TBPN Live - Apple's iOS 26 Review, Meta to Pay $15B for Scale AI Stake | Andrew Huberman, Scott Belsky, Sai Senthilkumar, Karri Saarinen, Roy Bahat, Alex Israel

Episode Date: June 10, 2025

(02:52) - WWDC Recap (15:17) - Apple's Retreat to its Core Competency (22:45) - Apple's iOS 26 Draws Mixed Reviews (52:58) - Meta to Pay Nearly $15B For Scale AI Stake (01:00:17) - Sai Se...nthilkumar, a Partner at Redpoint Ventures, focuses on growth-stage investments in enterprise software and AI, and leads the firm's InfraRed initiative, which introduced the first publicly traded index of cloud infrastructure businesses. In the conversation, he discusses the rapid advancements in AI, particularly in developer tools, highlighting companies like Cursor and Anthropic that are transforming software development through AI-powered coding solutions. He also addresses the evolving competitive dynamics between established infrastructure providers and emerging startups, emphasizing the significant opportunities for innovation in the AI-driven infrastructure market. (01:36:58) - CNBC's Disrupter 50 List Reactions (01:44:55) - Karri Saarinen, co-founder and CEO of Linear, a project management software company, discusses the company's recent $82 million Series C funding round led by Accel, valuing Linear at $1.25 billion. He highlights the company's efficient growth, noting a 280% profit increase over the past year and a customer base exceeding 15,000, including prominent AI firms like OpenAI. Saarinen emphasizes Linear's focus on streamlined solutions tailored to software development workflows, contrasting with competitors' more customizable but often overwhelming platforms. (02:01:27) - Scott Belsky, an entrepreneur and author, co-founded Behance, a leading online platform for creative professionals, and served as Adobe's Chief Product Officer and Chief Strategy Officer. In the conversation, Belsky discusses the evolving role of AI in creativity, emphasizing the importance of human elements like taste and storytelling to infuse soul into AI-generated content. He also explores the concept of collective memory within enterprises, highlighting how AI's growing contextual understanding can enhance collaboration and knowledge retention. (02:32:49) - Roy Bahat, head of Bloomberg Beta, discusses the firm's recent $75 million fundraise, emphasizing their continued focus on early-stage investments in startups that are shaping the future of work. He highlights the firm's commitment to transparency, noting that their operating manual and deal documents are publicly accessible to help founders understand their processes. Bahat also touches on the firm's relationship with Bloomberg L.P., clarifying that while Bloomberg is the sole investor, Bloomberg Beta operates independently without strategic investment directives. (02:47:24) - Alex Israel, co-founder and CEO of Metropolis Technologies, discusses the company's innovative approach to revolutionizing the parking industry through artificial intelligence and strategic acquisitions. Facing initial resistance from property developers, Metropolis shifted its strategy to a "growth buyout" model, acquiring traditional parking operators to integrate AI-driven, seamless payment systems. This approach has positioned Metropolis as the largest parking operator in North America, with plans to expand its technology to other sectors like gas stations and retail, while also preparing for the future impact of autonomous vehicles on urban infrastructure. (02:59:24) - Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist and Stanford professor known for his work on brain function, behavior, and wellness, and he hosts the Huberman Lab podcast, where he translates scientific insights into practical health advice. Huberman addresses concerns about proposed NIH funding cuts of 40%, emphasizing the critical role of both basic and applied research, and discusses strategies for rebuilding public trust in science after the COVID-19 pandemic. He advocates restructuring research funding to prioritize impactful, collaborative, and discovery-driven science, highlighting how significant breakthroughs such as GLP-1 treatments and brain-machine interfaces arise from fundamental research. TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're watching TVPN today is Tuesday, June 10th 2025 we are live from the TVP ultra dome The temple of technology the fortress of finance the capital of capital It's a great day. We're doing WWC reactions. I will run you through a little bit of the show We want to talk about the meta scale AI deal 49% for just 14 billion billion. It's a steal. You're getting Alex Wang. You're getting the Scale AI team. They're giving it away.
Starting point is 00:00:31 We're gonna talk about the Glean fundraise, competitor to OpenAI. They're cooking in Enterprise AI. Some of the reaction there from what's going on in deep research and some of the advancements that OpenAI has been rolling out there. Very interesting for Glean's business. Glean, still ripping.
Starting point is 00:00:48 So they're up, raised a big round today. They also got the CNBC Disruptor list. 50 top startups. We've had a ton of them on the show we're going to go through. Do a little underrated, overrated maybe. See who should be higher. Spicy, John. Personally, I love them all.
Starting point is 00:01:04 I think they should all be tied for first place Yeah, but CNBC ranked them Hopefully it was purely pay-to-play and yes, he just kind of auctioned off the spots. That's that would be the most fair thing you know Agree, but and then we got a bunch of great guests. We got aside from red point coming on We have Kri announcing a massive What is a series C unicorn round at linear one of our so must be their series C Yes, Bell ski from a 24 coming on Roy the hot from Bloomberg beta coming on announcing a new 75 million dollar fund and then this guy
Starting point is 00:01:39 Opel s and then Andrew Andrew this guy Andrew Huberman Andrew may have heard of him fellow podcaster Yeah, so we're excited for the show today, but let's kick it off with the timelines reaction to WWDC liquid glass whatever says one the most important thing in iOS 26 Text is finally left aligned. You know I saw people posting about this You said this about like the center alignment left alignment thing. I saw people posting about this. You said this about the center alignment, left alignment thing. I hadn't noticed it. It looks a lot better left aligned.
Starting point is 00:02:11 I don't know why. I didn't know what I was missing. Huge improvement. We'll take it. Yeah, so now text in iOS notifications, left aligned. Huge news. Also, all the different version numbers are now, they're doing car models. So it's 26 they jump forward a bunch I believe we
Starting point is 00:02:28 were on like 18 before so they just skipped a bunch I can't wait to be in the thousands we're in 2025 in the thousands the 22 and it's iOS 26 across everything so unification there it's happened in in in Android a while ago but now it's it's come to iOS. Love it. Again, a lot of people with negative reactions. We're going to take you through some of the positive reactions. Steve Jobs would have cornered you in a dark alley and beat you to with a metal pipe if he suggested something
Starting point is 00:02:55 like this. That's what Kitsy says. This was yesterday's reaction. Today, some of the designers are coming out and saying, hey, let them cook. I mean, there's a silver lining. There's certain There's certain examples that are really really gnarly so there's that one super viral one That's like really hard to see and then people put it next to the Oppenheimer with the Google blast
Starting point is 00:03:16 I think that's a fake photo. I think they adjusted the brightness on that. I don't think that's a deep fake I think I know not a deep fake. I don't think there's any AI involved I just think that that someone went in there and was like, let me turn out the brightness on that. I don't think that's a real. A deep fake. No, not a deep fake. I don't think there's any AI involved. I just think that someone went in there and was like, let me turn off the brightness for effect. And I think that that's fake. And I think that also, again, this is a beta. This is something that they're going to be iterating on before it goes out to the masses.
Starting point is 00:03:38 They're going to take this feedback. It's honestly a bit weird for a trillion dollar company to launch a beta. It is odd. They should just say, no, this is an alpha Yes but but but it makes sense in terms of like like if you are a developer and there's a and there's a Significant change to the user interface
Starting point is 00:03:53 You want to bake that into your app so that you don't look out of place on day one when everyone updates Yeah So you got to get the beta into the hands of the developers so that the Airbnb app and the public.com app and the ramp.com app save time and money. Time is money, save both, easy to use corporate cards, bill payment, accounting and a whole lot more all in one place, go to ramp.com. And travel, John's favorite.
Starting point is 00:04:15 And travel, the travel is amazing. Favorite, favorite thing in the entire world. We got to book our hotels for tonight because we're going to San Francisco for YC demo day tomorrow. Tune in, it's going to be a massive stream. With ramp travel, you can book last minute and itC demo day tomorrow. Tune in, it's gonna be a massive stream. With ramp travel, you can book last minute
Starting point is 00:04:27 and it's still a breeze. It's really, really easy. But yes, if you're designing an app, you want it to feel somewhat seamless with the rest of the UI. And if there's UI changes, you gotta test drive those beforehand. You gotta make sure that those are right.
Starting point is 00:04:40 So the big question, should we have our intern Tyler Cosgrove over there install iOS 26 beta, you know, it's potentially a he's on the green screen. Something happened. He's on the green screen. Should we make Tyler install? Oh, there, there we go. That's where he is really like, I'm glad that you did the false background for a minute and make it look like a screen instead of showing the real Yeah, we wanted him to be more approachable.
Starting point is 00:05:06 Yes, we just put a green screen behind him as a fake background. Yeah, but anyways, back to you. Is that Mekanos? Where are you right now? Oh, this is just my pool in my backyard. Okay, cool. This is where you take podcasts.
Starting point is 00:05:20 I mean, sometimes fellow, some of my friends will go on podcasts. They'll just use my backyard. Yeah, yeah, oh yeah, that's what it is. Sometimes fellow some of my friends will will go on podcasts. They'll just use my backyard. Yeah. Yeah Anyways, I would love I would love to watch you risk it all and install the update So why don't you are you willing to do it? I'll do it. Yeah Ios 26 beta it could go terribly wrong because the bugs, you know The thing with the beta is that you can't go back you can't you can't roll back to the non-beta yeah and so you could be with a minor grading bugs for like months until they fix it
Starting point is 00:05:55 now they fix it pretty quickly I've done it like once or twice gone on the data because I'm I'm so excited I want to try the new thing this is basically intern hazing it is ha Wwc version yeah All right Tyler well you are brave okay? Good luck with that and get why don't you get started get started? Give us the review. We'll be checking in with you to see how the iOS 26 installation process goes and and and any any problems you run into there We also have some other big- He's like, guys, I can't read anything
Starting point is 00:06:30 on my phone anymore. We also have some big show updates. Not only do you have intern cam now, we also have the breaking news camera. Let's go to it now. This is crazy too, because I can see- You see this? Okay, so this is the breaking news camera. When we we have breaking news we cut to the printer cut and and it
Starting point is 00:06:48 You can read the breaking news. Okay, you want to read that to us hold it up. We go We have some breaking news if we can switch cameras What is it so breaking news snap to launch smaller lighter augmented reality specs smart glasses in 2026 I'm excited for the CNBC. Thank you to CNBC smart glasses in 2026. I'm excited for this. From CNBC. Thank you to CNBC. Snap on Tuesday announced its plans
Starting point is 00:07:06 to release a sixth generation of its augmented reality glasses in 2026. As competition in the smart glasses market continues to heat up, the maker of Snapchat said that its next generation glasses will be called Spex. Breaking with the company, Spectacles branding that it used for previous. Drop the Ackles.
Starting point is 00:07:24 Drop the Ackles. Drop the Ackles. Just use specs. It's cleaner. Well, they dropped the T, too. So it's technically drop the tackles. Drop the specks. Drop the tackles. Just specks.
Starting point is 00:07:36 Larger tech rivals like MetaApple and Alphabet are investing heavily into cutting edge head worn devices. Yep. So the last computer will be on your face. So the most recent- And you're gonna like it. The most recent edition of Spectacles were released in September, 2024 to developers only. That edition of the glasses was available
Starting point is 00:07:54 under a leasing model that required users to commit to paying 99 a month for a full year if you wanted to develop for them. So that's $1,200 guaranteed. And then if you want to keep it more, it probably continues to be $100. So it'll be interesting, it'll run Snap OS operating system which they developed in-house.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Snap said the developers will be able to incorporate Google's Gemini AI models into programs that they developed for smart glasses. So you could see some sort of, yeah, exactly. So you could see someone where it's like, okay, you're gonna get the glasses You're gonna build cons out Google says hey, oh, that's where you're going with it. Okay. I don't know I I think very unlikely but but still you know well
Starting point is 00:08:35 snaps market cap Exactly what meta just paid for a 50% stake in scale AI 14 billion Anything's possible spicy Scale AI, 14 billion. Anything's possible. Spicy. So, SNAP's at 14 billion. The stock hasn't really moved over the past five days on this news. It's clearly SNAP staying in the game with the WWC news, getting something, getting a story out there that,
Starting point is 00:08:58 hey, we're still in the game, we're moving, and we're doing cool stuff. And I'm excited for this. I think we need more innovation here, more people testing different stuff. And it's clear that with a new format, with a new paradigm of what the product is, there's a whole bunch of interesting directions you can go,
Starting point is 00:09:13 whether there's an augmented reality display, whether it's voice only, whether it's glasses, prescription glasses, a whole bunch of different things. Social media goats, both of them are just not, the idea of not being a part of the next platform Shift is just an idea. They don't is a world. They don't want to live in right? Yeah, they are you know both both Zuck and and Evan are gonna be you know competing yeah, and so fun could be interesting from a developer angle obviously You know nowhere near the budget of Reality Labs
Starting point is 00:09:45 for what Zuck is working on with Meta, but potentially some constraints. They can be good, John. I agree, I agree. They can be good. I'm optimistic, I certainly want to try it. Anyway, let's go back to Liquid Glass. Ben Thompson gave a whole, posted a massive article
Starting point is 00:10:00 on Strutechary called Apple's Retreat, Apple Retreats, something like that. You should give it a read, you should subscribe to Stratechery, obviously. Apple's Retreat to its core competency. The headline feature of WWDC this year, this is from the latest Stratechery article, was Liquid Glass, a new unified design language
Starting point is 00:10:17 that stretches across its operating systems. I will reserve judgment on Liquid's glass aesthetics and usability. Gruber likes it but I am not one to install developer betas on my devices but Tyler will that's what we have Tyler because I agree with Ben Thompson it's extremely risky but he's willing to do it taking one for the team over there I mean the whole the whole TBPN army he's he's really saying I will I will sacrifice I will fall on the sword
Starting point is 00:10:52 It's okay it goes really south we'll get it we'll get a new phone and it's always always a possibility But good luck. Hopefully you can make it through Tyler will be checking on you throughout the show So first let's read Gruber's throughout the show. So first let's read Gruber's Gruber's overview of his reaction to liquid glass because we saw Timeline hated it they said Steve Jobs would hate it let's go to John Gruber during Fireball. I think part of it is it was popular to hate on it totally and because anyone loves when someone's on a down swing they love just piling on downwards yeah and when everyone's on an upswing they love just piling on upwards it's not what's on an upswing, they love just piling on upwards.
Starting point is 00:11:25 It's not a lot of pressure. I think it's also normal if a widely used consumer product does any type of meaningful upgrade. I mean, this was a default is that typically it's bad. There were protests about Facebook back in the day launching the feed. They were like, I want to go back to just randomly looking at your profile. I don't want to see random. Everything, every at your profile. I don't want to see random. Everything, every change is always
Starting point is 00:11:47 met with some sort of pushback. And then years later, people wind up loving it. I feel like this is something that could grow on me. I'm reserving until we've fully been tested it on our intern. If he gives it the thumbs up, I'm going to install it. So let's go to John Groover. I mean, it's kind of fun. It's daring and brave and bold to do something like that.
Starting point is 00:12:09 And just because Tyler's doing that doesn't mean you shouldn't. This type of bravery that Tyler's exhibiting today, I think it might be one day like an exhibit in the Computer History Museum. Totally. The bravery he's exhibiting today will be in the history books. They might even name the next operating system cause growth
Starting point is 00:12:28 Cause grow back. Oh s27 Mac OS cause grow after Taha got amazing And it just loads with this image that's the default wallpaper for the daring and Technologist who installed the beta on day you. You did, you know what, everybody said, you're crazy. Everyone said you're crazy. You're crazy. You're crazy. You should never do that.
Starting point is 00:12:50 But he did it, he took the leap. He took the leap and did it anyway. So, first, this is going back to Ben Thompson's piece. First handcrafted UI overhauls are the polar opposite of a probabilistic world of generative AI. One is about deep consideration and iteration resulting in a finished product. The other is about in the moment token prediction
Starting point is 00:13:08 resulting in an output that is ephemeral and disposable. Both are important and creative, but the downsides of that creativity, unfamiliarity in edge cases versus hallucination and false confidence are themselves diametrically opposed. Apple's historical strengths have always been rooting and designing for finality. In my first year of strata-cary, I did a SWOT analysis.
Starting point is 00:13:29 Let's give it up for SWOT analysis. I love SWOT analysis. Of the big tech companies and said about Apple. And I think we've talked about this a bunch on the show of like generative AI is inherently imperfect. Apple is about pixel perfection. So Apple's product development process is wonderful for developing finished products,
Starting point is 00:13:48 but that same process doesn't work nearly as well when it comes to building cloud services. Cloud services are never done. They are best developed by starting with an MVP and then iterating based on usage. This is precisely opposite of what it takes to design a piece of hardware, and it's a big reason why Apple struggles so much
Starting point is 00:14:03 with cloud services and why other services companies struggle with products. The canonical example of this, of course, was the MobileMe launch, which was delivered fully formed and which, when faced with real world usage, crashed and burned. Apple's latest offerings are better, but still suffer from too much internal development time per release. This is a hard problem to fix because it touches the core of what makes Apple, Apple. I think it matters whether or not liquid glass is good
Starting point is 00:14:31 because it will be a testament about the state of Apple's strengths. The point of this article, however, is that WWC was a retreat to those strengths, which is good. This is a bull case. They're not getting over their skis and they will eventually, I mean, if they're to win,
Starting point is 00:14:44 probably defer to the other companies and play to their strengths and let the other companies win in the places where they are best. Tim just calling up Sam and saying, Sam, I'm going to need $50 billion. Siri, it's yours? $50 billion. $50 billion.
Starting point is 00:15:03 If you and Mossett could pull together the capital we can make it happen I mean, I keep thinking about Syria. I keep running through like what would it have taken to to just To just replace Siri with a frontier level, you know simple response model Not even the reasoning stuff just GP GPT-4.0 level, you ask it a question and it reads you like a basic response and not lose the other Siri functionality. And I think that they need to kind of flip the paradigm because right now Siri is only, it's basically all tool use, it's basically a router.
Starting point is 00:15:40 So it takes in, you ask Siri, what's the weather going to be like tomorrow and it knows that you just and all it's doing is picking out keywords weather and it goes to the weather API internally and then tomorrow and it feeds that in and it delivers that back like chat GPT kind of flips that around by having the default interaction be much more generalizable and it can return kind of any result. It can return a paragraph. It can tell you about a historical event or just talk to you. And then if it needs to use a tool like web search to get you the weather for
Starting point is 00:16:15 tomorrow, then it goes and calls that. And so you need to kind of flip that around. I was wondering about like, like, why hasn't, uh, like what, what, if you, if you rolled back the clock and you were like, okay, Apple just wants to be in the game, what would it take to launch a V2 of Siri? And I was like, well, okay, if they try to partner with someone under the hood without, like, they don't even have the option of just saying, we are going to partner with Anthropic under the hood and it's going to be basically white labeled and no one will ever find out. Because there are just too many leakers.
Starting point is 00:16:47 It will find out immediately. And so Mark Gurman will have the story immediately and everyone will know. So they won't be able to say this is magically ours when really it's someone else's, even if they're paying them to be, and there's tons of NDAs. Like they do with cloud services, right? I don't actually know who's under the hood.
Starting point is 00:17:03 I think they do a lot of that. And then I think a lot of that and sure it's and then I think a lot of it Comes down to the privacy angle is that they want to make certain claims about privacy and ESG and Net zero and stuff and so if they were to just white label another company that didn't have the same reputation in privacy or or environmentalism like people would just say wait wait wait But like anthropic Anthropic isn't known for their privacy rules as much as possible, so maybe they're training on my Siri results now, and that's a whole thing, and they have to build up
Starting point is 00:17:33 Anthropic's brand to have the brand of Apple, which is just, I'm sure Anthropic's doing great, but they're not known like Apple is in terms of how seriously they take it. And then in terms of acquisition, obviously there's all the antitrust stuff. We'll get into this with a scale AI deal, but every major hyperscaler, except for Apple now,
Starting point is 00:17:51 has basically done one of these interesting acquihires of a foundation model lab to kind of juice up their AI efforts, and it's kind of been a mixed bag. Maybe we see one from Apple, they certainly have the cash, but it would be a very, very different, it would be a departure from their current strategy. Anyway, let's go to John Gruber over at Daring Fireball with his review of liquid glass.
Starting point is 00:18:16 He says, I've got iOS 26 installed on a spare phone already. Oh no, he didn't even use the real phone Tyler no number one never say it on your main phone how's it going so far well okay so so I'm going to download it it's 19 gigabytes okay okay my phone is not you know I only have 64 gigabytes of my phone so I'm gonna I gotta do a you know delete everything yeah I'm gonna delete everything okay so, I'm going to delete everything. OK. So you'll delete. Just go to your Photos app.
Starting point is 00:18:48 Select all the images. Delete them all. And then clear the trash. And you'll make more memories. Like, you could always make. You're making more memories all the time. Yeah, exactly. Clear out those images.
Starting point is 00:18:56 And good luck. If you, on a more serious note, if you need, we'll cover your sort of Apple iCloud plan if you get those images in the cloud so you can get if you need a backup on your ramp card yeah put it on the ramp so Gruber says I like the new UI a lot in addition to just looking just plain looking cool Apple has tackled a lot of long-standing minor irritants. For example, the iOS contextual menu for text selections, the one with cut, copy, paste, for years now there have been a lot of other useful commands in there, including share
Starting point is 00:19:33 at the very end. But to get to the extra commands, you had to tediously swipe, swipe, swipe. Now with one tap, you can expand the whole thing into a vertical menu, elegant. And I agree. I noticed that that was getting like, originally it was just like, just copy, just cut and paste, and it was pretty easy. And then they added, if you wanted to bold or italics,
Starting point is 00:19:51 you had to swipe over and then click on that and then go to text effects. And there were like seven different things eventually. Good move, minor update, but important. And this is the polish that Apple's so good at. And then he says, there's some stuff in Mac. Oh, heck mass Mac. Oh s 26 Tahoe I already don't like like putting needless icons next to almost every single menu item But overall my first impression of liquid glass on Mac OS is good, too
Starting point is 00:20:17 It's fun and lots of little details are nice joyful and useful in an old-school Mac OS Tahoe You'll love MacOS Cosgrove You say that it's just gonna be a banger. It's gonna be the best ever There was an interesting article in here that Ben Thompson linked to by Sebastian de with About physicality the new age of UI He actually posted this back on June 3rd before Apple refresh list so there's a a lot of, oh, do we have some breaking news? I just printed this out because, well, so this was a good post from Signal.
Starting point is 00:20:50 He says, watching this WWDC, thank you Signal for the content and I'm just happy to be back printing. It's amazing. It's, I don't know how we went a few months without it. So he says, watching this WWDC felt like watching a dinosaur try to do ballet, technically and aesthetically competent, but spiritually lost.
Starting point is 00:21:10 They talked about Apple Intelligence like they just discovered the concept throughout the presentation. There was zero ecosystem thinking and no real attempt to rethink a single interaction model. More importantly, there was zero sense of how to be relevant in a world where interfaces may disappear, apps get abstract abstracted and AI is the OS Apple still
Starting point is 00:21:29 thinks in icons and widgets while the world is moving towards awareness intent and delegation it'll be interesting to see how much of a penalty they will pay for missing this boat another negative post now signal did have a couple other posts that were more positive yeah good you know and I think I think this is Another negative post. Now, Signal did have a couple other posts that were more positive. Yeah. And I think this is generally why I'm excited about Johnny and Sam's hardware project,
Starting point is 00:21:54 is it's an opportunity to rethink the device from the ground up with AI at the heart versus Apple, which I think going back to Ben Thompson's position is smart to play their own game right now and understand that they do have the option of auctioning the sort of Siri out to the highest bidder at some point. Yeah, I mean, Alex Heath, who we had on the show yesterday, had a good post who said,
Starting point is 00:22:19 "'This is so very clearly designed for an interface "'that sits on top of the real world, not a phone, something you would need for AR glasses. And so this idea that it's a little awkward now when you see these images of these glass over the background of your phone display, it can look a little too transparent, the contrast ratios are all off. But if you think about if they're really going all in on AR, VR, and they want to project these screens over the real world long-term,
Starting point is 00:22:54 setting themselves up to really dominate there and not need to do another refresh, could be big. Could be big. Anyway, Mark Gurman liked it. Tim had spent some time with Trump. Yeah. Trump is known for playing 4D chess. Maybe Tim is playing a little 4D chess with liquid glass.
Starting point is 00:23:11 I think so. He's like, screen is going to be, everything's going to be a screen. We're just going to put UI everywhere. They have a patent for a glass iPhone that you can see through or something like that, or something that actually would appear more like glass or appear transparent.
