TBPN Live - Elon Musk Is Leaving Washington, Meta Partners With Anduril, Kim Jong Un's "Side Launch" Goes Sideways | Peter Rahal, John Andrew Entwistle, Ashlee Vance, Chase Lochmiller, Matan Grinberg, Jonny Dyer, David Hsu, Sushanth Raman, Rob Toews
Episode Date: May 29, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wa...nder.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.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(02:56) - Elon Musk Is Leaving Washington (12:01) - Meta Partners With Anduril (20:48) - Trump's War On American Universities (26:05) - Kim Jong Un's "Side Launch" Goes Sideways (29:38) - Peter Rahal. Peter is the founder of David, a new protein company focused on clean-label, functional nutrition products. He previously co-founded RXBAR, which was acquired by Kellogg’s for $600 million in 2017. (46:44) - Ashlee Vance. Ashlee is a journalist and author best known for Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future. He also authored When the Heavens Went on Sale and Core Memory, and writes extensively about tech and innovation for Bloomberg Businessweek. (01:03:01) - Chase Lochmiller. Chase is the co-founder and CEO of Crusoe Energy, a company that converts stranded natural gas into power for data centers. Crusoe is focused on reducing carbon emissions while powering compute-intensive applications. (01:32:01) - Matan Grinberg. Matan is the co-founder of Factory, an AI startup building "Droids" — autonomous agents that assist with writing and maintaining software code. Factory aims to reimagine how engineers build products. (01:49:58) - Jonny Dyer. Jonny is the founder and CEO of Muon Space, a satellite company focused on climate monitoring. His team is developing spacecraft to deliver high-fidelity Earth data for scientific and commercial use. (02:01:15) - David Hsu. David is the founder and CEO of Retool, a platform that lets developers build internal tools remarkably fast. Retool is used by companies of all sizes to power critical business workflows. (02:20:51) - Sushanth Raman. Sushanth is the co-founder and CEO of Pallet, a platform connecting online creators and their communities to jobs and opportunities. He previously worked at Google and Retool. (02:40:13) - Rob Toews. Rob is a partner at Radical Ventures, a VC firm focused on AI. He writes a regular column for Forbes on artificial intelligence and previously worked at Highland Capital Partners. (03:01:06) - John Andrew Entwistle. John is the founder and CEO of Wander, a network of smart vacation homes designed for remote workers. Wander recently raised $50 million in Series B funding to expand across the U.S.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're watching TVPN.
Today is Thursday, May 29, 2025.
We are live from the TVPN Ultra Dome.
Oh, that's right.
The Temple of Technology.
The Fortress of Finance.
The Capital of Capital.
But now it's also the TVPN Ultra Dome.
You heard it here first.
It's a rough year to be a Super Dome.
Because you thought you were at the top of the food chain,
you know, just as far as domes go. then a new player comes and then I know where yeah
No one saw it coming. No one's kind of like oh like Google we try to react to chat GPT
You know kind of blindsided by LLM GPT moment for super domes. Yeah, exactly. Exactly
The ultra dome comes out and you're like, no one now. Maybe we have to build an ultra dome
Maybe we got to compete
How are we gonna do that? So?
We'll go down for dome with the best of us
We will we will
Anyway, we got a bunch of news for you
We're gonna take you through about 30 minutes of recap in the news. Then we got a stacked lineup
Ashley Vance is coming on chase Locke Miller from Crusoe energy is coming on we're we're talking to folks about
Putting data centers in space we're talking about crew
We're talking to chase the Crusoe about putting putting data centers in Texas
Yeah, and then the only thing bigger than Texas the space space
I'm more of an Abilene guy. Yeah, I know you like space. I do like space. I know you like space data centers.
I'm really excited to talk to Peter Rahal from David Barr.
He's making a fortune.
He's back in the bar game.
It's remarkable.
And I think the growth, I would say unprecedented.
What was the number?
145?
140, they're targeting 140 million in revenue
in the first 12 months of operations.
That's insane.
And it would be clear about 10% of that probably
was from me when I was living on them exclusively
for a couple of weeks because they cost a lot,
but that's still very impressive.
But yeah, it's one thing to get to a run rate like that,
but even that is extremely difficult to do,
but to actually do $140 million in revenue that quickly
and seemingly has product market fit from coast to coast.
They have big presence in the typical wellness cities,
but then also in like middle of nowhere.
Yeah, yeah, it's crazy.
It's crazy.
These second acts from these founders, they should work,
but sometimes they don't, but he clearly knocked it out
of the park with this. So we're gonna be talking to him today on the show. Anyway
speaking of space manufacturing, space data centers, we have an update on
Elon Musk. He's leaving Washington. Here's how that affects the Trump agenda.
Interesting story with Elon. Obviously he went into DC, built out the Doge team,
had some wins, had some losses, some losses some setbacks some arguments some debates
But he has now concluded his tenure as a special government employee departing the White House
It's back to work on space, baby. Yes. He's going back in it. There's a there's a lot of stake at SpaceX
We're seeing the the ninth launch
interestingly We're seeing the ninth launch. Interestingly, the latest Starship launch broke up again.
Another RUD, Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly.
You hate to see it.
Great name for when your spaceship blows up.
But particularly bad for the people
that were in the whole firmament camp
because it broke up on reentry.
And so it had actually reached the peak velocity.
So anyone that says, oh, it can't go through the atmosphere
at all, and space doesn't exist, bad day.
Because the latest Starship actually does, in fact,
reach its peak.
It could, in theory theory drop off payload,
and then it just breaks up on the way down,
which means it's a very expensive,
non-reusable spaceship right now,
which is of course, breaks the whole economic model,
doesn't actually work, so they gotta figure out
how to get it back without it breaking up,
but good news that they're at least getting it there,
but they have some really important milestones
on the horizon that they need to hit,
and so Elon's probably going back in there
Also, we saw that the X outage and kind of you know things falling apart there
I'm sure he's like I need to be sleeping in that conference room, too
I need to be on the factory floor space like I go directly to the conference room
I heard a rumor that there were tents set up at the X HQ
Okay for people to sleep in because it'd be over the weekend when the site was down?
Recently.
Recently, okay.
Because it was, you know, it's embarrassing
for your service to go down in such a big way.
And I'm sure that the culture there just doesn't tolerate
you know, downtime.
Although, held up really nicely for us yesterday
with Crypto Day.
Yes.
Massive day on the internet.
And the interesting thing is Tesla,
the Tesla stock price has been pricing in Elon.
Didn't even get to Tesla, yeah.
Elon leaving Washington for a while.
It's up 22% over the past month alone.
Because there was that whole Wall Street Journal report
that said that Elon might be stepping down as Tesla CEO.
And he said, absolutely not, no chance.
But yeah, I mean, he's getting back in the game.
Can you pull up the polymarket on Tesla new CEO?
I wanna see that and I'll take you through
some of the news.
Probably down, horrendously.
Probably, now that he's not working
for the government anymore.
Yeah, it's at a 1% chance as of today.
So when is Elon Musk leaving the government exactly?
As a special government employee,
Musk's tenure was limited to 130 days,
which runs out at the end of May.
A White House official said that Musk's offboarding
started Wednesday, adding that he hadn't been
a regular presence in the West Wing in recent weeks.
As my scheduled time as a special government employee comes to an end.
I would like to thank President Donald Trump
for the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending,
Musk wrote on his social media platform, X, late Wednesday.
And so-
They also cut this off
because he specifically said,
the Doge mission will only strengthen over time
as it becomes a way of life throughout the government.
And I just had to call out that the journal
had to, chose to not include the second part of that.
Oh, interesting.
Which I think is important.
He's not just saying, see ya.
He's saying, hey, I actually believe in sort of
ongoing mission of the organization.
How much of this was expected and what actually is happening because I
Feel like the prediction on the right was that?
Elon and Trump are going to be a
unstoppable force forever and they're gonna reign forever and and they're gonna clean up the government to everything and then
The other side on the left it was like are going to have the most massive blow up,
and they're going to be at each other's throats,
and they're going to hate each other, right?
And it's like, what actually happened?
Seems like they kind of did some work together.
They worked on a project together.
They did a group project.
School project.
School project.
And it seems like maybe they're still kind of friends
and kind of chilling, but also Elon's like,
I got other stuff to do.
I think that Tesla Model Y is still parked outside of,
or it's a S.
Yeah, Cybertruck or S?
Model S.
You know, Trump got the red Model S.
Oh, he did?
Parked it out front.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm guessing he's still there.
Yeah, it doesn't seem like a blow up entirely,
at least not from Trump and Elon.
They seem to get along.
Although Elon did say, like, he's kind of,
it seems like Elon's more disillusioned
with government overall, because he said he's not gonna be donating again
And that and that it seemed like like there were so many special interests that once he got into the swamp
He's like, it's just too swampy. It was like me with my HOA
You might bought my house went to the first HOA meeting
I'm gonna revolutionize HOA. There's so many obvious things that we do improve the operations of the neighborhood
Yeah, realize very quickly that that there were some major, you know, I think you weren't chaotic enough
You should have launched like an HOA coin immediately. Yeah
Really really shook things shook nobody's building at the intersection of HOA is and crypto. No
White space long like get on it
No, no. No one is.
No one is.
White space.
Long leg, get on it.
White space.
Anyway, the Democrats are taking a little bit
of a victory lap.
Democrats took credit for Musk's decision
to leave Washington, arguing that the extensive litigation
and public pressure surrounding Doge forced his hand.
He lost, democracy won, wrote Norm Eisen,
a co-counsel for the House Judiciary Committee
during Trump's first-
Which is interesting because because as a special government
employee, his tenure was limited to 130 days,
and he's leaving at the end of that.
Yeah.
So taking a victory lap and being-
That seems normal.
That's like saying you hired a contractor.
But also, I don't know.
I feel like that 130-day thing, like we're
kind of hearing about that for the first time now.
That wasn't the way it was messaged beforehand.
It was definitely messaged like,
Elon's gonna be part of this team for four years,
like expect Doge to go on a generational run here
and do a lot.
It was not like, oh, Elon's, hey, just to set the record
straight up front, he's gonna be in for 130 days.
So like, let's see what we can do then.
This is the first I've heard of the 130 day thing.
So it feels like a little bit of like-
I had heard of that from another guest
that we got on the show who is a special government employee
and he had messaged it to me.
Oh, earlier?
Like, oh, it's just a sprint.
It's a sprint.
Okay, interesting, that's cool.
That was kind of core to the Doge strategy
from the very beginning,
is special government employees
that are on these sort of shortened stints.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that makes sense.
So what did he actually do while he was in Washington?
Asks the Wall Street Journal,
Musk came into the government with bold plans
to slash spending by as much as two trillion
in rapid fire succession.
Doge and Musk dismantled agencies
such as the US Agency for International
Development and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, leaving thousands of federal employees
out of work.
Musk and his Doge team emerged after Trump's inauguration with a series of shock and awe
moves that rattled the federal workforce.
The subject, he sent an email to a lot of government employees forking the road, the
same line Musk used in a 2022 email to Twitter employees
shortly after he took over the company and renamed it X.
Tens of thousands of federal workers took the offer to quit.
I'm gonna send an email to the team tomorrow morning
with the title fork in the road and it's,
do you guys want bacon or steak breakfast?
You're gonna get some of that.
That's great.
Musk's promise to slash the federal budget
by trillions of dollars ran into the wall
of non-discretionary spending programs
such as Social Security and Medicaid.
Doge said it had saved the government $175 billion
from a combination of asset sales, contracts,
lease and grant cancellations,
workforce reductions and other moves
made since January 20th inauguration.
So it seems like maybe a decent outcome.
I don't know, it's like the, you know,
better to not waste that money, but yes, it doesn't, right,
it doesn't correct the budget.
And so it's not dramatic.
Well, the new spending bill increases it dramatically.
So it's not, it's probably like better to have done
some of that stuff than not, but the real question
is social security and Medicaid.
And so the answer to that, longevity drugs.
Move the retirement age to 95, solves all of this.
Let's get Brian Johnson.
If Brian has his way, it'll be 150.
Yeah, yeah.
Stay in the workforce, keep grinding.
It would completely change entitlements
if people could work longer,
but very unpopular to ask people to do that.
Anyway, massive news out of Anderol and Metta.
They're teaming up.
Metta fired Palmer Lucky.
Now they're teaming up on a defense contract.
The Facebook and Instagram parent
is partnering with Anderol Industries
to develop combat VR headsets for the Army.
And there's a beautiful picture of Palmer Lucky
and Mark Zuckerberg there. Let's hear it for getting the band back together love it
Ashley Vance has an exclusive interview with Palmer Lucky he's gonna be joining
the show in just a few minutes and we'll break it all down very interesting
because the narrative I was hearing internally in the defense tech world
that some of the andro haters were kind of like,
oh, they bought this IVAST contract from Microsoft,
but the contract's gonna get re-competed,
and at a certain point,
why wouldn't Meta compete against Anderil for this?
They have a great team.
They have a lot of the hardware.
They could actually deliver this.
And the contract is up there, go get it.
Well, problem solved, now they're teaming up. And so if you think about it is up there like let go get it well problem solved now. They're teaming up
And so if you think about it's like Zuck started wakeboarding doing jujitsu, and now he's a defense contractor. Let's go
The cycle is complete back to the back to the couch with the red solo cup drinking a beer
The first is that interview. It's great. All you brother. It's fantastic
but yeah
exciting exciting interesting development, so
obviously there was a messy split with Palmer lucky years ago, but
Everything we've heard about that was that it like Zuck was not super involved in that process
Which is kind of crazy to think about, but Metta was such a big. Huge CEO of a massive acquisition.
It's such a big company that yeah,
maybe you bring someone in, you kind of let them work,
and then at a certain point,
this individual is layered,
and you don't want to just immediately go over the top
of the three people that are in between you
and this new employee that you've hired,
because I don't think Palmer was the CEO of Oculus
when he went in and so it's possible
that he technically didn't,
not like he technically reported to Zuck.
And so anyway, they've clearly rebuilt the relationship.
Very exciting.
And there's been some progress even just
in public discussions on X between Boz and Palmer Lucky
going back and forth about what happened, what mistakes were made,
some apologies, and it was just very cool
that the water was able to flow under the bridge.
I really appreciated that.
Yeah, I just like to see them doing business together.
Totally, totally.
So Lucky's Defense Company, Anderol Industries,
and Meta said Thursday, they will build a line
of new rugged helmets, glasses, and other wearables
that provide a virtual reality or augmented reality experience. The system called Eagle Eye
will carry sensors that enhance soldiers' hearing and vision, detecting drones flying miles away,
or sighting hidden targets, for instance. It will also let soldiers operate and interact with
AI-powered weapon systems. Androids's autonomy software and Meta's AI models
will underpin the devices.
Very cool.
Oh, that's interesting.
Yeah, it makes sense.
You'd want to have an LLM on board to actually interface
with everything, but then you need
to interface with all the different assets
in the battlefield.
And so Lattice comes in there.
That's Andruil's autonomy software.
Soldier on the battlefield.
Llama.
What do you got for me?
Llama.
Well.
Yeah. It's like instead of like, chat GPT. Soldier on the battlefield llama. What do you got for me?
But it's like yeah, hey llama, what should I be paying attention to right now?
Dark llama bleeding out send the medevac
Rough but I mean, you know
Like like you have to put you have to put these pieces together. But Llama is a silly, silly name. But I love it.
I wouldn't be surprised if they say Eagle.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They may need to hide that brand underneath the hood.
The collaboration brings together a social media giant
that has long been the target of Washington scrutiny
and a weapons maker that is a rising star inside
of the Pentagon.
The partnership offers another example
of Silicon Valley's ideological evolution
and big techs expanding embrace of defense work.
Lucky says, I should look at this as I have succeeded,
I have successfully persuaded not just Metta,
but many others that working with the military is important.
Yep, yep.
So, cultural victory.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, in the. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, in the previous era,
the one company that was kind of pro working
with the government was Microsoft.
And of course, they had the HoloLens project,
but they were also selling Outlook and Excel
and all these different products.
And I think that just came from the Balmer era,
the Gates era, where they saw their software
as just enterprise software,
so they needed to get in the hands of everyone.
And so it became standard on pretty much every military base,
that there's Windows machines.
And so that legacy, there was never,
it was kind of like even pre-global war on terror.
And so support was at an all-time high.
Those partnerships grew and grew and grew.
And of course, the HoloLens project was very cool
and the IVAS was just a cool project to work on,
but it didn't seem like they had maybe the defense contractor
DNA to really take something into the hands
of the war fighter, even if they were able to put Excel
in the hands of the war fighter.
Yeah, what Andrew has now is credibility with Washington
and the existing relationships that
say we are going to be a distribution channel
for the best technology in the world
and work with the best partners to deliver the best end
products.
And it's a fantastic partnership.
We've got to go get the demo soon.
Meta, in recent months, has recruited former Pentagon
staff to join its ranks in an effort
to navigate the labyrinth of the defense procurement process.
In November, it opened up its AI models
for military applications, a new line
of business for the company whose profits have been
powered by online advertising.
In a statement, Zuck said the Eagle Eye technology
will help US soldiers protect interests at home and abroad.
Meta and Anderil will have jointly bid on an Army contract for VR hardware devices worth
up to about $100 million.
If awarded, it would be Meta's most significant tie-up with the Defense Department.
The contract is intended to vet headset prototypes that are part of a larger $22 billion Army
wearables project, of which Anderil became the lead vendor in February after Microsoft failed to deliver a functional VR headset
Andrew said the collaboration on the headsets which the companies have already mostly funded themselves is going forward
Irrespective of winning the army contract and role is betting other parts of the military will also be buyers
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Why wouldn't you not want this if you're in the Air Force or the Navy or the Marines?
The meta partnership delivers a victory lap
to Lucky whose entrepreneurial roots and much of his fortune
can be traced to VR.
And then they give a little bit of background
on Palmer's journey.
It's so insane.
Finally got all my toys back.
He started Oculus when he was 15 years old.
Insane, insane story.
The new partnership gives Lucky access
to all of his old VR designs,
plus newer tech his team has built after he was fired.
I finally got all my toys back, Lucky said.
I love that. That's amazing.
So good. It's still so wild that
in 2017, the US has two real political parties,
and in 2017, there was one that if you donated
to you would get fired. It made me very frustrated at the time. It was it was
very very rough. It was just like that's not that's literally anti-democratic. The
whole point of democracy is you can vote for whoever you want. Yeah. Like it's like
the one thing in democracy that is like it's like it's the definition of democracy
You have to be able to vote for whoever you want
like
It's like everything you've learned about how America's supposed to work is now just at stake is bad bad times
But yeah, there's two parties, but but you can only donate to one of them
If you donate to the other you get fired, but, what matters ultimately, all the different groups have come around
and are moving forward, so it's good to see.
In other news, we should go through,
this is a story that a lot of people have been asking me
to kind of dig into, I was talking to Jordan Schneider
over at China Talk about this, he said,
it'd be great to get people's view in tech around this more political story which
we don't really cover, but Trump's I mean currently waging a
war on American universities which does have some tech implications in the sense
that the Teal Fellowship has been in renegotiating the
relationship between entrepreneurship
and higher ed for a long time,
and then also a lot of tech companies
hire from elite universities.
And so Trump has been threatening to withhold
billions of dollars in federal research funds
to punish campuses.
