25 YouTube shorts every single day.
YouTube shorts average 200 billion daily views.
That's a lot.
That's just insane.
That's a lot.
I mean, you can watch a YouTube short in like, what, five seconds on average, right?
because you skip one, you watch one for five seconds, one for 15 seconds.
So I don't scroll on YouTube shorts yet.
Yeah.
I find if I search for something, like let's say I'm looking up a car, it's nice to get a 60
second explanation of it, but I'm not like sitting there scrolling.
Yeah, it still serves, clearly a lot of people are.
But I rarely scroll through, whereas on Instagram I will scroll the feed of reels.
Staying in the content world, Kalshi shared that just in YouTube generated over 60 billion last year,
more than Netflix.
And Polly Mouse says, YouTube is beating Netflix with this really sneaky content strategy
in which their creators make stuff people want to see and are then rewarded for it with views and money.
And it is a simple encapsulation of the YouTube strategy.
Netflix hates this one simple trick.
UGC.
UGC is a big, big business.
Who would have thought?
There is other news as always.
The number of horses per county?
I didn't see this chart.
And Chadson says these are rookie numbers.
should be double, even triple this.
Horses everywhere, wall-to-wall horses.
I totally agree.
I found out, as you know, in escrow on a new property,
and I was talking to somebody very enthusiastic about horses,
and I was getting the breakdown on what kind of horses I'll be able to support on the properties
and they were going to be the lay of the land.
So I hope to contribute to – it's going to be on everyone to get these numbers up, right?
It's not enough for one of us.
I mean, Darra Kosha Shari, CEO of Uber yesterday,
came on and said that, you know, 75% of all land in cities is parking lots or something.
There's a lot of parking lots.
What's going to happen to them when we don't need them because of autonomous cars?
Stables!
Yep.
You take your Waymo or your autonomous Uber into the city.
You hop on a steed and you go from place to place.
Excellent execution, Jerry.
Excellent execution.
I love horses.
I do love horses.
According to the information,
upcoming avocado model for meta
is referenced as the most capable
model to date internally.
This doesn't tell you that much.
It doesn't.
It's the most powerful iPhone ever.
We get it. We get it.
But how does a benchmark?
Not even that.
It's like this is like some,
they could make the most capable model for meta
could be the least capable
if you compare it to their left.
Yeah, yeah.
But it's the same thing that that happens
in WWC where you stand on stage
and you say it's the most powerful iPhone yet.
It has the most battery life
of an iPhone ever.
But it's very exciting to see that they're making progress and they're sending out memos and they're leaking to the information and their excitement building.
And I do think that we are going to get something pretty powerful.
Avocado is a good name.
And based on the team of the compute and the money, like they're going to jump to the frontier.
Like there's just no question that they'll be really, really close to the frontier.
We got to go back to the horses.
Owl in the X chat says they have two horses doing their part.
So thank you.
Oh, thank you.
Oh, thank you, owl.
And full circle.
Get those numbers up, though.
Don't just say, oh, I'm doing my part.
I don't.
You've got to be growing exponentially.
You've got to go to four, then eight, 16, 32, et cetera.
Okay, just on the meta model thing for a second, historically food-based models with the name, with food in the name have done really well.
You have nanobanana.
Yes.
You have strawberry.
Yeah.
That's all I can think of.
I mean, avocado, it's a good sign.
Yeah, okay.
Okay, it's good.
It's good.
And have a great rest of your day.
Have a wonderful afternoon and evening.
We love you.
Bye. Nice work, brothers. I'll see you on the next one.