Starting point is 00:23:26 And a lot of the transparent, I feel like a lot of the transparent technologies, it's like the closest we're gonna get to just true holograms is if you have a variety of devices that are projecting holograms into glass sheets. And so maybe it doesn't start with your phone immediately because the battery needs to be right there, that needs to be solid, But if you think about a display
Starting point is 00:23:45 and you're projecting on that and doing kind of the same wave guides that are happening in reflected augmented reality glasses, you could do that on a monitor or something like that. And so that could be very cool. Mark Gurman had a more positive take on WWDC. He says, excellent WWDC. At cohesive story, deep integration
Starting point is 00:24:03 and continuity across the devices, zero false promises, impressive new UI, and significant new productivity features on the Mac and iPad, but the lack of any real new AI features, despite that being my expectation, is startling. And so people were expecting, you know, maybe there will be a new Siri, maybe they will move the ball down the field in AI,
Starting point is 00:24:23 and they did not Then Hilak of course taking credit for it as always you know him from taking credit for the Jaguar rebrand now He says so excited to see my my to finally see my work from Apple ship I was the head of design for the WWDC app notifications. There's still a work in progress We've only had the last year to work on them stay tuned so was this was this is this fake or is this I think this is a brightness adjusted I think that they I think that whoever shared this image turned up the brightness or brought up the brought up the lows basically decreased the contrast in the in the photos app like to make it look worse than it actually would but I mean even it doesn't even matter because even if this is the way it looks this isn't the photos app like to make it look worse than it actually would
Starting point is 00:25:09 But I mean even it doesn't even matter because even if this is the way it looks this isn't the way it will look when it Will ship to to people because it's obvious and and and Apple doesn't make these like obvious mistakes like this Especially when it comes to design They might do something that is like rough in the short term But better in the long term like what I think is happening with the photos app where in the short term, but better in the long term. Like what I think is happening with the Photos app, where in the Photos app, they are understanding that in the future, you won't want to scroll at all. You will just search, and search will be so powerful because every photo and video will be tagged so thoroughly from AI, and it will understand the context
Starting point is 00:25:39 so much that you will just ask it to pull up a photo and it will do it immediately. The problem is that right now, people, A, aren't't they haven't switched that UX paradigm to actually go search first and second And and second just the tagging is not that good like I had a video clip of Arnold Schwarzenegger From a movie on my phone. I wanted to pull it up and so I searched like Arnold Arnold video and it couldn't find it because the clip that I had started with a black frame and Clearly it's only indexing like the first frame And so if you have like a fade in a picture of your dog, it won't get text something like that
Starting point is 00:26:14 I don't know if that's exactly what I use the text search in photos quite a bit. Yep I find it like searching Kugen if there's some that's really yeah totally the text search is fantastic and even even things like objects like I Picture of a vending machine you type in vending machine it'll do a pretty good job Sometimes it'll miss it though But that these these like generative AI things they get to ninety nine point nine percent accuracy pretty quickly apples Just a little bit behind on them I think anyway if you're trying to upgrade your design chops, head over to figma.com.
Starting point is 00:26:45 Think bigger, build faster. Figma helps design and development teams build great products together. We'll go to Willem. Get on Figma now. We'll go to Willem. He gives his review of Apple's Liquid Glass. Clearly hints at a clear interface, AR glasses,
Starting point is 00:27:00 and unifies OS beyond devices. Like iOS 7, I would be shocked if this version of liquid glass ships to everyone later this year. Too many accessibility features for a company that pioneered it. Unfortunately, this means it's going to be muddy slash blurry. UI design used to be about function. This is decoration, late empire feeling.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Hate the trend of floating menus that seems to be happening everywhere. It puts useless noise on the edges of the screen. Ultimately, little of this matters when you can now just talk to the computer. Everything is computer. Anyway. Interesting.
Starting point is 00:27:32 There's an interesting deep dive from the Sebastian DeWitt talking about some of the history here, speaking of iOS 7. He said, on June 10th, Apple showed off what, this was in the spring of 2013. June 10th, Apple showed off what this was in the spring of 2013 June 10th Apple showed off What would be the greatest paradigm shift in user interface design ever iOS 7? I remember exactly where I was and how I felt it was a shock
Starting point is 00:27:54 I love a designer who's just so in the weeds they remember where they were when iOS 7 dropped to be there If there is indeed a big redesign happening this year It'll be consequential and impactful in many ways that will dwarf the iOS 7 overhaul for a multitude of reasons. The redesign is rumored to be comprehensive, a restyling of iOS, Mac OS, iPad OS, TV OS, Watch OS, and Vision OS in the intervening years
Starting point is 00:28:18 between iOS 7's announcement, and today, iPhones have gone from simply a popular device to the single most important object in people's lives. So true. The design of iOS affected and inspired most things around from web to graphic design to any other computer interface. That's why I figured I'd take this moment of obscurity, this precious moment in time where its changes are still shrouded in fog to savor something.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Wholesome naivety great writer of where things are going. So I can let my imagination run wild. What would I do if I were Apple's design team? What changes would I like to see? And what do I think is likely? And then he breaks it down the shaded age. He goes back to the skeu morphic era. iOS started out as can we pull up this iOS started out as the iPhone OS, an entirely new operating system that had very similar styling To the design language of the mac os tiger dashboard feature. Yeah, I remember this you can just put the widgets anywhere
Starting point is 00:29:15 It's very messy all the stick. This was so fun as a kid. Yeah Yeah, that's around with all the different widgets all the widgets and then you would discover discovering is great widget I I couldn't, I legitimately felt like a kid in a candy store with widgets. It was a beautiful time. So he says the icon layout on iPhone OS 1, it wasn't even called iOS then, it was just iPhone OS,
Starting point is 00:29:39 was a clear skeuomorphism was the buzzword at the time. You might have heard that word being thrown around. It might surprise you that it doesn't mean it had lots of visual effects, like gradients, gloss, and shadows. It actually means that to make it easier for users to transition from something they were used to, in this case, phones, typically being slabs
Starting point is 00:29:57 with a grid of buttons on them, to what they had become, phones were all screen, so they could show any kind of button or interface imaginable. And yes, there was a whole lot of visual effects in the user interfaces from iPhone OS 1 to iOS 6 in this age we saw everything from detailed gradients and shadows and simple interface elements to realistically rendered reel-to-reel tape decks and microphones for audio apps I remember this the reel-to-reel tape deck in the voice recorder, pretty, pretty remarkable. Uh, and like when,
Starting point is 00:30:28 when the directions would actually be like a, like a physical sign that you would see on a highway. It was, it was a cool design language. I mean, it was, it feels so not Apple now that they've spent 10 or 15 years post skeu morphism, but it was definitely unique at the time. Having actually worked on some of the more fun manifestations of it during my time working at Apple, I can tell you from experience that the work we did in this era was heavily grounded in creating familiarity through thoughtful, extensive visual effects. We spent a lot of time in Photoshop
Starting point is 00:30:59 drawing realistically shaded buttons, virtual wood, leather, and more materials. That became known as skeuomorphic design, which I find a bit of a misnomer, but the general idea stands. Of course, the metal of the microphone was not in fact metal. It didn't reflect anything like metal objects do. It never behaved like the object it mimicked. It was just an effect, a purely visual lacquer
Starting point is 00:31:23 to help users understand that the voice memos app worked like a microphone. The entire interface worked like this so as to be approachable as possible. Notably, this philosophy extended to even the smallest elements of the UI. Buttons were styled to visually resemble a button by being convex and recessed or raised. Disabled items often had reduced treatments to make them look less interactive. All of this was made to work
Starting point is 00:31:49 with lots of static bitmap images. The first signs of something more dramatic did begin to show on iPad. Some metal slider sheen could respond to the device's orientation. So as you delete a note or email to not simply make it vanish off the screen, but pulled it into a recycling bin
Starting point is 00:32:07 that went as far as to open its lid and close as the document got sucked in. I remember there was one that would shred things when you deleted it. They had a bunch of these fun ones. You can imagine the Apple designers in that era being like, today I'm moving on from Apple.
Starting point is 00:32:23 I was the designer that made the lid open and the thing swoosh into the can. It must've been so delightful to just be a designer and just like focus on just that one interaction for like weeks, you know? Yeah, that became a critique of Silicon Valley was just like you're working on something, like the idea that like something like this doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things but
Starting point is 00:32:48 Beautiful things matter they do and even a feature like this especially in the notes app of an iPhone was something that was being used Millions and millions of times a day and it's worthwhile to make it beautiful And so there was pushback when they went to flat design the flat age started in iOS 7 Introduced an entirely new design language for iOS much Much was written on it at the time and as with any dramatic change the emotions in the community ran quite high I'll leave my own opinions out of it mostly but whichever way you feel about it You can't deny it was a fundamental rethinking of the visual treatment of iOS iOS 7 largely did away with the visual effects for suggesting interactivity.
Starting point is 00:33:26 It went back to quite possibly the most primitive method of suggesting interactivity on a computer. Some buttons were nothing more than blue text on white background, like the inbox button. The home screen, once a clear reference to the buttons on phones of yesteryear, was now much more flat looking. One part owing to simpler visual treatment, but also a distinct lack of the use of shadows.
Starting point is 00:33:48 It is hard to look at this after looking at the last era. Oh yeah. This geomorphic era was amazing. Goated. It was amazing. It was amazing. I see why they had to move on in some ways. Yeah, of course.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Because it was just like the previous era felt, you know, like it. It started to feel dated. Yeah. It felt like. It feels vintage. I mean, it looks vintage today. Totally. I'm sure the kids today will like jailbreak
Starting point is 00:34:13 their iPhones back to looking. Yeah, I mean, I saw a comparison of the original Photos app, which looked like a camera lens, and then the flat design camera app had just a camera icon that was completely flat, and now we're back to a camera lens in the new era. And so some of that skeuomorphism seems to be coming back
Starting point is 00:34:36 with the glass redesign, liquid glass redesign, but not fully. We're kind of splitting the difference. We're going in a different direction. I just looked up, do people still jailbreak iPhones. Yeah, and Reddit says it's still possible The big thing is there's not much need for it a lot of the things jailbreaking was for have been implemented Yeah, IOS. Yeah, because the app store is so robust. Yeah, so you can get you can get an app
Starting point is 00:34:58 There's an app for that now there didn't used to be an app for it There were many many many many apps that were not available and on the first iPhone there was not even an app for it. There were many, many, many, many apps that were not available. And on the first iPhone, there was not even an app store. But why did shadows have to go? They had an important function in defining depth in the interface, after all. Looking at the screenshot above actually does it no justice. The new iOS 7 home screen was anything but flat.
Starting point is 00:35:21 The reason was that the shadows were static. iOS 7 embraced the notion of a distinct visual layers and using adaptive or dynamic effects to distinguish depth and separation. Why render flat highlights and shadows that are unresponsive to the actual environment of the user when you can separate the icons by rendering them on a separate plane from the background?
Starting point is 00:35:39 Parallax made the icons float distinctly above the wallpaper. The notification center sheet could simply be a frosted pane above the content which blurred its background for context. Johnny Ive spoke proudly at the iOS 7 introduction on how quote, the simple act of setting a different wallpaper affected the appearance of many things. This was a very new thing.
Starting point is 00:36:01 And so they're not losing the depth. They still, they're bringing the depth and they're actually making the depth more complicated with the liquid glass feature. And some people are frustrated by that. But one thing that they're highlighting is that it's intense from a computational perspective. Everyone was saying like,
Starting point is 00:36:17 rendering all these new features is definitely gonna hurt your battery life because it's so much more. Although Apple is fantastic at integration and they're fantastic at this type of hardware and software integration and these types of renderings, they will probably be very quick. So I wouldn't expect a disaster,
Starting point is 00:36:32 but I would expect a little bit more of a load just from the graphic layer, although it will be heavily optimized. Also, a new thing in the interface was that the UI Chrome was able to have the same dynamics. Things like the header and keyboard would show some of the content they obscured shining through as if it fashioned out of frosted glass. While it was arguably an overcorrection in some places, iOS 7's radical changes were
Starting point is 00:37:00 here to stay with some of its dynamic effects getting greatly reduced. Parallax is now barely noticeable. Over time, it's UI regained a lot more static effects. I wonder how much parallax there is. I don't really notice any right now. I mean, I guess when you swipe around, you can kind of tell that they're on a different plane, but I might, I might have it turned off. I don't even know. More interface elements started to blend with the content through different types of blur, like the new progressive blur and the button shapes
Starting point is 00:37:27 were slowly starting to make a comeback. It settled into a stable state, but it was also somewhat stagnant for bigger changes. There would have to be a rethink what would come next. Couldn't simply be a static bitmap again. It would have to continue the trend of increasingly adaptive interfaces. So he goes on to talk about, um,
Starting point is 00:37:46 the age of physicality and vision OS and kind of where Apple's going and predicts a lot of, of, of what wound up happening. So Ben Thompson, to go back to him, he talks about Apple's retreat to empowering developers and partners. This was your point about maybe Apple will be auctioning some stuff off. We'll see how their service revenue grows over the next few years. But first, let's tell you about Vanta. Automate compliance, manage risk, improve trust continuously. Vanta's trust managing platform takes the manual work out of your security and compliance process
Starting point is 00:38:15 and replaces it with continuous automation, whether you're pursuing your first framework or managing a complex program. It's like an AI golden retriever for mitigating risk. Yes, exactly. And automating compliance. Yes. It's literally a golden retriever turned into software. It's fantastic.
Starting point is 00:38:32 What the golden retriever does for your yard, yes. Fanta does for your business. Yes, yeah. It's like having a golden retriever in the office. Yeah. Like you just feel safer. You do, you do.
Starting point is 00:38:40 Yes, and you are safer. You feel more compliant, and you are safer. Yeah. So Ben Thompson writes about Apple's retreat to empowering developers and partners says that's not to say there weren't some notable AI Announcement in announcements in Apple's keynote first Apple announced the foundation models framework This is a quote from the Apple team this year. We're doing something new and we think it's going to be pretty big We're opening up access for any app to tap directly into the on-device large language model at the core of Apple intelligence With a new foundation models framework. This was what I was asking Alex about Alex Heath from the verge the question of hey there
Starting point is 00:39:17 Even if even if the models aren't frontier just the fact they're happening on device The speed is very important for a lot of these models, being able to use a model without a connection to the internet. People are still, they're still missing internet on planes occasionally, or they have patchy service. Building an app that takes advantage of that, and opening that up to the developer ecosystem where you can get really creative
Starting point is 00:39:38 and kind of start finding those like niche cases of where AI can help for certain things. We need the beer app, the iBeer app of the AI era. It's coming. We've been begging for it. With this development. For example, if you're getting ready for an exam, an app like Kahoot can create a personalized quiz
Starting point is 00:39:55 from your notes to make studying more engaging. And because it uses on-device models, this happens without cloud API costs. So if you're this kid developer who maybe doesn't have an economic model yet, you can build an AI product that only uses on device compute and you have zero cloud costs, which is amazing. I mean, of course there's ways to charge.
Starting point is 00:40:18 This got way less attention than it should have. Yeah, I mean, everyone was expecting it and it's great, but it is very cool in terms of just you can now vibe code an iOS app that has some sort of AI functionality. It's not going to be incredible, it's not going to be frontier, but you can get something that's served into the store that only uses Apple's APIs and creates an experience that is zero ongoing cost. It's entirely hosted by app and runs on the device, which is amazing. I think that that's very, very exciting
Starting point is 00:40:49 to see where people go with this. They give another example of if you're camping off grid, poring over the hikes you downloaded to all trails, just describe what mood you're in, the mood you're in, and all trails can use the on-device models to suggest the best option. So doing things like recommendation algorithms on device,
Starting point is 00:41:08 much faster, much easier. We couldn't be more excited about how developers can build on Apple intelligence and so it's important not to oversell the capabilities of Apple's on-device AI models. Of course developers who want to create something that is competitive with the output of something like Chat GPT will need to use cloud-based AI APIs, of course you gotta burn up the H200s to get the really good stuff. But it's like mid-wit intelligence on too cheap to meter.
Starting point is 00:41:35 Not quite super intelligence too cheap to meter, but it's a mid-wit. That's helpful. We got two-digit IQ. Two-digit IQ. Too cheap to meter. Too cheap to meter, it's really free. It's still, it's bullish. It's on mid-wit. That's helpful. Two-digit IQ. Two-digit IQ. Too cheap to meet it. Too cheap to meet it. It's really, it's free.
Starting point is 00:41:45 It's still, it's bullish. It's on the device. That reality, however, applies to Apple as well. Part of the folly of the initial Apple intelligence approach is that Apple was promising to deliver beyond state-of-the-art capabilities on the cheap using its users, processors, and power. What is compelling about the Foundation Models Framework
Starting point is 00:42:04 is how it empowers small developers to experiment with on-device AI for free. This is what I was talking about. An app that wouldn't have AI at all for cost reasons now can and if that output isn't competitive with cloud AI then that's the developers problem not Apple's. At the same time by enabling developers to experiment Apple is the big beneficiary of those that discover how to do something that is only possible once you have an Apple device. Second, Apple deepened its reliance on OpenAI,
Starting point is 00:42:32 incorporating ChatGPT's image generation capabilities into image playground and adding ChatGPT analysis to visual intelligence, that's cool. There is still no sign of the long rumor Gemini integration or the ability to switch out ChapGPT for the AI provider of your choice. But the general trend toward relying on partners who are actually good at building AI is a smart move.
Starting point is 00:42:54 Third, Ben Thompson writes, "'Apple is incorporating ChapGPT much more deeply into Xcode, its integrated development environment.'" This is their VS Code competitor that you need to use to write Objective-C apps for the, if you're building iPhone software, for building apps for Apple platforms.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Developers can also plug in other models using API keys, Xcode still has a long way to go to catch up to AI first IDEs like Cursor. But again, partnering with a foundation model maker seems like a much smarter strategy than Apple trying to do everything itself these are to be sure obvious moves but that doesn't make them any less important both in terms of Apple's future and also with regard to the theme of this article Apple's initial success with the Apple II was because of third
Starting point is 00:43:37 party developers and developers were critical to making the iPhone a sustainable success trusting developers and relying on partners may be a retreat from Apple's increasing insistence on doing everything itself, but is very much a welcome one. And so people are also, you know, he quotes Marques Brownlee here, the Windows Vista update with AeroGlass was a huge part of my childhood, so I'm getting serious flashbacks. It does have a little bit of like the Windows glass vibes. The biggest part of WWDC was about liquid glass,
Starting point is 00:44:07 which has drawn some unflattering comparisons to past Microsoft operating systems releases. Again, I'll withhold judgment until it ships, but there is another Microsoft OS comparison. I've been thinking about recently. To me, last year's Siri disaster was a lot like Windows 8. Windows 8 was an attempt to leverage Microsoft's large PC install base into a competitive position in touch-based devices and it did not go
Starting point is 00:44:31 well. Consumers, particularly enterprises, hated the new UI and developers weren't interested in the platform without users. Microsoft was forced to retreat and eventually came out with Windows 10 which was much more in line with traditional Windows releases. Apple has clearly missed the boat on cutting edge AI, but what I'm open to is the argument that this was a ship the company was never meant to board, at least when it comes to products like ChatGPT. Meanwhile, I've long been convinced
Starting point is 00:44:56 that Apple has gone too far in its attempt to control everything, even tangentially related to its devices. To that end, I understand why many people were underwhelmed by this WWDC, particularly in comparison to the AI extravaganza that was Google Hi-Oh. I think it was one of the more encouraging Apple keynotes
Starting point is 00:45:17 in a long time, and that's what Mark Gurman said as well. Apple is a company that went too far in many areas and needed to retreat. Focusing on things only Apple can do is a good thing. Empowering developers and depending on partners is a good thing. Giving even the appearance of thoughtful thinking with regards to Apple App Store is a good thing.
Starting point is 00:45:38 Of course, we want and are excited by tech companies promising the future. What is a prerequisite is delivering in the present and it's a sign of progress that Apple retreated to nothing more than that. It's here for Ben Thompson, another great article. Nailed it. Very, very good.
Starting point is 00:45:54 Hall of Famer. Anyway. Future Hall of Famer. If you're looking for the Apple of sales tax, get on Numeral, Numeral HQ, sales tax and autopilot. Spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance. It's AGI sales tax, babyilot spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance It's a GI sales tax baby get on numeral. Yes now so Sarah grow at conviction former former guest on the show friend of the show
Starting point is 00:46:15 Said that Apple transcription is still so bad so so bad compared to what's available on the market. They should be embarrassed Okay, so I agree I am now in the pattern of if I want to send you a long text with a lot of thoughts, I will go to ChatGPT, I will click the dictation button, I will talk to it, and then I will copy and paste that into the iMessage window. Do you instruct ChatGPT to synthesize it and organize it? I don't. I just use it for the transcription.
Starting point is 00:46:44 That's crazy. I just use it for the transcription. I open up the ChatGPT app, I let it transcribe, I don't organize it I don't I just use it for the transfer that's crazy I just use it for the transfer I open up the chat you P up I let it to transcribe I don't even one of those John hits me with one of those yes bubbles like this long you actually don't do that right I don't really notice you don't notice that I but even if I'm just saying like okay I'm walking around I can't really stop and time look here's what we're hitting in the gym yeah wake up you wake up at 5 a.m. first thing, transcribe the workout. Five for five, 225, bench press, yeah. So basically, I agree it's bad.
Starting point is 00:47:15 The question is, why is it bad? Because there are so many companies out there that they could work with, license, buy, partner with. There's a million different ways to solve this problem. Why is it bad? And I was thinking that maybe part of it is, let's say they buy a company that has amazing transcription and it is discovered that that company trained on data
Starting point is 00:47:40 that it didn't fully have access to. Interesting. All of a sudden, instead of going after some startup with $100 million raised and $50 million in the bank, and you're going to take them for all they're worth, you're going after Apple. And you can maybe get a billion dollar settlement. And so that's like a huge liability.
Starting point is 00:47:57 And it's also potentially a PR nightmare. Because a lot of Apple customers care about the AI training. Adobe's had to be very thoughtful about this in the sense that they're like, hey, look, we will let you opt in to letting us train our models on your images if you're on Behance or one of these other services. People don't like the idea of training just happening
Starting point is 00:48:21 on their hard work generally. And so I think that there's some PR risks, there's some legal risk, but I agree that they need to figure it out. Way less risk if they're just leveraging a vendor that is giving them. Even that, even that is like, it's tough for Apple because if it's like, oh, well, they're working
Starting point is 00:48:40 with this vendor and the vendor's not above board. Okay, well now they're linked in the right hand. Yeah, but they should also be able to go to somebody like scale AI or Merkor I just say like hey, we want to build a transcription product and we're just gonna make it ourselves I mean they face they like they face they face backlash when Foxconn has Bad working conditions, right? And so if they are partnering with another company and then there's some viral news story,
Starting point is 00:49:07 whether or not it's real, that those people, I don't know. But everything Apple does carries risk, even if they have great intentions. And I don't think that, yeah. And this is something that just feels, it feels so easy to move the ball down the field because they already have a transcription product. They just need to-
Starting point is 00:49:26 Let's just make it better. They just need to make it better. What are the ways in which we can make it better? And it's clearly not the modern transformer-based architecture. Yes, they need to do a training run. Yes, they need to build some GPU data centers for it. Yes, they need new training data.
Starting point is 00:49:37 But there has to be a way to do that in an environmentally friendly PR compliant, like do it the Apple way. I'm fine with that, but like you gotta do it. Because this is such a basic functionality of a phone now, and the fact that I'm going from one app to the other just because the Siri button isn't, the transcription is just not good.
Starting point is 00:49:57 And that would be such an easy thing to just say, hey, we're state of the art in this, because this is something that actually improves the daily experience of the phone user, for sure. And same thing with- That's so backwards to have to go in another app just to send a message, transcribe a message. I, yeah, I mean, I'm fine with them
Starting point is 00:50:19 not inventing the newest paradigm of deep research. Like, that product doesn't need to come from Apple yeah but we've had good dictation and transcription for years now yeah it's open source and it's not even saying that it's just like open source I'm sure they can't just like then the open source model in because the license and I'm sure there's the restrictions on that like you're not just gonna give whisper to somebody's company we should have somebody that big Dictation head and and have them get a job. No, no, it's just somebody just a fan
Starting point is 00:50:53 Go, you know an Apple fan goes joins Apple purely to just you know Beat the dictation drum internally as I feel like it just needs to be a handful of people Yeah, that that are really power users. Anyway, I wanted to highlight this post from PirateWires. They did an interview on April 16th with David Hannemar Hansen. That's DHH of Rails fame. He also works with 37 Signals with the friend of the show, Jason.
Starting point is 00:51:22 Screen recordings of Apple's new iOS 26 liquid glass software design appear to show a jumble difficult to read apps and incoherent home screen app animations. For a company that built its brand on seemingly impossible feats of technology, Apple now finds itself stuck in a self-perpetuating cycle, falling behind in the AI race, struggling to attract talent needed to catch up,
Starting point is 00:51:43 and fumbling product releases. PirateWire's writer Blake Dodge diagnosed the company's problems in a May interview with 37signals DHH. Read the interview in full on the site link threaded. I recommend you go read it. I won't read it here. You have to go subscribe to PirateWire's.
Starting point is 00:51:59 Also, it has a lot of bad words. But he really let loose and I'm sure there's a lot of insight there. The regarded state of affairs at Apple. So it has a lot of bad words. But he really let loose and I'm sure there's a lot of insight there. The regarded state of affairs at Apple. Yes. Not quite family-friendly material.
Starting point is 00:52:11 But if you're an adult, head over, hit the Subscribe button, check it out and read it in full, because there's a lot of insight there. Anyway, that is the WWE recap. We have seven minutes until our first guest. I thought we were going to do that in 15 minutes, wound up being a 53 minute segment. Love it.
Starting point is 00:52:29 Nice, well, should we cover the scale? Yep. So Meta is paying 15 billion, I thought it was 14, 15, something like that, for 49% staging scale AI that pays out investors and employees. CEO Alex Wang is leaving to join Metta and head up a super intelligence lab.