There's a story in the journal here about
the punch that launched Trump's war on American universities. So I still don't
I still I still don't know exactly the angle of this. I think it's something we should dig into
I think the big question is like
America has national interests has different security interests also has competitive dynamics around brain drain and
Then you know, we want the top entrepreneurs,
we want the top technologists, the top O-1s.
The administration has a view,
big tech companies have a view.
It would be interesting to hear from tech leaders
on where they think these policies should go
around the top research universities.
When you talk to the biotech folks, they're like,
we need research to be done
in universities funded by the government
in order for our business to make sense.
You don't hear that much from tech companies.
They're like, yeah, the next big AI breakthrough
probably just gonna come from Google.
They won't be able to productize it fast enough
and we'll just roll it out into some B2B SaaS.
But at the same time, there are a ton of AI labs, Silicon Valley tech startups that want
to hire tons and tons of talented individuals from all over the world.
And there's big questions about how the Trump administration is affecting that.
There's that famous quote from Trump on the All In podcast saying, we should staple a
green card to every university diploma.
And this feels like the opposite of that. and so there's a question about like was
that a campaign promise? Big news yesterday Secretary of State Marco Rubio
said that they will begin revoking the visas of some Chinese students including
those studying in critical fields. China is the second largest country of
origin for international students in the US behind India in the 2023 to 2024 school year.
More than 270,000 international students
were from China, making up roughly a quarter
of all foreign students in the United States.
That's actually down significantly.
I saw Solana posting something yesterday as well,
just showing that that 270 number is significantly lower
than just a few years ago.
Yeah, so there is a question about like trade balance a little bit where it's like, you
know, if 270,000 Chinese citizens are coming to American universities, should 270,000 Americans
be at Chinese universities? Is there an imbalance there? That's an interesting question to dig
into just in terms of like reciprocity of these relationships.
Just like if TikTok can operate here,
well, can Instagram operate there?
That would be an interesting trade.
If there's an imbalance,
we probably need to have a discussion one way or another.
There's also the question.
Yeah.
I would have to give a very rough estimate
of how many Americans were at Fudan,
which was the university that I studied abroad in China.
And it can't, it had to have been less than 50 total,
at least that I was aware of. It was pretty easy to, you know.
At the same time, I wonder how much of a, how much of a shot across the bow, how painful is this to the Chinese government? Because
if you remember the whole story of Russia with the Magnitsky Act, it banned adoption
from Russia to America. And that was like extremely painful for some reason. I don't
exactly know why that was such a hot button issue, but that was like a key point of leverage
Against against Russia at some point
And so I wonder I want to dig into the reaction to this move by the Trump administration
By the Chinese Communist Party are they upset about this like it does this go against their plan in like a very meaningful way
Does this something that will be another poker chip
on the trade negotiations around tariffs
or around the flow of fentanyl or something like that?
Could this just be an opening gambit
that then gets negotiated down
and Trump's merely just putting this piece
on the chessboard to then negotiate against?
Or is this something that maybe China
doesn't really care about?
And they're just like, yeah,
we actually want our students here.
And so this is great for us.
Please, please send all the smart people back.
Like we don't want to be brain drained.
I don't know which way it's going to cut.
And so I want to dig into it.
Their foreign ministry spokesperson, Mao Ning said,
we urge the U. the US to effectively safeguard
the legitimate rights and interests
of all international students,
including the Chinese students overseas.
So not really a real response,
but we'll see how it plays out.
Yeah, I wonder if there'll be like retaliation
or some sort of like canceling of American students
that are in China, how this will actually play out.
But we should start asking more of the guests
about how they're reacting to this.
Especially if they have deep insight here,
I don't just want to hear random people yapp about it.
Anyway.
Guess how many American students studied in China in 2024?
5,000?
Guess again.
10,000?
Guess again. 1 thousand? Guess again.
One thousand?
Eight hundred.
Eight hundred?
So I was pretty close with being like even in this was like 2016 I was like maybe there's
fifty other students here.
That's really low.
Eight hundred's nothing.
Yeah.
I mean we have like millions of college students in America right?
You would think that you know a couple percent of them would be over there on
at least like one semester or something like that.
So there was 11000 prior to the pandemic.
OK, wow. It really fell off.
90 percent. That's crazy. Wow.
Anyway, in in other Asia news, Kim Jong-un
launched a new North Korean warship using a risky side launch
technique and it completely crashed I guess. That's brutal. After that soundboard hit you can never go to North Korea.
Pyongyang is not gonna be happy to see that. We're not gonna distribute the show in Pyongyang anytime soon unfortunately.
The unconventional technique for launching a big military vessel points to North Korea's haste in modernizing its outdated Navy and lack of resources
Kim Jong-un witnessed a warship topple over during its launch deploying a risky side launch method
Naval experts cite inexperience a rush timetable and top-heavy warships as factors in the failed launch
North Korea's chose a side launch to save costs while the US and South Korea use safer floating dock launches. Oh
very
Rough imagine you're just like you so Kim Jong-un. He traveled to North Korea's city of iron. Okay, you got to hand it to him
That's an amazing name. Let's hear for the city of iron city of iron. It's where they build the ships. Isn't that amazing?
So they have a major yeah yeah you got to call us
baiters baiters we're just calling balls and strikes here on this one we're pro
North Korea now the city of irons is too good the whole it's home to a major
industrial shipyard where a hulking warship awaited him a VIP podium had
been erected alongside the port for the vessels's launch. Officials awaited anticipation,
but the big moment of celebration turned into calamity.
The 5,000 ton destroyer lost its balance
as it lurched into the water,
toppling over an embarrassing Kim
who seeks to modernize his Soviet-era naval fleet.
And it's so funny,
because they didn't send us video, obviously.
They didn't broadcast this,
because they would only broadcast it if it's successful.
So we just had like satellite photos
of just, it's just like getting destroyed slowly, slowly.
Very, very rough.
Brutal.
What do you do if you're the chief engineer
that tips the warship over and-
Oh, I actually know what you do.
You go to jail there.
I bet.
So four North Korean officials
have been detained over the mishap, which called it an unpardonable crime.
Can you imagine the stakes of like, oh yeah,
you think it's hard being a hard tech founder in America?
Oh yeah, try doing that in North Korea
where you go to jail if you fail.
We've had nine starships just blow up and we're like,
okay, like you're sleeping in the factory now not you're going to jail
Like you're working harder our answer is you work harder not not you
Not not you go to jail
What has become clear in the aftermath is how an unconventional choice of launch method?
Kim's rush timetable and a top-heavy warship over laden with weapons systems was a recipe for disaster
They just keep being like yeah, just just throw one more missile battery on that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, put a Gatling gun on it too.
Yeah, yeah, another cannon, no problem.
Just keep doing it, and then it just rolls over.
It was a recipe for disaster according to satellite imagery
analysis.
I haven't seen a failure like this one.
I've never seen a failure.
Said a retired Marine colonel that Colonel that Walter Turtle called out,
but he's just like, this is insanely bad.
Yeah, rough.
Who are you on the phone with, Jordy?
No, just calling up Mark, Konsey, and...
Yeah, how bad is this?
Haven't seen one this bad.
I've never seen one this bad.
It was a 470 foot long warship.
Kim's second destroyer had been built in the in this in the northeastern city and did not go well
Anyway, our guests are gonna start there's a bunch more stories here. We got Peter
Hall in the waiting room cool, man. Yeah, let's do it
Peter how you doing?
Nice nice sweatshirt looking good congratulations on your second announcement of the week yep this is the first real one sorry sorry
that you got leaked but very excited for you excited to have you on the show to
break it all down.
Yeah, what is the most recent news?
I only know the incredible revenue number.
But what else is driving the news cycle right now for you
guys?
Well, so we acquired a supplier, an ingredient supplier
called Epigee.
And then, yeah, our valuationations 725. Forecast this year's 140. I think those those numbers and I think, you know, it's like, we've accomplished more in nine months than we did in our X over four years.
Wow. So I think we're I think we're one of the
ones that's what other brands have achieved that
level of revenue within a year of launch.
There's two
feastables,
prime prime.
Yeah. Yeah. Because just massive distribution
cannons and really like leveraging
like essentially like, you know,
a hundred million dollars worth of free marketing
on day one, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So what's the secret for you because-
Here it feels product led.
Yeah.
Is that the right assessment?
Obviously you have a bunch of lessons, you know,
war stories you can pull on from RxBar,
but like it feels like the product just sells itself.
Yeah. Yeah, I would say it's definitely product led. stories you can pull on from RxBar, but it feels like the product just sells itself in some way.
Yeah, I would say it's definitely product-led.
In CBG, it's pretty hard to differentiate measurably.
And 75% of our calories are coming from protein.
The market is at like 50.
So it's meaningful.
And it's an example. the market was on the surface,
you don't apply rigor, it looks pretty competitive. But if you just like spend a little time,
talk to some customers, you realize like NPS is pretty low, like no one's really happy.
And a lot of people don't just aren't even in the category because of taste and texture and nutrition. So I, the big opportunity for us in the bar business is like to
really expand the category and make delicious, nutritious products that, that
people are like, Oh, Oh, protein bars don't taste like shit. Like the
expectations that there's just, they're just gonna be bad.
Yeah. Yeah. When you say people aren't in the category, are you talking about the
difference between protein shakes, which can typically be like
extremely high protein from calorie ratio
more specifically people are like you people don't consume protein bars like you'll
Hear people say like oh, I'm just not a protein bar person sure sure sure sure yeah
Those are people like you ask them like, why not? It's fundamentally taste.
Yeah.
I want to kind of push back on this idea that it's product led.
I agree that there's product differentiation,
but this feels like it's only possible from you because if you call up a major
distributor or supplier or retail chain, they say, yes, I know you,
you, you, you have a, you have a win under your belt.
I'm willing to go big and we don't need to do
some long extended test.
This isn't to knock you, I mean,
this is why you worked really hard
and you're reaping the benefit of that.
But is that critical or do you think if you were nobody
and you were cold calling.
My position is more so like,
Peter would have the relationships
to get the bars on the shelf,
but he's not making, holding every customer that
walks into the store at gunpoint.
That's true.
By my product.
I mean, it is very different than Mr. Beast in Prime,
where you have major influencers driving this.
Like, it is more product-led in that sense.
Yeah, and I would say my credibility or track record
is like a lubricant to facilitate things.
But the repeats, and it's all product driven.
Yeah, yeah, that makes sense.
Talk about the decision to acquire
one of your major suppliers.
Was that something that you anticipated doing
a long time ago or what was the point that that made sense?
Yeah, so when we started, in our business,
you don't want any single source supplier.
It's just too much risk.
So it can become a nasty dependency.
So we identified the technology, the ingredient,
and it was like, this is like magic,
like technology should feel.
Got close with them, became 90% of their volume.
So we were basically, 90% of their volume. So we were basically, you know, 90% of the
revenue and it just made sense to vertically integrate and de-risk it and
so we can just control the supply. Yeah, and you know, I can't imagine a company
without us being together and enabling us. It just like totally
widens the aperture
of like where we can go and truly have a platform
across different products, different brands,
different consumer needs.
And is this, you're as much like acquiring a supplier,
but there's also internal IP that they have,
is that correct?
Can you break that down?
Yeah, they have patents around the trademark
and application of it.
So, you know, CBG sucks.
It does.
I know.
It sucks because of the competition.
And so, right, like, there's like,
we do this like there's three modes. There's the brand mode, which is
really abstract and takes a lot of time. So I don't put much
merit to it. But but it's a real thing. And then there's like,
trade secret mode or distribution. And then there's a
third mode, which is actual IP. And so we actually have with our
business now, and part of the reason we got a good valuation
is because we have a really defensible business
with three motes,
which allows us to protect our cash flows.
And so, you know, three years, we're not gonna have,
you know, we can't have 10 copycats.
Like it just like, they'll try on protein,
but they won't get their own calories.
So, as like an entrepreneur in the business. And break down the moats. You have the key ingredient you have.
Are you counting brand at all?
And that, yeah, I can't brand, but like, if I'm talking to an investor,
I'm like not even bringing it up because it's so abstract.
Like it doesn't mean anything.
And it can take, it can take 10 years to truly have a brand, right?
At least in the mind of the everyday consumer.
How did you dig into the defensibility
around that intellectual property?
Because I feel like the gold standard for defensible IP
in anything FDA regulated is probably pharmaceuticals,
like drugs.
But as we've seen with the Ozempic, Wugui transition,
even GLP-1s, they were able to kind of eat at the edges.
Now Eli Lilly is taking share from Novo.
And it feels like if it can't work in GLP-1s,
how can this possibly hold in a protein supply chain?
You're gonna get someone who spins something up
that's one molecule different or something like that.
Is that a risk or did you dig into that
at that level of depth?
Yeah, I mean, there's really one process
to make the molecule.
Sure.
And you know, it's like, sure, someone can go try it,
but we'll just litigate.
And then it's a bit to calculate that.
And I guess the, I guess the, the, the bull cases that like,
yeah, you could go and fight on the IP stuff,
but at the end of the road,
you don't get a pharmaceutical product.
You get a CPG brand.
And so, and so it's like,
you're going to have to fight real, real hard.
And at the end, you then you also have to build a brand, also do the distribution and also, whereas, you know, Eli Lilly, you're gonna have to fight real, real hard and at the end, then you also have to build
a brand, also do the distribution and also,
whereas Eli Lilly, if they spend a bunch of money
to figure out how to alter the GLP-1 to get a drug
that works, well then it's just a matter of doctors
prescribing it, right?
And it gets paid.
And then in CPG, you kind of have like two years runaway
before someone copies you.
Now we have like structurally nine years.
And I think by that time, it's kind of too late.
Yep, yep, yep.
I mean, you already see that with the 140 revenue.
Like as that gets bigger, it's just gonna be ubiquitous
and you own all the shelf space.
So even if there's knockoff copycat,
it's like, yeah, you're already big.
You're less than a year in post-launch.
What does a good outcome look like?
You've already had a multi-$100 million exit.
I imagine you're aiming a lot higher here.
But what is that in your mind?
Yeah, I try not to think about the outcome too much.
But I do.
Uh.
Ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha. Ha ha ha. But I do. That's the most honest answer ever.
Any entrepreneur is like, oh yeah, I've never thought about the outcome.
It's just purely mission, you know.
Yeah, it's amazing.
Yeah. Like I would be pissed if we don't get to a billion in revenue.
Yeah.
You know, that would be disappointing. What was our X bar roughly? Like what's your personal high watermark?
Two, two 40. Okay. Yeah. Okay. And I think maybe maybe a little bit more. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Four X that. Yeah. So I, but I, I do think, I, I do think we can build a really diversified portfolio of brands that really address a
broad population and create a ton of consumer surplus.
So I think we just have so much work to do.
Yeah, I do fantasize about being a public company.
Let's go. I love it. Yeah, I do fantasize about being a public company.
Let's go.
I love it.
This is what my dreams are.
We'll have you back after your public company and you're just going to be like, it's such
a headache.
It's so annoying.
I can't say anything.
I'm in a quiet period.
I can't come on TVPN.
It's the worst.
Yeah, I might be the reverent. Yeah, these calls.
But but
yeah, I just think like there hasn't been
a truly
from scratch brand platform in
the space. It's all been done through M&A.
Yeah, I think you're sure.
Trevani is doing it actually now.
Yeah, sure.
And I think that and you're a believer in
in these brands living under the existing, you know, C Corp and or
like it doesn't sound like you want to do like a studio.
No, I only studio analogy would be like we're not going to do M&A.
We're going to we're going to build them like.
Yeah, I mean, my team, we've demonstrated we can like go from scratch like.
Yeah, so so we would just build them. I mean, my team, we've demonstrated we can like go from scratch. Like, um, yeah.
So, so we would just build them.
It would be a decentralized models, like different orgs, you know?
So David's the master David's Mars.
And then David protein is the operating business at the G will be its own
subsidiary and it will create other brands.
Um, and then they just have to be decentralized organs like orgs
because you you know like David in his life cycle is very different than a
newborn baby. And so like you need to design the org for our agility and so
that's what we're designing for. And how much do you view yourself as a
technology company? I heard you bring that up earlier, as in you're
wanting to pursue opportunities where you can have a unique sort of durable
edge through some type of effectively chemistry. I don't know if that's the right one.
Yeah, chemistry. You know, we're in the chemistry business now. I want to keep
learning and investing. You know, I don't know what we don't know, but like once you
get in the pool, you'll figure things out. So, you know, I don't know, we don't know. But like once you get in the pool, you'll figure things out.
So, you know, like technology's not really welcome in food.
So we restrain from the T word.
But yeah, we wanna keep making really valuable products.
Like that's just our focus.
And obviously technology is really the best way
to get there.
Have you mapped out what it takes?
Well, you have technology.
You have investors that are traditionally
technology investors.
I mean, I don't think I've ever seen Green Oaks do a CPG round.
Yeah.
The last deal they did was like Windsurf, right?
Or like the last big outcome for that wildly different company.
Have you taken a crack at kind of reverse engineering,
what it takes to really go after like a Nestle or a Unilever,
like one of the major, major conglomerates
that has been built through M&A,
but if you think really, really far into like,
what it takes to create a hundred billion dollar
outcome in consumer packaged goods,
no one's even come close, like we all cite like,
Red Bull is a great outcome, sells it,
but these are all like single things and very niche categories that are big categories like energy drinks
So the companies get big Red Bulls big monsters big but no one's really been able to figure out the right corporate structure to
To just compound and compound and compound and create this like hundred million dollar a hundred billion dollar behemoth
Yes, the key way to address the really large tam
in consumer food is through different brands that
have different DNA that address different problems
for consumer state-like needs.
So like David, I use the analogy of like brands
are just human beings.
They have fathers.
They have DNA.
They have behaviors, beliefs.
They have friends. You got to let they have behaviors, beliefs, they have friends.
You gotta let that brand or that asset be itself.
You can't jam it into places it doesn't belong.
So the David brand with our future portfolio
and optimizing our calories coming from protein,
so we look at David, it's the most protein,
least amount of calories.
That time is probably 1.5 billion in revenue in the US.
So so you really need multiple you need like a house of brands to go after very different
parts of the population. That's one and then international.
What's the mega scale and they're global. So that's that's the key thing.
What's the pushback been like from kind of like the trad community that wants to
do everything all natural, everything like, you know, oh, just, you know,
farm to table, the Michael Pollan crew, the RFK crew, like there's all these
different, uh, different segments of kind of, uh, like anti-modernity
and food. What's the reaction been like?
Yeah. So, um, you know,
Peter Thiel talks about like anything with science at the end is not science.
Sure. So nutrition science is really to date not been science. Yeah. Um,
and so, so it's really been,
it's a really emotional conversation and, and, and not a intellectual conversation.
So that's the first place and it is complicated and our society is really confused around
it.
And so under the confusion and the way to simplify something complex, people find like
just simple correlations.
Like if my ancestors didn't eat it, I shouldn't.
And that's like a pretty good framework or like it's not bad advice
But it's clearly not sophisticated and it's way more complicated than that. Yeah
And it's like the interesting thing was like the ancestral movement
My friend told me this and I thought was like really good. It's like the ancestral food movements like it's like post-traumatic
stress response like it's like a post-trauma response where you're like
Like you just stop and you like don't progress and you actually go backwards dramatic stress response. Like it's like a post trauma response where you're like,
like you just stop and you like don't progress and you actually go backwards.
Cause you're scared to make it worse.
And perhaps that's because food fucked up and food, you know,
got run by CFOs who just cut the bottom line and just cut, cut, cut.
Um, but I do believe like there's a way to advance food in a way that isn't that scary. And yeah, so I think I have goals.
I have like a more intellectual conversation on food, like, you know, not something like,
oh, I can't pronounce it.
Therefore it's automatically bad.
Yeah, yeah.
Makes sense.
Who is what?
Like nutrition is about like, it's pretty simple. It's about the 80% like don't overeat calories
Don't be fat turns out. That's fucking terrible
Don't spike your blood sugar and get enough protein. Yeah
And you have to judge we had more I wish we had more time. There's a bunch more questions
I have congratulations on the milestone. Just getting started cool and
Appreciate coming on. Yeah, we'll talk to you later. Congrats. Bye. Next up
we have Ashley Vance. You know that Green Oaks is underwriting that to small chance
of a hundred billion dollars. For sure. That's why they're doing the deal. Neil Metta. Undefeated.
Next up we have Ashley Vance coming in the studio from core memory
bring him in how you doing Ashley exclusive breaking news core memory
interview Palmer lucky you're hearing about it here first folks you're cooking
you're cooking it was a good good morning. It's Yeah, yeah. Palmer came. I think well, he
came in yesterday, I think straight from there's this photo
we posted of him and suck together. He's wearing the same
clothes. I should have actually asked him. But yeah, I think he
came straight from there. They're peacemaking accord.
Yeah, what's what was your read on it? How much of it was, uh,
how much were you focused on like the technical side of the deal between
Anderl and Metta to work on VR for the military versus just the,
the, the, the, the crazy full cycle narrative of, uh, the emotional journey.
We kind of did both. I mean, he's, he sat here for a couple of hours.
And from my memory, you know,
I think the first 45 minutes was going into the deal, the backstory, all that.
You'll the press release on this is super thin on the technology and the Wall Street Journal story didn't have that much either.
And Palmer, he went into some some detail on our podcast about about the tech.
And then, yeah, he got in the backstory. I mean, this is crazy. If I've been following Palmer pretty close
for the last couple of years,
I'd never would have imagined that this
would have been possible given the intense,
the depth of this like nine year war
that he and Metta have had.
So yeah, I did not fully see this coming.
Is it accurate to describe it as a war between Zuck and Palmer
or a war between Palmer and Metta?
I think it was like more Palmer and Metta.
If you go back, Blake Harris wrote this book,
The History of the Future.
And he spends like 40, I don't know, 40 or 50 pages
laying out the saga.
Palmer put up this paid for this billboard and about Hillary Clinton and became a known
Republican in public and it was fired from Facebook and in you
know, in that book, you see a lot of operatives within Facebook
kind of pushing Palmer out and we talked about this on the
podcast. I mean, if Palmer's being truthful in what he said,
he didn't lay the blame directly at Zuck's feet.
He kind of felt like Zuck was doing what he had to do
to protect his company and what the employees wanted.
So I think it was more meta directed.
Yeah.
It is crazy to think about the post-Oculus acquisition
time period at meta and just not having Palmer report
directly to Zuck.
That seems like that's the real Cardinal sin here
more than the crazy stuff that happened politically.
It's just like, how do you bring in someone
who's clearly the face of VR, generational founder,
all these amazing things.
And it would just have been so much easier
to manage that relationship
If there was no one else in between like no management layers in between yeah
And like almost definitely I think Paul is probably still at meta making working on VR. I don't
You know yeah didn't Jan Kuhn from whatsapp stick stick around for a long time
And obviously like the Instagram guys had kind of a rough go and they're upset about it now But like they I think they reported directly and like built that for a long time. And obviously the Instagram guys had kind of a rough go and they're upset about it now.
But I think they reported directly
and built that for a long time.
It was just odd that VR was so important in meta
that Reality Labs, huge investment,
and yet Palmer Lucky was not,
he should have been on the board.
He should have been added really, really
into the inner circle.
It's been a while since I read Blake's 20s. who cares right Zuck was 19 when he started the company whatever sure
Break the rules and it's it's been a while since I read Blake's book
But yeah, I mean he kind of lays out all these layers of management that were put between Palmer and and and mark
So but here they are taking photos as friends again. Have you got a demo yet any of the the Anderl hardware? Yeah, I haven't gotten on this headset. No, I
mean, this has been in I've been down at Andral doing some
reporting and Palmer's always like you because this this is
like an extension of this I've asked you know that that that
Andral took over from Microsoft. So I've been down
there and Palmer's like, Oh, my secret lab is over to
the side. That's where these guys are working. I mean, people should know what are the coolest
parts about this, I think is that I mean, yes, they're making this warfighter helmet
of the future, like the sci fi thing we see in every military movie that doesn't exist.
But beyond the like VR,, data feed coming in.
I mean, and Palmer talks about this in the podcast.
He's trying to reinvent the helmet itself, right?
To make it lighter weight, to make it the ballistics upgrade,
all of that stuff.
I mean, so he wants to build,
it's not just the sort of tech end of this.
He just wants to make a better helmet for soldiers too.
And I know he's been spending a lot of time
on all the materials and things like that.
Yeah, have you been tracking any
of the other developments at Meta?
There were some setbacks with the Llama team.
It seemed like they kind of went a little bit too far
into the pre-training paradigm and maybe not enough in RL.
And so Llama 4 has kind of fallen behind
in some of the benchmarks. At the same same time there's some really amazing VR demos that are
coming down the pipe like the Orion augmented reality glasses and then even
just like the next quest headset I feel like is gonna be incredible because all
that work that Apple did to get those incredible screens into the Vision Pro
well like Zucks probably gonna be able to buy that for the Dean because it's that Apple did to get those incredible screens into the Vision Pro.
Well like, Zuck's probably gonna be able to buy that
because it's two years later now.
It seemed like that was something that was unique to Apple,
but only for a small period of time.
And Apple kind of whiffed on actually getting that
into the hands of millions.
If it's in the next Quest, it could be really cool.
So any takes on what Meta's has been doing in VR AI lately?
I mean, I,
I do not follow them as closely as I do some other companies. The thing that's always stuck out to me was when they bought control labs,
which was doing this weird take on a brain computer interface by reading the
motor neurons in your, in your wrist. And, and you know, we've seen, uh,
Meta do some demos around this kind of like new
interface using your body and to, and your brain to navigate computers.
I actually think that's like the under, um, you know,
it's probably one of the hardest things they have to pull off,
but it's, it's kind of under reported in some ways because, um, I mean,
if you look at what,
ways because I mean if you look at what trying to read the tea leaves on whatever open AI and Johnny I've are doing you know we're clearly we're lurching every
some companies are lurching toward a new kind of computer we've been on the same
basic computer for decades well to be clear the open AI thing they were just
they were pretty clear that they said it's a third device besides your phone or
Your computer that will work
With those with those yeah, yeah, that is fair. That is fair. I just I still feel like we're
Everybody wants a new toy
Somebody will figure this out. I'm confident. I'm old enough to remember like, you know when I first started reporting
Yeah, it was like exciting people had different operating systems
They had different takes on computers all the time, you know, and and I just feel like we've lost that so I this is
Like what are you talking about the new iPhone? It has a button on the side
There's an extra button now. We can only We can only refine the bezel so much.
You're looking a gift horse in the mouth, Ashley.
Come on.
This thing is awesome.
I have a bone to pick with you guys, which is you got
this glowing profile in the information about your new media
empire.
And I was quoted in the story, and they didn't even bother to mention my new media empire.
I mean.
I mean.
No, no, boo.
Sorry, sorry, I hit the wrong effect.
Boo.
I hit the wrong effect.
Yeah, I mean, it was half like complete glaze gate,
like just so over the top, like lavishing praise on us
for genius and reinventing media as a whole
from the ground up.
And then the other half was like a complete hit piece.
It was brutal.
And I guess you balance those out and it's like,
you know, kind of a, kind of a nuance take,
but yeah, they did, they did some people dirty.
They put our quotes.
They put us in quotes.
They put us in quotes.
But this will be the last time
TBP never appears in quotes.
And the last time that Ashley Vance has ever
Quoted in the information without mentioning core memory
Subscribe right now that hurt that hurt. I yeah, I like that everyone wants you guys to be
The ringer or Grant land and neither of you seem to know
But it's even worse than that because people are like, oh it has like, you know, it's sports center I haven't watched that it's a box also haven't watched that. Can you come into some reinventing the wheel?
We're reinventing the wheel at TVPN. We're focused on reinventing the media's wheel
But yeah, give me that give me the broader update on core memory
I know you have a bunch of different products your You're you're you're filming movies. You're writing books. You're doing short documentaries. Like, give me the yeah, the
overview. And I want to know specifically about the latest
update with Neuralink as well.
Yes. Okay. Yeah. I mean, we've launched a bunch of stuff. I'm
writing on Substack. We launched a podcast Palmer's on it today.
And then, you know, I think the thing that we're maybe most
proud of, or one of the things is, yeah, you know, I think the thing that we're maybe most proud of, or one of the things is, yeah, you know, I used to make a TV show for Bloomberg and did very well there and we kind of killed that built our whole team from scratch.
And so on our YouTube channel and on our sub stack, we've got I don't know if they go anywhere from like eight to 20 something minute episodes that are, you know, dives into different inventors and scientists and startups. And then, so anyway, please go check.
Yeah. You're kind of telling the story of these like various Brotopias that are
existing all over Silicon Valley.
You know, unlike some people that only Brotopia, we, we do too many female
scientists. Um, but you know, we're going all around the world really.
So we'll, we just went to so far, the early episodes were Silicon Valley based just because I had to get this up and running really quick
But we just went and filmed in Switzerland for a couple weeks
And so part of that was to your other question, you know, we're working on a movie
About brain computer interfaces and and Neuralink is at the heart of that
And so we're following this journey for many months,
years maybe.
And then we filmed a couple episodes
with some Swiss companies.
How do you think about, oh sorry, Jordan.
What's happening in Switzerland?
It's always like this mixed, oh god,
you're going to get me on like a Europe rant.
I'll try to contain myself.
Switzerland is my second favorite country in the world.
It's like, you know, if you're gonna go with the
well-made museum version of Europe, it's great.
They do have some, I think a lot of, well, okay,
they have a lot of good biotech stuff coming out from Pharma
and just like a incredible education system.
And they have finance stuff, but we went robotics, you know,
I went to a couple of university robotics labs. I, the,
it's interesting. They're always doing pretty cool stuff.
And then it's always hard for them,
I think to make the leap into forming a startup and like really getting money
behind that and sort of the same
ambition that you would see out of a similar Silicon Valley company.
But yeah, we met a bunch of young kids who were doing cool.
We you will see it coming up in a future episode.
We had a robotic swan robots, robot swans dancing at a lake shooting water and lights.
And we were up till two in the morning filming that.
They actually have a fantastic.
Are they putting a gun on them yet?
They actually have a fantastic robotics industry.
The American thing would be to put a gun on the robot swan.
I'd love that.
Over in Switzerland, you gotta do a profile on this.
They have a fantastic robotics industry
all around telling the time.
And so they have these amazing companies.
You should do a whole profile and okay leap
Audemars Piguet Vacheron Constantin
It's a it's like this machine. It's
Robotics, but just to tell the time and so I can imagine of an Ashley Vance style deep dive on those companies being really really good
It's hard tech. I would I would enjoy that. I think great. Yeah
But yeah, it was cool. It's cool.
They got good energy.
The Swiss government really backs EPFL and ETH, these two universities, kind of on a
level that I don't know.
I've been all over Europe filming the TV show, and I'm impressed when I go to Switzerland.
Do you think American investors should be posted up in Geneva?
Just slinging checks is the is are they ready for American industrial venture?
Should they go from spending just the entire summer there to spending some time?
And most of winter ski season is a ski season summer, but then they could also spend some fall and springtime there
It's I mean, I try and you know, I don't want to overgeneralize and crap on an entire
cotton, but, um, you know, I do think, I do think there's opportunities there, but then
sometimes you walk through the European startups and the energy level is, is not the same as
you would, you'd find.
They're not sleeping on the floor of the factory over
there.
We have billion dollar companies where
teams are sleeping in tents.
Yeah.
We're about to talk to a billion
dollar company where the founders sleeping out in
Abilene, Texas, where you got Chase.
Have you been to Abilene yet?
I have. I went with Sam and oh yeah,
I'm going to name drop.
I went with Sam and Greg a couple weeks ago
It got the tour. That was like a big
Everyone in Europe was asking me. They're like, are we hosed on AI and I was like, well, I just went to
Abilene and each one of those buildings cost about
50 billion dollars and they have a lot of that you guys have precisely none
billion dollars and they have a lot of that you guys have precisely none so I mean it was it was kind of like a harsh idea I gave a talk in Poland as part of
this trip and people were not aware of the scale of like the investment even
though it's all MGX setting up a data center in France yeah yeah I mean the the overall Stargate
project is available to other countries
and those deals are being negotiated right now.
Because obviously Nvidia wants to sell chips
and you know, Crusoe will want to sell energy
and there's a lot of different companies
in the Stargate supply chain that want to be a part of that
even if it's in another country.
So I'm sure that's the first step.
Like from what I was gleaning from chatting with Sam
on that trip, it sounds like France is the only country
that's kind of ready to pony up
at the we would like to participate level.
Interesting.
Is it gonna be like luxury AI?
LVMH GPT.
Like branded tokens.
Yeah, chat LVMH.
Artisanal tokens.
That is what they do best.
Anyway, this has been fantastic.
Thanks so much.
We'll talk to you soon.
Let's make it a regular thing.
Thank you, boys.
Thank you.
I would love that.
Yeah, I'll see you this weekend.
All right, thanks guys.
Cheers.
Up next, we have Chase Lockmiller
from Crusoe Energy coming in the studio.
Welcome to the stream.
Chase, how are you doing?
Welcome.
Where are you in the world?
Are you in Abilene, Texas?
Better be in Abilene.
It might be.
I don't know.
It might be in San Francisco.
Oh, we don't have them.
Oh, OK.
He is not here yet.
I thought we had them.
But we can do some timeline.
What do we got?
Oh, this is interesting.
There's a shake up in terms of who's in charge of AI at Meta.
And I want to go deeper here because we're
a little bit of an AI day
is coming together on Thursday.
We have OpenAI and Anthropic on board.
We need someone from Meta.
So this is a little call out.
If you work in AI at Meta, let us know.
We'd love to have you on the show
and duke it out with the rest of the foundation model,
company CEOs and research scientists.
Lab on lab violence.
Lab on lab violence.
Anyway, speaking of the man who powers it all,
we have Chase Lockmiller from Crusoe Energy in the studio.
How you doing?
Welcome.
Welcome to the stream.
We are missing sound.
Are you muted?
Are we muted? What's going on?
Let's check it out and get to the bottom of this.
And we can hear you now.
He makes data centers.
He's not a Zoom expert.
Give him a break.
What is new with you?
How are things going?
Give us the latest on all the news that came out.
I feel like the last two weeks have just
been cruceau wall-to-wall coverage. But how are things going in your
world?
Things are good. Things are busy. Turns out, you know, AI
needs a lot of power and all these chips need a lot of data
center capacity. So what we announced last week was, you
know, the completion of funding for the expansion of our facility in Abilene, Texas.
That's going to consume a total of 1.2 gigawatts of total power capacity. And that funding
we did in partnership with Blue Owl Capital. So the total funding is about 15 billion in
total capacity to build out.
We love to see it. What, how, how is it different working with an investor,
a financial institution like blue owl versus some of the investors that you've
worked with on the venture side? Is it more Excel and less vibes and decks?
Is it, is it a wildly different underwriting scenario? Like, you know,
we're more familiar with the venture style
where it's usually just a handshake
and a term sheet on the back of a napkin.
And a prayer.
Yeah, I feel like I left the vibes investors, you know.
Behind.
You know, a long time ago.
That was more like kind of the earlier stage stuff.
But, so, you know, certainly different.
And I think with Blue Owl, they've been a great partner,
you know, one of the leading real estate,
you know, private equity practices in the world.
So very sophisticated.
I mean, they've been super supportive and helpful
across getting the entire deal structured and financed.
So, and then obviously very, very deep-pocketed capital providers to really help us make these
projects happen at really significant scale.
Now what's different is this is not an investment in Crusoe.
Yeah, equity.
Right?
This is a partnership with Blue Owl for this specific project.
Got it.
And just, you know, Crusoe has a business model that is, you know, not asset light,
is very capex intensive,
which requires, you know,
being able to tap into those very large pools of capital
to basically make these large scale AI factories happen.
So what, so really break down the anatomy
of like how these deals work.
Is it like, there's a new LLC or a new C Corp
that's created and then is there something
that looks like a mortgage with like a 30 year
payback period, interest only period?
And then I imagine that this facility is gonna make
no money for a few years while you're building it out,
but then it'll start making a bunch of money.
And so is there some sort of repayment schedule
that's responsive to that dynamic?
Yeah, so the breakdown of the structuring is,
so this also came out, there was a, you know,
the exact number is-
Yeah, I'm sure you can't share.
But there is construction financing
that's being provided by JP Morgan.
So on the expansion, it's a little over 7 billion
that's provided by JP Morgan and then a number of other banks and capital providers in the syndicate,
including Bank of America and a handful of others. But the way it works, I mean, it is
a prop co, right? So it's a property company that basically,
it's an LLC that ends up owning the individual campus
or the buildings.
All of those buildings have an affiliated lease with them,
with our customer, which is a long-term lease agreement.
Being able to partner with a large scale
investment grade customer is really what helps unlock a lot ofterm lease agreement. Being able to partner with a large-scale investment grade
customer is really what helps unlock a lot of the capital here. When people are talking
about these very, very large quantums of capital, Reddit is like the magic unlocked. So when
you have big long-term off-take agreements with high credit quality customers, that's
where you can really unlock these larger pools of capital,
and we can put $15 billion to work
in a positive capacity.
And then, so that's happening over there,
how do you make money then?
Sure, we make money as both a project developer,
as well as we are a partner with Blue All and the ownership of the entity.
Makes sense.
Our customer, it's basically like we're the landlord.
We have a customer that is paying us a monthly rent
for 15 years and we make money that's in excess
of sort of our debt service obligation.
Yeah, then talk to me about the energy side,
that's kind of the bread and butter, like the history of Crusoe as obligation. Yeah. Then talk to me about the energy side. That's kind of the bread and butter, like
the history of Crusoe as I understand it. How important is it to find unique combinations
of resources to provide energy to these large scale data center projects? What's happening
in Abilene? What's unique about Abilene? And then I want to dive into a little bit more about the life cycle of that energy production plan.
Yeah, so much of the bottleneck of scaling AI has boiled down to just lack of energy
or lack of access to energy.
And Crusoe from its founding seven years ago has always taken this energy first approach
to building computing infrastructure. Instead of thinking about, you know, how do I build the next
data center in Northern Virginia, we've always kind of thought about like, where can we access
low cost, you know, clean as much as we can, and abundant energy to power computing infrastructure?
And sort of the revolution you see unfolding with AI and sort of this
complete transformation of the digital infrastructure landscape is pretty mind boggling when you
really think about it. Because Northern Virginia is sort of like the center of the world for
data centers. Everybody's like, okay, the Northern Virginia corridor, that's sort of
where the internet is happening. That's probably where like, you know,
this Zoom conference is being like hosted.