Starting point is 00:52:48 Feels like those license and acquired deals had character AI inflection and adept to avoid regulatory scrutiny says Tane, who's been on the show. This is from the information. You gotta hit the size gong 15 times for Alex Wang. Let's hear it for a fantastic outcome. Your headphones. I'm gonna need to let you hit the size gong. I will hit the gong. Where's the gong mallet? Oh it's over there. Where's the mallet? It's over there. Here we go.
Starting point is 00:53:24 technical difficulties but we got we got it done congratulations to Scaly Eye. That was not 15 hits John. That wasn't 15 hits but it was one big one and it's very exciting I'm a big fan of Alex Wang I've met him I interviewed him on stage at an event about a year ago and he has a ton of really deep insight into artificial intelligence and I'm sure he's gonna be an absolute beast in the boardroom. An absolute dog. Hopefully he can get a board seat. A boardroom general. He's a boardroom general.
Starting point is 00:53:49 Yeah, so it's funny when these kind of deals are relatively recent phenomena. Yes. We saw this with Character AI. To Google. To Google. Adapt to Amazon, inflection to Microsoft, and now Scale AI to Meta.
Starting point is 00:54:06 And the interesting thing here, I was talking with an early Scale AI investor this morning, and they just still didn't, I think the deal is still in the works. They didn't have full insight into how exactly it was structured. The question is, Meta is paying $15 billion for 49% of Scale AI, And Scale AI, through that, is losing their CEO to Meta.
Starting point is 00:54:31 Now, Scale AI is a very big business. They have a ton of customers that I imagine are going to want to continue to work with Scale AI. The question becomes, what happens to the actual EV of scale AI in a scenario where half of it is owned by a hyperscaler who has very different incentive structure than a traditional acquirer.
Starting point is 00:54:53 The positive here is that it's that. Didn't you talk to somebody at character or adapter inflection? You talked to somebody who was at a previous company. Yes, I talked to what happened with character is basically the cap table was effectively wiped out and reset. And to my knowledge. But not wiped out.
Starting point is 00:55:08 Cashed out to the tune of a very high valuation. So they're happy. Everyone's happy. That's the thing with these deals. Character AI ended up in a situation where they had this massive balance sheet. No investors, no preferred shareholders, is effectively, to my knowledge, employee-owned.
Starting point is 00:55:25 And I don't think that's what's happening here, but it is seemingly clear that the founders, the team, and the investors in Scale AI will be getting paid out, I would imagine, pro rata based on that $15 billion mark. And the thing that's wild here is I mean I. So it's an up round for everyone. Everyone gets cashed out, gets a ton of money.
Starting point is 00:55:50 Alex gets to go work in like a hyper scale on super intelligence and actually like take a run at some really serious like high technology. Yeah. The thing that was ultimately surprising here is. So Scale AI has more than $900 million in cash on its balance sheet at the end of last year, according to Financial Information,
Starting point is 00:56:06 shared with prospective investors. They've raised more than 1.5 billion from investors, so they only burned 600 million of that. They kept more than half of it. The company made 870 million in revenue last year and expected more than two billion this year, and it lost about 150 million. So I mean doing dig pretty well I mean there is a world where where like scale AI as a company, even though they're not wholly owned by Meta
Starting point is 00:56:34 They are independent and they have nine hundred million dollar war chest and they can go build a great business and do a bunch of Stuff there and then that the relationship with meta can be a fantastic growth engine Yeah, this the only reason this was surprising to me. Well, I guess one it's Scale AI was you know, if you're trying to build a new research lab They're probably gonna need to still acquire a lot of other top talent You can imagine medic going and trying to bring in into you know people from Anthropic or OpenAI into this new organization. But it felt like Scale, I do wonder if Scale's team could go back and see Circle's IPO and the success of that if they would have still
Starting point is 00:57:21 done this deal because Scale AI- Because you would see Scale could have ripped in the public markets Yeah, circle circle IPO showed that the public markets are very receptive to pure play technology bets That that have great narrative around them. Yes, and and I could easily Seeing what circle has traded at I could see scale trading well beyond what Circle has traded at, I could see scale trading well beyond this valuation they're getting from Meta. I agree with you.
Starting point is 00:57:50 The question is, how does the liquidity picture, what does the liquidity picture look like in that scenario? They wouldn't, the insiders wouldn't have been able to unload 15 billion. 14 billion. Like does that actually play out? Because yes, the stock could have traded up to 100 billion market cap, but can you actually, if you're an investor, can you actually get liquidity
Starting point is 00:58:12 without crashing the stock if you're putting 15 billion of downward pressure? So yeah, big question. We'll have to dig into it. Yeah, ultimately huge pickup for Zuck. I think Alex will continue to be, you know, execute very well, and I can will continue to be execute very well. And I can imagine he'll be a huge part of recruiting.
Starting point is 00:58:30 I mean, he's done a fantastic job. He's been on everything from the Theo Vaughan podcast to testifying in front of Capitol Hill and lawmakers. He's got a ton of range. He's very able to storytell and do creative deals, which increasingly are extremely valuable in the world where the AI paradigms, like the secrets are known.
Starting point is 00:58:52 It's about, okay, how can you actually marshal the capital and the will to build the hyperscale data center, to actually go and get Jensen to fork over 100,000 H200s on schedule? I'm sure there's a ton of different things in the works. Yeah, it's interesting for Meta, too. Even if they're able to leverage the scale team to simply get better at ads, they can make back the $15 billion
Starting point is 00:59:20 in short order. There's a ton of different ways this works out. And I mean, they clearly need a lot more reinforcement learning training data to improve llama 4, because they need a reasoning model if they're going to stay in the game. That's clearly the next paradigm. And I mean, a big part of what we learned about from semi
Starting point is 00:59:39 analysis this week was that verifiable rewards are really important in reinforcement learning. Scale AI pioneered that humanities last exam. They've been in like the evals game, defining the rewards that you would work against in the reinforcement learning paradigm. And so there's a whole bunch of ways that plugging Alex and the scale team in makes a ton of sense.
Starting point is 00:59:59 Anyway, really quickly, let me tell you about Adio. Customer relationship magic. Adio is the AI native CRM that builds, scales, and grows your company to the next level. Let's give it up for Adio. Go check it out. And we have our first. Let's give it up for Adio.
Starting point is 01:00:13 Let's give it up for Adio. Redpoint, our first guest, investors in Adio. No way, really? Yeah. What a coincidence. One hand watches the other. Welcome to the stream. How you doing?
Starting point is 01:00:22 Well, it's going great, guys. Great to be on. Huge fan of what you guys have built. So this is exciting. Thanks so much. Would you mind kicking us off with a little bit of an introduction? For sure. My name is Saisan Lukumar. I'm a partner at Redpoint Ventures. We're a venture capital firm in the
Starting point is 01:00:36 Bay. It's been around for over 25 years. We've invested in companies like Netflix, OpenAI, Stripe, but we're known for infrastructure software investing. So companies like Netflix, Stripe, but we're known for infrastructure software investing so companies like Stripe, Twilio, HashiCorp, Cribble, Chain Guard and yeah, that's been our bread and butter. And walk us through what's going on today.
Starting point is 01:00:58 Yeah, so we're in San Francisco at AWS's BuilderLoft. We've partnered with NASDAQ to actually move the their exchange to SF So in about 30 minutes, we're gonna ring the bell really about in SF people here Yeah, it's it's like it's like that delian tweet like move move Silicon Valley to Miami We just move Wall Street to the bench here. So we're excited. We're exciting day for us But yeah, this is our annual conference and we do it every year. That's amazing. Amazing. Well, break down some of the-
Starting point is 01:01:27 Hopefully you guys have, we have a Gong cam here. You need a bell. Hopefully you guys have a bell cam set up. We know the Gong might be better than the Bell, I think. Yeah, SF is very Gong-coded. Yeah. Yeah. Well, yeah, I wanna know about the top themes
Starting point is 01:01:45 for the conference, the top top tracks the top discussion points. What are people debating? for sure what Take us from kind of where the discourse is and where the frontier of that discourse is going For sure, you know We created this whole initiative a few years ago to call out the importance of infrastructure software as standalone category. It really is like the picks and shovels behind how software is consumed and delivered. It's this invisible piece of software that we just take for granted. When you buy something on Amazon, for example, there is some application that we open, but
Starting point is 01:02:20 it's powered in the back by all of these dev tools and databases. There's some global server taking in billions of bits of information and you need to secure it from all of these DDoX attacks, which happens millions of times a day. And we just don't know about that. So I guess across the whole application delivery life cycle, there are just a ton of different infrared tooling and it powers virtually everything we do.
Starting point is 01:02:42 So, yeah, we we take yeah, we do this conference every year to just shine a light on all of the amazing innovation that's happening at the infrastructure layer. So we divide the world up into four different subcategories, everything happening at the AI and modeling layer, all of the data infrastructure tooling that needs to be built out around that, the cybersecurity vendors that need to protect that data,
Starting point is 01:03:07 and all of the developer tools that actually creates the software. So we've been doing it for, this is our third year doing it, and we also highlight basically the top 100 fastest growing private infrastructure companies. We all get them in a room. We have the CEO of AWS, Matt Garman, coming to chat today and the president of YC, Gary Tan.
Starting point is 01:03:31 And so yeah, it's a fun day. I have this thesis I wanna bounce off of you and get your feedback on. It feels like DevTools infrastructure, it's less monopolistic, it's, and maybe that makes it easier for maybe not VCs to make money, but entrepreneurs to make money, you just don't get steamrolled as much.
Starting point is 01:03:53 Am I off there in thinking that a lot of these dev tools markets are more oligopolistic by nature of the fact that hyperscalers are competitive and the different cloud platforms are competitive like what what is the current dynamic because I feel like the narrative is always like someone comes out with some infrastructure or dev tool it's kind of a boring company it flies under the radar for six years then it gets and then oh it's worth a couple billion dollars and that's worth like 20 30 billion dollars exactly so we break
Starting point is 01:04:24 down like what structurally is going on there. Why is it harder to build these crazy, crazy monopolies? And then is that narrative about like base hits being easier or unicorns being easier, is that even real? I actually agree with that sentiment maybe a couple of years ago. But if you look today, I mean look at cursor, hit $500 million in ARR in less than a year.
Starting point is 01:04:48 And I guess like dev tools, it's always been this like very, like if you think of DevOps, it's this very sequential process, right? It's like, yeah, if you have your engineers on one side, then you have your SRE folks on the other, and then there are tools for the developers, there are tools for the incident response engineers,
Starting point is 01:05:06 and there are like these distinct stop gaps that exist across the lifecycle, right? But with these code generation tools like Cursor and Winsurf and Copilot, like they all started on the left, and they started in the IDE, where these developers are actually coding. But you can see the writing on the wall
Starting point is 01:05:26 and where they're going. So now you're consuming and writing all of these applications in the IDEs, but they're probably going to extend right, and they're gonna start doing the code review stuff, and then they're gonna deploy the apps. You can see it in Lovable, for example, with just a simple query.
Starting point is 01:05:40 You can go from that query to a full-blown production app that's live on a website. So before, you needed 10 different designers and engineers to do all of that But now it's just one tool you can do that. So I think I think yes, it's it's not been as monopolistic in the past but I think That world is changing and and like the clear horses right now in my opinion are cursor and anthropic in the coding world Interesting and and so yeah I mean, it's just crazy like two years ago like people were saying
Starting point is 01:06:10 LLMs all they could do is just spit out code like you couldn't actually Write real software and impact software development cue two years later It I think there was this interesting cell a computer engineering grads face double the unemployment rate of art history majors. And it's just crazy. How do you compare and contrast the adoption of AI versus traditional cloud? I know that you guys have done some research around cloud adoption, you know adoption more than a decade at this point versus even just the growth rate on the token side. Yeah, I mean, it's just incredible how much faster the consumption is on the AI side.
Starting point is 01:06:58 I think a really good analogy or data point is if you look at the cost of EC2, like servers during the cloud, it got efficient very, very quickly, and it allowed people to consume cloud software all across the board. But when you look at the cost of inference, which I think is the equivalent to EC2 and cloud, but inference for AI, it's literally dropping like 100 times faster than the cost of EC2. But at the same time, applications are being built and consumed 10 times higher than it was during cloud.
Starting point is 01:07:31 So it's like 1000X more consumption at the end of the day. So it's just insane, like what's happening in the age of AI. And the markets itself, like there's this massive services component that is gonna be converted to product-based software revenue because you can encapsulate all of these workflows with software. Like, LLMs are software at the end of the day. You're taking these huge markets and you're making them available through software. How are you thinking about competitive dynamics between scaled infrastructure providers like
Starting point is 01:08:02 Databricks and CloudFlare and companies in that category versus some of the upstart companies that are scaling rapidly but still having to compete with these founder-led companies that are basically, they're not going to miss this sort of platform shift. Yeah, it's really interesting. I think the existing infrastructure vendors, they can actually embed the AI products in their suite. Like take Vector databases, for example, which I think is an incredible market still, right?
Starting point is 01:08:34 And there's like all of these use cases, but is there a Vector database equivalent of Databricks yet? Like, no, actually what happened was that MongoDB extended Vector search part of their suite. So I think like, but that's not to say like, for example, like two years ago, people would not have thought an IDE like cursor would be better than GitHub Copilot. So I think there are pockets of the infrastructure market where sometimes the incumbents are going to win and they can just leverage their existing technology to extend their applications.
Starting point is 01:09:07 But then there are AI native wedges, like the IDE for example, where there's tremendous opportunity for a couple of 22 year olds to come and create a $10 billion business in two years. Yeah, let's stay on cursor, windsurf, the new dev tools like IDE coding, AI coding market. There's a little bit of a horse race going on.
Starting point is 01:09:31 You're either a cursor guy or a windsurf guy or you're an investor in one. But as I talk to more and more of the founders, I just increasingly become convinced that this is such a growing market and it remains potentially oligopolistic that they might kind of all wind up winning in some way or at least returning investor capital and making the founders fantastically wealthy and successful.
Starting point is 01:09:54 How much of that narrative do you think is real? We talked to Scott Wu over Cognition. We were like, oh, like OpenAI just launched Codex. Are you cooked? And he's like, well, we grew 40% last month and so it seemed like very much not so and we talked to another person was saying that github copilot not the trendy tool at all at a 500 million dollar run rate and so that in of itself could be a public company if it was spun out and so it feels like when we're talking about doing something
Starting point is 01:10:23 so net new something so additive to companies workflows, there's just so much opportunity that it kind of just is like a rising tide lifts all boats. But what do you think about that narrative generally? Yeah. I mean, if you just look at the application with the strongest product market fit within the AI world, it's coding and like the market itself, there are tens of millions of developers. If you just assume moderate assumptions and what you pay them, it's like a $1.6 trillion market in spent. It's absolutely massive. It's like the mother of all markets.
Starting point is 01:10:56 And I think it's really interesting. There are companies going after certain pockets. So you have the code generators that living in your IDE IDE and that's where the developers are today, right? It's it's where the actual development happens. So Cursor it was just magic in a bottle. It's Tap tap tab and all of a sudden you have a full-blown production app and you save yourself countless hours in development But when you when you can see where the world is moving like all of these processes think about humans at the center,
Starting point is 01:11:29 but it's like very, very quickly we're thinking it's gonna shift to having agents at the center. And so companies like Cognition and Factory, they're not gonna exist in your IDE. Like you're just gonna go tell it, you're gonna go tell an agent to go do something and it's gonna come back and have a pull request and you're just going to approve. So I think there will always be a need for software developers, but I think they're going
Starting point is 01:11:51 to move increasingly from actually coding to being kind of these like orchestrators of a product. And I think like product managers, for example, are now enabled with these tools. I think at the end of the day, like I don't think it's going to... Yes, there's some developers that might lose their jobs, but you're actually just making their jobs a lot easier, and there's just going to be a ton more software. There's going to be more software. If you're not Jevons Paradox-pilled now, you never will.
Starting point is 01:12:16 You lost. Reacting to the news today, the scale, AI, MetaDeal, how do you expect the data labeling market to evolve now that in some ways one of the key players in that space will naturally have other priorities if half their company is owned by Meta who has their own goals around super intelligence. Yeah, look, if you're the model providers,
Starting point is 01:12:47 there are two use cases that are just so clear and hair on fire. The one that's inference, it's actually running these models. Two, it's data labeling. How do you actually structure your data and clean your data and feed it into these models and such that you can actually advance the LLMs.
Starting point is 01:13:06 And so I think it's a brilliant acquisition. I think whatever the sticker price is, we're going to look back. It's going to be like the Instagram deal. You need accurate classified data to feed these large language models. And for a variety of use cases, there are so many data labeling businesses that we see like pockets in hiring and whatnot and coding and like they're all screaming out of the gates. Like they go to like zero to twenty in like two months and so I think it just makes a ton of sense and I think
Starting point is 01:13:38 it's I think it's a brilliant acquisition. I want to get your reaction to WWDC. It felt like Apple was kind of pulling back from some of the territory that they'd over expanded into in artificial intelligence Obviously, it's a developer conference. Do you think that there's opportunities for? startups to build new companies even around Servicing the nascent AI for Apple environment. You could imagine there is like, there is no cursor for Xcode. There's probably a way to solve that problem. Even just.
Starting point is 01:14:10 Anthropic and their deal with Xcode. Yeah. Yeah. But, but there's probably some way to even advance that. And then also just serving up models into, you know, iOS APIs that are like more tailored. Like there's been a couple couple companies that developed backends that were specifically tuned for iOS apps in the past. Some of those wound up getting sold. So how are you thinking about opportunities
Starting point is 01:14:34 coming out of WDC or just general reactions? Maybe you don't even follow it at all. You know, it's interesting. When you look at past platform shifts like the cloud, you first need the workdays and service nows and salesforces running at massive scale, pushing the limits of cloud rails before you can really understand what kind of innovation needs to happen
Starting point is 01:14:58 at the infrastructure layer. So, our guess here with Apple and all of these apps that are built, you need the AI native versions of these apps to start hitting the limits of the underlying models before you can really understand. So for sure it's gonna happen, but I think it's gonna take some time. What is the discussion,
Starting point is 01:15:19 or what do you expect the discussion to be around agents? There's great narratives around agents right now. There's individual agent products that people use, whether it's coding agents or sort of research agents. But despite Salesforce marketing, whatever their agent cloud is. Agent force. Agent force, things like that, it doesn't feel like they maybe have broad adoption yet,
Starting point is 01:15:44 but a lot of promise. So how do you think about agent adoption given there's people, I think, at the event on the browser infrastructure side, agent DevOps, all that kind of thing? Yeah, it's clear it's an ex-paradigm. I think we're just catching it in a point in time where they're stumbling agents. But again, there are some clear youth cases where it's clearly working today. Like, if you like,
Starting point is 01:16:10 technicians agents, for example, there are low level development tasks where like that is fully automated. And the largest of companies know that but like no one else really knows that yet. And it's it's it's it's mind blowing what's happening. Same thing with customer support your your companies like Sierra and Dekagon and that's just a use case that makes a ton of sense for agents to operate. So I think as the agent infrastructure improves, there are things like memory and context budgeting. There are a lot of these like hairy infrastructure problems that need to be solved. But ultimately, also the agents are going to improve dramatically. Like from a year ago, agents have just gotten so much better. A year from now, they're going to be even better.
Starting point is 01:16:49 So as agents improve, all of the infrastructure around it improves, like memory. I think very, very soon, there will be an agent for every industry. Do you think that it ends up looking something like regular SaaS from a a user standpoint in terms of you have sort of a dashboard or do you think there's potentially totally novel paradigms?
Starting point is 01:17:14 Yeah, you know, I think UI is just a big problem or just an opportunity for these companies to kind of rethink how you surface these products and extend these products to your end consumers. If you look at agents running in the developing world, in development world, they're just running in your CLI in the background. Is that the best way to do it? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:17:34 Maybe voice is the best way to interact with them in the future. So I think that UI is still being reimagined right now. I'm guessing what we have right now will be thrown out the window. And that these abstraction layers will be very, very different in a few years. Yeah, the voice thing is interesting. That was actually in that original
Starting point is 01:17:55 vibe coding post from Andrei Karpathy. He says he doesn't even touch the keyboard. He just uses whisper or some sort of like super whisper app. He said, and he just talks to it and just says yeah, just the padding except all You know, oh, there's a bug fix it And yeah, I mean I it would be very it'd be super super weird because for the longest time the programmer was You know, the keyboard was sacred. It was don't have it You don't even have a mouse everything you do is on the keyboard was sacred. It was don't have, you don't even have a mouse. Everything you do is on the keyboard.
Starting point is 01:18:25 Probably have an ergonomic keyboard. You're dealing with carpal tunnel because you're on the keyboard so much. And if we move to a world where the, you still have a genius programmer who can understand the architecture, understand what questions to ask, what features to build, that type of stuff.
Starting point is 01:18:38 But the actual interaction day to day is via voice. That would be a very, very big shift. It'd be very interesting. Anyway, to get your reaction to the the news today that glean re raised 150 million dollar series F at a seven point two billion dollar valuation now we say glean glean yes so glean their their whole goal is to enterprise search and I'm interested in particularly who are the beneficiaries up and down the stack because I imagine that they're in a position to kind of say, hey, they stuff all your data in Glean
Starting point is 01:19:12 but they probably want to be more of an integrator and sit on top of your data lake, on top of your snowflake or on top of your AWS installation or and plug into your Slack. How are you thinking about, um, having tools that really allow folks in the enterprise to interface with all of the infrastructure that you have described? Totally. And you know, what's interesting is the category isn't, isn't new like enterprise search and like there were so many startups and there's
Starting point is 01:19:42 this graveyard of companies that existed, but I think the clear why now or at least the enabling technology was LLM so yeah, of course Glean is gonna benefit but like what's powering all of this or open AI's and Anthropics like really really powerful models now there needs to be This layer of infrastructure that exists between the model providers and Glean itself It's like the hairy problems like memory and caching. And so those providers are gonna win as well. But ultimately the consumers also and these companies win. It's amazing even for me,
Starting point is 01:20:13 like if I'm trying to search something in Google Drive, like how long it takes to get something. It's crazy. It's graded, somehow it's gotten worse. Like I can't even see my email. It's just like, there's so many like cookies now that if I search for like Jordy, it'll find that in some random URL string and be giving me some like, you know, spam email I got. It's a mass. Yeah. But you know,
Starting point is 01:20:34 we should expect, and I think it'll get better. Not, I think it's open. AI is going to release a product here. Like you will have, like why, why does there need to be an application on top of this? Oh yeah, totally. I mean they were, they were teasing this a little bit with the, uh, uh, what, what was it? The, um, the new, I think there was a little, a little bit of drama around, uh, different people not wanting other people to invest in the glean. That was one thing. Yep. But then there was also the,
Starting point is 01:21:10 there was also the latest news that deep research now can search across GitHub, Google Docs, Gmail, Google Calendar, SharePoint. And so that feels like- That's the Glean competitor. That's the Glean competitor at this point. That's the Glean competitor. They're just not saying it. Yeah, exactly. And so I think for the applications that make, that there is really strong part of Market
Starting point is 01:21:22 Fit with the large language models, we should expect the model providers themselves to move up the stack and address parts of these apps. Because if you think about like the models themselves, like yes, they make a ton of money, but they also burn a lot of cash because OpenAI is just trying to build that next frontier model. So they're going to go where the consumers are like, let me go buy Windsurf, right? And be in the IDE. Let me go release something in the enterprise search
Starting point is 01:21:47 space to compete with vendors like Glean. But I think it's fascinating. Yeah. When are you ultimately, or the CEOs that you're meeting with today, when are you know, I think there's areas in which people feel safe if they're working on a specific application of LLMs with a bunch of deep integrations and workflows, people generally feel safe today.
Starting point is 01:22:10 But is there, are you expecting a lot of dialogue around people just trying to assess like, am I on the lab's roadmap and really trying to figure out like at what point they're going to get, you know, sure locked? Yeah, you either have to be, you have to be building on the right side of AI. So if you're trying to solve for deficiencies in the model today, and you're trying to build these things, very, very quickly in a couple of months, all of that tooling just didn't need to exist.
Starting point is 01:22:36 So you just need to be building on the right side of AI. As these LLMs become more powerful, your application itself should become a lot more powerful. And how do you embed into workflows and also build all of that little hairy infrastructure things to empower all of that? Yeah, it's interesting, like ironically, like wrappers, aggregation, aggregating demand,
Starting point is 01:22:57 being a front door to AI, like that's where a lot of the value has accrued or at least like, it feels like the foundation model companies feel most threatened by those approaches versus the slight. Threatened or just want to own them? They want to own them, or they want to compete with them directly, as opposed to the,
Starting point is 01:23:15 OK, yes, you leapfrogged us on capabilities. That's much less of a threat than, oh, yeah, you beat us on a benchmark. That matters a lot less than when people think of this particular AI use case, they go to this website instead of mine, that's more threatening to the foundation model labs, in my opinion.
Starting point is 01:23:33 Totally, you know, a good analogy is that the hyperscalers like GCP, AWS, and Azure are the equivalent of OpenAI and Anthropic for the AI world. And if you saw what AWS did, for example, right, are the equivalent of OpenAI and Anthropic for the AI world. And if you saw what AWS did, for example, right, with Elastic, they open-sourced. Elastic was a very permissive license,
Starting point is 01:23:51 and they open-sourced it, and they started competing with Elastic itself. What Elastic ended up doing was they went for a much more restrictive license, but you still had AWS selling Elastic's core product, and then Elastic is also existing as whatever it is, a $10 billion business today. So I think going back to your point,
Starting point is 01:24:10 I mean, like it's, I don't think it's winner take all. I think the model providers are gonna have a large portion of revenue and spend here, but they're also gonna be a really exciting AI native companies that exist on top. Yeah. Yesterday we talked to Vlad from InPhysical working on API keys and secret management. Really cool company.