You know, just so much of the internet happens
in Northern Virginia.
AWS US East, we know and love it.
Yeah, exactly.
Everybody uses AWS. It's a backbone of our industry.
Yeah.
Totally, exactly.
So all of the data center capacity
we've ever built in Northern Virginia
is about four and a half gigawatts.
Wow.
What we're doing in Abilene, Texas is 1.2 gigawatts.
Wow.
And you know, we're looking at trying to do more.
Yeah.
We're one company.
This is for one customer.
We're looking at other sites that are five gigawatts.
Right.
So you're talking about building a whole Northern Virginia that's been built over the last three decades.
Yeah.
One facility for
one customer. There's just fundamentally not enough power there in Northern Virginia to
make that happen. And so what's happening with AI is you're seeing everybody start to
take an energy first approach to developing this infrastructure. And that's really what
led us to Abilene. Abilene is a market where there's an abundance of energy, a lot of wind particularly, and solar had been built
on the back of production tax credit incentives. And their problem was actually they didn't
have enough demand for energy, right? It would frequently get curtailed, which means like
they would have to sell power at a negative price, so they're shutting down their wind farm.
Or pricing would go negative and they would sell at a negative price.
So their issue was actually just not enough demand for power.
So it was a good natural fit between AI factories and low cost, clean, abundant energy.
It's a pretty awesome setup.
We're gonna account for about,
I think the number is about 30%
of the total tax revenue for Avaline,
which is like, we're like, objects.
That's amazing.
Can you give me like kind of an energy 101
on energy production in Northern Virginia
between, I'm sure natural gas is in there,
there's solar, there's wind.
I don't know if there's any nuclear.
Are we still using coal at all?
Like I really have no idea.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, what about like crude oil or fuel or like just gasoline?
Does that power AWS at all?
Like I'm just curious about that mix.
Yeah, no, there is actually, you know,
especially during moments of peak demand,
if you have peak demand at night.
Diesel generators probably. Extremely cold night, there's obviously no solar. Sure. You know, especially during moments of peak demand if you if you have peak demand at night diesel generators
Extremely cold night. There's obviously no solar sure and you know people are you know, oftentimes having to use oil
You know oil to produce power which is like not a good
You know that not a good
Yeah, it's like the dirtiest possible option here.
We can be a lot cleaner.
It's expensive.
And it's expensive.
Yeah, very inexpensive.
And then contrast that with Abilene,
what's the energy mix look like there?
Is it similar or is there something different?
You mentioned wind.
Is there more wind in Abilene than in North America?
Yeah, I mean, Abilene is one of the windiest places
in the United States.
It's sort of those corridors that just gets
a tremendous amount of wind,
and that's why a lot of renewable energy developers
built there.
I think it's actually important to understand
this production tax credit.
So the way this works is that
the independent power producers
that build these renewable energy facilities,
they get paid a production tax credit
for producing and selling a kilowatt
hour of clean power.
Now they get paid that regardless of who they sell it to and at what price.
And so that has led to these consequences where you'll often see power prices go negative
because their actual realized price is, you know, after you factor
in the production tax credit subsidy they're getting is positive.
But it's like kind of they're having to pay someone to take that kilowatt hour and then
they go collect that subsidy through the production tax credits.
So now the issue becomes those production tax credits only exist for 10 years.
And so at the end of the 10 years, you still have this working wind farm
and you're like, okay, power prices go negative.
Now I have to curtail and I have to shut off,
which that could be producing power,
but I'm not because there's literally no marginal demand
for the power.
And I think this is where having this alignment of markets
where you can produce power in a very cost-effective capacity and
you can actually build an AI data center there to soak up that energy is a very good alignment
that Crusoe's tried to facilitate.
Can you talk a little bit about the history of the company?
I know that at one point there was some crypto mining with gas flaring stuff going on and
then the transition from that into the current AI boom,
was that a major emotional roller coaster
or did it kind of overlap in a perfect way
where it was just like all growth?
Yeah, totally.
So, you know, we started the company,
one of the first applications of energy was,
as you talked about, was basically capturing waste methane
from oil production that would otherwise be flared,
and then utilizing that to power
initially Bitcoin mining data centers,
but we also powered our early versions
of our AI data centers.
Sure, like smaller training runs, right?
Yep.
And this was like pre-Chat GPT.
This was like, we were working with like,
you know, the MIT Department of Physics doing, you know, early simulations of the Big Bang,
you know, which news and, you know, the CSA department at MIT, like, you know, early,
early work in our AI cloud development. But ultimately, you know, when I started the company,
I really wanted to build an AI cloud platform.
So a lot of people are like, wow, this was a great pivot. And I always tell them, no,
this was the plan from day one, believe it or not. But I always felt like energy was the thing that
tied together all computing infrastructure. And any computing application, when really scaled out,
energy does become the bottleneck. And I had seen that when really scaled out, energy does become the
bottleneck. And I had seen that and experienced that in these proof of work blockchains like
Bitcoin and Ethereum. And I felt like if AO is going to scale, energy would be a massive
component in the overall operating cost of operating intelligent systems at scale. And so we did a lot of early investment in terms of like making the
platform work with Crucial Cloud and trying to figure out what we wanted to build and for who.
And then we kind of, with the launch of ChatGPT, it really sort of catalyzed just massive investment
and attention
to purpose-built GPU infrastructure.
And we had done that from the ground up,
all the way from energy data centers,
as well as managed infrastructure as a service
at the software layer.
Did you lose any sleep over the DeepSeq news,
or were you Jevons Paradox-pilled from day one,
and you knew that it was just gonna keep going
Yeah, I think just like the way that got spun up in the media was like so
Mr. Very pro China media
Very early on like I think anybody
Everybody was like wait like there's no chance
I think anybody, everybody was like, wait, like there's no chance this was like a couple of hobbyists
that had like a couple of GPUs in their garage
and they train this model off of like,
that's just like not what happened.
They did this training run with scraps.
Scraps in the cage.
Powered with a bicycle.
They packed.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, totally.
Yeah, it was a couple guys with pens and paper just.
But I guess, I guess like the bigger question question is as it does feel like we're somewhat shifting
from a pre-training to an RL environment, the scaling laws are holding in the macro,
but it seems like there's a series of S-curves in terms of the different training and improvement
paradigms that lead to just better products.
And so, yes, we can do another 10x increase in pre-training,
but maybe we hit a data wall or there's some problems there.
What are you seeing in terms of trade-offs for demand
on the data center side as we go through these paradigm
shifts in terms of what's important to create
a really, really performant AI product?
Is it just we're shifting from training to inference and that doesn't even affect you?
Does it affect you?
Do you need a different build out for a large training run versus just mass inference of
complex models consistently forever all the time because demand's so high but it's smaller
models all over the place?
Does any of that affect the way we build data centers?
I think it does affect some of the ways that we build data centers. But to the question
of slowing demand, the conversations that I'm involved in, if anything, we're seeing demand accelerate and for bigger, larger scale clusters.
And just the overall demand is increasing quite a bit for inference as well.
I think you see kind of this transition where folks will use a very large AI factory for a training run that gets some
state of the art model, that infrastructure is still useful for a long period of time
to serve both inference workloads as well as any of these post-training, test time compute
scaling, chain of thought reasoning models that are really basically taking inference queries
and then thinking about them
and sort of playing out a whole bunch of different scenarios
and then coming up with better, smarter,
more intelligent answers.
But, and I think that's like the crux of the infrastructure.
It's like what we're building are these AI factories, right?
So they're factories that manufacture intelligence.
Factories that manufacture intelligent outcomes
that are prompted by inputs from users.
And I don't see any near term shortage of demand
for more intelligence.
Are you bullish or bearish on upstart or SMB players
that want to build AI factories or data centers that
see the broader opportunity and then are maybe putting together
sometimes sophisticated teams, sometimes less sophisticated
teams, but able to pool together capital
and want to bring data centers online
and just assume there's gonna be demand waiting there,
or just assume that they can actually build something
that's state of the art.
Pretty bearish.
We've seen a massive influx of,
we call them two guys in a pickup truck,
where I got my cousin Lenny, who has this plot of land, a massive influx of, we call them two guys in a pickup truck.
I got my cousin Lenny, who has this plot of land out by his ranch.
And there's a power line that goes through it.
And he knows someone that works at the power.
Just put up a barn and throw some racks in there.
We're in business.
Hit up a hype.
Hey, hey, I'm a Google shareholder.
I'm going to just call up Sundar yeah, I got a contract. No problem. Yeah, I got some 3090s in here. I got
Yeah, I got a tag as a couple 1080 Ti's right over there. Yeah a couple propane tanks
Yeah, I think that I think the thing is that these these projects
You know, they, they're so big that the capital investment to make them happen is so massive.
You're seeing people speculatively build smaller scale stuff, but the really big stuff that's
whatever, a couple hundred megawatts or gigawatt plus,
you really need credit to make it happen.
I said it before, but credit is the unlock
to all of this infrastructure getting built.
And we have companies with the greatest balance sheets
in the history of business that are going all in
on this technological paradigm shift underway.
And with that, you can unlock a lot of infrastructure
capital to make all of this happen.
But if you're gonna speculatively spend 20 million bucks
kind of trying to build an AI factory,
it's like shooting a BB gun at a grizzly bear, you know
You know, you're not you're not you're not well, yeah
At the 20 million dollar scale you can get a group of smart people that can make a deck and then
Investors are gonna see that and be like I want to make money on this AI thing and be like, well, yeah
We'll throw 20 30 40 chase has the best animal-based metaphors,
because I remember we were at that nuclear conference
and you said that the demand for energy is so high
that companies would burn whale oil if they could.
And for some reason, you keep coming back to these,
but the BB gun at the grizzly bear is great.
So I'm sure you work with hundreds of different vendors
for different components, parts, et cetera.
Where do you think there is major supply chain risk
or shortages?
Where would you like to see more investments?
I was about to ask this.
We heard something that a large portion of the transformer
supply chain, not the algorithm to the transformer,
the physical infrastructure, comes from China. And maybe there's a risk to the supply, the physical infrastructure comes from China
and maybe there's a risk to the supply chain
with the trade war there.
Would love to know what the key inputs are outside of,
we all know power, we all know Nvidia GPUs,
but what else could we be constrained on,
whether it's cement or transformers or copper,
I don't even know, lay it out for us.
Yeah, I mean, the bottlenecks move around.
The bottlenecks for AI infrastructure builds
kind of move around.
You sort of had this moment of infinite demand for H100s
when they first launched.
And I think Elon famously said that
it was way easier to acquire illegal drugs
than get an H100.
And so it's rapidly shifted into energy
and data center capacity.
And what does it mean to actually build that stuff out?
You know, high voltage transformers are definitely
like a big bottleneck.
A lot of that capacity does get built in China.
You know, it's a diverse enough supply chain
that, you know, I'm not that worried about trade war impacting
high voltage transformers, but they are kind of long lead time assets.
There's a whole stack in the transformer side too.
So like you have the medium voltage transformers. Switch gear can be like a major long lead time item
that Crusoe actually started manufacturing in-house.
So we have factories in Tulsa, Oklahoma
and right outside of Denver, Colorado.
When you say switch gear, is that like network switches
like ethernet routing or something else?
No, sorry.
It's electrical switch gear.
This is basically like your electrical room
that has all of the breakers that feed into
the actual data halls that are powering the-
Yeah, it's like a power strip.
You plug it in the wall, you get six outlets
out of the back, kind of like that.
Yeah, yeah.
But like the big version of that, is that right?
It's kind of like your breaker box in your house.
Okay, got it. You know, it's kind of like your breaker box in your house.
Like when you trip a breaker, you gotta go down and you gotta go flip the switch.
It's like that at a gigawatt scale data center.
Yeah, that makes sense.
But switchgear is definitely a bottleneck.
Chillers is another big thing.
I think an interesting trend in data centers right now is with the introduction of the
GB200, the new Nvidia chip, basically you're seeing this massive transition to liquid-cooled
computing at significant scale.
So a lot of the government labs
and high performance computing communities
have been experimenting with things like immersion cooling,
you know, single phase and two phase,
as well as, you know, water cooling DLC for decades.
But no one's ever done it at the scale
that's unfolding right now.
And the reason it's happening is because
you just have so much energy density, so much heat being produced
by these new NVIDIA chips as we move on to more advanced
architectures that there's simply just not enough heat
capacity.
Basically move that heat off the chip
from a traditional aluminum heat sink or something that's so big that you know,
like we just.
Can you talk about the life cycle of water
in some of these AI factories?
We had somebody on the show, I don't remember their name,
but I do remember that they said,
we don't have enough water in Abilene
to run these data centers.
And that didn't quite feel correct.
So I'm not gonna call them out.
Is that a bottleneck?
No, it's not.
It depends on how you design it.
So we've tried to,
I think water can be a very sensitive topic
depending on the communities that you're engaged in
and Crusoe's always tried to be a phenomenal partner
to the local communities that we're working with.
The way we've designed our AI factories is what's called a closed loop architecture.
That means basically you have cold water that flows into the rack and it flows over the
chips through this copper pipe and you have this heat exchange between the silicon
that goes through the copper and then to the water and then hot water sort of exhausted
from the rack.
That hot water then goes out to a heat exchanger that's a chiller that's outside.
And it's basically just, you can kind of think of it as like massive maze of a copper pipe.
And then you blow air over it.
You try to blow cold air over it.
And then the heat basically gets exhausted out of the water.
And then you basically have cold water
from that that then feeds right back into the system.
So while we have one million gallons of water per building,
we only fill it one time.
It's not like we're using a million gallons of water per building, we only fill it one time, right?
It's not like we're using a million gallons per hour.
Yeah, this is what the media has implied,
is that every time you make a cute Studio Ghibli image,
you're dumping a gallon of water.
It's like, yeah, a gallon of water might flow over the chip
while you're doing that, but then it flows over the next one
and the next one, and this is recycling, which is not.
Yeah, and at that kind of scale, even a million.
So there are architectures that are open loop,
where basically you have a fresh water supply
and that is, you are consuming a little water
in that scenario.
But in our case, we've designed it
with a closed loop architecture that is like,
you fill it one time, then you're done.
Let's hear it for closed loops.
I love closed loops.
Last question I have, how do you evaluate your pipeline?
I'm sure you're very popular guy getting you know phone calls and emails from all over the world, but you're building physical infrastructure
It's not like you can just copy and paste you know
What you're doing an Abilene or some other areas, you know a million times. So I'm sure you have to be pretty
Yeah, I mean, we're trying.
We have a couple other projects that are underway that hopefully
we'll be able to talk about more soon.
But similar scale or bigger is kind of like what we're seeing.
So a lot of demand unfolding within the ecosystem. And I think we try to be
thoughtful about our partners. I mean, we really ultimately want the space to be successful.
I view AI as a generational opportunity to transform human prosperity around the world.
And we just want to help make that happen. And we don't think any one company is going to do it alone.
We want to help support the entire industry
in terms of making this technology successful,
scaled, and really rolled out to the masses.
Makes total sense.
Fantastic.
I have a ton more questions, but we'll
have to have you back on because this
was a fantastic conversation.
We'll talk to you soon, Chase.
Thanks so much for stopping by.
Cheers.
Appreciate it, guys.
Take care. Before our next guest, let me tell you soon, Chase. Thanks so much for stopping by. Cheers. Appreciate it, guys. Take care.
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No chasing recedes because it happens inside a ramp which is amazing
But even aside from the expense thing even if I had to do something else on the existing side just the experience of actually booking is so much easier
It's like I mean I wish we had it on camera because I don't know it was a really special me leaked leaked leaked
Yeah, I'll be right back anyway
Our next guest is coming in the studio
But first let me also tell you about figma think bigger build faster figigma helps design and development teams build great products together.
Go to figma.com to get started.
We have our next guest coming into the studio.
Factory AI, Matan, welcome to the stream.
How are you?
Thank you so much for having me.
I'm good, how are you?
I'm great.
Thanks so much for hopping by.
Can you kick us off with a little introduction on yourself
and also the company and the news?
I know that there's big news coming up.
Yeah, absolutely.
So I'm a Tom CEO at factory here to share a bit
about our latest launch.
We released droids.
Droids are not just your regular everyday coding agent.
They are full end-to-end software development, life cycle agents built for the enterprise,
big enterprise, not just startups.
Although, we've, in the last 24 hours, seen a pretty big explosion of usage with startups,
which has been really cool.
Yeah, it's been fun.
Talk to me about the evolution of AI agents
and coding agents.
I remember there was a company a couple years ago
that was training their own foundation model.
Then the regime seemed to shift to,
okay, we're not gonna do any pre-training on code,
specifically, the foundation model companies
got that covered, but we will do a bunch of post-training.
Then it became more, maybe there's some RL fine-tuning, maybe there's just some reasoning that we're doing. Now it feels
like a lot of the coding agent companies are just kind of like, we're rappers, but we're still
printing money and rappers and unnecessary pejorative, it's actually the best way to build
this business and it's helping us. So where do you fall and what is your take on the different paradigms?
I just got here, I gotta compliment Mattan on the suit.
I know, I know, I know.
Looking fantastic, it looks great.
It looks great, thank you for expecting.
When you come to the temple, when you come to the temple,
you must be dressed appropriately.
Yes, yes, thank you.
Anyways.
But yeah, great question.
I think it's been interesting how in the last two years there
have been so many trends within the kind of sub-sector of AI for software development.
You're spot on. There was a really big trend, especially if you measure it by the capital
that was put into it in terms of companies coming out there saying that they're going
to train models in particular for code, or fine-tune models for code. There's been quite a few who raised up to the tune of like
half a billion dollars to train their own models. And I think something that a lot of
people are saying at the time are maybe whispering because they don't want to offend those who
put half a billion dollars in was code is a core competency for the foundation models. They
will not allow a startup to fine tune their way to having the best models. As you see
it in general with code, it's like alternating between OpenAI and Thropic, Google, XAI in
terms of the number one spot in code. And so I think it, I guess it took a lot more
money than it should have, but I think people come to the realization that Fine tuning and RL for code specific models will be won by the foundation models
Is that I guess just a function of like of like code is the internet the internet is code code is on the internet
And so if you train an LLM on the internet like you're gonna learn
Like like out of the box if you do do a robust large scale training run on web text,
you're gonna get Reddit answers
and you're also gonna get a pretty good model that can code.
And so unless OpenAI says, let's not train it on code,
it's just, you're going to lose to them
because they're putting the most energy,
the most cycles into training the big model.
And so you just get that as a byproduct.
Yeah, that's that's spot on. It's actually I would go even further to say that. And I know there were
papers on this in around like 2022. I'm sure there have been since but there is a direct correlation
between how good a model is at code and how good it is at other general purpose tasks.
That makes sense.
So it is just it is, it is, you know,
table stakes for the foundation models
to be the best at like raw coding.
Yep.
So exactly right there.
Yeah, so how do you build a business without getting rolled?
Yeah, how have you guys navigated just partnerships
with the labs in general, where it's,
you're kind of frenemies, you know?
It's like, hey, we can work together.
But at some point, somebody is going
to try to kill the other one.
Yeah, no, this is a really good question.
And it's very top of mind.
I mean, I think the reality is the closer you are to the zero
to one or like the vibe coding or the like less
technical your audience and the smaller the company,
that's really where the foundation models are
about to sweep it up or already have.
So it's like building apps from scratch,
building websites from scratch.