Starting point is 01:24:30 Yeah, raised the $16 million Series A from Elad Gill. I wanted to know more about different strategies and approaches to building infrastructure plays that either play directly or alongside open source strategies. And so there's an open source package out there that's gaining traction. How do you build a product or company around that? Or you have a company that's built something. Do you open source it?
Starting point is 01:24:55 What are the different strategies that you're seeing? What's working? What's gone out of fashion? I just love some color on how to build either with or alongside open source in the enterprise Yeah, I think open source is a double-edged sword I mean obviously we've we've been fortunate to back companies like like hash core and click house Yeah, we've seen the commercial success of those businesses, but ultimately The for these companies the biggest competitor is actually your open source project.
Starting point is 01:25:25 Right. Like, why do I need to go pay you millions of dollars when I can just try to do this myself and fork it? And so for the open source companies out there, I think you need to be really careful and just kind of understand where your product is going, the types of enterprise features that you could add that that buyers would actually want you to pay for. Alia Databricks, he has a good analogy here. Like building a massive open source business is like hitting two home runs simultaneously. One, you need a really exciting product where there's a ton of open source traction.
Starting point is 01:25:57 And two, you need to figure out monetization. In the case of Databricks, they had Spark and it was great, but they had to figure out a way to make Spark really, really cheap and easy to use. And, and, and, but they had to hit these two massive home runs to build a big business. So for the open source founders out there, I would, I would say like really consider how you're going to commercialize this product.
Starting point is 01:26:18 Yeah. What, what are the, what are the case studies that people are coming back to today? I remember learning the history of red hat Linux built on top top of Linux of course. Fantastic business, wound up a public company. Then we've also heard the story of GitLab that went through Y Combinator became a fantastic business. Databricks has a similar story. What other stories are people latching on to these days? What are kind of like the famous examples that people keep pulling from in this open source enterprise infrastructure world Yeah, I mean MongoDB is one right look at the success of that business
Starting point is 01:26:53 And what's really interesting is that they release their cloud product much later from the actual open source It actually came right before the IPO and it's actually Accelerated their revenue growth since it's the only company where that's the case in enterprise software. So how are they making money before having a cloud offering? Just, well, they had an enterprise, the, uh, core version of their open source, but like then they also released a cloud self hosted version of that product. Hashtag corp is another example, right? With vault and all of the systems. And so they're,
Starting point is 01:27:24 they're obviously they're, they're obviously like companies that have been successful in doing this, but it's, you need to be really careful on you to think about monetization. Yeah. It just seems so dangerous because you're building on top of an open source product. You know this is going to be baked into Amazon and Google and Azure like very quickly.
Starting point is 01:27:48 But at the same time, you're maybe a founder mode company. You have a lot of really aggressive people that can go and move and launch new features that can just keep you a cut above. And then, yeah, you know, the company says, yeah, I could get, you know, 80% of what I want on AWS, but I want it to be perfect. And so I'm going with you because you're the best vendor. Yeah. Basically it's a total cost of ownership of having all of these developers internally and trying to maintain this in-house Is it much less than the actual service that they're providing the enterprise service if that's the case and great if not
Starting point is 01:28:18 Then you really have to reconsider this the strategy. Yeah, nothing's worse than having an open source installation And having to deal with like oh, we got to turn it off and turn it back on. It's much better to pay someone else to do that. And then, you know, it just creates just really interesting dynamics with the open source community, right? If I'm only going to release features in the paid enterprise version,
Starting point is 01:28:42 and I'm going to kind of just stop releasing features to the open source version and you can then your community is gonna get upset and so like it's yeah you just have to be careful yeah well this has been a fantastic conversation thanks so much for taking the time during the busy day to check in with us fun ringing the bell come back on again soon yes great so this is great we'd love to see it enjoy the rest of your day yeah big one see you soon see See ya. Bye whether you're looking to get exposure to MongoDB or Red Hat Linux go to public comm investing for those who take it seriously. They got multi-asset investing industry leading yields They're trusted by millions. Oh joy and you got a new campaign today. How did you sleep last night?
Starting point is 01:29:22 Because I went on a whirlwind tour tour I fell asleep in my son's bed so I got two hours it doesn't pick up it doesn't count I need an eight sleep in his bed and then I can have Tyler vibe code up something that merged the two data sets together because I think I got like nine hours yesterday I'm feeling fantastic but I only logged seven hours on my actual eight sleep so I got an 86 how'd you'd you do I got an eighty-three that's two nights in a row let's hear it for John Cougan the sleep master no one out sleeps me no one out sleeps me don't even try oh we got some breaking news from the printer definitely ill we got some I'm gonna be a hand model now this is gonna be bad okay we got some
Starting point is 01:30:01 breaking news Anderil has been placed number one on the CNBC disruptors list. Congratulations to Anderl. And Trey Stevens is jumping in on the timeline, taking a shot at Sam Altman saying, "'Ha, take that, Sam Altman, you suck!' Crying emoji. Of course, they're buddies and founders,
Starting point is 01:30:19 funds and investor in OpenAI, so they're having some fun. It was crazy that Anduril got number one because OpenAI has what, 10 times the market cap at this point, but both fantastic companies. You'll love to see them at the top of the list, number one and number two. We should go through the disruptors list because we have a little bit of time
Starting point is 01:30:38 before our next guest. Kari from Linear is joining at 12.45. We have 15 minutes. Let's go through some timeline reaction. Let's go through some CNBC disruptors list. I want to see who's going on. So anyway, to recap the glean news, they raised $150 million, adding billions to their valuation. They're 77.2 billion dollar valuation. Very interesting to see them to 7.2 two and it was a who's who on the cap table the The CEO Arvin Jane really using the long post feature on X
Starting point is 01:31:11 He gives shout outs to Wellington coastal a bicycle VC geo does it capital archer man cap alt cap Capital one venture city ventures coat to general catalyst D catalysts, DST, Iconic, institutional venture partners, Kleiner, Latitude Capital, Lightspeed, Sapphire, Sequoia, everybody's in. So this tells me that OpenAI didn't really get their way and not wanting to people to invest in Colleen. Yes, so what you are referring to is the fact that back in October of 2024 last year, there's an article in Reuters that says, OpenAI asks investors to avoid five AI startups, including Ilya Sutskova's SSI, sources say.
Starting point is 01:31:52 So as global investors such as Thrive Capital and Tiger Global invest 6.6 billion in OpenAI, the chat GPT maker sought a commitment beyond just capital. They wanted investors to refrain from funding five companies they perceive as close competitors. The list includes Anthropic, XAI, Ilya Suscovers, new company, Safe Superintelligence, and then where was the other one? Two application firms, Perplexity and Glean. And so this was kind of a funny moment because you know Anthropic seems like
Starting point is 01:32:24 the direct competitor. Glean was kind of just thrown in there, but in many ways, but it makes sense I don't know in many ways anthropic is not trying to compete in the core Yes, you know, they're so a GI pill they're not trying to compete they don't have a they don't have a voice They don't have an image model. They're just focused on on that So but at the same time, they are competitive. And if you can keep your investors on your side of the table, there used to be an unwritten rule in Silicon Valley
Starting point is 01:32:52 that you only back one company. Open AI has just gotten so big, they're effectively public company scale now. We are the market. So it's a hard ask to say yes, just don't invest in SAS enterprise Other other labs just don't invest just don't take a year off Take a six-month spring summer break just just bet put your whole team on getting into the massively oversubscribed round over there focus on that
Starting point is 01:33:21 Good luck on yourself work. Hit the focus on yourself No more investing focus on that. Good luck. Work on yourself. Work on it. Focus on yourself. Hit the slopes. No more investing. Focus on yourself. Yeah. But this news happened last week. OpenAI said, we're rolling out ChatGPT record mode to Teams users on Mac OS.
Starting point is 01:33:37 Capture any meeting, brainstorm, or voice note. ChatGPT will transcribe it, pull out the key points, and turn it into follow-up plans or even code. This was taken as a granola attack, but it also plays into the glean story. So Signal said granola is more of a social company than a B2B company. It punctured a norm.
Starting point is 01:33:54 No big player would have taken the risk of recording without permission, but granola beautifully reframed it as productivity, intimacy even. Once the social acceptability shifted, it was inevitable that infra players, like OpenAI and Notion, would mimic the mechanic under the same pretense. This is the difference between product innovation
Starting point is 01:34:11 and cultural mutation. Tech can't move where the culture hasn't first been softened. And so- So interesting because Otter, do you remember Otter AI? Have you used them? I've used Fireflies.
Starting point is 01:34:22 So Otter was started in 2016. Yeah. They crossed 100 million ARR. Yes. This year. Otter AI, have you used them? I've used Fireflies. So Otter was started in 2016. They crossed 100 million ARR this year. And in many ways, it's very similar to Granola. I believe I inspired some of these, because I don't want to take too much credit because I didn't build anything. But in 2014, I had a workflow where I would record meetings,
Starting point is 01:34:47 audio, I would record the audio of Zoom meetings or Google Hangout meetings, and then I would send those to a transcription service that was not using AI at the time, and I would use Zapier to automatically do this, or Zapier. And the team at Zapier reached out and they wrote a blog post about my workflow as being like a cool example of how to use Zapier in an interesting way. And a couple founders reached out to me and said, hey, we wanna build this as a product.
Starting point is 01:35:13 And one of them was Fireflies and it's like a banger company now too. And obviously it's massively enabled by AI and only gets better and better. But yes, Kevin Weill over at OpenAI, the chief product officer, said deep research can now search across GitHub, Google Docs, Dropbox, HubSpot, Outlook, Box, and even more.
Starting point is 01:35:33 You can connect any chat to Google Docs, SharePoint, Dropbox, and Box. There's even an initial version of MCP support for HubSpot. This is big. There's record mode in ChatGPT, single sign-on for ChatGPT teams, so they are firmly going into the enterprise. And this was a point that people were making, was that ChatGPT for teams didn't
Starting point is 01:35:52 feel like an enterprise product. It just allowed you to provision a normal ChatGPT instance to an employee and say, hey, we're covering the cost, basically. It wasn't truly integrated. Imagine how cool it'll be if we add someone to the TBPN team, and they immediately get access in their chat GPT to all of our internal documents,
Starting point is 01:36:13 everything that we have about all of our transcripts, all of our previous Google account. Almost like an enterprise search product. Yes, exactly. Somewhat like Glean. Somewhat like Glean, and so it was clearly on the roadmap, and they worked towards it. Anyway, they're doing great.
Starting point is 01:36:27 Open AIs number two on the CNBC Disruptor 50. Then you got Databricks, Anthropic at four, Canva at five, Ramp at six. Let's hear it for Ramp. Take a second. Congratulations. I'm using Ramp. Ramp.
Starting point is 01:36:40 Ramp. Ramp. Ramp. Ramp. Ramp. Love to see it. No surprises there. Block Safety at seven.
Starting point is 01:36:44 We've got to get the founder on the show., ramp. Love to see it. No surprises there. Block Safety at seven. We gotta get the founder on the show. Very interesting company. Crime fighters. Crime fighters. They solve a ton of crime in America. More important than ever. Alpha Sense.
Starting point is 01:36:54 It's kind of like productized Gary Tan. Yes. Gary Tan is a service. Alpha Sense is at number eight. They, of course, acquired Tegas and are a market research team market research Firm for juggernaut intelligence juggernaut big advertiser and invest like the best we love to see it how If there's a single company
Starting point is 01:37:17 Yes, yes, but number nine Look it up. Give us a breakdown haven't heard of them smarter greener fair energy for every Texas home Is this a base power competitor interesting is I don't know they make batteries or do they make solar panels break it down for me I'll keep reading while you do some research. So I'm on the website and I still don't know how it works Okay. Well, all you need to know is that they're number nine Let's have the founder on the shelf have him explain it to us. We don't need landing pages, Jordy We get it straight from the source on this show. Yeah, there's a bunch of graphics of octopus. I don't know. We really Is it is it energy generation energy storage?
Starting point is 01:37:54 You do some research. I'm gonna read through some of them. Yes, they do They got striped at 10 you revolute at 11 thrive market at 12 metropolis at 13 We have the founder of metropolis coming on the show in just a few minutes. Wow, would you look at that? Trans-Carent, I haven't heard of this. They care, they're at number 14. We gotta look up them. Lead Bank, Fintech's Fixer at 15, haven't heard of them. Carbon Robotics, Weed Tech, we talked to the founder
Starting point is 01:38:17 of Carbon Robotics, that was an awesome company. Trans-Carent, one place for health and care. Virta, Virta Health, what comes after GLP-1s? That's an interesting company, we'll have to dig into them. Fruitist, the berry unicorn. We got to look into Fruitist. That sounds awesome. Sironic at 19, we know them. Grub Market. So what is the criteria for getting on this list? We will look, we will dig into that. Because it's definitely not revenue. There's a whole bunch of great companies on there. You got figmas, zip line, Sierra runway, Navon,
Starting point is 01:38:52 shielding eyes on here. So Fruitas is inspiring, inspiring, enjoyable and nutritious snacking. Okay. Fruitas grows the world's most delicious berries bursting with flavor, crunchy goodness and freshness in every bite. Okay, here's how they chose the list. So they're all private. Have any of these, I'll go out and say, I'm a huge fan of fruit. I think it's one of God's greatest inventions and gifts.
Starting point is 01:39:19 But have any of these fruit brands broken out? Fruitas seems like fruit brands broken out? Fruitas seems like they've broken out. They're on the list. Beautiful website. Beautiful website. Do you want to hear about how they chose the 2025 Disruptor 50? Okay.
Starting point is 01:39:35 I got to know, John. So they're all private independently owned startups founded after January 1st, 2010. They were eligible to be nominated. Companies nominated were required to submit detailed analysis including key quantitative and qualitative information Quantitative metrics include company submitted data on their sales number of users employee growth or lack thereof and more Some of this information has been kept off the record as it was used for scoring purposes only
Starting point is 01:40:01 CNBC also brought in data from PitchBook and IBIS World and compared those based on the industries that they are attempting to disrupt. There's a board of leading thinkers in the field of innovation and entrepreneurship from around the world along with a newer advisory board that ranked quantitative criteria by importance and ability to disrupt established industries and public companies. This year, the two advisory boards found
Starting point is 01:40:29 that scalability and user growth were the most important criteria followed by sales growth and access to capital and community. It's very funny that Andrew rolls number one because like what other user growth metrics? Like that's not the metric for them at all. Like users are a relevant metric. They're not looking at like Maos and Daos.
Starting point is 01:40:46 They're looking at like how many things did we build? But still, obviously very important. Yeah, so Fruitas coming in, I'm still fixated on Fruitas. You're obsessed with Fruitas. Because I guess going off of users, they're selling consumable good and whole foods. But tough, tough go for companies like Scale AI, which are down at 20, 28.
Starting point is 01:41:09 So fruitist is better than Scale AI. Fruitist is 18. So yeah, if you're going off of this. You go short Scale AI long fruitist. It's possible this should be Meta's next target. Maybe. They should try to move up the list. Yes, get them all.
Starting point is 01:41:23 They already have a deal with Anderil. They have an amazing distribution engine. Every other ad could just be an ad for berries or fruit. And I eat these things all the time. And it'd just be a good way to really, they could potentially turn fruit is from the berry unicorn into a, you know, a deca unicorn. I love it.
Starting point is 01:41:40 A deca corn. We need more food. We need better food. This is a common theme. This is a common common theme. This makes sense So new for 2025 we can compare the way the two different advisory boards consider the importance of the list criteria Well, the two boards mostly agreed the VC group thought that the size of the industry being disrupted was more important than the academics Did with the latter ranking access to capital and community as more important criterion than the group that provides said access The ranking model is complex enough to be sensitive to these differences of opinion and perhaps more than ever
Starting point is 01:42:12 It makes good on the concept that companies must score highly on a wide range of criteria to make the final list Nominated companies were also asked to submit important qualitative information about themselves including descriptions of the core business model, ideal customers, and recent company milestones. A team of CNBC editorial staff including TV anchors, reporters, and producers, and CNBC.com reporters and editors along with many members of the advisory board read the submissions and provided holistic qualitative assessments of each company. In addition, the VC advisory board assessed a small group of finalists as an additional component of the qualitative review.
Starting point is 01:42:49 Specifically, we asked the VC group to assess some of the companies that would, if selected, be making the list for the first time, as well as to help in the consideration of high-scoring early-stage firms, a group with lower valuations, but promising this fall. I think part of the criteria, they didn't want the top 25 to all be enterprise SaaS companies.
Starting point is 01:43:10 Cause that doesn't, it's not good for ratings. It's not good for ratings. Not good for ratings. So only 11 of the 2025 honorees are pre-Chat GPT CNBC disruptors. But most of that group, Andoril, Databricks, and Canva, chief among them, the embrace of the new era is what has kept them here. And so there were 19 first timers in either 2023 or 2024.
Starting point is 01:43:36 Companies are moving up, they're moving down, but it's an exciting list. Who else sticks out on this list? We gotta get some of these folks on. A Better Ride to School from zoom. Wabi how self driving trucks see and learn that seems interesting. Aptronic five feet eight inches 160 pounds all robot haven't seen them. Harvey's on the list, lawyering up AI. They got good
Starting point is 01:44:00 pithy pithy phrase good lines notion project project management. Okay. We got project management for your projects. That's kind of an odd one. Yeah. Not the strongest. A bridge getting a doctor's note. Is Sessu Isusu treating renters like owners? Shield AI. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:44:18 CEO on. Interesting. Uh, well, very fun list. We love a good list. We were now that Conrad's out, the Midas list has fallen from grace and we need new lists. But congrats to Anderl, congrats to Opena, and congrats to everyone that made the list of the CNBC disruptive 50. One thing's clear, you've got to be an absolute dog to get on this list. Yes, you do. Well, we have Kari from Linear coming in the studio.
Starting point is 01:44:44 Get the gong ready John Why don't you hit it? I will hit it for him. We're gonna hit it a few times Kari before you before you dive in yeah, give us the numbers first 82 million Low dilution round at a billion at a billion Congratulations We love to see it A lot of people would have said
Starting point is 01:45:08 This is maybe an unlikely round You guys have been very efficient But it's a testament to Proving the haters wrong They said it couldn't be done Well they said it could be done They said Kari would never Wouldn't do it
Starting point is 01:45:24 It's great to have you on Massive milestone for you and the team. How are you feeling? Yeah, feeling great. And yeah, I think it's definitely like one of this like I think like all five rounds has been kind of like interesting because since I think the seed round we haven't really needed the money. So each round is kind of like we're doing something different or we're doing something different or we're signaling something to the market. So it's a little bit always like strange to do this rounds because like I think like often like you celebrate it
Starting point is 01:45:54 as a way to be able to do something more. And I think like in the end we will do something more but also that like not a lot of changes. Like we still keep billing for the customers and the things we're doing. Talk about maybe some of the last rounds, how they were unique, and what makes this round unique. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:46:15 I think we also done this interesting thing where we have kind of doubled down on each of the investors. So Sequoia led our seed round back in 2020. And then we did a series A with them, I think 21. And then we did a series B with Excel in 22. And then now two years later, or like about three years later, we did a series C with them. So I think that there's also like, I remember when I was talking to back in the day, like around the seed round to a lot of seed round investors. And I think like they had this like, they create this fear that this platform funds
Starting point is 01:46:55 can be challenging and like there can be this signaling risk and all kinds of things. And I don't know if that's really true or I haven't, I don't even know like when that has happened. But I do know that it's kind of or I don't even know when that has happened, but I do know that it's kind of interesting when you are working with these platform funds, they can kind of lead two rounds in a sequence. And I think the benefit there is that you can kind of push down the dilution because they already have some kind of ownership. And I think a lot of times with this game of fundraising, the actual absolute numbers don't matter,
Starting point is 01:47:30 how much you raise or what the valuation is. It's more like everyone else is fighting for their percentages. And so if you work with the same investors, you have more leverage or there's a little more flexibility on those percentages. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I like, I don't know, leverage or, or there's a little more like flexibility on those percentages. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:47:48 Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it makes sense. It also makes a board construction easier because you're not adding 25 different board members from every fund on the platform fund thing. I mean, it's clear that like that narrative came out of like kind of the clubhouse era where the company got marked up multiple times for by the same insider and, and the metrics didn't really meet that.
Starting point is 01:48:06 Was this more of a vibe round or an Excel round? How are the metrics tracking? What are people watching? Are they looking, like is Mao Dao the key KPI? You don't have to give us the actual number, but like what is most important? Is it revenue, profit, EBIT, EBIT? Like what metrics are most important for a round like this to
Starting point is 01:48:25 get done in this era? I mean, like I think like all the later stage funds like or later stage rounds, it is about the growth and the revenue. I mean, obviously, different companies are different. So like there might be like other things. But for us, since we we sell the companies, it generally turns into revenue. We don't have a lot of free users or free customers. So everyone is a big customer.
Starting point is 01:48:53 I think it comes down to, one, it's the growth and the position we have in the market. We've been able to capture quite a lot of the growth market, the early stage startup, but also like the late stage growth market, like companies like Ramp or Mercury or Brexor, or even OpenAI, which is, I don't know, if you categorize it as a growth company or enterprise,
Starting point is 01:49:18 what is that, I don't know. It's a massive company. Behemoth, yeah. We need a new word, centicorn, something like that. Yeah. Yeah. I think like we, I think like it comes down to like, we work with the best companies out there and I think like we also have like a lot of, um, people really love the product and like they really want to use it.
Starting point is 01:49:37 So I think like we have had a lot of opportunities that we could have additional investors join the board or lead these rounds. But for me at this point, I think it's probably like the next time around, there's probably reasons to find someone new and find someone with some kind of specific or different skill set. But right now, I didn't feel like that's necessary. Right now, I think the biggest thing we're aiming for is that we have this core business and product going with a lot of 15,000 customers, companies. The next thing is the AI and how,
Starting point is 01:50:20 but you probably heard it this like a million times on this on the show, but I think again the AI is like shifting the the market and like how things work and like how software is built and I think we Often I like to do these rounds when we don't need to do it Yeah and we also like when we are about to hit something big and I think we were about to hit something big with this Yeah, talk about some of the discussion around. Yeah, talk about some of the discussions around. Yeah, talk about some of the discussions with Excel and some of the other partners and internally
Starting point is 01:50:51 with the team around this sort of inflection point with agents. Because for the first, you guys have had a bunch of integrations for a long time. But this is sort of a novel type of integration. I know you guys are working with Devon and Cognition and other players. And that feels to me like a lot of the linear's position
Starting point is 01:51:12 as a platform that can help manage agents feels like a major catalyst. Yeah. Yeah, so some of those companies we've been working now. But there's a lot more coming. I don't know the exact dates yet. but I think we're also working with the bigger companies out there that are building some of the like the model companies. So hopefully those are coming soon.
Starting point is 01:51:34 So yeah, I think with the agents, the idea is that we have this, we have built this like end-to-end workflow for like discovering and planning and building products, and it's like kind of familiar to these organizations and these product teams. And I think right now, we started seeing distraction from our customer base and also talking to CTOs. Almost every CTO out there is thinking about AI. Like, how do we... I think the CTOs and the CEOs are writing these memos and like
Starting point is 01:52:06 they know that the AI can help their organizations. But the problem now is like there's a lot of friction, like the solutions are not that designed yet. Like it's a little bit hard to use some of these tools or use this technology. So the idea here is that like we have this familiar system that people already do use to do their work. And so we can easily introduce these agents and some of the other AI capabilities into it. So they don't have to go somewhere else to do it, but they can continue what they're doing. But now instead of assigning tasks or code bugs or something
Starting point is 01:52:46 to humans or to teammates, you can assign them to agents and then work with them to solve them. So I think the idea there is that we want to make it as easy as possible for organizations to adopt the AI or adopt these agents or adopt the new technology. Because a lot of the other companies are kind of more building the underlying technology,
Starting point is 01:53:11 but then sometimes it seems like it's hard to, for enterprises to adopt. Yeah, orchestrate them. I wanna let you get back to building, but I wanna get WWC reactions. Yeah, we gotta get your take on WWC. Linear's a fantastic design-driven firm.. I mean, linear is a fantastic design driven firm. I'm sure that there is a lot of internal chatter in the slack or in the in the in the in the
Starting point is 01:53:30 group chats about WC. How's the reaction liquid glass liquid glass? What's the take? Give break it down for us. Yeah, I don't want to go too harsh on it until I think until it's like in production. I do think like there's some discussion. I think that the borders are too rounded and I think like some of the borders are off. Like they're not following the right like when you have like two rounded rectangles, you just kind of like follow the same curve with those curve with those round like the border radius. So it looks like a kind of like even, like that there's even spacing alongside all of the path. But I don't know if that was a mistake someone did for the keynote or they just didn't
Starting point is 01:54:14 want to, I don't know, they didn't do it correctly. I hope it was a mistake. I think it seems like really, I think obviously visually interesting, but I'm still like skeptical until I see it, like how well it actually works in practice. Like at Linear, actually we did have some of this, we had this like translucent UI at some point, and then I decided to remove it because I thought it was like too distracting and it's actually was kind of slowing the application down. So I decided to remove it. And so I'm hoping that Apple can make it performant
Starting point is 01:54:52 and also not distractive. Yeah, do you think there's always going to be readability challenges with it? Or is it something that they can solve? I mean, I think the starting point, it is hard to solve that because I think it's, that was my experience with having transparent UI as well is that it can work well if you have a nice, I don't know, solid color background on your computer
Starting point is 01:55:19 or something, but then if you have a photo, on the phone you have a photo of your family or something. It can be kind of bright and like there can be a lot of different things going on in the background. So I do think it will be hard to like make it kind of easy. It's like the contrast to be enough to, to read it. But I don't know if they're going to do some kind of magic there that they could figure out like what's on the background and then adjust it somehow. So I'm hoping that they can figure it out. But I remain a little bit skeptical
Starting point is 01:55:52 until I actually see it on the live. Our batteries are going to be cooked. I'm rooting for them. I think they'll figure it out. Well, congratulations to you and the whole team. And yeah, excited to see what you guys continue to cook up. Yeah, this is fantastic started. We'll talk to you soon Thanks, but I have a good one curry Let's check in with Tyler. Apparently he has iOS 26 installed. Give us the update Tyler. How's it going?