That's something where the model providers will basically
get it for free, plus or minus some deployment details
in terms of actually what's fitting.
Yeah, you remember with pre-Chat GBT,
there were a bunch of players that would generate copy for you
based on the OpenAI API.
And they had just rocked, their revenue rocketed.
And I remember it was the same sort of like people,
like the same behavior of like posting screenshots
of like the revenue dashboards.
And then those screenshots stopped being shared
post-Chat GBT because all that revenue, you know,
they just went away.
As Shakespeare said,
these violent delights have violent ends.
There was a really great tweet I saw the other day.
I can't remember who posted it,
but it was, you know, a lot of people are talking
about these like record-breaking like runs to like,
you know, large ARRs.
And what's going to be coming soon
is some record breaking
churn for a lot of these monthly subscriptions.
So that'll certainly be interesting to see.
But yeah, so that's the part of the spectrum
where the foundation models are best poised to tackle.
Is that zero to one less technical use case?
For us, we've been focused on the enterprise from day one.
Because one,
it's really not sexy and so it's not like conducive to like viral demos and all that hype,
but that's where a majority of developers are getting a majority of their pain. Like dealing with like
COBOL, dealing with these like 20 year old code bases,
migrations, refactors, and in order to handle that well,
you can't just like one shot with like a chat GPT
or a codex or a cloud.
You need to have deep integrations with their code base.
Oftentimes it'll be like multi repo integrations.
You'll need to understand not just where the code is now,
nice little thumbs up guy.
Not just where the code is now, but how it got there,
what the best practices of that
org are, integrating with tools like Jira, Google Drive, Sentry, Datadog.
The kind of first principles thinking there is that in order to produce the quality that
an engineer who's been at that company for like 10 years would produce, you need to have
access to the same information.
And that information sometimes requires some really ugly integrations.
You need to kind of get the workflows that are a little bit more specific to these large
arcade orgs, which is a little bit further afield from what the foundation models are
working on right now.
Talk to me about synchronicity, asynchronous coding agents versus synchronous, copilots
versus autonomous agents.
Where do you think it's going?
Do these lines blur?
Are they distinct product?
It feels like OpenAI has three coding products now.
I can go to 03 and I don't even ask it to write code and it just does.
I imagine that the amount of code that's
being written for non-technical people who don't even know that code would be
useful in giving them an answer to a question is just skyrocketing right now
in that product. Then there's Codex, they also have Windsurf now and so you can
imagine a few different bites of the apple there. Are they
indexing the market,
or are these distinct different markets?
Will there be one power law outcome in the coding space?
In terms of the paradigm.
Yeah, yeah, great question.
I think the first order bifurcation that'll happen
is between the non-technical audience and technical audience.
So for non-technical, being able to spin up apps on the fly
is cool and fun, and that'll continue to be something that's useful.
They're never going to, yeah, exactly right.
And they're never going to really be that concerned
with going too deep into the code itself.
They'll just like, I want a to-do list app, make it for me.
OK, great.
For the technical user, I think that's
where it gets a lot more interesting.
Basically, and maybe this is just a quick philosophy that we have at Factory, every
transformation shift has a very clear behavior change associated with it.
Right?
So like internet had people getting most of their information from like TV, newspapers,
books, to then like going on this console on their desk and getting all their information
there.
Mobile had people walking around, heads up to now,
walking around on TikTok subway servers all the time.
These are very visceral, obvious behavior changes.
And yet everyone talks about AI as it's the largest one
to come, it's gonna put these other ones to shame.
And yet, if you look at the most used product,
the most used AI products right now,
there is no new behavior.
Like chat GPT perplexity,
that's just Google with better results. The behavior, the is no new behavior. Like, chat GPT perplexity, that's just Google with better results.
The silhouette of that behavior doesn't actually look that different.
Similarly, with a tool like Copilot or Cursor, the way that software development is looking,
the behavior is still the same.
You're still in this IDE, which was built for the world where humans wrote 100% of their
code.
We're quickly going to a world where humans will write 0% of their code. We're quickly going to a world where humans will write 0%
of their code.
And our take is that their behavior will fundamentally
have to shift then.
And not like in some iterative approach
where you iterate your way from an IDE
to whatever this new thing is.
But our take is instead, you need
to build that from the ground up.
And this is kind of a long-winded way
of answering your question about the async versus sync.
The reality is, in this future, developers
are going to be natively working with agents.
And so they'll need to dynamically adjust
between if they're collaborating with an agent
to look through their code base and understand how they should
plan some new feature, and then having a good plan for it,
and now firing it off, delegating it to these agents.
And at the same time, delegating it to these agents.
At the same time, it's going to put more emphasis on the testing because if you just shoot from
the hip a ton of agents, or in our case, droids, then you're going to have a ton of code to
review before you release it to production because ideally you're going to review it.
That's a depressing world where, okay, we don't write any of our code, but now you just
need to read thousands and thousands of lines before you can ship anything.
So if you as the developer have better tests and you know, Hey, if it passed these tests,
I don't even need to review it because I like expressed all of the constraints that I had
through these.
So if it passes, great, let's ship it.
There's kind of this new emphasis on testing to kind of enable that more delegative workflow.
What's the secret to avoiding churn in the enterprise? Are you trying to ink multi-year
contracts up front? Are you just playing the same game as everyone else and getting a bunch
of experimental budgets because money is money and that seems to be the meta right now, but
I imagine that you're thinking about this or at least like a message when a community when a
competitor gets to a cut you know a customer first are you kind of hovering
you know with the understanding that like hey you know maybe they're you know
if we can really show that we're significantly better we could win and is
there is there like a little bit of a price war here because you imagine that you come into an enterprise and you say
hey this would cost you so much to do with like Accenture and we're gonna do
this this replatforming of your cobalt application to dotnet or something or
Python and and and you would spend 10 million on that we'll do it for 8
million and that's all of a sudden all of that's all of a sudden, all of a sudden,
that's like 90% margin for you instead of like 50% margin.
But then your competitor comes in and says, well,
we'll do it for 7 million.
We'll do it for 6 million.
We'll do it for 5 million.
And so it seems like there's some sort of price war
dynamic that might happen.
Walk me through all of that of winning
in the enterprise financially.
Yeah, that's a great question.
So first of all, yes, we do year-long contracts
just because it's important to have that mutual commitment and in particular because
Adopting the tools is not enough like there
I cannot tell you how many like CIOs and CTOs
I've spoken to who have adopted like the hot new AI IDE and then you ask them the question that they don't answer
Which is how many people are actually using it?
Mm-hmm, and it ends up being like 10, 20%. And all of those 10
to 20%, a lot of them are just using it like the IDEs of old. So they're kind of like adopting
these new tools, patting themselves on the back, being like, look, CEO, we did it, we
adopted AI, job's done, give me the big bonus. But the reality is, is like, they're actually
not getting any productivity improvements. And so part of why we do these longer term
commitments is because one of our core competencies
is not just having the best agents in the game, but also helping them.
Droid.
Droid.
I love it.
I love it.
There we go.
We're also helping them adopt their behavior patterns.
Because that's the thing is like you could have a tool that's 50% as good, but if you
have twice the adoption, then you're now at parity.
And so I think it's just a lot less sexy because all the great engineers who are coming out
of Stanford want to work on spinning GPUs and all that stuff.
Talking about behavior change in the enterprise, that's like, ew, they don't want to think
about that.
But that is where the ROI is going to come.
And also, John, to your question, the way we actually get in and do these deals is focusing
on those deliverables about this was scoped out to be four months and we did it in two months or one month or two weeks. That's ROI that actually matters
to like the C suite. When you talk about like we shipped tests 10% faster, it's just so
like, are we 20% more lines of code. It's just so amorphous and so not tied to real
business outcomes that if we can come in and actually tie things
to things that are shipped per quarter
or pulling in dates for certain deliverables,
that's where it's just like,
it's so frictionless because it's not really
existent elsewhere in the market.
It's good.
I was texting with Adam and Ben from Genius,
one of your investors, and they said to ask you
about a fateful walk
that you had with Sean Maguire.
Does that ring a bell?
Yes, it does.
So this is in the founding history of factory,
basically two years ago, or two and a half years ago,
I was doing a PhD in theoretical physics at Berkeley,
which is what I was doing prior to factory.
You just were phoning it in,
you wanna take the easy path in school?
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, you know, just some fun string theory, which to be fair, it is really fun and beautiful.
But decided it wasn't a path for me in particular because, you know, to be a good physicist,
you kind of need to thrive in isolation, just like in your room alone, like reading papers. Did that for like 10 years, was really stubborn. It's kind of a long story, but ended
up reaching out to the Sequoia partner, Sean DeWire, because he also used to be a string
theorist. And he ended up, you know, going into entrepreneurship, sold the company for
a billion dollars, joined Sequoia, saw like a random podcast with him. And I was just
like, I've never seen like another physicist
who has somewhat social skills, like let me hit him up
and get some life advice from him.
Ended up going on a walk together.
On this walk he said, Matan, you need to drop out
of your PhD and you should either join one
of my portfolio companies and just like work on glue,
not a thumbs up, let's go.
Or you should join X because Elon just took over
and you'd have to be a badass to voluntarily go there.
Or you should start a company.
And so that was eight days later,
dropped out of the PhD and started factory.
Well, congratulations.
Very cool.
And yeah, thanks for stopping by.
This was fantastic.
And thank you for giving agents a cooler name.
I love droids. You gotta get yourself some droids. Yeah, we gotta get you guys This was fantastic. And thank you for giving agents a cooler name. I love droids.
You got to get yourself some droids.
We've got to get you guys some droids.
Thank you, guys.
Great, Chairman.
Have a good moment, Tom.
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And next up we have Johnny from Muon Space.
We're talking about data centers
with Chase Lockmiller in Abilene, Texas.
Now we're going to space
and we're putting the data centers in space.
Very excited to talk to Johnny.
So welcome to the studio.
Johnny, break it down for us.
And I'm gonna let Jordy do the intro on this and
If you're on your phone, would you mind rotating it 90 degrees? It's widescreen. Thank you. There we go
What's going on great to have you?
Randomly I'm actually down in Yeltsin. I could the woods in Long Beach. I'm hanging out with a friend at bass today
Nice nice
Yeah, why don't you give a quick intro,
background on the company yourself, all that good stuff.
Yeah, sure.
So MuonSpace, we're a 150 person startup in the Bay Area.
We're building a platform to deploy large numbers
of satellites in constellation format
for a lot of different mission types.
We were founded in 2021.
It's been a pretty big rocket ship ride so 2021. It's been a pretty,
pretty big rocket ship ride so far. It's been really fun. My background going back a ways. I mean, I've been in space for,
you know, well, longer than I care to admit, including I was
an intern back at SpaceX in the very early days, like 2003 and
four, I was part of I was the chief engineer at skybox
imaging, which was the kind of first venture backed satellite
company, kind of space before space got cool.
Very cool.
And so, you know, taking a lot of the lessons learned
and kind of things I've seen from those experiences
to the new company.
Awesome, and then break down the new company.
Yeah, so I mean, I think the way to think about this is,
you know, a lot's changed in the last decade of space.
Traditionally, if you wanted to go do something in space, it required a lot of sophistication.
You had to have it literally a team of rocket scientists.
You often had to have a lot of deep expertise in everything from, you know, ground stations to to launch to avionics software.
You know, barriers to entry have come down in a lot of ways, but a lot of that complexity remains. And our kind of goal is to really abstract a lot of that away from a customer that wants to do something in space and doesn't want to have
to go build that full vertical technology stack for every new use case that comes up.
And I think that was a big lesson we took out of Skybox is we kind of built two companies
under one roof, a satellite company and a data company. And that the future should really be about,
a data company being able to go build a data business
without having to deal with all the complexity
on the space, the ground, the operations, the hardware,
the integration side,
and that's really what we're trying to solve.
I want to know about the potential of data centers in space.
It sounds like a crazy idea.
I know some folks are working on it.
Just kind of like, what's your high level take
of the progress?
We've been tracking dollar per kilo to orbit.
It's been falling.
But recently, there's been setbacks in different programs.
And there's more competition.
And there's a lot of different dynamics going on.
What do you think the key milestones are
to get us to a future where we're really doing
mass manufacturing, big mega scale projects in space?
Yeah, well let me start off,
I mean I think you guys are hitting on the right metric,
right, it's like the hardest part of this
is what does it cost to get a kilogram in space?
Because everything else kind of derives from that.
Ultimately, if you want a certain amount of power, if you want to be able to put an aperture
in space to do communications, whatever it is, that's really driven by what it costs
to get it there in the first place.
And I think it's important context to kind of see how far we've come down that path.
I mean, largely driven by SpaceX over the last decade.
And I like to
tell the story of, you know, about 15 years ago at Skybox when we were trying to launch these small satellites, we were literally going to Southeast Russia and launching satellites on converted Russian ICBMs.
I mean, they were popping out of the ground and putting satellites into space.
And that was the only way for like a Silicon Valley
venture-funded startup to go put something in space.
Wait, hold on.
Did I hear you correctly?
Like the ICBM actually launches
from one of those missile silos in the ground
and makes it to orbit?
Pops out of the ground and goes to orbit.
I mean, you can see those videos on YouTube.
That's crazy.
If you search NEPR on YouTube, you can see this.
And it's crazy.
I mean, you know, and that's what it took
before SpaceX kind of like revolutionized
the launch business
Yeah, and even at that we were spending something like ten times as much
Per satellite or per kilo is what we can go buy on a transporter launch today So there's been at least one and arguably two orders of magnitude improvement in the last call it decade on
Kind of what it means to launch things to orbit. I think if you imagine that happening again,
another order of magnitude,
again, it's gonna dramatically change
the way you think about feasibility
of some of these things,
like putting very, very large power hungry things in orbit.
We know how to do the solar,
we know how to do the structures,
we know how to get,
we know how to make electronics work
in the radiation environment,
which is always a concern and do it reliably.
And so really, ultimately, I think it's going to come down to unit cost.
And what does it actually take to do that? The great thing about space is you have virtually limitless power.
The sun, you know, you can you can go into orbits where you're in the sun all the time.
So it's not like solar on Earth where you're going in and out of eclipse or in and out of night.
Like you can be on all the time. And then you have this cosmic background of three Kelvin cold
sink that you can go dissipate all the thermal energy you need from running your electronics
and stuff. So it's actually in a lot of ways sort of an ideal environment to do this if
you can actually get there. So yeah, that's the kind of way I think about it.
It's interesting. It feels like SpaceX has commoditized launch and is kind of way I think about it. It's interesting. What it feels like SpaceX has commoditized launch
and is kind of the power law winner there.
Obviously, there's other companies that are competing,
but they've standardized launch.
They've also standardized Starlink.
And then we talked to the Enduro Sat founder
about standardizing a satellite bus platform
and kind of getting to the mass manufacturing less bespoke,
less customized, less hand-built pieces
What else are you seeing as kind of?
Critical pieces of the space supply chain that need to be standardized or you might be trying to standardize
Where where where are the pieces in the supply chain to do the things that you want to do?
Where it's still like oh that has a long lead time or that's hand-built or that's way too customized
I get what I want, but it's too exquisite system. It's too expensive talk to me about the supply chain
Yeah, I'm actually gonna give you the answer you asked for and then an answer. I want to answer so you both yeah
On the supply chain side. You know I think there's a lot of progress been made. Our satellites look very much like, especially things like the electronics, look very much
like what goes into an EV right now.
The batteries, a lot of the electronics, a lot of the individual semiconductor parts
have heavily leveraging other commercial industries.
So it doesn't look like a traditional space supply chain.
I think that problem more and more is solved.
I think EnduroSAT obviously is doing
very similar things in that way.
Some of the places where we really see
that that has not yet happened,
one is more on the payload side.
So things where you think about the spacecraft bus
and EnduroSAT's building buses.
I do think there's a path to that
becoming very standardized.
But every mission you put in space has a bus
and then it has a moneymaker.
It has something that's actually doing
what you need it to do, whether it's communications
or remote sensing or beaming power.
If you're trying to beam power,
if you're putting a data center in space,
it's got a payload of compute or whatever.
And what we see in most of the kind
of traditional space missions is that
that now has become kind of the hardware bottleneck.
It's like, how do you actually get the payload
you need to solve your ultimate business problem
built in, in quantities large enough to deploy in a constellation,
it costs low enough that you can do it.
And I think there's a lot of movement in the right direction in that way,
but it's we're not there yet.
And the other question that I kind of I'll answer that you didn't ask is,
I think the other big bottleneck outside of hardware is still software.
So like, you know, we spent, there's a lot of talk right now on hardware supply chains across a lot
of industries, including space. I think there's paths to address that. What is still very true
in space is that these are very complex autonomous robots with global networks that are having to
communicate inside communication, outside of communication.
And software is really the glue that holds all that together.
And in a lot of ways, the integration of all these things
and the software integration, the hardware integration
is still the hardest part.
It's really making these large complex systems work
as a whole.
And I really think that's a place that there's not being
enough emphasis put in the industry right now.
It's something that we're really trying very hard to solve
with kind of the kind of core hardware software stack
that we're building.
So that instead of, you know, for every new use case,
you're trying to solve in space,
you're going in from the beginning,
having to do this crappy new integration
of a bunch of parts of hardware and software
that aren't actually designed to talk together.
You have a platform that much like a data center rack today,
everything from the lowest levels of hardware to the high level application software to talk together, you have a platform that much like a data center rack today, everything
from the lowest levels of hardware to the high level application software is designed
to interoperate, it's designed to be pluggable.
And so when Google's putting data centers in the data center, they can go take a bunch
of stuff off the shelf.
Every rack doesn't look the same, but they have a bunch of parts that are interchangeable.
They can go throw that in, plug them in, the software works, the hardware works, et cetera.
And we've got to get to that with space too. Yeah, I mean, we've done that a ton in data center like CAT, like CAT5 cables, plug them in, the software works, the hardware works, et cetera. And we've got to get to that with space too.
Yeah.
I mean, we've done that a ton in data center, like cat, like cat five cables,
cat six cables, like these are all standardized, even Facebook open, open
source, their, their blade design for their rack mounts.
Um, and there's a lot of other, uh, you know, ecosystem tools.
Um, last question from me, um, are you tracking the SpaceX Starship progress?
There was news today that Elon Musk is winding down
his relationship with the government
as a special government employee.
That was a 130 day mission.
Probably spending a little, fewer nights at Mar-a-Lago,
more nights than the SpaceX factories.
Starbase.
Are you tracking that?
Are you excited about that and I
guess the big meta question is Elon has always seemed interested in getting to
Mars but he's willing to go to Mar-a-Lago if that's what gets him to
Mars he's willing to go to Starbase Texas if that's what get him to Mars so
it feels like this might be a moment where he's shifting his focus the
missions the same but he's shifting his focus. The mission's the same, but he's shifting his focus from regulation to engineering challenges.
Mars is back on the menu, boys.
Mars is back on the menu, but what has your take been
on the recent Starship or SpaceX news?
Yeah, I mean, I guess I would start by saying,
look, building rockets is really fucking hard.
I mean, I think anybody that says it's not is crazy.
It is rocket science.
I think we've almost been lulled in complacency
by how successful SpaceX has made it
and like how easy they make it look.
But I mean, Starship is a crazy complex rocket
unlike any that's ever been built.
So like at some level,
I feel like the setback should be expected
and people shouldn't act so surprised.