Starting point is 01:56:20 Yeah, yeah, so I got it fully installed. I mean We might have to put those those posts in the true zone. It looks pretty good on my phone. It looks good Wow, pretty readable. Give us the review. I think it's I and I like it. Okay, I might I mean It's a bit slow on my phone because I have I have an 11 so it's like whoa Wait, I'm on like 16 So it's either that or I think also usually in the beta versions It's it's a bit like slower. I have a 16 Pro Yeah, I'm gonna light years ahead of you
Starting point is 01:56:52 But okay, it looks pretty good. I'll bring it up there. Okay, cool We're putting on the printer came We'll see it And yeah, here we go. Okay, cool Can we see I don't see much It actually looks pretty similar I expect okay. There's the there's the there's trans yeah, this doesn't look as it's it's mostly just the home screen Like if you go I went to a bunch of the like here open open
Starting point is 01:57:20 Open, open hinge. The calculator looks open hinge. No, no, no. I'm kidding, I'm kidding. Yeah, I mean, you can see the glass effect like right here up at the top. Yeah, it's nice. And look, so look at the search bar as I scroll the apps here. You can see that glass effect.
Starting point is 01:57:42 It's not too bad. You bring down the settings I'm bullish this is groundbreaking I think this is this is groundbreaking this works this is this is pretty readable anyway thank you for volunteering you'll have to we'll have to check in with you over the next couple days we're sorry if it destroys your productivity but you're cracked so you're cracked you'll figure it out anyway thank you thank you, Tyler. You know, Apple's going to be pushing this pretty hard.
Starting point is 01:58:08 They got to do some out of home advertising. They got to get on adquick.com. Out of home advertising made easy and measurable. Drop the Genmoji ads. Mark it by every single billboard in San Francisco for iOS Tahoe. Tim, say goodbye to the headaches of out-of-home advertising. Only AdQuick combines technology, out-of-home expertise,
Starting point is 01:58:30 and data to enable efficient seamless ad buying across the globe. I'll be right back. We have our next guest, Scott Belsky, coming into the studio in just a minute. In the meantime, we will react to some posts on the timeline. Kendall says, trying to quickly change the subject on the Zoom call when everyone else is cracking jokes about the way Mo's and I can feel myself choking up lots of sympathy
Starting point is 01:58:58 for the way Mo's. Lots of coverage in the Wall Street Journal today about the burning Waymo's, talking about how this played directly into the hands of the Trump administration by making the tech company clearly align with, you know, against the burning of Waymo's. Very sad to see. Hopefully things resolve. It does feel like the report from L.A. I've been been driving around today It feels like things have calmed down a lot in general I was able to drive all the way across LA and without any I was in downtown
Starting point is 01:59:32 Didn't really notice anything and so it does seem like things are are calming down. Thankfully Anyway, I like this post from Tyler I'm gonna mispronounce this name name. Well, I'll just say Tyler He says unlike the rest of you cowards. I think the what the Y Combinator valuations are too low We will find out what the valuations are coming in at tomorrow when we're at YC demo day live in San Francisco We're bringing a huge swath of the crew. We're going up right after the show wraps. The team is stoked We'll be giving out hats we have a whole bunch of different hats,
Starting point is 02:00:06 some TBPN hats, some ramp hats, and the ramp hats have TBPN on them. So they're all limited editions. I think people will really like them. So if you're a founder at YC Demo Day, or you're an investor at YC Demo Day, stop by our table, come chat with us for a couple minutes, and we will get your take and hear your pitch and hopefully turn
Starting point is 02:00:27 Your demo day into a massive party round because we will be live from the palace of party rounds Mike Solana Reposted the video of the way most leaving los angeles apparently waymo is moving their cars out of la I don't know how real this is but it was a video of several waymos Driving through la kind of all together. Maybe they're like Getting out of here make sense because you think you could just put them wherever they store them and charge them and clean them But yeah, I don't necessarily believe that this was a response this seems like fake news But Solana has a great post as always the elves are leaving Middle Earth very funny
Starting point is 02:01:08 Anyway post as always the elves are leaving middle earth very funny anyway ramp has a post in 2012 in 2024 ramp placed 32 on CNBC's disruptors 50 this year number six they're grateful to their customers for betting on a better way and allowing us to fix the parts of finance people hate so they can do more of what they love and shout out to our friends at Anderil for making number one. What a fantastic lineup over there. What else is in the news? Oh, Warner Brothers.
Starting point is 02:01:33 Oh, wait, we have Scott Belsky in the studio. Let's bring him in. How are you doing, Scott? Here he is. Finally. Long overdue. I'm sorry it took me so long to invite you on. I'm so glad we could make this happen.
Starting point is 02:01:47 It's fantastic to finally meet you. We were sending invites constantly, mentally. We were like, this is a dream guest. So thank you so much for taking the time to join us. Would you mind kind of setting the stage for us? Cause you've done a lot in your career. What are you focused on right now? What's interesting to you?
Starting point is 02:02:01 And then we can kind of dig into all the hot topics of the day. First of all, it's been fun to watch you guys at work and congrats. I'm just, you know, creating conversation, which I think is appreciated by all of us. What am I up to these days? My obsession has always been the intersection of creativity and technology. Behance is probably what? 58 million, 60 million creatives online right now focusing their work and that brought me into Adobe
Starting point is 02:02:27 had a long stint at Adobe leading emerging products and design and various other new things there and You know now I'm excited to kind of explore the world of storytelling and the role that technology plays there Obsessed with the implications of new technology, new technology that emerge and I love engaging in conversation about, I think you guys were talking about the implications kind of writing I do and riffing off of, I don't know, what's gonna happen because of what's gonna happen is the question.
Starting point is 02:02:59 Yeah, it's a big question. It's a big question. Maybe we should start with some of the news that's coming out of this idea of collective memory, what's going on in the enterprise. We were talking about Glean, OpenAI, deep research. There's so many new products. We're using stuff.
Starting point is 02:03:15 We're wiring up stuff. We have an intern in the corner, vibe coding different stuff for us. We're essentially a podcast or a live show, a media company, and we're writing software. Everything about how we are building this media business is different than I think people would have done even just a few years ago.
Starting point is 02:03:33 But walk me through. Yeah, it's actually crazy. If somebody told me three years ago, we have a show, a podcast, and we're building a bunch of internal software, I would just be so bearish. And yet we get so much value out of our internal software we call Newsmax.
Starting point is 02:03:51 But anyways, back to you. No, I mean, I think the, well first of all, it's when you're building a new team from scratch these days, it's almost like you're able to build with another new generation of tools, as opposed to retrofit something built with old tools. Totally.
Starting point is 02:04:09 So I do think there's this advantage that a lot of new companies are realizing now or new teams within companies. But you asked about this concept of collective memory, which I've been obsessed with, this notion that the context window of these AI tools that we're using, of course those context windows are growing, which means that their memory of us and their understanding of us is growing and persisting across all the inquiries we have.
Starting point is 02:04:33 And this is becoming almost like an extension of our knowledge and opinions and identity and everything else. And it's great when these LM's get to know us and give us better and better answers to our questions. What happens when in the enterprise, we access each other's memory? Right? So if the context window of me working, you know, as one of your interns for years, you know, is suddenly accessible to you, even when I leave, you know, are you able to keep saying, Hey, what does Scott think? Or, you know, or what, what, what did Scott do?
Starting point is 02:05:05 And we had this situation and is that a, is that, does that belong to the enterprise? And you do see, by the way, like every company right now, trying to build this memory for each of its products, users. And in some cases, a lot of companies are building connectors to get the data from other products that that customer uses to enrich that memory and understanding of their customer. And it'll be interesting when that kind of memory that's for each of us becomes a collective memory. And then what happens in the in the social like in the consumer world?
Starting point is 02:05:35 Like, you know, does your girlfriend say like, I want access to your context window, your memory, you know, and is that kind of weird? I think there's all kinds of weird questions and implications that arise from that. Do you think memory can be the lock-in that I think certain companies would like it to be? It doesn't feel like it is yet, but I think there's still an idea that it could be. Sometimes it actually goes the opposite way. Like I'll ask Chachapiti to tell me a joke and it'll be like hyper specific about something I talked about a year ago. And I'm like, that
Starting point is 02:06:04 actually makes the joke worse. Josh, you'd be like, I'd prefer if you ignored all my questions about trains or something. Well, that could be in the prompt, right? Yeah, exactly. I feel like, uh, you know, you see open AI launch, um, the ability to log into tools with open AI. Yep. And you know, when I saw that, I was like instantly thinking, gosh, that's a way to
Starting point is 02:06:23 enrich the personalization I I do think personalization effects are the new network effects You know we used to talk about in terms of the the moat that companies would have with a network effect today I do think they will have with personalization and that is a direct, you know a direct outcome of the memory and Extended context window and all of the data, you know, that they can get to give us a personalized experience that no one else could ever give us. But you're right. Like there are other ramifications of that, you know, if you're
Starting point is 02:06:55 too well known. I asked OpenAI the other day, you know, what I didn't know about myself. And it told me that you're a real hypochondriac. And I was like, well, I didn't know that about myself. that you're a real hypochondriac. And I was like, why do you know that about myself? That's funny. I want to know more about this idea of collective memory in the enterprise. Sorry to interrupt, but it's an interesting thing where the model is effectively trying to do pattern recognition.
Starting point is 02:07:19 And it just identifies something that is. It's like you ask a lot of questions. It's like, yeah, because you're a question answering machine. Yeah. That's not me. That's you. But on the concept of creating a collective memory in the enterprise, I've noticed that even though we
Starting point is 02:07:34 are this new company that's starting from scratch, Total Greenfield, we have still not been able to go all in on one walled garden. We have Gmail. We send a lot of iMessage groups. We also have a Slack that we are interfacing with different people on, that's a Salesforce product. And so I'm wondering if, you know,
Starting point is 02:07:52 there's been, Eric Mikovsky was trying to build Beeper, this product to let you create one unified messaging interface. That was a real struggle because every major company was like, we will not let you break our walled garden. We're not really there yet. And it seems like most of the companies are playing ball with MCP servers and the like. But what do you think the big dynamics of the big tech companies will be like once they realize that, Hey, maybe if I don't want to let the fox in the hen house?
Starting point is 02:08:23 that, hey, maybe if I don't want to let the fox in the hen house. Well, I think you're forecasting a bit of a, call it a data war in the years ahead where everyone's going to leverage each other's APIs and start to pull all the data in. And there are going to probably be some backroom board level bilateral negotiations where it's like, well, let's not cut off Slack because we don't want them to cut off us. So we're going to let them and may the best model win, right? With the data provided to it. So, but that means that if the data becomes sort of readily available across the board from all of the connectors
Starting point is 02:09:04 that are made for all of the products we use. And to your point, if you've built the network, your company with all these different products, that's fine because the data is all stored probably in one of three or four clouds and you can just instantly access all of that data, use AI to see it as structured data and then be able to have AI apps built on top of it. And you don't even need to care what actual products create the data, as long as you have access to all the data.
Starting point is 02:09:29 But then the question is, what are the motes, right? I think one of them is the personalization layer that we talked about just now, and that context window becoming ever more important in the product. I think another one is permissioning, like in the enterprise especially. Permissioning is permissioning, like in the enterprise especially. Permissioning is freaking hard, right? To know exactly who's allowed to ask what question and get what answer or what column of information that might relate itself to that answer.
Starting point is 02:09:54 That is a very, very hard thing to crack. And I do believe that the enterprise products that have really incredible permissioning layers and products that allow people to control and access permissioning. We'll also have an advantage. So, I mean, and then in the operating systems, we talk about operating systems in the consumer world, like your iOS or Android person or whatever, and that's the operating system.
Starting point is 02:10:18 Those operating systems, like if they can't figure it out, well, shame on them. Like they literally own the top layer of everything underneath and they should be able to, you know, manage our attention and our needs with AI at that level. But what are the operating systems of work? You know, I think there's gonna be another war
Starting point is 02:10:36 played around those operating systems. One might be the browser. I think one might be the way that projects are managed. You know, different functions of the enterprise might have different operating systems and people are going to be fighting to own the top layer of those. Yeah. I wonder if that's like a, almost a bull case for data lakes becoming more of a mid market or early
Starting point is 02:10:56 stage product because like I, I, I take your point about like the, the, the deals between the large tech companies just kind of happening behind the scenes, but at the same time, I'm just like, there's going to be friction. And I just know these companies like, yes, I can export all my data from Facebook if I click 12 buttons and do it every single day. Like the API is not fully there for a lot of these products. And so I wonder if more and more people are going to be saying like even for my personal life,
Starting point is 02:11:26 I want to be able to funnel everything into a data lake that then I can drop my own AI on. And I don't necessarily want lock into one AI tool right now. I'm wondering how that will evolve. I don't know. Yeah, I mean, we're going to see this in consumer, too. It'd be really nice right now if you could describe in chat GPT, hey, go find this image and then make it a studio Ghibli right or make it like an impressionist painting
Starting point is 02:11:49 Yeah, yeah, and obviously there's that kind of barrier. Yeah, it just feels like the big tech companies want that They're fine having lock-in and like you see this with WWDC Like the the Siri button cannot be remapped still and it's like that would have been an easy thing to do. That would have been something that a lot of consumers demanded. What was your reaction to WWDC and kind of like how how the the AI Apple does like, decisions are playing are playing out? Yeah, I mean, I think it's really, it's a really
Starting point is 02:12:24 fascinating time, you know, in that company's history, I think from the outside, we're questioning's really, it's a really fascinating time, you know, in that company's history. I think from the outside, we're questioning, like, where's the vision, you know? Where are we all going? And I think inside, it's probably some sense of, let's wait until we're really ready. We've had a few false starts.
Starting point is 02:12:39 We can't get it wrong again. And so we're probably gonna get something that's more fully baked, which is hopefully great for Apple. You know, I never, I never discount Apple because of its DNA and its rigor and the quality of talent that's there. You know, on the other hand, like they're late to the game at this point, like super late. And I also wonder the things we discussed just a minute ago around personalization and some of the moats that are going to play. Also, by the way, remember this is a new era of experiences that is all about data, and Apple has always been all about privacy.
Starting point is 02:13:13 So Apple in some ways as a policy has done everything to make it impossible for others to get others' data. And here we are in a world where that's what's going to enrich the experience we have from AI tools. So I think it's a different era. Do you think that Apple will end up looking really smart on privacy? Like we're in a very chaotic time where people will let a new software company just have full access to audio, visual, screen recording. Record my screen. That's like an OK thing now to ask for.
Starting point is 02:13:45 And I'm even surprised at this point that we haven't, I can't remember a major incident of a model producing private data in response to sort of like a general query. I've heard about little anecdotes here and there, but nothing really concrete. You can imagine a world some days where people get their kind of lines crossed.
Starting point is 02:14:04 And you ask about some acquisition, for example, and somebody at some point dumped it. You even tried to get ChatGPT to guess a picture that was from your own house, and it was smart enough to say, hey, you're maybe trying to spy on someone, so I'm not going to do that, even though it knew it. It basically gave me the exact description of it without giving me the street is so it knew it knew not to step up line I don't know anyway on
Starting point is 02:14:31 privacy it's a great question you know I always go back to first principles and this one and I say to myself you know first of all what do we know about the next generation they seem to care less about privacy than the generation before them. You know, number two is we're willing to trade a lot for less friction in our lives. And it seems like people are willing to always click accept or yes or yes or yes, you know, again, just to be able to have a frictionless experience in a product.
Starting point is 02:14:59 Now, I think you're surfacing the point that very, we don't oftentimes realize like how much we're giving over in those instances and I think the world of AI will make that very apparent to us because We'll start getting these personalized experiences. We're like how the hell do they know that about me, right? But I don't know like there's also part of me that says that the best technology takes us back to the way things once were But with more scale and efficiency. Well the way things once were hundreds of years ago is we were known. Like everywhere we went in our small towns we were remembered, they called us by name, they knew our kids
Starting point is 02:15:34 names, they knew our favorite cut at the butcher. Like you were kind of known and in some weird way we're being brought back to a world where we're gonna be known again. The question is we want to know how we're known. And also we don't want to be known by people that we don't trust. Yeah. Yeah. There, there is kind of this interesting economic, uh, dynamic where there's almost like a de facto bug bounty for privacy in the fact that if a company like Apple has a privacy fiasco, that could wipe off hundreds of billions of dollars of market cap and so
Starting point is 02:16:05 they have this massive incentive to invest to not have these privacy fiascos of the data to leak and so you have kind of this massive economic capital cannon towards let's secure the public clouds and so that my one of my former colleagues was making the point that in terms of open source AI versus closed source AI, oftentimes it's actually better to trust a hyperscaler with your data that, because it's harder to break into an AWS data center than it is to the on-prem server that yes, you're running it, but you're the only security guard. And what happens if someone breaks in and just takes the rack?
Starting point is 02:16:41 Like I'll tell you what though, like here's a bullish case for Apple, it would be that models are all going to be local, you know, in X number of years, the most power, like if you look at the performance of, of LMS, right? There are these small LMS and there's these ones that run locally on devices. And the, the, the, the D the Delta between those and top LMS is of course decreasing. Um, and so as chips get better and LMS run locally, you can imagine that all of your data can actually be stored locally in a super encrypted way. All these local models can operate to answer all of the questions you have, can search
Starting point is 02:17:17 the internet when it when is necessary. And maybe we all up to this like super private AI world, maybe for all we know, Apple's optimizing for that flag that they know the puck is going to, you know, and they're going to launch who knows how many years from now, like a hundred percent local AI experience that is world class with zero privacy considerations or risks rather. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that makes sense. Can you talk a little bit about knowledge arbitrage? Like these models we've gone from, you know, massive databases of facts.
Starting point is 02:17:47 And so there wasn't as much incentive to just be a, the, the, the person that memorizes all the facts because you can just Google it on your phone. Now we're in this age of even more significant knowledge retrieval intelligence, potentially too cheap to meter. If we can call it intelligence. Um, what is knowledge arbitrage? Like what? Yeah, I mean, it's funny, like when I think about the term knowledge arbitrage, like I'm
Starting point is 02:18:11 actually brought back to, I think this is very relevant for like people who are listening to us or kind of earlier in their careers right now and figuring out like how to plot their path forward. And you go back to the early 2000s and the people stood Twitter and social media and things like that were getting hired by like CMOs of Fortune 500 companies to school them on what the heck this thing was and like how to have their brand participate. And it was really looked upon as like this complex, crazy thing that every leader in corporate America felt they needed to understand. thing that every leader in corporate America felt they needed to understand. And so there's this moment of knowledge arbitrage where people who are like, you know, in their late teens, early twenties, who are deeply natively familiar with this stuff called social media could just like school the people who had no clue.
Starting point is 02:18:56 Here we are again. You know, you have the leaders of all these Fortune 500 companies saying, oh my gosh, like we have to refactor how we work and every function is going to operate differently with AI. But we don't even know like when to use chat GPT. saying, oh my gosh, we have to refactor how we work and every function's gonna operate differently with AI, but we don't even know when to use ChatGPT. We don't even know what a prompt is and how does this stuff even work? And so once again, these very young people
Starting point is 02:19:13 who got through college using ChatGPT and talked to ChatGPT about their boyfriend or girlfriend issues or whatever else, it's native to them. And so I do think this knowledge arbitrage moment is here and the window's open right now. Yeah, it's funny that there's this massive fear from young people around how the job market is evolving
Starting point is 02:19:33 or jobs getting killed or whatever. And at the same time, yeah, it feels like social media didn't reinvent every part of a company. It sort of massively changed marketing and how you should focus marketing dollars and how you should think about building brands and all these things. But it wasn't something that changed internal comms,
Starting point is 02:19:54 like you're talking about with collective memory. It wasn't something that changed a certain aspect of the business, like compliance. It didn't change. It wasn't this sort of full full stack transformation and for that reason It creates more opportunity than the social media wave to just get good at using LLMs and and agents and whatever ever Whatever other tools you have and then use that I mean we the the last person that we hired was somebody who who vibe-coded? Like a guest directory for us. And they did it last Thursday.
Starting point is 02:20:28 And then we hired them on that. And then we saw it like Friday. They started on Monday. Yeah, they came on Thursday. They came on Friday. And we had them start on Monday. And just by demonstrating the ability to leverage these tools and create a product that was a V1, but it was a solid V1.
Starting point is 02:20:43 And it was just a super easy decision to be like, yeah, you should join the team. So shout out to Adam. But like 48 hours work though, that's like incredible. So by the way, that's changing the way product is even done. Like I'm so used to a world where you concept, you do like a sort of product scoping session, then you have the designers work in a product like Figma
Starting point is 02:21:04 and make prototypes. And then engineers don't even see it until the prototypes are locked. And then it's like redlined and engineering start to like, you know, now it's a different world, right? Yeah, it's like we need we need we need this to be done. You kind of vibe code it out. In parallel, a designer says, Okay, let's how to finesse it. Here's how we can maybe change that make that more accessible to more people. And then you just deploy and test and iterate. It's a different
Starting point is 02:21:28 is a whole different product stack to some degree. And that's why I always say the best talent these days is like a collapsed stack talent strategy where you hire people that have exposure to different parts of the stack, whether it's engineering and design or design and copy or product and design, because you're just trying to collapse the stack with the types of people you have. So you can leverage these tools, you know, efficiently. Can you talk a little bit about agency? Um, it's, it's an interesting concept because we don't have like an eval for it, uh, in terms of the LLMs, uh, we're, we're, we're, you know,
Starting point is 02:22:03 destroying all the benchmarks in math and IQ, but the models don't seem to have volition and yet the trend is around agentic applications. We're trying to give them agency. It still seems like there's some sort of combination of uniquely human traits that seems to be increasingly valuable. How are you defining it right now?
Starting point is 02:22:24 Well, I think that when you talk about sort of agentic workflows and the role, you know, the role of agents in the future, you know, and I think about it, every company, you know, I'm calling companies these days in my mind, Cognica, it's like condition driven businesses, where it's ultimately inferenced in the center, right. And there are these the functions of a company which were once accounting and legal and design and like all these different functions are going to be AI tools that are running, you know, AI agents, basically, they're running that function or collection of agents doing different aspects of the function, which then begs the question of what's the role of the humans, I think we are the orchestration designers and orchestration engineers, we're like
Starting point is 02:23:03 orchestrating how these agents work and how they work together. And we're also developing and enforcing the rules by which they work. Cause remember these agents are told what to do and they're rewarded based on doing it. They have to be working within a subset of rules that, um, that need to be administered and enforced to some degree by humans. So I, you know, so I start there and then I start to think, okay, so what are the functions of every organization
Starting point is 02:23:27 gonna look like? And then that dictates what kinds of tools or agents are empowered to quote unquote take agency in those functions. But I also wanna say that when you say agency at first, I think of like the human, the human getting agency. You still got it. You still got it.
Starting point is 02:23:43 I always feel like We gotta exercise our agency and our taste more than ever before these days. And the years, the days of us getting a prescribed job function and sticking to it, that is like the death bell of a career these days. Yeah, totally. As soon as it can be defined, it can be reinforcement learned against and optimized.
Starting point is 02:24:05 Were you surprised at all about the concept of taste coming into the Silicon Valley discourse? It feels like one of those things. It actually reminded me of when venture capitalists discovered the creator economy in 2020 and 2019. But it was a trend that had been happening for like a decade at that point, where people were creating content online and turning it into a business.
Starting point is 02:24:29 And then all of a sudden, people I think saw a statistic that was like, look at this. Look how fast this category is growing. We should invest a bunch of dollars there. But in many ways, I feel like taste has always been a key part of our industry. And if you look at a lot of the best companies, they don't all look the same, but they have people
Starting point is 02:24:49 that run them that have tastes that sort of gets applied in many different ways, whether it's hiring all the way through, obviously, the visual side. You know, I am brought back to a, just earlier in my career, you know, it was all about what skills you had. The resume, were you good at PHP or JavaScript or could you do road code in Python or whatever the case might be? We come from a world where skills were the hardest things to achieve and the most differentiating things for humans, right,
Starting point is 02:25:25 in a project. Now, as a lot of the skills have been offloaded to compute, you know, now it's like, well, what's left? Like, taste is actually one of those things that is definitely left, right? And so I think that the fact that everyone's sort of focused on taste these days is more of a commentary on how less focused they are on skill and how much confidence they have in all these models and coding tools and everything else. Can taste be taught, though? That's the question. Skills can be taught.