I think there's, I don't have enough inside information
to know if like forward progress is being made
or sideward progress, if there's more focus, whatever.
But like, this stuff's really hard,
so I don't think it's that surprising that there's setbacks.
You know, I think that the key thing
for the launch, unit economics,
which I think ultimately, you know, Starship,
we're all hoping it's gonna give us
another order of magnitude on unit economics.
So much of it is not even about scale or size or technical performance or capability.
It's about launch cadence. It's about rate. It's about flying. It's like airlines, right?
If you bought a 737 and flew it five times a year, nobody would be able to afford to fly.
But because it flies 10 times a day, all of a sudden that the amortization of that fixed asset
over those flights makes
a ton of sense.
So I think for Starship to really go, what we need is we need applications that require
Starship like Starlink has for Falcon 9 that drive us to launch it three, four, or five
times a day like you fly 737s.
And I think if that happens, like it will, we will get another order of magnitude in
the unit economics.
And I mean, maybe tying the loop back to the original question, you start thinking about applications
like deploying data centers in space where you're putting thousands of things that are
each many, many tons each into space.
And there's a really core first order economic driver requiring that, needing that to scale
AI training and these types of workflows. That's the kind of thing that I think could drive the demand that you need for something like Starship to really get
Another another sort of order of magnitude new and economics. I don't know if I really answered your question, but that's the way I think about
Makes sense. Well, thank you so much for stopping by. This is great. Come back on again soon. Yeah
And while we're waiting for our next guest
Let me tell you about linear linear is a purpose-built tool for planning and building products meet the system for modern software development
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Lucky to use for over a decade now over a decade on linear
I'm surprised the company's even decade old seems no no no sorry half a decade on linear? That's crazy. I'm surprised the company's even a decade old.
Seems like a long start up.
No, no, no, sorry, half a decade.
Half a decade, okay.
Because a decade ago you were in middle school.
I was about to say the better part of a decade.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
Well, we have our next guest.
David from Retool is coming in the studio.
I'm very excited to finally talk to you.
I was at your YC demo day alumni demo day and
No one's gonna believe this but it's true
So I just have to say it and and you were the one company that stuck out
I was like that company's gonna be amazing and I wasn't I didn't even think of myself as an angel investor
I should just be like, let me please let me invest
Anyway, it's been fantastic to watch the arc of retool and everything that you've built. So congratulations and
Thanks for joining the show.
Thank you great to be here.
Huge fan of TBPN so excited to be here.
Can you give us a little update on the company kind of define the different eras what the
product is and where it's going.
I know obviously we're in a period of transformation with artificial intelligence I'm sure we'll
go into all of that,
but what has the bread and butter been
for the last couple of years?
Yeah, so for the first few years of Retool,
Retool's like Legos for code,
which is we allow you to build
a sort of higher level building blocks
and you can code faster.
You can say, you can piece them together
and you can build software.
And the weird thing about Retual was that we always
focused on this category that we called internal software,
which is extremely not sexy,
because no one ever thinks about internal tools.
But surprisingly, something like 50 to 60%
of all the software in the world
is actually internal facing.
And no one thinks about it, actually.
And so that's where Retual started.
And the idea behind that is that and and engineers are not like
Oh, I want to work on the internal tools typically like, you know, you put the engineer that's not
Grinding away, but yeah, I mean this was the big we were talking to Joe Weisenthal about this with the the question of like meta training
llama and there's a bunch of places
where LLMs will instantiate themselves in consumer facing products across meta but also
they have a massive amount of internal tooling that can benefit from AI and so you know not
having to fork over endless boatloads of cash to you know to just check is this or does
this have profanity in it?
One billion times a second, right?
It's like that could be a very big open AI bell
if they don't train that internally.
And so yeah, I think the dark clouds
over the internal tooling world
is something that most people might not be aware of,
but you've obviously been living in that.
So talk to us about the growth of the company.
What's the mix?
Is this all enterprise
driven? Is there small and medium businesses that benefit from Retool? Kind of what's the
bread and butter on the customer side? Well, if you look at the homepage, it's like
the logos. It's like, oh, so you guys work with every company.
Every company. Yeah, it's pretty cool. I've been working
with companies ranging from the US Army to the US Navy, the state of Utah,
all the way to small startups, two-person companies,
five-person companies.
You don't get put on the American Dynamism market maps.
I'm going to start demanding.
Yeah, we've got to put them on the American Dynamism.
Put some respect on Retool.
Retool's name, yes.
It is the backbone of the US military.
No, seriously.
I mean, there's Intual software everywhere. But yeah, maybe it'd be good to shift into kind of like the US military. No, seriously, I mean, there's internal software everywhere.
But yeah, maybe it'd be good to shift into
kind of like the AI moment.
It feels like Reeschool was kind of vibe coding
without the vibe coding meme or without the,
it allowed you to vibe code without
the actual instantiation of, you know,
you're not in an IDE, but you're effectively vibe coding
or building something that That's very quick
How have you been processing the the AI boom?
When did you first think about implementing?
LLMs and other AI
Technology into retool and and how has it been going so far?
Yeah, so the really cool thing about retool is that once you have these Lego blocks built
Yeah, you could actually give them to a to actually use, which is really interesting.
People leave is missing now, which is today.
If you look at how many dollars have been invested in the U S N AI,
I think it's around a trillion, maybe a trillion and a half or so.
But if you actually look at how much revenue there is from all AI products across all companies,
I think it's like 20, 30 billion.
That's pretty crappy ROI.
That's a 3% ROI.
That's terrible.
And the question is, is it all a bubble?
Can we figure out some use case for this LM
beyond just chat?
And if you look at where we are today
in the consumer market and the enterprise market,
it pretty much is all just chat.
I think if you look at that 20, 30 billion dollars
of revenue, I want to say something like 80% of it
is chat LGBT revenue plus cloud revenue, which is awesome.
But chat is pretty limited.
I mean, is track gonna grow 30X from where we are now? It's hard to say. I think probably no is pretty limited. I mean is checking a growth 30x or VR now It's hard to say I think probably no is the answer
And so what we think is really missing is a way to actually leverage and use LLMs to actually go automate labor
Mm-hmm. The weird thing about this is that LLMs are actually plenty smart already if you you know
I use channel out for you to both use chat quite a bit as well
It's basically a GI at this point. I mean, yeah, it was the classic Turing test thing of you know, I use chat a lot for you to both use chat quite a bit as well It's basically a GI at this point. I mean, it was the classic Turing test thing of you know, we have a blue past that
Way past that. Yeah, yeah
They are doing anything. Yeah
So it feels like this is big disconnect totally what we're here to really solve is can we actually allow a eyes or LMS?
To actually do things in your business? So right now
it's just chatting back and forth. Can we actually allow it? Can we allow the US Navy, for example,
to say, hey, it's not just using chat GBT to answer some questions, but actually chat GBT
actually or LMS actually do things in the US Navy, whether it's approving orders, whether it's
approving plans, whatever it might be. That, I think, is the next frontier for AI.
It's AI that actually does things.
And I think we're almost there.
It's pretty cool.
That's what we're working on.
Can you help me work through this question of there's
like this AGI ASI narrative, and then how does that not destroy
every software company because I?
I'm seeing MCP servers spun up left and right and my question keeps being like if the AI is so smart
Why does it need a server? Why can't it just use?
HTML and UI like any other human right?
At a certain point is it good is there is there a world where I say I want to
sell a t-shirt online and instead of spinning up a Shopify store it just
writes payment interop code it doesn't even use stripe it just builds stripe
from scratch at a moment's notice if it's so smart and it just works for a
billion human hours added up at 160 IQ, and it just builds me Stripe for this one t-shirt
that I want to sell.
That feels like it aligns with the ASI.
That's also maybe not even the best example
for the regulatory component.
We also had Steven on from the co-founder and CEO
of Lambda Labs.
His point of view was broadly that you're just
going to generate the software that you need,
and you might generate 500.
And I'm sure this is
stuff that Retool is already doing to some degree, generate a bunch of different versions of what a
tool could look like, rank them, allow you to sort of try different versions of it before landing on.
So there's like this one, there's this one world where like having Retool primitives that LLMs can
interact with is amazing in terms of like making sure that there's robust
Performance and everything gets up to speed really quickly at the same time
You know in the really long term do we even need these primitives and can we just do everything from scratch?
What's kind of your long-term view of how this plays out?
So this is I think a secret that we've actually discovered is
In what cases do you want determinism versus
what cases do you not want determinism?
That's interesting.
And we actually just announced yesterday that we have automated 130 million hours of work
for our customers over the past 12 months.
If you divide out the math, that's around 70,000.
That's a lot of hours. the past 12 months, if you divide out the math, that's around.
It's a lot of hours.
I think the secret is exactly what both of you just pointed out there, which is
in what cases do you want AI and what cases do not want AI?
And, uh, to give an example, open AI has this product called operator.
Yep.
Agent like thing that does things on your computer.
And actually for consumer use cases operator is really good
What up does is basically an LM with one tool and that one tool is use the computer Yeah, and if you want to go buy a
Shirt, if you want to go buy a pair of socks
That agent is really good. It you know, what it'll do is you say hey you want, you know socks size medium
And maybe blue color it will open up the browser and will Google I want socks, size medium, a navy blue color.
It will open up the browser.
It'll Google.
It'll find the sock.
It'll buy it.
It'll use a credit card.
It's done.
And that's fully non-deterministic.
It's kind of making it up on the spot.
And that's pretty good for a consumer use case.
Whereas for an enterprise use case or a federal use case,
for example, you actually don't want it doing that.
And so I'll give you an example.
One of our customers, a large company, actually uses Retool for employee onboarding.
And so what they say is, hey, every time a new employee starts, you got to go do all
these tasks.
Maybe you have to go send them a laptop, you want to send them the key fob, you want to
do this, you want to do that, whatever.
And if you ask operator to go do that, operator says says I got one tool and it's web search
So how do I onboard an employee?
I'm gonna open my browser. I'm gonna Google. How do I onboard employees?
He how article it reads the wiki how articles like
That's not at all what you want
This has very specific ways of onboarding an employee
Yeah, and I'm actually calling those specific things because you actually don't want it reinventing the wheel This has very specific ways of onboarding an employee. Yeah.
The AI actually calling those specific things
because you actually don't want it reinventing the wheel
all the time.
And a lot of those might be gated and private
and maybe not even on the open web
and also very high risk from a regulatory perspective even.
So you don't actually want the AI reinventing it all the time.
So that's kind of what we mean by the building blocks.
You almost want to give AI these building blocks, these tools, these MCP servers, and
then have AIs call them as opposed to AI reinventing it all the time.
Because you don't actually want AI rewriting your security policy, or how do I send laptops
to employees every day?
Instead, you want it to say, hey, oh, let me think.
There's a big storm happening in the Southeast. So for me to get the laptop in on time, I have
to ship by express, which is ground. That's something you want the AI reinventing and
reasoning about, but you don't actually want the AI reinventing. You know, do I use FedEx
today or do I use UPS? What do I feel? You know, you have a contract with FedEx, you
want to use the FedEx one. So sure, sure, sure. Yeah. And that's something that like
a good office manager, good person in HR who's onboarding,
would actually think about and reason about.
And you could inject that with a reasoning LLM.
That makes a ton of sense.
Talk to me about the evolution of the business model.
Consumption versus seat-based pricing.
And then going into the future, are
we going to be looking at outcome-based pricing,
like what we're seeing Mark benioff talk about in terms of salesforce?
Where it's more like resolution based you want a job done our agents our tools can get that done
And you're going to pay for results
Yeah, so this is a fun
I think a birdie secret too is that I think outcome based pricing is basically designed to rip customers off.
Okay.
The reason why I believe that is when Mark Benioff
tries to charge you per outcome, he's like,
well, what's the value of what I deliver?
And great, pay me that.
Whereas in reality, it costs a lot less for him
to actually go deliver that value.
This is software though, we want 90% margins, come on.
What do you have against high margins?
Well, for awesome.
No, I hear you.
Yeah, no, it creates a, but isn't,
couldn't you argue with SaaS,
the SaaS vendors basically trying to charge
as much as possible without the person saying,
oh, we're gonna build this ourselves,
or oh, that's actually, you know,
we can just hire two more people to do this.
It's always this dance between you want to be,
no company should be trying to capture all the value
that they create.
Right?
Yeah, because no one would buy a product.
Yeah.
So the way that we're pricing is pretty interesting,
which is that we price based on inputs, which is we just say,
our agents work for $3 an hour. And that's it you want a smarter agent can hire smarter agents actually that three dollar agent is a deep seek agent
So it's a Chinese agent for three dollars an hour
You go by oh three, which is a quite smart probably the smartest right now reasoning agent
I think that's something like maybe a hundred twenty dollars an hour or something
So it basically depends on what kind of task do you want to do if you want to do a simple task actually deep
Seek is quite good at that and a real is now getting a really good deal compared to hiring human labor
Whereas if you want something, you know, really knowledge worky or something really nuanced done, maybe oh three is better actually
but I think the innovation here is that we are charging on a
Per runtime hour basis and what we've discovered is that we are charging on a per runtime hour basis.
And what we've discovered is that an hour of runtime,
for 03 for example, is actually worth something like 40,
50 hours of human labor.
If you've tried to do at least,
deep research can do it an hour.
I mean, I probably could have been doing it, honestly.
So that I think is really cool.
And then what happens is you actually look at
how much the customer pays per task actually completed.
If you compare, you put our pricing to Salesforce's,
for example, per ticket resolve pricing,
our pricing ends up something like 95% cheaper,
which is really, really cool.
I mean, it'd be like if AWS charged you
not on compute or storage,
if they charged you on how much money does your app make?
Let's charge 90% of that.
That's a total rip off, right?
So that's kind of how we think.
We're almost, you know, we're trying to be almost
like an AWS of labor, if you will.
Yeah.
How do you evaluate as the businesses evolve?
I'm sure people early on,
it was pretty easy to communicate even to investors.
Hey, people spend a lot of time and energy
and engineering resources on internal tools.
We can be a big company just doing this.
Now I imagine as you look at the business evolving,
you're like threatening a lot of different categories
of software because you're saying,
we're gonna enable teams to more easily make the decision,
do we buy this or build it ourselves?
And like maybe retool is like some middle ground.
I don't know if that's the right way to think of it.
But how do you evaluate kind of the scale of the opportunity now?
So the internal goal that we have, and it's pretty early,
but our internal goal is to go automate the equivalent of, if not actually,
10 percent of the labor in the U in the US by 2030 is our goal.
The idea is modest.
Let's go.
I love it.
I love it.
Here's the TAM.
US labor.
10%.
10%.
Yeah.
And actually the cool thing is we're on track actually
The last few months we draw that now, yeah 20 30s a long time away, but we draw the line out it comes to I think
Actually, that's incredible
But how did 30 million hours automated is no joke. So yeah, that's serious. Yeah, that is absolutely why. Well, 15 minutes was not enough time.
We have three more minutes.
We have three more minutes.
Yes, 120.
I have one more question.
Talk to me about the knockout drag out
fight happening in the foundation model space.
You mentioned DeepSea get $3 an hour versus 03 at $120
an hour.
How do the other foundation labs compare?
What do you do to benchmark them internally or the benchmarks cooked? What's the take on Meta and llama?
There seemed to be a ton of energy there in terms of your use case
Having an open source model that you can inference for cheap or at cost seems incredible And yet they yet it seems like they're a little bit behind
on the reasoning models.
Are you optimistic there?
Are you kind of model agnostic?
What's your overall take on the foundation model space?
It's pretty cool to see this play out,
especially with our customers,
because, yeah, so for us, we're theoretically agnostic.
You can use whatever model you want.
But it's really cool seeing what customers prefer actually. So for example, with a large federal customer, you might think, oh,
actually on-prem is really important. And so they actually prefer to use Lama or something like that.
Sure. Not the case. Actually, OpenAI is selling a lot of OpenAI, it turns out. It actually does
a lot of traction, even in big federal agencies for something like OpenAI. They actually have
contracts already
That's they plug in the ritual and just works that makes sense
You know, I think I would have thought if he asked me three years ago
Is the federal government happy giving all their data to you know, LM?
No, hell no, it seems very unlikely but it's happening, which is really cool
But you also see this obviously happening in other countries too
We're unlike whether it's Saudi Arabia or Europe with mistral, for example,
people are getting kind of nervous about sending data to other countries.
LLM.
So it's going to be cool to see how the world plays out.
Uh, it's surprising.
It's very much not a meritocracy is maybe one way of putting it, which is we
thought that when we build our agents product with an evals framework, people
would just say, let's see who does best, who does have a cheapest and let's go. And actually that's not the case, which is, I don't know how I
feel about that, honestly.
Is that because like there are SDRs that are buying steak dinners for people and swinging
them over or is it more like there are qualitative metrics that matter more, like the nature
of the contract matters more than just benchmark price, et cetera,
like the quantitative metrics.
There's that, but maybe another way of putting it is
LLMs have been stickier than I thought,
which is maybe the branding is so important
or something like that.
Yeah, everyone just says,
oh, it's just one line of code to swap out,
but if you're used to the certain,
like what does undercarpathy call it,
like spiky intelligence,
there's like certain models that spike in certain ways
and you have expected behaviors and they,
yeah, they might all hallucinate at the same 3% rate
but if they hallucinate in a specific way,
you build around that, that type of thing.
Okay.
Exactly.
Very cool.
Cool, but excited to see how the space develops.
Well, thanks for coming on.
This is fantastic.
Yeah, super fun.
We'd love to have you back and just chat about AI
and automating 10% of labor.
Good luck.
Give us access to the internal tool that's just the labor
automation tracker.
I'd love to just follow along.
We can put it up as a ticker on the screen.
It's just like progress.
No, I love the ambition and excited to follow
and come back on again soon.
Yeah, thanks so much for stopping by.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye. Let's talk about sales for stopping by. Cheers, David. Bye.
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Anyway, our next guest is from Palette.
We have Sushant in the studio.
Let's bring him in and hear the latest update.
How you doing?
Doing well.
How are both of you?
Doing great.
Fantastic.
Would you mind kicking us off with a little introduction on yourself and the company?
How you doing?
Yeah, sure.
So I'm Sushant. I'm the founder and CEO of Pallet. So what we do at Pallet
is we're an augmented AI platform built for the logistics industry. So we automate away
all the back office tasks you do in running a logistics business, right? Like data entry,
quoting, appointment scheduling, tracking where your ocean containers are. So there's
about like $11 trillion spent on logistics, but what's
surprising is about a trillion dollars of that just goes on these back office tasks that you have to do.
So what we saw was here is like a real prime application of using AI agents to go and automate
away these tasks. But we took an augmented AI approach in that we always have humans QA the
work that agents are doing. That way the completion of the task is near guaranteed
to very high degrees of accuracy.
So that's why a lot of the leading logistics providers
really trust us to automate away what basically eats up
about 10% of their optics.
What's the wedge product that most companies start with?
Or do you have, do you think of it that way
or are you trying to sell like a whole suite
of products on day one?
So what's interesting is that we built, the technology we built is pretty generalizable
and you can customize it per use case.
So customers have started with a wide range of use cases.
One of the largest cold chain storage companies started off doing data entry.
Another well-known shipper has started off automating how they basically bid for freight
with different transportation providers.
Other folks have looked at using us
for automating spot market coding.
Other folks have started off with appointment scheduling.