Starting point is 02:25:55 Taste? Can taste be taught? Can taste be taught is a thing I think about in debate all the time with friends. What is taste? Gosh, it's like the human experience, it's childhood traumas, it's mistake of the eyes, it's judgment, it's knowing how many things to see before you make a decision, you know, but it's also knowing how to choose something
Starting point is 02:26:16 that isn't so on the nose, but like leave something for the imagination. You know, it's knowing where people are going as opposed to where people are. Like, I think it's all of these factors that are so critical, whether you're making a product or making a marketing campaign or a film or whatever the case might be. And I just, I think that hopefully we'll just over index on human experience in order to achieve taste.
Starting point is 02:26:39 Yeah, there's, yeah, it almost feels like just independent thinking, confidence, like you can maybe develop it just by being around. Independent thinking that elicits a collective response that you want in some ways, right? I mean, I think of this in the context of how companies get attention. There's a lot of different ways to get attention.
Starting point is 02:27:00 Some ways are tasteful and elicit a positive response. Others get a lot of attention, but a sort of visceral negative reaction and taste in the context of social media, algorithms and timelines is such an important question because it's really easy right now to do. To instantiate something, but not to, yeah. It's fascinating.
Starting point is 02:27:27 Yeah, taste too in the context of AI slop, right? There's tasteful, there's tasteful. I always keep coming back to the Harry Potter Balenciaga video. I feel like that was, you know, it had the aesthetics of AI slop because it was AI generated. There were issues with it.
Starting point is 02:27:43 And yes, but it had the touch of a human to think of combining those two kind of completely unrelated, disparate ideas. And when you put them together, it was something that you had to watch. And by the way, that's perfect evidence, the fact that you're still citing that, despite how many months, if not years, of content generation has happened since.
Starting point is 02:28:04 It shows you the taste still stands out. And why you know people are like, oh my gosh content is commoditized Like everyone can do everything now Oh my gosh, this is horrible for Hollywood My view is the opposite like in the in historically when anything becomes commoditized whether it's shoes clothes handbags liquor Whatever it is, like that's LVM, like LVMH is in all those businesses, but they're doing the higher end meaning infused, more scarce version of that thing that's available to anyone. You're now content is commoditized given all these new tools.
Starting point is 02:28:38 And I think as consumers of content, we are going to seek more scarce, meaning infused human, you know, brand signaled versions of content to fill our attention in time. And so I think that's great example. You know, it doesn't matter how it was made. It matters. You know, whether there's meaning in it. I even know how the tools I knew the tools that were used to
Starting point is 02:28:58 make the Harry Potter Balenciaga thing, but I couldn't come up with a unique idea that would go viral. And so I went to Chia GPT and I said, here's why this worked. It worked because it was inspired and it combined two things that were so disparate. Think of another thing that could be iconic like that and it couldn't do it at all. It came back.
Starting point is 02:29:16 Yeah, exactly, exactly. It wasn't there. You know, that inspiration still needs to strike. George, give me the last question. Speaking of Hollywood, did you see Mountain Head, the new Jesse Armstrong film? Have you seen it yet? I haven't seen Mountain Head yet, no. OK, you should.
Starting point is 02:29:31 I mean, if you don't enjoy it, they're really cooked. But it's Jesse Armstrong from Succession. OK. You're making this film. The high-level concept is some tech. It's the all-in podcast. Yeah, yeah, you could say that. But the thing that I wanted to get to is the basically the over-arched part of the overarching
Starting point is 02:29:49 Narrative is that deep fakes have gotten so good that they're causing global chaos because people don't know what's real And then they're seeing video and sort of acting on that video I wanted to ask you in that context or or or just generally about the progression of video models and how you're thinking about, you know, if VO3, you know, what do you expect from things like VO4 and, you know, new runway models and anything, you know, I'm assuming you're looking at everything internally at Yeah, let me just, well, two comments, like one on video models and then deep fakes real quickly. On video models, I mean, this is like a consistent slap a hand game, right? Where, oh my God, this is the best model.
Starting point is 02:30:27 And then VO2 comes out and then Sora and then runway and the VO3 and it just keeps piling up. This is great for anyone who makes stories because these models are becoming better and increasingly commoditized. However, you know, it's would I wanna be the model, you know, that's competing in that increasingly commoditized and not as great, you know, quality sort of vector, probably not. So that's comment number one on the deep, on the deep fake situation.
Starting point is 02:30:51 It was interesting, like these new, these new websites that are coming out where, um, where, uh, you have these, like anyone can make a deep fake with Trump saying whatever, you know, I actually think they're playing a secret value to society by inoculating all of us Totally all get a fake Trump said something crazy video tomorrow And we're inoculated from the fact that we should no longer trust what we see that we should instead of going from a world where We would trust but verify go from a world, you know get to where we verify then trust Yeah, like that would be good for humanity So I'm like I'm actually'm actually for that inoculation,
Starting point is 02:31:26 because I think that we need it, and we're going to want to know where stuff came from. If you didn't see it live on TBPN, it didn't happen. No, in a weird way, it might save legacy media, because if legacy media orients around, if CNN were to say, there's a you know, there's a bunch of these, you know, you have usernames like Autism Capital that are sort of de facto news on X, right?
Starting point is 02:31:52 These are accounts that get billions of impressions and they act as, you know, news content. But if CNBC and CNN and other services can really orient around. We were late to the punch on this, but we did the work to verify that it was real. It actually might save. Totally.
Starting point is 02:32:13 And there's credentials now, there's metadata through things like content credentials that go into assets that are made on certain cameras and edited in certain software. And whether it's TPPN or CNN or anyone else can surface that information in the reporting and say, we verified this is done by the so-and-so and was edited by so-and-so.
Starting point is 02:32:29 And I think that adds to a layer of what people are going to need and want in the future. So it can happen. Thank you so much. Yeah. I wish we had 90 minutes. This is super fun. Well, you have to come back soon.
Starting point is 02:32:41 Awesome. Yeah, to be continued. Great talking, Scott. Have a great rest of your day. We'll talk to you soon, Scott. Bye. Cheers. Really quickly, let me tell you about Bezel. Go to come back soon. Awesome. Yeah, to be continued. Great talking, Scott. Have a great rest of your day. We'll talk to you soon, Scott. Bye. Cheers. Really quickly, let me tell you about Bezel.
Starting point is 02:32:47 Go to getbezel.com. Your Bezel Concierge is available now to source you any watch on the planet. Seriously, any watch. And we have our next guest already in the studio, Roy from Bloomberg Beta coming in to talk about his latest fundraise. How are you doing, Roy?
Starting point is 02:33:00 Great to meet you. Fresh capital in the bank or committed or something like that, you know? How much? How much capital did you raise? Roy, great to meet you. Fresh capital in the bank or committed or something like that. How much capital did you raise? Talk to us. Okay. How much? You get it 75 times for 75.
Starting point is 02:33:13 Whoa. You know, I'll take one customer sale over fresh capital in the bank. You know, the old. No, no, no. Capital formation is the highest calling of man. They two guys who do not intend to form their own capital. Unless that's right. That's right. But we're in the business
Starting point is 02:33:32 of celebrating it. But congratulations. What are you most excited about? Where are you planning to deploy this? What is what? How is the money burning a hole in your pocket? Yeah, so we 12 years ago started this firm to say, we're gonna do day zero investing in startups, and I'll just give the context because the answer is gonna be the same thing. Startups that are future work oriented,
Starting point is 02:33:59 our bet at the time was our personal lives have changed a lot, our work lives have not. Maybe that'll change. Like people were still using Lotus Notes for email, and now on our fifth fund, we are doing basically exactly the same thing. The craft of day zero, work closely with the founder, and what's burning a hole in my pocket
Starting point is 02:34:18 is continuing to do that, you know? And I'm looking at our fund one companies and feeling like they're still midway through the journey replet flexport campus, you know We love these companies Most of them have been in the show fantastic companies. Yeah. No, I've loved watching them That's part of what I love about the show what what percentage of funds venture funds make it to fund five That's an excellent question. There's gotta be like 5%.
Starting point is 02:34:45 Very lateral. But I always feel like that's sort of like those stats about what percentage of startups like raise their series B. It's like if the starting denominator has a lot of meh in it. Like I think to me the more interesting question is who gets, there you go. Who gets to a, there you go, hot off the press. I printed, so I printed your post
Starting point is 02:35:04 because it appears that you printed your post. I don't know if you can see this, but you printed a LinkedIn post and you marked it up. You said today we're announcing our next fund, our fourth, and you just crossed it out and put fifth and we respect printing out posts here. So I just wanted to... The idea was inspired by this thing I stole from Congress when the Republicans blocked a Democrat Supreme Court nominee and then it went around the other way and they literally just crossed out the names and put in Schumer to McConnell. It is the same. So I think the more interesting question is who gets to a fund five or whatever fund size
Starting point is 02:35:42 without trying to gradually expand AUM? It seems like so many of the VC firms out there and We love working with them are just in the AUM expansion business. Yep, the big AUM scare me personally I looked it up here according to Chad GPT. There's probably a 50% chance It's hallucinating but it's estimating it less than 5% based on pitch book and Cambridge Associates data I mean here here you say you're say you aspire to be the most transparent investors. What does transparency mean in the context of a venture fund? Yeah, do you tell the founder, look,
Starting point is 02:36:12 we clocked you at about a 15% chance of success. It's a bet we're willing to take. We do try to tell them how exactly we're thinking about it. But here, look up, go to our website right now. Those two laptops you got in front of you. And then you'll tell me what. Which is to say, when I was a founder.
Starting point is 02:36:26 So before this, I started a company in games. And you know, you drive down to the two 80 end up in an office on Sand Hill Road. And in the first three minutes of the meeting, the person would be like, oh, but you're not a fit for us. We don't do this. And it's like, well, why on earth do we just do that? And we're an attacker. We're coming into an established industry.
Starting point is 02:36:45 We just asked, are there things the industry does that we can flip the bit and do the other way? And so the industry seemed very opaque at the time. It's a lot less true now. And we're just like, can we be as transparent as possible? Can we put in valuation? Can we put in diligence questions? You can actually get our long form actual deal documents from our website. And the point of it is not transparency for transparency sake,
Starting point is 02:37:06 although that's a very Bloomberg idea about trans. Yeah. It's just, founders are our customers. We want them to not waste time guessing what we do. And so if they can disqualify out by seeing we don't do that thing, great, better for everybody. We're big fans of Bloomberg. We read a lot of Bloomberg pieces on the show. What is the actual relationship between your terminal subscription yet? No, we got to get of Bloomberg pieces on the show. What is the actual relationship? You have your terminal subscription yet? No, we got to get one. This is my go-to terminal every day, the Wall Street Journal.
Starting point is 02:37:31 But we do have Bloomberg subscription. You got to get a terminal. And we've had a bunch of Bloomberg folks on the show. You're like the fifth Bloomberg affiliated person. We got Joe Weisenthal, Tracy Allouay. We got Sheeran Ghaffari coming on the show. Bigger brands than me, one at all. of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company.
Starting point is 02:37:47 We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company.
Starting point is 02:38:03 We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a lot of people that are interested in the company. We got a trying to find some startup that's gonna be a Bloomberg partner. Bloomberg wanted to understand what was happening in the world of startups. The argument was, best way to do that is give startups what they need, which is just money. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Cool. Talk to me about deployment of the fund. Is 75 million, that's a lot of smaller checks.
Starting point is 02:38:19 Are you holding back some for pro rata and scale up? You know the line about like, tell me the fun size. I'll tell you the strategy. Part of the reason why we've kept our fun size where it is, is we want to be as early as possible. And so I can't remember the exact number, but it's something like most funds, their first check ends up being something like 75 basis points of fun size on average. And we end up a little bit around there, slightly bigger. Um, we do, you know, we reserve for follow-ons,
Starting point is 02:38:44 but then we also have an opportunity fund because what we realized is we wrote some big checks in from our core fund into some of our winners, we wrote a big check into replant at one point, eight, whatever, you know, company, new front. And it's like, well, if we're going to do that, we might as well have the capital to do that reliably. So we've got an opportunity fund. Yeah, at the early stage, are you trying to pick a winner
Starting point is 02:39:07 and then not invest in competitive companies? How do you think about that? So very old school on all this stuff. My view on competition is in the eye of the founder. I have an attitude on this, which is, if I back you, I want you knowing I have your back. Not that I'm thinking about which of your competitors to introduce to somebody.
Starting point is 02:39:25 And so any founder we invest in, if they tell us that a company is competitive, we won't invest in that company. It shit still happens. Like, of course, you know, companies pivot into being competitive and we're going to work it out. But that's the principle. Yeah. Yeah, but yeah, but that's not on you. Um, driving the news cycle this week, you got WWDC, uh, Apple kind of pulling back. It drove the news cycle kind of by necessity. Yeah, of course.
Starting point is 02:39:46 If you had said, but nothing happened, would we have all just nodded along politely? Well, our intern Tyler spent hours today installing it. Well, yeah, he assembled the first American-made iPhone yesterday. Today, he installed arguably a harder challenge, installing a beta. iOS 26 26. IOS 26.
Starting point is 02:40:05 But, I mean, there is a bit of a narrative for startups there in the sense that if Apple is truly pulling back and not going to steamroll the startup developer community in terms of AI-based apps, that could be a potential boom for, you know, we could see another rise of a mobile-esque era where AI companies are building on iOS in a little bit more friendly territory than it's been in the past. Obviously there's the Fortnite decision and discussion around the App Store. What are you seeing that's interesting or just what else is driving the news cycle for you? Well, no, so I do think, look, Apple has to be an attacker on AI. You've pointed out the way that the privacy first philosophy makes it a lot harder for them to do AI and AI developers who go They're talking about running into that internally
Starting point is 02:40:52 You know all the big tech companies want to be the platform on which everybody else share crops Yep, and at the moment that's open AI and enthral pickets like you have all these fast Share crops is such as savage but real way to describe. Everyone wants a 30% cut. It's just 30%. Just give me 30. Just 30. It's not 50.
Starting point is 02:41:10 30. Of course, naturally. But the market didn't exist but for that. And I think they're going to try to figure out, can they disrupt some other part of the ecosystem? I feel the same way about the scale AI acquisition, which is meta has to attack. They need a layer that they can control that everybody else depends on.
Starting point is 02:41:29 And this looks like their play at it. The other thing I think is interesting about that that I've been thinking about is how many of these big AI companies have effectively been acquired in ways that the government doesn't get to approve. It's the big talent acquisitions. When I saw this, I was like, that looks like an acquisition. The FTC doesn't get to approve. And so I don't know if that's the motivation.
Starting point is 02:41:49 I have not spoken at any of the parties. We're not in scale AI. But my sense is you're basically seeing the game of Thrones play out. But the government is one of the houses. What's very interesting about that is that we are... Yeah, Lina Khan is gone. And we're in a different regime. She's out. Why can't we keep...
Starting point is 02:42:02 Let us do some acquisitions. Let us do some M&A. Just $1.28 billion acquisition. Just let us sneak it in. Let's get it by. Let's get it by. Just one. Let's get the M&A window open.
Starting point is 02:42:15 That's the early baby master. I mean, the other thing I say is, when was the last time you heard a big tech company buy a company for $80 million? It felt like that used to happen all the time. All the time. And now it's a lot less common for a variety of reasons. They took that from us. They took that from us.
Starting point is 02:42:28 I think. I feel the grief. Yeah. I mean, there used to be a really great outcome for a lot of folks where if you're a founder and you start and you still own 20, 30% of a company and you sell it for 80 million, like that's a house in Palo Alto and the kids and generational wealth in some ways. And yeah, that has gone by the wayside. I don't exactly know why, because those
Starting point is 02:42:49 seem to be easier to get across the finish line from an FTC perspective. But I guess folks just don't think about it. At what point does the FTC just say, look, we know, we can see what you're doing. I mean, also, I did. You just spent $15 billion on this company, and the CEO no longer works there.
Starting point is 02:43:04 Works there, yeah. I mean, the flip side. Yeah, I mean, the flip side this company, and the CEO no longer works there. I mean, the flip side is, when was the last time a company was valued at $80 million? Every company seems to go straight from $5 million to $500 million in two days. And so I don't know where you're getting $80 million. That's just hard to find. I do have a question for you.
Starting point is 02:43:25 I don't even know if you can speak to this, but there's a lot of companies that are thinking about plugging into the terminal. We see what Perplexity is doing. We see a bunch of AI agents for financial. Well, to be clear, Perplexity is trying to disrupt the terminal. Are you looking at it in that space?
Starting point is 02:43:41 Would that be too competitive? Is there anything interesting there that you've seen or heard rumblings on the other side of the fence? I can't speak to what's competitive. Sure. They're my LP. Yeah, of course. I can't speak for their business strategy.
Starting point is 02:43:53 What I will say is, when you run a firm that's got a name of another company on it, my guess is the Google Ventures, GV guys have this too. Every pitch that's like, we are gonna be the Bloomberg for X lands on my desk. And maybe not everyone, but many of them do because they're like, and how amazing would it be to also have Bloomberg as an investor? Yeah, almost all of them seem to misunderstand to me what the
Starting point is 02:44:14 value of the Bloomberg terminal is, because it packages data, Yep, community with a messaging system, outside in perspective news, etc. I mean, that's just some of it. So much stuff. And it's more than just let's display some data. So everybody who's trying to disrupt, I think is in for a surprise when they realize what an ecosystem it is.
Starting point is 02:44:33 Yep. I think this happens constantly, especially in media. People see a media product, they like it, they don't understand why it's successful. They try to reverse engineer it, but if you don't understand the why, you're never going to be. But can I ask you guys though, for you, you tried before,
Starting point is 02:44:50 what's your hypothesis on your why of why this has been so successful for you? The main one is that, um, most people in tech media have done it part time historically. And we decided to just kind of burn all the ships and make this the full-time thing. We got some great advice from David Senra, the host of the Founders podcast, another full-time media creator and he basically just said you guys have something that's that's working you should go ten times harder at this and we also enjoyed it a lot. We loved it.
Starting point is 02:45:23 We liked talking about business. We loved it. We liked talking about business together. Yeah, we loved it. Which was kind of the foundation. But yeah, the idea that there's a lot of- Yeah, but he didn't tell us. There's a lot of technology podcasts. There's a lot of business podcasts. If you actually drill down and you look at how many people
Starting point is 02:45:37 are actually full-time just making media, it's very, very small. It's pretty small. And the nature, the other thing is the nature of by taking something way more serious than anyone else, it can sort of morph and evolve in the way that the show has from just us two in a printer. My viewers look on this is it felt
Starting point is 02:45:58 I'm obsessed with Hamilton for a variety of reasons. One of the reasons I'm obsessed with it is nobody would have said one of the great media properties of the last 10 or 20 years it is nobody would have said one of the great media properties of the last 10 or 20 years would be unusable. Yeah, totally. And so it defied the genre through intensity and seriousness and you feel immersed in a world.
Starting point is 02:46:13 And like before the show, they used to go out on the street and do some little ditty or something like that. Oops, my camera just froze. Okay, there we go. And you guys have that same kind of immersion. I teach this class at Berkeley on the structure of the media industry. I will be inviting you as guest speakers.
Starting point is 02:46:26 Amazing. We'd love that. Not when you're live. I grew up in Berkeley. The other thing that you've realized is it's cheap to start a media company. So as long as you don't get too big for your britches and figure like a venture backed company, your financial aspiration, maybe this is yours, is to create one of the most financially successful businesses
Starting point is 02:46:42 in the history of capitalism, which is in VC, as much as an $80 million exit along the way, it can be magical for everybody involved. That's the hope. Is that you can produce something wildly valuable and make some money. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah. This is fantastic. This is great. We'll have to have you back. Congratulations. Have you fun? Appreciate what you're doing. Keep us all immersed in it. We will, we will come back.
Starting point is 02:47:05 Yeah, we'll hit it. We will, we will. Come back soon. Get hard, 75 times. Yeah, we'll hit it. We'll wait till after the show. Two down, 73 more to go. 73 hits. Done. I'll come in and bang on that. Have a good one.
Starting point is 02:47:14 You're the man. We'll talk to you later. Cheers, Roy. Bye. Up next, we have the founder of Metropolis, Alex Israel. He's in the studio, but really quickly, let me tell you about Wander. Find your happy place. Book a Wander with inspiring views, hotel, great amenities, dreamy beds, top really quickly, let me tell you about Wander. Find your happy place.
Starting point is 02:47:25 Book a Wander with inspiring views, hotel, great amenities, dreamy beds, top tier cleaning, and 24 seven concierge service. It's a vacation home, but better. Welcome to the stream, Alex. How are you doing today? Good, how are you guys doing? We're doing great.
Starting point is 02:47:37 We've been having an awesome show. What's it like to land on the CNBC list? Yeah, you guys are on there, right? Congrats. I mean, that's gotta be your guys' biggest accomplishment ever. There's nothing that tops that. No, no, I'm kidding.
Starting point is 02:47:51 It's, I mean, anytime, you know, I know the CEOs that land on these lists, they're like, they'll post about it, but it's like, you get back to work. Yeah, of course. Yeah, it's, look, it's flattering. I just like being in the company of, you know, OpenAI and Andrew.
Starting point is 02:48:04 Yeah, it's good. Yeah, you just gotta get back to work. Yeah, just like being in the company of you know open AI Yeah, you just gotta get back to work. Yeah, the first the first CEO to be like, you know Normally PCS a job's not finished in this case jobs. No, we're done. We're done This was the whole goal the whole time now we can retire It's definitely better. It's definitely yeah, I can pay my college It doesn't pay the bills, but you know, can send your family member and maybe they'll be impressed You know yeah, you'll get some text messages Anyway, can you kick us off with an introduction on on the structure of the company and what you guys are building because it's super Interesting and I know we can go a bunch of different directions, but I'd love to get your kind of
Starting point is 02:48:41 Ground setting first yeah, of course but I'd love to get your kind of ground setting first. Yeah, of course. So, you know, traditional in a lot of ways, startup story, founded the company in 2017, and now are one of the fast-growing payments companies in the United States. We talk about ourselves externally as an AI company for the real world,
Starting point is 02:48:58 but it's all about how you leverage computer vision and artificial intelligence to create next generation payments and commerce everywhere you go, whether it's a retail environment a car wash or a gas station. How do you just walk in or walk out on this case drive in and drive out. That is fascinating. Talk to me about the strategy of actual building the business and acquiring assets and actually getting, like the go-to-market motion is different here, right? Yeah, it was very different. I mean, look, we started very, I don't know,
Starting point is 02:49:32 stereotypical, we raised the, I guess large, but $20 million seed financing, $40 million Series A, we hit the market. Wait, $20 million seed in 2017, that's more bigger than a mango seed, which started to become popular a bit later. I don't know, is that a watermelon seed round? What was the catalyst there? You just had a bunch of experience in the space and so people had a lot of confidence in you? Why did you need $20 million at the time?
Starting point is 02:50:01 Yeah, that's a good question. I don't know, I guess serial tech entrepreneur. I don't know, my last Series A and my last company was 3.5 million, and I thought I was rich. And then $20 million seed financing. But look, we knew we were tackling, the first vertical that we entered was mobility, and we wanted to go after the parking industry. And we wanted to deploy technology
Starting point is 02:50:21 in the parking industry. And we knew that there were a number of companies, whether it was Standard Cognition or Amazon Go, that were leveraging computer vision to create these next generation experiences. And we knew it would take a lot of capital. And we knew it would take a while to penetrate the market. So we wanted to make sure that we had the capital in place
Starting point is 02:50:40 to really go after the market. Talk about your position in parking today. It sounds like you're thinking about other categories already. At what point did you decide that you could be thinking about other applications of the tech and infrastructure? Yeah, it's a good question.
Starting point is 02:50:56 You know, I'd say, so after our series A, I would say we hit product market fit and unit economic fit really quickly. I'd say the problem was we hit a wall without going to-to-market. And that was, you know, at the time we were scaling our technology to a number of large asset owners across the United States. And we'd effectively knock on their door, ask to take the keys for the parking experience to their $200 million development. And they're like, cute startup, come back in 50 years. So we realized we needed a different go-to-market motion. good startup come back in 50 years. So we realized we needed a different go to market motion.
Starting point is 02:51:25 So we shifted strategies and we invented what we qualified internally as a GBL, which was this idea of a growth buyout. Could we raise venture capital dollars and could we acquire old world businesses? So we started rolling up old world parking operators that are, you know, the cost plus staff and agencies that were EBITDA positive that run parking
Starting point is 02:51:43 across the United States. And we kept rolling them up to a point where now we're the largest parking operator in the United States. It's amazing What yeah, yeah, but what is the structure of the of the parking market generally? I feel like I live in Pasadena when I drive around some of them are city owns some of them validate some of them Don't it feels very fragmented it I couldn't name one unified brand but what is this is the structure of the parking owner market as fragmented as I perceive it to be yeah completely it's I mean it's as fragmented as the real estate owner market right people that own real estate on parking and there are you know hundreds of thousands of real estate owners from a class-a perspective all the way through an airport
Starting point is 02:52:26 across the United States. And we deploy our technology to facilitate that type of seamless experience where a consumer can just drive in, get a text message when they arrive and get charged when they leave. Yeah, is that historically just because there's no economy of scale like there is in real estate or is that just because the asset class is so big
Starting point is 02:52:44 that you can't possibly own it all? It's just so sexy. Everyone graduated with an urban and they like parking. Yes, yes. You know, it's like the last bastion of non-institutionalized real estate in the United States. Yeah, yeah, you're right. And it's everywhere.