So we always try to start off with one use case,
but that use case could be quite distinct,
and the agent we deploy could be quite distinct
client by client.
When you say data entry, are you migrating people
from other systems primarily, or Excel,
or are there still paper-based workflows out there?
What are you actually seeing in the modern American economy?
Because I feel like a lot of companies
will give the pitch of get off of paper,
but realistically, most companies are on Excel.
Do you guys have a humanoid robot that goes to a printer,
prints something out, and then faxes it?
Fax machines.
Still in use, apparently.
Joking, of course.
Humanoid robots will come in soon.
But the way it works, actually, is
that you go to one of these.
Even the largest logistics providers in the world,
like your DHL or your FedExes, they still
get paper documents sent over email.
Basically, the way it works is you have your email inbox,
you have a bunch of emails coming in
with documents attached to it.
You look at it, first you look at,
is this customer someone I should be working with?
Is it someone I work with or not?
Then I look at the document,
does it have all the fields I want?
Then I go type in literally all the fields
off the document into my system.
And I'm doing this like 100 times every single day.
Right? Like I think the whole reason I started this company was I went to one of her customers'
offices. It was like a Sunday afternoon. And he was like typing in data, like he was typing
in 100 orders into a system on a Sunday afternoon. And he's like, I can't watch the NFL playoffs.
I have to type data manually in from my inbox.
That is your son of American.
Into my transportation management system
and this is how I spend my Sunday evenings.
And I was like, that's crazy.
Like there has to be something better we could do here.
What is the Super Bowl of the industries
that you sell into?
Like are there specific conferences
where everyone gets together
in terms of logistics that are super important
for you to sponsor?
Or what does the top of funnel look like for you?
Or is it very much just cold outreach, sales reps,
dinner, steak dinners, that type of thing?
Or what's the actual go-to-market motion?
So the go-to-market motion, I think we rely
on a wide range of channels.
We rely on conferences.
Cold dialing, believe it or not, is still really popular.
Like when I got our first customers, I would actually do something even more extreme.
I would drive around East Bay and Stockton, literally knock on warehouse doors, get kicked out until I could get our first customer in.
So I went a bit extreme, but a lot of our SDRs,
still cold aisle.
And then there's quite a bit that comes in inbound.
But I think the key, the key though,
it's not just about the method of the outreach.
All these companies are a bit skeptical
of Silicon Valley technology companies naturally, right?
So the thing they tell,
the thing that we've done is about 30% of Palette
has come from the industry.
They've worked at places like SEVA,
they've worked places like Uber Freight, they've worked places like Flexport,
and they understand all the use cases in the company. So I always tell everyone on our
sales team, you have to earn the right to talk about the technology. First, you need
to show the customer on that cold call that you understand their business really well.
That like if I'm talking to a freight forwarder, I understand terminology,
how they deal with containers, what are incoterms, and all this industry-specific jargon. If
I can show that, the person on the other end is more receptive to hearing me out about
how I can utilize technology. If you understand their business processes, you understand their
workflows. They're like, this is not just another company that's in SOMA that's just
looking at logistics terms on Chat GPT,
these are people that actually just get me.
How much has AI been just an accelerant
of the product that you're already selling
versus something that you can upsell
and bolt on as like a new product?
I think AI has been a huge game changer
where it's like been like the primary focus of the company.
Right, like if these foundation models didn't exist or value prop of a product wouldn't be as strong I think AI has been a huge game changer where it's like been like the primary focus of the company, right?
Like if these foundation models that didn't exist or value prop over product wouldn't be as strong as it is today
So I'd say it's very critical and I think in fact
One thing that's made it even more critical is what's happening with the recent tariffs, right?
like the volatile like what tariffs have really created is like this extreme sense of like
Volatility were like April container volumes in Long Beach
are spiking, now they're down
and the courts reverse the ruling
and it gets reversed back in the last hour.
So people have no idea like my volumes
keep going up and down and I just can't scale up
the human capacity to support it.
And now AI really just allows me to kind of come
and like if I'm getting more emails into my inbox,
I can deploy these agents and then they can go and handle this excess
volume that I would otherwise have to hire contractors really quickly to go do
so it's a huge game changer especially with what's happening right now. What was
it like selling maybe call it a month ago when when the trade the trade war
chaos was sort of peaking in some ways. And I imagine people at that point
feel like they probably need better tools.
But at the same time, they're like, hey,
I can't really handle onboarding.
But I'm curious what your experience was actually like.
What I tell them is, look, you're kind of like, right now,
the way we priced this is on a per success outcome.
Your cost of doing this, let's say, is a dollar in house.
It's going to be $1.30 on pallet.
So if we do what we're going to say,
you're going to have guaranteed ROI,
and you're going to have immediate time value.
The second thing is that we built a very,
the way our product works is we can adjust the customer's SOP
and immediately spin up an agent that
replicates their workflows.
So we also really emphasize our time to value,
where we're like, look, you're not changing your tech stack.
You're not changing anything about your operation.
You're just sharing.
You just literally give us a video recording of what you do.
We'll capture that.
And we can then create the agent to go and automate it.
And it requires a minimal touch.
You're not changing any of your systems.
I just have to call something out.
So you were at Retool before Palace.
Just had David on.
And he said that, it's just so funny,
he was like charging on a per outcome basis is BS.
That was his take.
I don't fully necessarily agree with it,
but it's amazing that you were just there.
Yeah, yeah.
I love David.
He used to be my former boss,
but I think that's one area we probably disagree on.
I think the outcome-based pricing is a game changer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Talk about the round.
It's only been seven months
since you raised your $21 million Series A.
Now there's a $27 million Series B.
I'm sure there's a valuation markup,
I don't know if you're sharing that, but it's not a huge step up in terms of total capital
raise. So what does that tell us about the structure of the business and the burn rate
and how you're thinking about capital consumption? You mentioned that AI has kind of infiltrated
everything. Is that a cost center now? Are you actually spending significant amounts of capital
on inferencing AI models, or is this more just,
we have something that's working,
so we're gonna hire more, write more code,
more sales reps, more dinners, more steak dinners,
more champagne, more hitting the size gong
when you get a big client?
So actually, most of the capital from the last round,
we hadn't even spent.
Like, we barely tapped into that. Like we barely touched it, tapped into that.
So this round was entirely opportunistic.
And the part of the reason it came together with the folks, the general catalyst, I
knew them really well.
We got to know each other really well and they helped build some Sara.
And some Sara was probably the most iconic logistics software company.
So a lot of it was Hey, Mark and the team, they're like really knew how to build a
big business
the second part was I
Kind of felt like the industry was going for a big change and I just really wanted to accelerate our momentum on our product and our
enterprise sales motion where what I saw was like I was talking to the CIO and the CEOs of companies like DHL Cuda Nagal
Estee Lauder and all these. And they were telling me like,
we're trying to figure out how to use AI.
We have no idea which model to pick for which use case.
It's like these models keep evolving at a rapid pace.
We need someone to be that translation layer
to kind of make that happen.
So that was very obvious from the conferences
that I was going to.
And the second thing was when these tariffs kicked in,
I was like, there's so much volatility
that the value prop of this stuff is like a no brainer
and we just really need to accelerate at this time.
So that's why it was completely opportunistic
where we had the right partner,
the market felt like it was just getting ready
for the technology and we were like,
we know exactly what we wanna do.
So like, let's go and accelerate.
Yeah, you mentioned some of those really big companies
and kind of them not being able to decide
between different models. Have you bumped into
any of the large consulting firms, the McKinsey's of the world? Because we heard
this narrative early in the AI boom that they're making more money than the
startups and the tech companies because they're they're selling pitch decks at
extremely high margin talking about AI transformation,
and then just saying, hey, if you're a big company,
you can go build it, here's our take on AI,
or are they more of a partner that could recommend you?
Do you have any insight into how
the big management consulting firms
are confronting the AI issue
and plugging into the Fortune 500? So what we've generally seen is that the consulting firms are confronting the AI issue and plugging into the Fortune 500?
Kline- What we've generally seen is that the consulting firms are very much open to partnering
with companies. I think the way that you think about it is the executives at these businesses,
there's a lot that's happening. There's a lot of noise. I'm not even sure who the right
partner is. Do I go with a horizontal solution like Microsoft Copilot? Do I go with one of
these newer players? Like
where do I allocate my capital and who do I take as my partner? And think of the consulting firms
as a way to kind of help these companies filter out all that noise on who is the right partner
for me to work with. So we very much think of them as critical partners that help us like earn the
trust of these Fortune 500 corporations. And that's how we view it.
Actually, as the CEO of one of those firms,
is actually someone who I've gotten to know well.
And he actually has helped us actually open a couple of doors.
Very cool.
Just got to say you're exceptional at sales.
I'm ready to sign up for Pallet right now.
And I have nothing to do with your industry.
Hey, we're going to be shipping a lot of hats, a lot of jackets.
He's like, well, a lot of people think
that our solution might not be right for them.
But before they actually try.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The anti-cell sells better than anything else, for sure.
Anything else, Jordy?
No, congratulations on the new round.
Yeah, this is fantastic.
Excited to track your progress.
Yeah, I mean, grateful to be here.
One last thing, by the way, is that one thing we've really kind of pushed for at Palette
is this concept called hybrid work.
Sure.
Where what we believe in is actually that there's only two places you could work at
Palette, either in the office or at the customer site.
Ooh, like forward deployed engineers.
Every month, we make our team spend a week at the customer side.
So last month our entire team was out in Medellin at a customer's BPO learning their operations
and learning how they can like every single aspect of their process.
And I think this is really important because in a world where software costs are trending
to zero, like if you don't understand the customer's workflows, like in excruciating detail, you might not be building the right thing and they don't build good documentation.
You can't just go chat GBT the right answer on how does container track and trace work.
You actually have to sit there, observe, learn.
Yeah, I love the hiring process. Candidates like, so do you guys support a hybrid work?
And you're like, of course we do.
About a week out of the month, you'll be in South America.
You know?
And you built out that function at Retool, right?
The sort of concept of this deployed engineer.
Is that correct?
That's correct.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I was probably the first forward deployed engineer there.
Very cool. That's cool
So you're pretty bullish on the forward-deployed engineering meme kind of just growing and growing in the future
broadly for like every company or is it specific to B2B software or something about AI automation and
Something that needs to be customized. I imagine that there there have to be some
organizations that
They they don't need it because the product is so standardized,
right?
Yeah, I think it's not necessary for every type of business.
I think in our case, we're dealing with a company that has a lot of internal systems
and processes that you have to hook onto.
And we're trying to make change management, to your point, what you said earlier was like,
hey, I don't want to change my operations too much.
I want to stick with what I do. So if we want to make change management simple, we need, what you said earlier was like, hey, I don't want to change my operations too much, I want to stick with what I do. So, if we want to make
change management simple, we need to hook in with your existing infrastructure. So,
at least for Pallet, we think the forward deployed engineering function is critical
to make change management easier. But there's obviously tons of companies that could succeed
without that function.
O'Reilly-Holme, thank you so much for stopping by.
Shen, congrats on all the progress. I'm super bullish
Yeah, talk to you soon. Cheers
Bye, how'd you sleep last night Jordy? I?
historic numbers again had kind of a
We were on so much caffeine yesterday John. I do you did you track how much caffeine you were on?
I was on a lot of a fair amount of caffeine couple year We got six and a half hours of sleep. I guess almost seven me and 82. What'd you put up?
What was your final number? Did I beat you? No, you didn't
My worst night this month
I got an 84 anyway, go get yourself an eight sleep five-year warranty 30 night risk-free trial free returns and free shipping
It's what Charles LeClair sleeps on
when he's crying himself to sleep.
Yeah, there's a timeline post I wanted to highlight here
from Andy Nexuist because it ties
into our next advertisement.
Stripe put up a digital billboard in Grand Central
and it just says Stripe billing, usage based billing
to scale your business faster.
And the meme is, is everyone there
having the same thought bubble?
What a silly niche ad.
Nobody at Grand Central has even heard of Stripe,
let alone implemented it in prod like I have.
And it's so funny, but it's so true.
Like I have actually implanted Strife
and I'm sure so many people that go through
Grand Central have.
And I think it's, I think my interesting takeaway
from this, sorry, is that there is a desire for,
like we talk about out of home obviously,
and we're gonna read you an ad quick ad,
don't worry, it's coming.
But I think that there are companies that feel like
they need to abstract their message into even broader terms
when in fact I think just being clear about what the product
is and just knowing that yes, implementing Stripe
is a common thing at this point.
And those people walk through Grand Central.
Yeah.
A lot of people do start yelling about their company
without being clear about the product marketing,
effectively.
And then that can just make your life so hard
because people are like aware of your brand or your company,
but when the moment comes that they would convert,
they don't actually think of you in that context.
Yeah, like there is a different version of this Stripe ad
that is like a photo of Patrick Collison
talking about increasing the GDP of the internet and stuff,
and it's very like high fidelity and stuff. I I'd love that. Going like one of the classic Arnold poses. Hitting the Ziz.
Yes absolutely but but but aside from that it's like it's like it's okay to
just send the message up front just just be just be just be straight up with it
like adquick out of home advertising,
made easy and measurable.
Say goodbye to the headaches of out of home advertising.
Only AdQuick combines technology, out of home expertise,
and data to enable efficient, seamless ad buying
across the globe.
And yeah, I'm still super long on out of home advertising.
You can see Stripe is doing it in Grand Central.
And it is the most fun.
It's the most real.
Yep.
Seeing your ad on MetaX, et cetera, is cool.
Yeah.
Seeing it in the real world.
Nothing like it.
Nothing like it.
It's different.
Did you see Nathan Fielder piloted a full Boeing 737
plane?
Yeah, so I finished it.
It was kind of a challenge because I kept falling asleep
like two thirds of the way through every episode.
So I've seen the entire season,
but I actually should probably watch it back again.
This is so awkward.
But yeah, it was absolutely wild.
And especially the context, like the timing of when of when the show actually
Premiered and the episode started rolling out. Yeah, it really is insane
He's one of the best ever do it and he's he's a he's a real icon
Yeah, and we have to I would like to be in the next his next season
well speaking of icons, there's nothing more iconic than a
season. Well speaking of icons there's nothing more iconic than a Rolex and you can get one on bezel. Go to GetBezel.com your bezel concierge is available to
source you any watch on the planet. Seriously any watch. They have 26,000
luxury watches available and so go check it out at GetBezel.com and next up we
have Rob Taves, a good friend of mine. I grew up with him. I went to middle school
and high school with him.
Now he's a venture capitalist at Radical Ventures,
and he's a great columnist in rights
about artificial intelligence,
and has been writing about artificial intelligence
since before it was cool, which is fantastic.
So we'll bring in Rob and ask him a bunch of questions
about artificial intelligence.
How are you doing?
What's going on?
I'm doing great.
Thanks for having me, guys.
Welcome to the show. What is top of mind for you right now in AI? How are you doing? What's going on? I'm doing great. Thanks for having you guys welcome to show
What is top of mind for you right now in AI? What's the biggest thing that you've gotten right over the last few years? I know you have that scorecard ten predictions, then you rank yourself as you look back on all of your predictions
What's the big one you got right? What's the big one? Maybe you missed on?
It's it's a great question. Yeah, every year I write a column of 10 predictions
for the year to come in the world of AI.
And to keep myself intellectually honest,
I go back at the end of the year and grade
which ones were right, which ones were wrong.
Let's see, so far this year, one of the predictions
I made at the end of last year was that President Trump
and Elon would have a messy falling out,
which would have various implications for the world of AI, was that President Trump and Elon would have a messy falling out which would have various
Implications for the world of AI which looks like it may be playing out. We'll see how that all comes together
Yeah, we were reading that today because Elon is no longer a special government employee
But at the same time messy seems like the key word there might be a split, but if it's clean
You're getting yellow. It feels like a clean split. We need satellite imagery of whether the red Tesla
is parked at the White House.
If there's a Tesla still at the White House
by the end of the year, I think you got to fail that one.
Yeah, not messy yet, for sure.
Yeah, it's interesting, because it is kind of an error
violation, because half of the world was like,
they're going to be together forever.
They're in love.
They're going to be partnered for four years, maybe for 10 years. And then the other half was like they're gonna be together forever. They're in love. They're gonna be partner for four years
Maybe for ten years
And then the other half was like this cannot last it's gonna blow up and it's gonna be super messy and it feels like right now
It might just be hey back to business sleep it in the factory
Anything could happen what about things that you feel like have played out
as expected?
Have you been kind of reassured or shocked
by the data wall, the pre-training wall,
the shift of the focus to reinforcement learning,
the importance of tool use going forward,
the importance of productization
versus this like this narrative around, oh yeah,
just scale up the big transformer model,
GPT-7 will be ASI, done.
Yeah, yeah, I think those trends are all very much playing out
and it's been interesting to watch.
It became increasingly clear over the course of last year
that the pre-training scaling laws really were plateauing.
And this narrative emerged around
towards the end of last year as OpenAI was increasingly
teasing its reasoning models and its O-series of models
that there is this kind of next frontier, next vista
for scaling, which was inference time compute and scaling
reasoning models and so forth.
And the reasoning models 010304, DeepSeeks R1, et cetera,
they have been very powerful and have unlocked
a lot of new capabilities and use cases and so forth.
I think the jury is still out as to whether they really
represent this next massive runway for scaling
that will
take us many years into the future.
I think it's still maybe the case
that the fundamental underlying capabilities of the models
are not growing as quickly as they did in the GPT-2 to GPT-3
to GPT-4 era.
But importantly, that may not matter that much,
to your point, John, because I think
the value and the activity is increasingly moving up
the stack.
And even if all model capabilities basically were frozen in time today, there were no further
advances, there's literally trillions of dollars of economic value to be created by just figuring
out how to productize these models, build particular solutions for particular end markets.
And even the big frontier labs, opening AI, anthropic, et cetera, are increasingly focused
further up the stack.
So I think that's where more and more the action will be.
Yeah, what is your take on how the shift
from pre-training to test time compute
affects data center build out,
the need for these hyper scale, Stargate-like,
massive data centers?
That stuff made a ton of sense
in the Leopold-Oshin-Brenner, where you're just gonna scale it up and get this massive data centers. That stuff made a ton of sense in the Leopold Aschenbrenner
where you're just gonna scale it up
and get this massive data center going
for the biggest pre-training run ever.
In a test time inference regime,
it feels like maybe it's more on demand,
maybe you don't need as many big super clusters,
but am I just thinking about that incorrectly
because maybe we still need the massive clusters
because the rate of token production is just going
going completely parabolic no I think that I think that narrative conceptually
holds true and I think a key insight as you touched on is inference can be done
in a much more decentralized way you don't need to have like hundreds of
thousands of GPUs that are all really tightly interconnected like as close
together physically as possible.
And so in a world where more and more of the compute
is inference, either productionization of models
or even inference time compute, that
can be done on GPUs that are more spread out.
And you don't need to have these like 5 gigawatt clusters.
The counter narrative is the like,
and I'm sure you guys got sick of hearing
Jevons paradox get referenced a million times over the past few months.
But the kind of-
We love Jevons paradox.
We think it should be taught in middle schools.
We almost got it tattooed right here.
Never forget.
Never forget.
Never forget.
Yeah, that guy has really been immortalized.
Yeah.
But I think there is a narrative
that even as inference becomes more important,
as computer gets cheaper and cheaper,
there will still be bigger and bigger and bigger
pre-training runs, and so that will justify
the massive capex build out that we're seeing.