Starting point is 02:52:58 It's 15% of the surface area of our cities. And for us, it was the first touch point. And to your comment earlier, we realized that if we can roll out parking and we can deploy a seamless payment product across parking, then we can move into gas stations and car wash and quick serve retail. And then we can move past the car and into the store.
Starting point is 02:53:17 Yeah, can you talk about the kind of longer term vision for city parking? I feel like there's, with autonomous cars, people are excited about maybe reclaiming some green space. Whenever I see a big city and there's just like one flat parking lot, I'm like, that would be way more efficient if it was like three stories of underground parking
Starting point is 02:53:36 and then a massive building on top with some mixed retail. And some, some places. On the autonomous cars, people like to say, oh, when we have autonomous cars, we'll need less parking in cities. And I can see that in some way. But at the same time, I'm not excited to spend every day in Waymo's, effectively taxis.
Starting point is 02:53:56 I am excited to have my own autonomous car. And the idea that I would drive into the city, and then my car would just be driving around all day. Like it's got to go somewhere while I'm while I'm podcasting. Right. Like it's you know, so so it's going to be parked somewhere. And so I think this sense that autonomous driving is going to eliminate the need for for parking is is or certain, you know, some some of the parking in cities is maybe off base. No, look, I think it's an interesting question.
Starting point is 02:54:26 I mean, when we founded the company, we spent a lot of time thinking about the future of autonomous vehicles. And to your point, like cars are not gonna circle the block endlessly looking for their next job. They're gonna get off the road and back onto the road as quickly as possible. And that's the conversion of parking from parking lot
Starting point is 02:54:42 to mobility hub, you know, where you can facilitate the cleaning, servicing, charging, and deploying of vehicles. I mean, at this point, our underlying technology enables kind of seamless, I would say, integration or connectivity between an autonomous vehicle and old world infrastructure. I mean, at this point, we're interacting with millions of Americans every single day that are on our platform or interacting with our locations and I think at this point
Starting point is 02:55:08 we're onboarding 50,000 Americans every single day that are signing up for the first time with Metropolis. Yeah yeah the idea you know you're not gonna Waymo's not gonna have like a humanoid robot in it that presses the parking ticket you know button when it's coming in and that is like feeding the ticket back in, it obviously would just happen. You know, Metropolis can be that hub for autonomous vehicles that makes a ton of sense.
Starting point is 02:55:32 Yeah, talk to me about the evolution of financing. You're obviously using a lot of venture capital, but I imagine that it's a certain point you need to interface with private equity firms or banks or debt providers. How can you get creative with the with the different structuring financially on some of these larger deals? And can you give me kind of like a 101 on what it what it takes to get a billion dollar deal done these days?
Starting point is 02:56:00 Yeah, I mean, we did, you know, the last deal was a $1.8 billion Series C. Amazing. Huge, huge. Yeah, listen, we took an old world, you know, 100 year old company that was publicly traded private. Yeah. And yeah, look, it's, if you look at our cap table, it's exactly that.
Starting point is 02:56:20 It's venture and private equity in the same rounds. So last round was Eldridge, Vista, 3L, Tomasek, Vista, EDT, MSD. And like you normally don't find all of those players in one party round. But yeah, look, I think that you guys talk about this more than I do, but the capital markets operate very clearly in these very set boxes, it's credit, it's private equity, it's growth. And we kind of broke through that with an entirely different strategy, which is how do you take next generation technology and artificial intelligence and start acquiring old world
Starting point is 02:56:57 businesses to scale into the market even faster. But in the context to your question, in the context of our business, it's structured to a great extent, like any series C venture company would be structured. Talk to me about what the communications challenge of taking over a 100 year old company. It feels like you're fortunate that you don't have the the stench of maybe like, oh, we're going to buy and lay everyone off. but it is change management is it is a new, it is a new structure in the organization. I'm sure there's some communication that you have to do when you, when you buy a company, what has that been like and what are kind of the best practices? Yeah, that's a great question. I mean, look, I think that we went from a 200 person company organically to a 2000 person company with our first inorganic
Starting point is 02:57:47 acquisition and then to a 23,000 person company with employees in 400 cities. So yeah, there's massive change management, there's massive internal communication protocols, but I'd say first and foremost, it's like how do we put our employees and our team first. And you're right, we were lucky because this was not a turnaround. This was not a structure where we're looking for cost synergy. Metropolis and this strategy of taking these old world companies private was all about revenue synergy. It was how we drive more revenue and more value, not only to real estate owners, but to our employees and our team members. So, it's been exciting. And what we found is is it's really interesting.
Starting point is 02:58:26 You see cultural friction on both sides. You see cultural friction in the engineer that's worked at Amazon for 10 years that now works for Metropolis. And then you see friction on the parking attendant. But you find people that are really excited about building a hyperscaler and really excited about how they can leverage
Starting point is 02:58:45 and build on the existing infrastructure of this 100 year old company. That's great. Well, thank you so much for stopping by. This is great. This is fantastic. Come back on when you have a good reason for us to hit the size gong.
Starting point is 02:58:57 Yeah, we'd love to. I'm sure you'll have many more in the near future. This is great. Looking forward to it. Thanks for taking the time, guys. Talk to you soon. Cheers. Bye. Next up, we to it. Thanks for taking the time, guys. Talk to you soon. Cheers. Bye.
Starting point is 02:59:06 Next up, we have Andrew Huberman joining the stream. We'll bring him in in just a second. We have some breaking news too. Scott Wu has posted about the new model from OpenAI. 03 price drop makes it 15 times cheaper than GPT-432K, the state of the art model from two years ago. Meanwhile, the number of use cases is probably up 1 million X kudos to the opening team for dropping the price. So congratulations to everyone over there. And welcome to the stream. Andrew,
Starting point is 02:59:34 how are you doing? Great, great to see you. Thanks so much for joining. Yeah, what's new in your world? What's new? Goodness, this week, we have a big episode of the Huberman lab podcast out with the current NIH director, Dr. J Bhattacharya, who's a MD and a PhD. He has a unique background, because he has a background in medicine, obviously, the MD, but he also has a background in economics. Yeah. Incidentally, did his undergraduate, master's PhD, and medical school training, and then was a professor of
Starting point is 03:00:03 medicine at Stanford. So Stanford, you know, he's at Stanford the whole way. And as NIH director, right, he holds a ton of power over what happens for the future of basic and clinical research. And he looks at all that through the lens of an economist, but mostly through the lens of a, you know, public health official. So it's a very unique perspective and folks are actual recognized. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 03:00:28 We're vocal. I don't want to speak for him and label, we have to be careful with labels, but the anti-lockdown, I don't know. Yeah. You know, not a huge fan of the lockdowns for most people, right? He does say that there are certain populations
Starting point is 03:00:44 that he felt should have been kept indoors, Not a huge fan of the lockdowns for most people, right? He does say that there are certain populations that he felt should have been kept indoors, but other folks probably in his view should have had more interactions. Well, it's a long episode. I wanted to basically get a preview of it. You guys focus on a couple of things. One, how to fix the issues with science,
Starting point is 03:01:00 and two, the importance of funding research, both, sorry, basic research and then applied research. So why don't we kind of cover a couple of those different areas. My big question was like the narrative right now is that research funding is being cut like immensely. And I was wondering if you got a feel for how severe the cuts are, is the narrative overblown? What is the balance of cuts between applied and basic research? And then we can kind of go into some of the implications of that.
Starting point is 03:01:33 Sure. Okay, so there is an upcoming vote in Congress in September, I believe, and it's on the table to cut the overall budget for research for NIH by 40%, 4-0. That's huge. Which is huge. That's huge. The budget for research at NIH, there are multiple dimensions to NIH, and I don't want to get lost in the weeds of it. It's a, you know, and it's just something I'm very familiar with. I was on grants panels for, you know, over a decade. My lab was funded by NIH. We could go really deep into the weeds, but let's just keep it pretty simple. NIH funds basic research, which is research that it's not
Starting point is 03:02:09 specifically geared toward understanding the or trying to solve a particular cure or treatment for disease. So think all everything we understand about cell biology, not everything, but much of what we understand about cell biology. Yeah, it was because of NIH funded research into the functioning of the cell over the course of you know, 50 or more years. And that led to important implications for treatments and cures for cancer. We don't have a quote unquote cure for all
Starting point is 03:02:36 cancers, but many cancers now can be cured. To be clear, these are non commercial. This is like non commercial research. So things that we cover a lot of, right? Yeah, we cover a lot of cannot be patented. So basic research is, you know, a laboratory wants to understand how cells work, how neurons work, how the immune system functions, gut brain access, studies on, you know, how stress impacts health, sleep, etc. Then the applied work is also funded by NIH.
Starting point is 03:03:07 So clinical trials are funded by NIH. This is an enormous portion of the overall budget. The exact division between basic and clinical trial funding is hard to demarcate, but let's just for sake of this conversation, just agree, because it's true that most of the basic research and clinical trials that are run in the United States are funded by the NIH.
Starting point is 03:03:27 The NSF is a separate entity, right? But NIH's specific goal is to improve the health and longevity of American citizens and by extension the rest of the world, right? Because it is fair to say that while there are excellent, you know, research funding bodies in the UK, in Germany, in Switzerland, all over Asia and around the world, that the NIH, when people say it's the crown jewel, it's the one that's devoted the most billions of dollars to basic and
Starting point is 03:03:55 applied research. And it's no coincidence that the majority of Nobel prizes in physiology and medicine and chemistry and related fields have come from work that was either initially seeded by or certainly supported by the NIH. So you can't overstate the importance of NIH funding basic and applied research. That overall budget is facing a 40% cut in September. Now, you know, I'm hearing two things out there, right?
Starting point is 03:04:24 I wear many hats. One is my lab ran on NIH money. It no longer depends on NIH money. I'm a podcaster, so I have the ear of folks who are like, this is really scary, right? It gets very political because the current administration seems to be taking a more, like, they're going to revise the way
Starting point is 03:04:45 that NIH is structured potentially, 20 plus institutes down to eight. So all of it looks like downsizing. There are a lot of people who are terrified about this. There's another camp that I hear from a lot, and I can't even say particularly on X, and I wanna be very clear, this camp doesn't always lean right.
Starting point is 03:05:03 It's pretty even across the board that are saying, wait a second, why are we giving so much money to these universities to do research from our tax dollars? And I know this will upset people who are very science-minded as I am, who care about science, but they're saying, why are we doing this, right?
Starting point is 03:05:17 Some of these universities, not all, but some of them, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, UT Austin, et cetera, the private universities often, although some public ones too, have, UT Austin, etc. The private universities often, although some public ones do have very large endowments. And they're thinking, why are we funding so much of this work? Maybe these tax dollars should go elsewhere. There's another key issue and this came up during the discussion with Dr. Bhattacharya, which is there are many, many people, okay, I'm just who voiced to me that they don't want to give their tax dollars to basic or applied research at all.
Starting point is 03:05:49 This is a large and growing crowd because they feel that there needs to be for lack of a better way to put it, some truth and reconciliation. They want two things acknowledged. And I've actually heard this from many of the, let's just say that the highly recognizable names in the world of Silicon Valley, super tech or founders and funders and investors, et cetera. And those two things are the following. One, they want the NIH to acknowledge or CDC and or others in government
Starting point is 03:06:21 to acknowledge that there were in their mind failures during the pandemic, in particular to acknowledge that there were in their mind failures during the pandemic, in particular lockdowns that impacted the non-laptop class. Okay, we're talking about janitors, staff, teachers, kids, etc., that basically had to halt their work and their income. They're pissed off about this, right? That no one kind of acknowledged this. The other thing that they're very angry about is the lack of acknowledgement from the scientific community that the science community makes errors. Sometimes errors that, for instance, in the field of Alzheimer's research, I want to point
Starting point is 03:06:55 out not all the work in the field of Alzheimer's is bad. Much of it is very solid or excellent, but they are frustrated by some recent kind of unveiling of the fact that there were findings that later were found to be fraudulent, basically, and that it was never checked up on. And then that opens up a whole discussion, which I also discussed with Dr. Bhattacharya about what's being done to solve the so-called replication crisis. So they're upset about the public messaging around health and science, right? They would have preferred it sounds like that
Starting point is 03:07:29 People in government say hey listen, you know, we have a virus that we don't understand And we have ideas about what might control it, but we don't fully understand this So it was very iterative and a lot of people are pissed off kind of like when you're you know 15 or 16 and you're being told you can't stay out late and then your parents are staying up late or you know you or like we had governors who were saying you had to wear a mask but then were taped in fancy restaurants on the northern coast. And you know it restaurants and like much in the way that a teenager
Starting point is 03:07:57 goes wait a second like you smoke pot in college and you're telling me not to smoke pot like this there's a logical flaw here and we at least need to talk about it. So there's this kind of notion that, um, that this, this isn't my stance necessarily. I'd be happy to share my stance, but that the scientific community has kind of cloaked its errors. And so there are a lot of people in the general public, they're like, don't give these universities a dime, let them dip into their endowments. And the last thing I want to say about that is not every university has large endowments. Most public universities do not have large endowments. And the last thing I want to say about that is, not every university has large endowments, most universities do not have large endowments. It's also true that universities
Starting point is 03:08:30 don't like to spend their endowments. And the typical way that they hide behind that their their endowments or endowment spending is to say that money is earmarked for other things, right? So it's, which is not to say that it isn't. But and then the last thing and I know I'm going kind of fire Hose here, but I want to make sure this comes out Is that the big issue that is really on the table as well as this notion of indirect costs? Guys are finance guys. So basically a laboratory get it might get a grant of a million dollars across four years
Starting point is 03:09:00 So 250 a year for four years and the university then gets what are called indirect costs so 250 a year for four years. And the university then gets what are called indirect costs. They get, let's say 500K typically. It's anywhere from 300K on the million to up to 750K on the million. There are a few cases of even more than that. The so-called indirect funds that take care of administrative costs
Starting point is 03:09:17 and the basic costs of doing research. And earlier this year, the Trump administration said, we're cutting that to 15% across the board for all universities. And that was very prominent on X, because Elon retweeted it, and a number of other people retweeted it. And I would say,
Starting point is 03:09:34 while the indirects have been very controversial, I just personally, it's my view, okay, this is my personal view, is that a severe cut to the indirects, while on the face of it might sound good, that's going to disproportionately hurt the public schools without large endowments, okay, because they don't have money to dip into. And you know, something more in the range of 30% seemed
Starting point is 03:09:56 reasonable to me based on my understanding of what those funds are used for. But historically, there've been some challenges with indirects, you know, there were universities, I won't mention which caught for spending some indirects on things that were unrelated to the science, you know, perhaps keeping the lights on in the English department. That's typically not the case now. It's for disposal of radioactive waste. It's for, yes, chiniters.
Starting point is 03:10:16 It's for painting the walls of the building. But it's not for making, you know, a lavish lifestyle for the administrators. Right. If administrators have a lavish lifestyle, it's presumably through some other mechanism, not IDC. Yeah, there was some example, I don't know if it was UCSF or some school where they had like a multi-hundred million dollar administrative budget, and I think people really wanted to push on that.
Starting point is 03:10:36 And, but I think your concern is like, obviously there's like this massive trust issue between the public and new parts of the administration and science. And how do we rebuild that trust without destroying the entire system? Is that kind of? You nailed it.
Starting point is 03:10:55 And I would like to just highlight, in the backdrop of all of this, there is one very major emotional issue that I'm going to catch a lot of heat for this, but I don't really care anymore. And we're on X. So, yeah, a lot of I put out a post recently that said, Hey, listen, I'm, I'm very concerned about this 40% overall cut as the most severe damage to science. We're not talking about allocation. We're not talking about indirects. We're not talking about what's going to happen with that body of money. We're just accept this 40% cut.
Starting point is 03:11:28 And I'm very concerned about this, but I don't want to talk about, for instance, the fact that federal funding to Harvard or to Columbia has been frozen. And a lot of people said, well, why not? I have a lot of friends at Harvard Med and at Columbia and elsewhere. And they're like, wait, this is,
Starting point is 03:11:41 why won't you talk about that? Well, that's actually a different issue, right? The reason that money has been frozen is that in the eyes of the administration, they are Harvard and Columbia are violating civil rights laws until that's resolved. There's no discussion about NIH to be had. It's not an NIH issue. It funnels through NIH money. People are tying the issue even though just because it has some of the same buzzwords
Starting point is 03:12:06 That's interesting. I have a question about the 40% I mean there is a world where where like Where what becomes important is the ranking of what gets cut? And so my question is like within the within the basic research that you're seeing what should we be fighting for? Hardest to keep? What basic science or applied science research are you most optimistic about going forward? Because we saw this with GLP-1s, I mean I'm sure CRISPR, these stuff, this stuff was NIH funded at one point, there was a ton of research and
Starting point is 03:12:40 then we get this big boom, like but it's ten years later, what's on the frontier? What are you most excited about? And what should we be fighting for? Let's keep the funding there no matter what. Yeah, great question. In fact, the most important question. So regardless of whether or not this 40% cut happens, if it's less, if it's kept the same, a couple of things.
Starting point is 03:12:59 First of all, despite the fact that NIH funds basic research and that many laboratories, including my own for many years, focused on basic research, like how does the visual system work, we always had an eye every laboratory has an eye toward, you know, what the translational implications could be. Okay, so we were actively involved in trying to solve, you know, gla- blindness due to glaucoma, even though we were focusing on some basic questions. So I think it's a statistical issue.
Starting point is 03:13:25 If you step back and you say, okay, in the field of, let's just say vision, my former field, what is the leading cause of blindness? Cataract, but you know what? You can fix cataract. You can slide out the lens and you put in a new lens. That's being done now. Great.
Starting point is 03:13:38 What's the second leading cause of blindness? More than 70 million people worldwide. Glaucoma. You can test for eye pressures, but once the cells in the eyes start deteriorating, people go blind, there's no recovering those cells. You could say, wow, so OK, so let's take the top.
Starting point is 03:13:51 Let's take the statistically that the top causes of blindness and let's fund those. OK? Retinitis, pigmentosa, et cetera. You could do this for pretty much any field. So in the field of brain health, you'd say, OK, dementia, you'd say, okay dementia you'd say Major depression you'd say a stroke
Starting point is 03:14:10 You'd say, you know, I'm gonna piss off some people because I'm not gonna mention their their particular suffering, you know here But it's not hard to find it Parkinson's right? MS I mean, it's not hard to know what the problems are to tackle. The problem is it I mean, it's not hard to know what the problems are to tackle. The problem is deciding what the targets are. And as you mentioned, like with CRISPR, I mean, in many ways, it was a fortuitous thing, right? Doudna Lab was worrying on bacteria. I mean, it's very hard to predict what basic research is going to lead into these different
Starting point is 03:14:39 areas. But we know what the critical areas are. So I'm not trying to dodge your question. I do want to say that the emphasis from Maha on chronic disease and chronic health issues, I think has concerned some of the people in the scientific community because listen, I as a podcaster that covers science and health will be the first to say that if you're not sleeping well,
Starting point is 03:14:59 your mental health and physical health is not going to be good. You can miss a few nights sleep, but if you're chronically sleep deprived, you're sicker than you normally would be. If your gut health isn't proper, if you're not getting exercise, if you're not getting sunlight,
Starting point is 03:15:11 if you're not doing these things, of course, right? But I think that people who are in the kind of hardcore mechanistic science community are like, great, we're all gonna strive to do those things and we should, but not at the exclusion of figuring out signaling pathways that are vital for, like the GLP-1s are a beautiful example, right? This peptide acts at the level of the brain and the gut
Starting point is 03:15:31 to make people feel more full. It also, by the way, shut down the debate as to why people are fat. It's because they eat too much, right? They eat more than they burn. Remember if you used to argue about it? Yeah, yeah, totally. No, no, GLP-1 silenced that. Yeah, that's totally. Yeah. No, no, JLP one silenced that it's like, yeah
Starting point is 03:15:46 Now are they eating too much because of a hormone issue relate to having too much fat? Maybe there's some depression feel short like I fully acknowledge like I'm not trying to be completely insensitive But like but we isolated the problem by understanding that this peptide Discovered in heel the discovery of this is we're spending two sentences on please Yeah discovered in Healy, the discovery of this is we're spending two sentences on please feel a monster a reptile that doesn't need to eat very often makes a lot of this peptide that it turns out is manufactured by humans to and if you increase 1000 fold in humans, you know, you're not hungry anymore. And
Starting point is 03:16:15 so I think that you know, the guy studying helomons, the helomons or I doubt was thinking about curing obesity. But there you go now and of course, there's a debate to every one of these things No medication should ever replace lifestyle factors, right? Yeah, there are many Look, I think we sometimes fail as healthy fit people We fail to understand that lifestyle factors are very hard for people to implement even if they have copious amounts of disposable income and some free time, it's just tough. It's just tough. It's hard to do. And so I think that the
Starting point is 03:16:52 emphasis on nutrition and exercise is wonderful. I don't think anyone on either side of the political debate would argue that Maha in principle, make America healthy again, isn't a great thing. I think what they probably would appreciate hearing, I'm speaking for kind of more science mechanistic biology minded folks They'd probably like to hear a little bit more about hey, you know They're probably signaling pathways in the brain that are relevant to you know to depression that maybe Next class of antidepressant drugs are probably good I don't think anyone would say there's no need to develop antidepressant drugs We probably take too many of the ones that don't work and have too many side effects,
Starting point is 03:17:28 but as a country. But when, so when you say what are the most important things, what we really need is a, is a very rationally grounded planning committee, a sit back and say, you know what, we're going to put X number of dollars towards this X number of dollars towards that X number of dollars towards this. And this is where I think Dr. Bhattacharya really shined on the podcast. He said, and I would totally agree. And I have already, my phone's been blowing up with some anger from colleagues about this.
Starting point is 03:17:54 Much of the work that's funded by NIH, here's the dirty secret, is already completed. Because they tend to fund things that are very certain to be completed. And so people put forward grants based on work and preliminary data showing I can do this and it's already kind of worked out, then they use the money for the next iteration.
Starting point is 03:18:13 This is the dirty secret of every NIH funded lab. And it tends to favor a kind of pedestrian, more pedestrian science. Then they use foundation money and they use other sources to kind of do the high risk stuff. But if you were to look at like one of the more impressive funding bodies in science, like the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, right, gives the equivalent HHMI folks, as they're called, they always say it's not that much money, but let me,
Starting point is 03:18:40 we can do the test, we can take away their money and we can see how well they do or don't do. They don't like doing that. It's like being on academic steroids, right? Yeah, the equivalent of three grants per year basically NIH grants per year and More money translates to when it's excess money. I know that word excess money You know scares investors, especially if they're taxpayers But if that money is being used to fund really, like really bold hypotheses, like it's my opinion that every single peptide, not just GLP-1, every single peptide shouldn't be getting tested
Starting point is 03:19:12 in the gray market of like gyms and like biohacking. That's frankly, that's bullshit. Yeah, and isn't the reason that we don't have good studies on a lot of peptides is it's not profitable to study them because they're effectively naturally occurring and you can't patent, like, is that correct there? Like BPC 157, right? You hear about that all the time is,
Starting point is 03:19:33 will it accelerate healing? The animal studies are solid. There's no human studies. My good friend, Peter Atiyah, is like, I'm not gonna touch that stuff. There's no clinical data in humans. And the rest of us are like, I'm not going to touch that stuff. There's no clinical data in humans. And the rest of us are like, well, I take it and it works. And there's no reason for a drug company to take it.
Starting point is 03:19:51 I'll take it transiently for like a joint issue. Yeah, but the core issue and I've taken it too. I've benefited from it. I recommended it to John a couple of weeks ago. He had an injury. I just said, hey, I'm not going to like, this is not something I'm it to John a couple weeks ago he had a he had an injury I just said I hey I'm not gonna like this is not something I'm gonna take you know weekly for my entire life but in certain instances but but breakdown that specifically that you're saying because it's because it's
Starting point is 03:20:15 effectively science there's not there's no real ability would a drug company have to create some variation of it in order to patent it? Is that is that? Yeah, in fact, and here I'm going to catch heat from everybody. But you know, the pharma companies that make GLP ones, I mean, most people have realized that GLP ones are very expensive and the dosages that they're typically prescribed, people get some discomfort. And so the new thing is people get it compounded at a compounding pharmacy and
Starting point is 03:20:44 they're they're microdosing GLP-1s. The number of women that I know who are microdosing GLP-1 in service to the spring and summer, outrageous, right? Yeah. Outrageous. Yeah, it's outrageous. And the idea is that GLP-1 is a good example. I mean, again, insulin is a peptide, you know, but there are many peptides.
Starting point is 03:21:06 Like for instance, I'm very excited about this peptide, pinealin, for sleep, right? And it's for some other properties too. But there's no reason why a drug company would go patent pinealin. They're busy patenting drugs like the recent class of drugs, the Doras. This is an interesting story.
Starting point is 03:21:21 Work on a peptide called hypocretin. This peptide is involved in generating wakefulness. It's also in the feeding pathway. And there's a new class of sleep drugs that suppresses the wakefulness pathway as opposed to making you more sleepy. So lower abuse potential. The Doras have been released, right?
Starting point is 03:21:38 They maintain the architecture of sleep pretty well compared to other sleep drugs like Ambien, et cetera. Here's the issue. They're about $325 a month. So for a lot of people, that's prohibitively expensive. And they're patented. Yeah, to put it in context, that's a luxury gym membership. Right.
Starting point is 03:21:55 Which is a unique. Pinealin probably costs you, and I'm not suggesting people take pinealin. I'm not a physician, so talk to your physician and then ignore him or her. If you two, don't do that on my suggestion. It would cost you about $15 a month, right? And you know, for me personally, it has allowed me to get two and a half hours of REM sleep a night in a six hour
Starting point is 03:22:16 sleep bout. So I've shortened my sleep bout to about six hours a night with a lot of deep sleep. And the pinealin, is it completely safe? Reasonably, but we don't know. We don't have clinical trials. Now I'm willing to run that experiment on me, but are you willing to run that experiment on you is the question and that's where it gets down to personal freedoms and that's a, I don't wanna cover too many things here,
Starting point is 03:22:36 but I will say that Robert Kennedy has been pretty vocal about, at least before the election, about wanting things like peptides and stem cells and supplements to be more widely available. The truth is they're pretty widely available now. And I will put an asterisk on stem cells. I know a very prominent public facing physician who is almost paralyzed permanently from a stem cell injection into the disc of his back. I talked to a neurosurgeon friend who ultimately saved his life, by the way. This is a well-known story within the wellness community. And he said, yeah, the discs can't accept
Starting point is 03:23:11 stem cell injections, but if you go down to Mexico or you go out of country and you say, you know, my back is hurting, they'll inject stem cells into the disc of your back. So is this to say that stem cells are bad? No, they're not ready for clinical use yet. And the United States has been very careful about things like this, because before they were careful,
Starting point is 03:23:31 there was a clinic down in Florida that injected some stem cells into the eyes of people with macular degeneration who were worried about going blind. And guess what? They all went blind right away, permanently. So I do want any discussion about peptides and these kind of things.
Starting point is 03:23:46 When you get into the realm of stem cells, it starts getting to be a serious matter. So I don't want to give the impression, I'm like, oh yeah, try this, do that, shoulder hurt, put some stem cells in. When you're talking about stem cells, you're talking about cells that can become essentially anything, including tumors.
Starting point is 03:24:00 Yeah. I talk about, I'm curious I mean you you and and Rob I feel like do such a good job of threading the sort of needle around having conversations without giving endorsements for specific things that are untested and really focused on understanding helping people understand the world the science themselves and then take the actions that they themselves as well as their doctors believe they should take. Do you think that podcasters generally in health don't really understand broadly the
Starting point is 03:24:40 responsibility they have? I remember when I was in college, there was a popular tech podcaster at the time that would pretty much widely endorse microdosing, right? And I looked up to this guy, right? It looks psychedelics, right? Yeah, psychedelics, right? And in hindsight, I look back on that and I'm like, that is so wildly irresponsible to basically recommend,
Starting point is 03:25:05 you know, there's microdosing, some people report tremendous benefits, I'm wildly irresponsible to basically recommend you know, there's microdosing, some people report tremendous benefits, but to sort of broadly endorse something in hindsight feels insane. And I don't think people fully grasp the responsibility that they have and just how much impact they can have on an individual or how a community thinks about something. Yeah, I mean, Rob and I, we take it super seriously.
Starting point is 03:25:27 I mean, I've probably taken heat for a bunch of things in the larger science community, but probably one of the things I've taken the most heat for is my belief that certain supplements can be helpful, not as a replacement for good behaviors and for prescription drugs. I'm a fan of certain prescription drugs. Listen, I've read an episode on ADHD and talked about the prescription drugs and took a ton of heat from the kind of natural folks. And then I did one on behavioral tools for ADHD
Starting point is 03:25:54 and took a lot of heat from the folks who said, hey, listen, my kid got a lot of benefit from taking stimulants for ADHD. So we do weave back and forth and on that kind of knife edge, and it can be tricky. In terms of microdosing, because I saw it come up in the comments before today's discussion,
Starting point is 03:26:08 and so it's just kind of flagged in my mind, the data on microdosing psilocybin are basically clear that it's not known to have any major effect on major depression, or some of the other things that psilocybin is being tested for clinically, including major depression, PTSD, et etc. The data from clinical trials out of Robin Cardart-Harris' lab at UCSF and elsewhere on high-dose psilocybin, so macro dose, right, you know, two and a half grams, four grams is the
Starting point is 03:26:38 quote-unquote heroic dose if you're speaking Northern California language. You know, those dosages done in pretty, maybe, you know, two weeks apart or so with the support of a clinical staff going into it, through it, out of it, etc. have been very successful in those trials for the treatment of depression. Microdosing has shown very little effect. MDMA was put up to the FDA last year as a potential treatment for PTSD. It has not been approved. It did not pass approval. Unfortunately, as a component of those trials, there were some sexual improprieties in one of the clinical conditions that, you know, all it takes is, you know, one bad incident, right? And then it was very, but it queued people to this larger theme. How are you going to protect patients
Starting point is 03:27:25 who are really in, they're not incapacitated, but they're not in a position to really advocate for themselves, that you need probably multiple clinicians in the room and checks and balances. So I think ultimately it will be approved. The remission rates on PTSD, by the way, from properly dosed and spaced MDMA is remarkable,
Starting point is 03:27:43 up to somewhere between 60 and 70% remission rates on PTSD. And the new thing that people are very excited about is Ibogaine or Ebola, a 22-hour psychedelic journey. This has been tested largely from Nolan Williams' lab at Stanford for the, it seems to, in one or two sessions, it has led to a significant number of veterans essentially ceasing their alcohol use disorder, what is typically called alcoholism and opioid use disorder. But you need to be heart rate monitored while you do this.
Starting point is 03:28:14 The point here is that any discussion that we have on the podcast is, as you can tell, like I'm not known for being very succinct. It's for a reason. Right. You have to flesh out the conversation around these things. You can't just say psilocybin is good. MDMA Yeah, like works great. You know, people can really get hurt. And I think discussions around whether or not you take magnesium three and eight or bisglycinate before sleep, like, okay, you can probably speed through those a little more quickly. But when you get down to things about psychoactive drugs, in particular, schedule
Starting point is 03:28:43 one, illegal psychoactive drugs, you when you get down to things about psychoactive drugs in particular schedule one illegal psychoactive drugs you when you get down to things about Hormone therapies, you know, you're just trying to get into the into the realm of where people can really screw themselves up That said there's you know, there are a number of things that I hope that the NIH and the and the public health messaging Going forward will be more expansive about which are drugs that are currently prescribed at enormous rates in the United States and elsewhere, for which there are very severe side effects. Like there's this whole thing about people taking finasteride and deutasteride men to keep their hair and getting permanent sexual dysfunction, right? Permanent sexual dysfunction.
Starting point is 03:29:21 Some of them killing themselves as a consequence of this. These are young guys. It's clear those drugs have very different effects in young people versus old. Some people can use them safely. Some people can't. These are FDA approved drugs, as well as, you know, I think we're finally coming around to the idea that the SSRIs can be very useful for things like OCD in certain cases for depression, but it's a double-edged blade. A lot of people suffered it as a consequence. So I hope really strongly for three things. One, as a scientist who essentially has my podcasting job because of the way the NIH supported me coming up
Starting point is 03:29:54 through graduate school, postdoc, my lab, I think a 40% cut would be too severe. Regardless of the IDC issue, I think it's just too severe. It's going to kneecap science throughout the world and help the growth of new discoveries throughout the world. I'd like to keep that funding level. I really would.
Starting point is 03:30:15 What happens to IDC? What happens to Harvard and Columbia? Separate matter within there. But then I would very much like a very thoughtful committee to go in and look at every single grant. Every single grant by area. Yeah, you have to have a scalpel, not a- You have to have a scalpel.
Starting point is 03:30:30 And you could say, I mean, listen, in the field of neuroscience, am I the most qualified to decide what grant should be funded or not funded? No, but I can tell you that I sat on study section for a long time and I can tell you there were clusters of grants that didn't solve what we call, what good labs call the deletion test. If this laboratory didn't exist, would it change the direction of science? You have
Starting point is 03:30:48 to pass the deletion test. So it's not solved. You have to pass the deletion test. If you didn't exist, would it matter? It's a harsh test. Nobody wants to be subject to that test. But anyone that's getting millions and millions of taxpayer dollars, and by the way, millions of taxpayer dollars often to work on and kill. And we could argue about that. I think most people are species. They'd rather see a mouse or a rat life or a nonhuman primate life. You know, we're killing animals. We're occupying the lives of graduate students and postdocs with taxpayer dollars. The work needs to be justified by passing the deletion test. And the idea that AI could do that, maybe,
Starting point is 03:31:28 but the idea that a jury of close peers are gonna decide the deletion test, and if you pass, that's flawed in my opinion. Because the in-culture, we don't have time for this, but the in-culture of science is, people aren't helping each other out just to help each other out, but when you're very close to something,
Starting point is 03:31:43 it's very hard to make a really clear decision about it. And when you're too far from it, you're not qualified to. So we need people that are in the middle who can really go in and say, okay, in the field of, let's say, visual repair and neuroscience, give me a scalpel. I hate to do it, but also, you know, some are going to pass. And then I do think that instead of cutting people's funding entirely, there should be initiative saying, hey, listen, if you want to run a laboratory, would you be interested in working on these important projects that maybe the Americans paying for this research ought to be able to vote up vote? Why not?
Starting point is 03:32:16 I mean, it's 2025. And the NIH has done beautiful work over the last funded beautiful work over the last hundred years. But I think an update in the way these things are handled is great. As I say that Every single one of my colleagues is probably quaking that they're not going to pass the deletion test Except the ones that know they would absolutely pass the deletion test and then the question is who's making the decision and I'm not saying I should be making that decision. Although I have some strong opinions about what's great
Starting point is 03:32:40 What's meh and and what's like lousy, but I do think what's great, what's meh, and what's lousy. But I do think we need to be more discerning the same way that a bunch of VCs would sit around and say, hey, what are we getting for this investment? Well, yeah, I think the question they ask is, if we don't make this investment, is the world gonna be worse off? Like, does this company, I think it's not
Starting point is 03:33:02 quite the same test, but I think it's important for investors to run that process and understand, are we really funding the future that we want, or is this kind of a rounding error, and the dollars would be better elsewhere? Can you give us a white pill? Are there any other organizations
Starting point is 03:33:17 that can come in and help? I always think of what happened in computer science and artificial intelligence. Google created the transformer architecture, not patentable. It created large language models and we got chat GPT and we got all this great stuff. It would be amazing if we could find a way that the big pharma companies that are big and profitable
Starting point is 03:33:38 wind up stepping in and funding some of the gap. Maybe there's nonprofits, maybe we just, you know, the sheer will of the American people, there's nonprofits, maybe we just, you know, the sheer will of the American people, we wind up voting for more funding. But how do we really make science amazing and ensure really strong progression over the next few decades? Yeah, I mean, that's the key question, right?
Starting point is 03:33:59 So, I mean, listen, I was born at Stanford Hospital, yeah, I did my training, much of it at Stanford, I'm gonna say I'll probably die at Stanford I don't know in the hospital. I'd like to die getting morning sunlight or something. But My dad's my dad's a physicist turned computer scientist, right? Worked at Xerox Park, which was an incubator for ideas, right? Yeah, so I grew up in that landscape and you know, he always said, you know, eventually degrees in computer science Will be important for starting companies, right? But when I was young, that wasn't the case, right?
Starting point is 03:34:27 People dorked around on computers and made video games. And then we saw cell biology migrate into the world of biotech and for the treatment of certain diseases. It has been, I mean, we can't forget that there are certain basic discoveries going back to our earlier discussion that have led to tremendous treatments like the drops to lower eye pressure and glaucoma. If you catch your eye pressure elevation early and you take those drops, you will keep your
Starting point is 03:34:48 vision. Wow. Right. We'll keep your vision. So it's not like we can't cure glaucoma, but you have to that's based on basic work. So the real key here is to ask, you know, so where has it been done successfully before it's been done successfully in the world of computer science and AI, right? Growing up, I heard about AI.
Starting point is 03:35:05 It was kind of like no one took AI seriously growing up. Or brain machine interface was like... It's just sci-fi. That was so sci-fi. Seriously. Now my good friend from childhood, Eddie Chang, who's the chair of neurosurgery at UCSF, he's using BMI, brain machine interface, and AI to get people with locked-in syndrome to speak. And Elon's going to get them to move. syndrome to speak and to and Elon's gonna
Starting point is 03:35:25 get them to move. I fully believe that Neuralink is going to solve paralysis. Yeah, I really do. I'm not saying that because we're on X. I know the head neurosurgeon there. They're well on their way. Right? Yeah.
Starting point is 03:35:35 So the question is, when should it move into biotech? And you know, Peter Thiel had the breakthrough labs idea. He was paying people to not go pursue graduate degrees in labs to get the PI like me, papers, and advance their careers and then maybe go get their own lab, but to take great ideas and go through breakthrough labs. I don't know what happened to breakthrough labs, but I do think that incubators like that, where you have enough money to test, you know, to move fast, right? You know, move fast, break things model, figure out whether or not something is promising, and then advance advance that and here's the key as soon as something looks promising you want to be able to pour human power onto that and the problem in academia is every graduate student in postdoc needs a first author paper in order to have
Starting point is 03:36:20 The potential to get a job and so one thing that I'm you know been in J to have the potential to get a job. And so one thing that I've been in Jay Bhattacharya's ear about is, I think the independent investigator model of science in this country, where it's the Huberman lab or it's the whatever lab named after the PI, I think that's a flawed model. This is gonna really upset some people. There should be labs named after a particular mission
Starting point is 03:36:40 like curing blindness laboratory or solving Alzheimer's laboratory. And then people can collaborate within that lab without the idea that they're necessarily going to go start their own lab. In Europe, typically there's a lab head and it's very hierarchical, but people who get PhDs often stay in those labs as permanent careers. They get paid better and better. The NIH has not had a mode to keep paying people as staff scientists.
Starting point is 03:37:04 And most people don't want to go off and run their own labs. So I think the ability to iterate more quickly, much like a tech company funded by NIH would be enormously beneficial. And I could be wrong, but I think that's going to be music to most people who would like to go to graduate school. Because what it means is that you can be on the bench next to someone and they get the thing that's really interesting. And rather than feel like, shit, I got nothing, you can now start working together to accelerate the progress of that work. And so now who can go off and run a lab
Starting point is 03:37:33 becomes a separate issue, but it really becomes discovery-based science. And we can't forget that the taxpayers are funding this. So this is like, as much as we'd all like that the next generation of scientists to all have their own labs, I think what'd all like it, the next generation of scientists all have their own labs. I think what we really want is for the next generation of scientists to have the opportunity
Starting point is 03:37:49 to make fundamental discoveries that seed health and cures and treatments for disease, right? I mean, do we really care about the careers of scientists? No, that we care about treatments and cures for disease. The careerist model. Well, I do think I do think it matters that that young people aspire to be scientists. Yes. And that is a concern that I have about the destruction of trust between the public and the science community via covid.
Starting point is 03:38:18 The concern is that you'll have a, you know, a 10 year period, a decade, you know, a decade where young people say, well, I'm not gonna go into science because they have some, and I think that that's the work that you do with Huberman Lab has potential to heal that divide between the public and the science community and one of the reasons why I think it's so important. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:38:40 Yeah, I mean, listen, one of the most, the three most gratifying things I can hear as feedback for the podcast or I can't believe this is free You know that that feels good That people are sleeping better like oh goodness I made a few morning sunlight and dim the lights and a few things in the evening and like I'm sleeping better because I know that Catalyzes many many other positive changes and then the third one and the one that's most heartening to me as a scientist, less as a health podcaster,
Starting point is 03:39:07 is when people say, like, you really turned me on to like neuroscience, or I'm going into the field of psychology, I wanna be a therapist, but I'm really starting to incorporate some physiological tools with my patients. That to me is, those are the three most gratifying things.
Starting point is 03:39:22 As you can probably tell, I'm very impassioned by this, right? Folks close to me know this is how I talk all the time. No, I haven't had any caffeine in the last, you know, four or five hours, just depending. We have, we have. I've got it here. Yeah, I do, I do.
Starting point is 03:39:35 I'm glad you love this stuff, all right. We love it, we drink it every day. We debated, we didn't have time, but I debated having you join the call and it was just stacks of cans so you couldn't even see us. I do four of these have time, but I debated having you join the call and it was just stacks of cans that you couldn't even see us. Four of these a morning minimum, but I have a very high caffeine tolerance. And, uh, you know, in fast metabolizer, the fast metabolizer.
Starting point is 03:39:54 And, and you know, there are many issues I care deeply about, but what you just put your finger on is so key. If this 40%, I know people are like, don't give them this money. They fucked up during the pandemic Excuse my language or they lied. Listen these kids that would potentially become scientists we can harness their energy They didn't lie. They didn't do anything Yeah and if you if we train them properly and we put them into an environment where the spirit of that environment is just
Starting point is 03:40:20 Discovery based maybe a little less careerist a little more discovery based You know, and we really fund the most important work. We can really transform the treatment and cures for all these diseases that everyone is so concerned about. I know that because it's proved to be the case every single time. If you look at AIDS, there are two things that led to the treatments and you know, AIDS isn't fully cured, but it's a very different landscape now than in the 80s. Two things, right? Money and emotion. And it came emotion first and money and then a bunch of scientists and labs and a bunch of funding. Okay. So where the reason we don't have a cure for schizophrenia, even though it's 1% of the world's population is sadly, it tends to run in families. There's not a strong lobby for research on schizophrenia. The director of NIMH told me that, former director Bob Desimone.
Starting point is 03:41:08 The reason there's so much interest in autism is that any human being with half a heart looks at a kid, and I'm not talking about kids that are on the spectrum or a little neurodivergent who, you know, I work with those people. Like, we're not talking about that. I'm talking about kids that have like stereotype motion, can't be in an open environment, will forever need support. I'm not trying to like split the spectrum motion can't be in an open environment will forever need support I'm not trying to like split the spectrum, but there there are kids on the spectrum that really struggle, right? Okay
Starting point is 03:41:31 and so the reason there's so much interest in in finding treatments for things like that or for major depression is because many many people suffer right and what's required is money and Scientists working on the right problems and ditching the things that aren't promising. The faster you can iterate, the better. And so I do think the Silicon Valley model has something to offer. And I don't know what the latest update is on breakthrough labs. And if Peter's moved on from that, I haven't heard much about it. But that doesn't mean that they don't have something interesting. But look, as you can tell. Yeah, the key is if you have one car that comes out, it's not so great. You don't destroy the car industry.
Starting point is 03:42:12 You don't basically dismantle the entire system. This car hurt people, so we should just eliminate all cars. Yeah, look, I think in engineering, we're on X after all like an engineering More of an engineering stance on on basic research is helpful It's also true that you know, I can name off countless discoveries in biology where You know an accident of leaving something and you know on the shelf too long or something led to an interesting discovery I mean there is some fortuitous aspect to it, but
Starting point is 03:42:44 Now with AI you can also run lots of hypotheses in silico, more in vitro, then move to in vivo models. I mean, there is a way to make the money go further. But ultimately, there's no replacement for great ideas. And there's no replacement for human energy. And the best source of human energy that I know is youth. And so you need to catch people when they're coming out of college, not send them to work in a lab for three years before they might go to graduate school
Starting point is 03:43:13 then realize that they can't make a good living compared to their friends in finance. Like you're not gonna get rich doing science, although some scientists do get rich, right? I mean, Genentech was started by scientists. I mean, there are companies, you know, but ultimately you want to harness that energy of youth and the spirit of discovery and give people the resources.
Starting point is 03:43:34 I had wonderful mentors and one of the most important things they taught me was you get money, you give it to young people and you get the fuck out of their way and let them try. And then when they don't work, you guide them and you say listen like you're wasting your time move on like no no no no and they get down to it no move on it's like a bad relationship cut and run and then that you just start the next thing and so and eventually you get hits and then if you compile human power onto those
Starting point is 03:44:01 hits right I'm just describing what everyone knows to be true but this is not the way that the system has been designed it is It is old and clunky and it doesn't need to be scraped Or you know hacked in half almost at a 40 cut, but it does need to be revised. It really does. Yeah Well, this is fantastic I want to hit the gong for you. Can you give us a stat? How big is the Huberman Lab podcast now? Can you give us an idea of the scale of the impact you've had? We like to hit the gong when we hear big numbers.
Starting point is 03:44:34 He's looking over at Rob. He's like, no, no, don't leak any numbers. Even some rough numbers. Just any number, maybe just one episode hit, a million downloads. Give us some number, something to hit the gong. Those are rookie numbers. Those are rookie numbers. Yeah. So, so what can I say one thing first please anything that you
Starting point is 03:44:50 know rankings reflect acceleration not absolute reach yes yeah like rogue it like when people go like Rogan's not in Rogan's reach is like beyond I know the numbers I'm not gonna talk about his numbers but it's it's like it's an order of magnitude greater than all the other major News hubs combined. Oh, yeah But no, we are very blessed to reach, you know 20 million people This was an important conversation. This was fantastic.
Starting point is 03:45:26 I'm excited for people to get into the entire episode. Yes. It's fantastic. It's over four hours long. No, and thank you. If nothing else, with the Hebrew in the Lab podcast, I always say, if nothing else, I'll cure insomnia. But no, the in all seriousness, it's
Starting point is 03:45:41 timestamps so you can break it down. If you want to get right to the vaccine stuff, skip to that. It's fantastic. I listened to it last night. It's great. The You can break it down if you want to get right to the vaccine stuff skip to that That's fantastic. I listen to it last night Can be digested however you want. Yeah, I want to say thanks to you guys I started watching your show since you had Rob on fantastic. You guys do is great I also think that you're transforming the way that media is is, you know dispersed each week and you know, and and it's awesome Yeah, that's doing what you do and elsewhere. So thanks so much. We appreciate it. Thank you so much for stopping us. You guys are both welcome any time.
Starting point is 03:46:07 Yeah, any time. This is really fun. If you ever need more Matina, let us know. Oh, yeah. We can always use more. We got a fridge. We're going to park a fridge right here. We're going to do it.
Starting point is 03:46:15 The whole crew back there is cheering for Matina. Where are you guys based? We're in Los Angeles, in Hollywood. Yeah. All right. We'll come right over. It's a nice day out. Yeah, we'll see you soon.
Starting point is 03:46:23 Thanks so much for helping us. Awesome. You're the man. Cheers. All right. We'll come right over. See you soon. It's a nice day out. Yeah, we'll see you soon. Thanks so much for having us. Awesome. You're the man. Cheers. All right. Fantastic episode. Very fun. Well, folks, we had 30 minutes scheduled with Andrew,
Starting point is 03:46:33 and we just went longer. But we have some breaking news. We can go to the breaking news camera. Hopefully it's coming out. The breaking news printer. The breaking news printer. If you want breaking news. Watch it live as it comes out.
Starting point is 03:46:44 I got a note that it's slightly out of. I see the laser working. What is this? What is this? Whoa. Shane Copeland. Whoa. Shane Copeland.
Starting point is 03:46:53 Polymarket says, X and XAI are live on Polymarket. When I check Polymarket to get a gist of what's going on in the world, I always wish there was more context. Now there is the first of many XAI partners with Polymarket to blend market predictions with X data and Grox analysis. Hardcore Truth Engine, see what shapes the world. The Truth Engine, let's give it up for Truth Engines. We love Truth Engines.
Starting point is 03:47:16 This has been a fantastic show. We will be at YC Demo Day tomorrow. We have a flight to catch. We covered most of the news. You've heard it. We talked about it yesterday. OpenAI hit 10 billion in ARR, almost 2x. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 03:47:28 We hardly touched that. Since the end of 2024. Yeah. It's just a casual 10 billion ARR. You know, it happens. Happens all the time. Yep. And yeah, I think that's pretty much it for the timeline.
Starting point is 03:47:41 I don't know if there's anything else you want to cover. I mean, maybe we can close it out with this fantastic post from Mert who's in on the show from Helios He says having 300 million dollars liquid is truly an interesting limbo golden handcuffs in a way You have almost infinite money for daily expenses like groceries Amazon binges and chill little vacations But you can't really splurge on anything sick You have just enough money to think about making a real boy amount, but a razor thin margin for air if you screw it up.
Starting point is 03:48:11 You're also at the exact amount where it becomes cozy and hard to motivate yourself to go that much harder. Tough spot, TBH. Tough spot. Oh, we love Mert. He's an all time poster. I love him, we gotta get him back on the show. He's so fun. Banger. Banger. Great place to end. Yeah, we'll always close. He's an all-time poster. I love him. We got to get him back on the show. He's so fun.
Starting point is 03:48:25 Banger. Banger. This is great. Yeah, we'll always close out with a banger. Anyway, thanks for watching. Looking forward to tomorrow. Leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. If you're in SF and you're at Demo Day, come by and say hi.
Starting point is 03:48:35 We'd love to talk to you. Looking forward to it. Have a great one. Cheers, folks. We'll talk to you soon. Bye.

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