Yeah, I've always been interested to see
if there's going to be the big transformer training runs,
like the GPT-45 type training run in image diffusion
or in robotics, or even in, I was thinking about like,
you know, we've kind of solved chess engines
but like what happens if you scale that up
seven more orders of magnitude?
Like just, do you get some weird outlier scenario?
The question I always have is like,
when can I see it on semi-analysis?
When can I see it from a satellite image?
Then I know that the big training runs happening I'm wondering are there any other areas or
regimes of training that aren't just predict next word that we could see a
huge data center run happen or is it really just text is the only option for
that scale or will we see like a VO4 training run and we'll be hearing about like oh wow
It's at it's at five gigawatt scale because vo4 just needs that much pre training
Yeah, yeah
So this was one of my predictions for 2025 is that we would
Start to see more and more scaling laws in data modalities other than text other language
And I do think that we're starting to see that play out
in robotics, for instance, in biology.
I mean, there's like the whole premise of,
the whole justification for building
such massive compute clusters is this notion of scaling.
And as you increase compute and increase data,
the model gets reliably better.
And we are starting to see like decent signs of that
in some of these other data modalities.
I think one important challenge or constraint though is there are very few other modalities that where there is as much raw data available as
there is for text like there is not an internet for robotics training data or
an internet for biology even and so the training data sizes can limit like it
like it doesn't make sense to have a massively overparameterized
model if there's just not enough training data.
And so for the foreseeable future,
at least, I think the amount of training data available
will cap how big the biggest robotic foundation
model can be, for instance, relative to the biggest
general purpose language model.
Do you buy the whole robotics thesis of,
but transfer learning is really effective
and like we can totally simulate this because we have unreal engine it feels
like a little bit of potential cope being like well we know that you don't
have the trove of the robotics data and so you're coming up with something that
hasn't worked in other modalities but at the same time unreal engines pretty
real and you can imagine walking a robot around and learning
a bunch of stuff if you train.
So what is your take on robotics data and transfer learning,
simulated learning, that type of stuff?
Yeah.
I mean, I think there's no question that robotics
foundation models are getting increasingly generalized.
And there's more and more signal that you can, in fact,
build a general purpose robotics foundation model.
And you can expose it fact, build a general purpose robotics foundation model, and you
can expose it to some previously unseen scenario,
and it knows how to navigate the real world in a way
that generalizes the same way that language models started
doing a few years ago.
I think this question around training data
is a really, really important one and a really key one.
And there are very strong opinions on both sides.
There are robotics experts who swear you can use simulation and
synthetic data to massively scale up the training data set and
use that to kind of erupt these scaling laws.
And there are other folks who believe that there's really no substitute for
real world data.
And you can supplement it a little bit with simulation, but
the sim to real gap is still a very real... There's a meaningful gap there, and so you can't get that much juice out of just
simulation.
I think today I fall more on the side of the importance of real-world data.
I think there's just so much nuance about the real world that isn't adequately fully
captured in Unreal Engine or whatever sophisticated simulation engine you can build.
But I do think as time goes on, that sim-to-real gap
will probably close.
And I would imagine it ends up looking not dissimilar
from the way the autonomous vehicle industry is involved.
I was about to ask.
Where real world data is essential, right?
And everyone remembers seeing Google's cars driving around
for over a decade collecting data.
But no major autonomous vehicle program today is not deeply based on simulation as well.
And so I think some mix ends up being necessary.
I think in robotics today, you still have to be heavily weighted toward real world data,
but hopefully just for the sake of leverage and technology advancements, I think simulation
will end up getting better and better.
Is there an analogy between the pre-training to test time inference regimes in LLM training
and chat models to what's happening in autonomous vehicles and the difference between pre-training
on all the data and on policy training that you can do and then also add simulation on top of that is that is there is there an
evolution of the of the kind of like mix of training paradigms that you would use
in in AV and I guess like the bigger question is just like Waymo versus Tesla
is there a meaningful data gap between those two companies?
Because Tesla's obviously been tracking
tons and tons of data, but Waymo seems to be working
pretty well when you get in the back of one.
And so it seems like both companies
might just have enough data,
and we might wind up in a situation where, you know,
like no one's talking about a data gap between Gemini,
Chachipiti, Anthropic, Llama.
They all just have all the data.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's interesting.
The way that autonomous vehicle AI stacks work today
is because they were kind of crafted and developed
in the pre-generative AI era,
they're not like these massive pre-trained
foundation models where they just fed
all of the data in the world.
They are much more handcrafted.
But it is an interesting thought experiment.
And there are more younger, next generation autonomous vehicle
companies that are taking this approach of like,
let's build a foundation model for driving them.
And can we do something similar to what
companies like physical intelligence are trying
to do for general purpose robotics?
Can we just apply a model like that to autonomous vehicles? How would a startup like that get data that that feels like the hardest thing?
Because you can't just crawl the web, right? Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. It's much harder to get training data for it
It's your question on Google versus Tesla Waymo versus Tesla
I think this is like a fascinating age-old question
Waymo versus Tesla, I think this is a fascinating age-old question. And you're right that Tesla has way more training data in the sense that it has this fleet of
personally owned vehicles driving around.
The quality of the data is lower than Waymo's though for the specific concrete reason that
they don't have LIDAR as a sensor modality.
And so this is the big debate.
Before I got into BC, I worked in autonomous vehicles.
And even back then, this was a debate, can you get to level four autonomy without LIDAR?
And Tesla needs to believe that the answer is yes, because their business model is selling
cars to consumers.
And LIDAR is so expensive that it would completely wreck the economics of selling a car to an
individual.
Waymo can stomach the cost of a of a lighter because their model is a
Robotaxi model. I honestly think the jury is still out like it's it's
Tesla folks will tell you that like we're very close to that and lighter was never necessary
But it's I think it's not it's not completely clear yet
And so in that sense like the the data set that Waymo has is more robust just because it's much more multimodal
Do you have a do you have a sense for why lidar is so expensive?
Like I mean Elon Musk was able to make Rockets cheap like the iPhone is cheap
Like how can we not get lidar down like even just to like a couple thousand dollars like that wouldn't break the Tesla
Paradigm right, but I assume that when we're talking about a lidar package on a Waymo
We're talking like five or six figures and that breaks the model
But we historically humans have been really good at like mass manufacturing expensive stuff and make it cheap
So I've always wondered about you know, Elon for a decade has been lidar is doomed. We don't need it
We don't need it, but he also changes his mind. And so I wouldn't be surprised if one day he's just like,
yeah, we figured out how to do it,
we have LIDAR in the cars and like, too bad.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and there have been rumors of Tesla
experimenting with LIDAR here, and obviously under wraps.
Sure, sure, sure.
You're right, it wouldn't shock me.
I think it's a great question.
I think the short answer is just like,
it's a complicated sensor, there's a bunch of lasers,
they're moving around and so forth.
But to your point, the cost curve
has been coming down on LIDAR.
And we'll continue to come.
So the original bucket-shaped LIDAR that Velodyne made
were $64,000 a pop on the really old school Google self-driving
vehicles.
Now they're probably a few thousand dollars each.
You need several of them on a car, so it does add up.
But I think you're totally right.
And there are research prototypes of lidar that are solid state, meaning they don't have
pieces that move, and that makes them a lot cheaper.
And people talk about $250 per unit lidars, which again, are not production ready yet.
But I think you're certainly right that the way this debate could be resolved is it may
just all converge because
In a few years lighter gets cheap enough that like Tesla can use it and everyone can use it. Yeah, I had a buddy
Friend of the show share recently. I'll give you some context
He said Waymo will change the world walk down the street
One million dollars in metal sitting unused 20 hours a day on every street in America
and metal sitting unused 20 hours a day on every street in America. Garages will be useless turning into storage or ADUs.
Parking lots the same thing.
Street parking will be more lanes.
Driving offense revenue, DMV revenue, parking tickets all go to zero.
Gas stations will be worthless.
Sounds insane, right?
But Uber went from nothing to everywhere in a decade.
Waymo might take 15 years, but the disruption will be nuts.
How do you think about the downstream,
assuming that you believe some of that is real,
and I think Sean makes some great points,
how do you think about the investment opportunities that
are downstream from ubiquitous autonomous driving?
And is it even, are there gonna be
as many venture opportunities or is it more of a-
AI car washing startup.
Pull the autonomous vehicle in, it washes itself, it's great.
And that would be different than a regular drive-through.
No, no, roll up, we're doing a roll up.
Humanoid, humanoid, yeah.
Let me, let me follow up.
To me, this seems like a lot of opportunities on the real estate side is like, hey, can weid, yeah. Yeah, so I just, to me this seems like a lot of opportunities
on the real estate side is like,
hey, can we turn this into more housing or whatever, but.
Parking lots aren't cheap though.
But yeah, this is, the context here is that Waymo
monthly rides were sort of ticking up gradually
and then just shot up to 708,
and I guess they're now doing more rides than Lyft
in the Bay Area as well.
It's crazy.
Yeah, it's been amazing to see how quickly Waymo has gone
from a novelty to just a piece of the fabric of life
for people in San Francisco.
And most people that I know in the Bay Area,
in San Francisco, use Waymo more often
than they use Uber and Lyft.
And it's quickly spreading beyond just being a Bay Area phenomenon like they're now live in LA as you guys know and in
Phoenix and in Austin and so forth
And yeah
So I think it is it's remarkable to see it after all these years finally become like a real business that scaling quickly
And I really like the excerpt from your from your friend
I mean, I think I very much agree with that line of thinking.
And one of the things that initially attracted me
to the world of autonomous vehicles back a decade ago
was this fact that it's really fascinating technology.
It's difficult technology being able to get
a car to drive itself.
But also, once you solve it and you start scaling it,
it has so many broader implications, second and third
order impacts on so much
of society and the economy.
So much of modern life is built around roads and cars
and the way cities are designed and so forth.
So I do think it will have dramatic implications
on civilization, bigger picture.
It will play out over a longer period of time
because we're talking about the built world
and it takes time to adjust
But yeah, I think especially in cities at least a start especially in urban areas
It's some crazy stat like a third of real estate in the average American city is devoted to parking
And so much of that can go away and it's like such an inefficient use of space
So you can imagine cities being totally redesigned around humans rather than around cars,
more pedestrian areas and so forth.
You can also imagine, there's a lot of people talking
about the rise of exurbs, being able to live
further and further outside of an urban setting
because when you're commuting, you don't have to be driving.
You can imagine the entire form factor of a car changes.
Maybe you have a desk.
Yeah, I want it to be a desk and a couch.
And I just want to, yeah, I mean,
I've spent a bunch of time thinking about this,
because I kind of have a gnarly commute right now.
And it will just become so much better
within when I can get it.
Jordy's in Malibu.
I'm in Pasadena.
You've spent time in both.
We'll get you back here eventually.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I'm excited for LF, for Waymo to expand the geofence in LA Pasadena you've spent time in both we'll get you back here eventually yeah
Yeah, I'm excited for LF for Waymo to expand the geofence in L.I. more and more yeah, yeah
Well, this is fantastic. We love to have you back. This is a lot of fun We could talk about 25 other topics in AI since this is the most fascinating industry right now
We didn't even get a chance to talk about deals and stuff, but I'm sure we'll I'm sure we'll go into all that in the next
Time you're on.
Yeah, that sounds great.
Thanks for having me, guys.
Thanks so much for talking to me.
Bye.
Next up, we gotta sing, we gotta hit gongs,
we got lots to do.
We're gonna say, are we gonna sing with us?
It's always hard to sing with a remote guest,
but maybe we should sing beforehand.
Find your happy place.
Find your happy place.
Book a wander with inspiring views,
hotel-grade amenities, dreamy beds,
top-tier cleaning, 24-7 concierge service.
It's a vacation home, but better, folks.
And we have the founder of Wander in the studio
coming in to announce a massive round of funding.
Welcome to the show.
How are you doing?
Get on that wide.
Hit that gong. Hit that gong.? Hit that wide. Hit that gong.
Hit that gong.
Hit that gong.
Welcome to the studio.
John, it's great to have you here.
It's great to be here.
I was hoping that I'd be able to sing with you guys.
So I'm a little disappointed that I did.
It's really hard with the delay.
We got to figure this out somehow.
Some latency mitigation or something we
also need to make it a full song yeah because oftentimes I get to place
there's a chorus and verses yeah integrate that whole pitch into one big
song but congratulations break it down ideally ideally when somebody walks into
a wander for the first time they're sort of serenaded by us yes yes we can sort
of you know two three minutes yeah on the whole home speaker system yeah
we can make that happen for sure but yeah give us the business update break
down the fundraising round what are you actually spending it on because I know
it's an asset light model but explain how the round came together the progress
of the business.
Totally.
So it's a $50 million Series B led by QED,
fifth wall, long tracks, Redpoint.
Thank you guys.
Logan Barlison, okay, Redpoint, cooking, let's go.
Yeah, Redpoint, Starwood,
bunch of really incredible folks.
Fantastic.
And yeah, in terms of capital, it's really,
I mean, I'd love to get on here and act like
we're gonna do some like crazy stuff, but it's really scale.
Like we have three core priorities, which is quality stays, quality customer support, and then quality homes.
And that's really where we're where we're laser focused.
Very cool. What's the key to onboarding more Wonders?
I've seen the numbers ticking up every week as we cover you guys.
What is the what's the funnel look like? Wanderers I've seen the numbers ticking up every week as we cover you guys
What is the what's the funnel look like? Yeah, it feels like you guys have a relentless pace
yeah, like a culture that really celebrates that and
Yeah, break it down. Yeah wonder wonder definitely has a very high output culture as a as a startup I tell the the team that like culture is not
you know like as a startup, I tell the team that culture is not like happy hours and that kind of stuff. It's about winning. And so as a company, we obviously very much focus on that idea.
From a growth perspective, there's about 300,000 wander-worthy locations across North America and
Europe. And so that's really our target.
From a systems perspective, we actually
built out a fleet of AI agents that
went and found each one of these homes
and then enriched it with the owner contact information.
So we know exactly who we're going after.
And so that's sort of the focus right now,
is really a sales-driven model onboarding these homes
onto the platform and then automating their operations
with Wander OS and delivering that great experience
to customers.
Talk about kind of looking back a little bit.
I mostly want to spend time looking forward,
but like navigating through the Zerp era, lessons learned,
like that era allowed for a very different type
of business model that you guys have evolved,
but I would love to hear kind of the backstory.
Yeah, I mean, when Wander started,
interest rates were pretty much zero.
And so that allowed for us to have a very asset heavy model
where we actually went out and bought
those first few locations on balance sheet,
really with the idea of solving the cold start problem
of marketplace, do things that don't scale.
And so as we grew, obviously that had to transition.
You had two crazy events happen at once.
You obviously had sort of the massive
rise of interest rates, but Wander actually at the time
had a hundred million dollar credit facility
with Credit Suisse as a six month old startup,
which was incredibly hard to put together.
And then to have this systemically important bank explode
as a CEO trying to scale the company was pretty wild.
Traumatic.
That was, yeah, pretty quick transition.
Talk about, I feel like one of the craziest things
you can potentially do as an entrepreneur
is go into a category where
there is an active startup, even if they're scaled, that's still founder led. That always seems dangerous because they're still somewhat agile, but obviously you've counter positioned the company
against Airbnb. But what decisions are you making?
How are you thinking about maintaining differentiation
and really competing as Chesky goes on a run,
building out different products and different strategies?
It seems like there's more opportunity than ever
to differentiate, but how do you think about it?
Yeah, I mean, first of all, I think Airbnb's a great company
and Brian's an incredible founder, so I think Airbnb is a great a great company and brands like
Incredible founder so I have nothing nothing negative to say there. Yeah, I think I think for wander
You know, we we do deliver a little bit of a different experience. So our net promoter score for q1 is you know, 85
Which is you know phenomenal
Thank you. Yeah, like true true customer love. Yeah. And that doesn't happen by accident. I
mean, literally, if anyone has a negative sentiment in the
concierge chat, when they're like talking with our support,
that literally gets flagged across the entire company. If
there's a stay that's below an eight out of 10, then they're
going to get a call from our COO. And like, I see that feedback and we're going to be hyper
aggressive on fixing it.
And that's across, you know, every single stay, every single
home, every single customer.
And so I think that that like relentless customer focus is, um, just a very
different model than, you know, Airbnb, Airbnb is sort of that, um, unmanaged
marketplace versus, you know, wander like we truly do
care about the quality of our inventory, the quality of your customer experience, you know,
to the point where literally like I will hop on the phone and like deal with whatever the
issue is to ensure that it gets there.
And I know that sounds obviously like very unscalable, but I think that just purely from
a cultural perspective, it forces, you know,
systems and automations to be built. And in a time where I think that, you know, given everything
that's happened in AI, you actually do have this opportunity to deliver hospitality and like
perfection at scale. And so that's, that's really where our focus is. Can you talk about advertising
in this category?
We were talking to Keith Reboy about whether or not Airbnb should have an advertising product
because we've seen with Uber and,
is it Instacart where Fiji Simo was,
where she spun up advertising?
There's, it's not quite a marketplace business,
but there's an element of that,
but the take rate was low,
and so the advertising product
was very meaningful at those companies.
Keith Ru Boy's take was that in the housing,
vacation stays market, it's less relevant
because the take rate's a little higher.
But do you agree with that, or do you think that
there is a future where just broadly the category
is driven by advertising dollars in a meaningful way.
Yeah, I mean, when you go onto booking.com as an example,
or even BRBO, you will see ads.
Sure, promoted to get to the,
because if I have a house and I want it rented,
I'm willing to sacrifice a little bit of my margin
to try and rise to the top of the rankings, right?
You'll actually even see off-platform ads.
So like very typical, like, go buy this product.
They're actually taking people off platform,
which is pretty interesting.
Like, I'm sure that it's a revenue source.
I mean, these platforms spend a ton of money
on getting traffic,
performance marketing perspective,
from the marketing SEO, et cetera. And so it certainly makes sense to
like try and monetize a percentage of that traffic that's never going to end up converting to
actually like booking a home. But that being said, like Keith is obviously, you know, correct and
very smart that the the take rate on vacation rentals is really high. Sure. For for wander,
our average order value is about $5,400.
And you're looking at an average take of about 30%.
And so for us, that would have to be a lot of random ads
to make that up.
And of course, the customer experience is not great.
We're really trying to market users on that booking.
But yeah, I think for a company like Airbnb,
it would totally make sense, especially to the, you know, on the avenue you mentioned where hosts are just
paying a little bit more to promote their house to the top of the feed. You know, they
have a lot of inventory and sort of pulling yourself out of that is, you know, difficult
for your mom and pop Airbnb host.
Yeah. Talk about disintermediation in the context of marketplaces and platforms.
We saw the canonical example of the dog walker, which is basically just lead gen company.
Because as soon as you find a good dog walker, you immediately disintermediate. And there's
some things that those companies can do to prevent that. With some rentals, it's very
much like I'm going to be in this town for just this week. I need this place. I'm not
going to bother disintermediating.
But if you fall in love with a place
and you're going there every year,
we've heard about people trying to Google the place
and find a different way to get around it.
Airbnb has an issue where property management companies
will list a home.
And then the person that's booking the home
could stay there and then just reach out to the property
manager and do a deal off platform whereas Wander you guys are just full
stack right so you could even get you could look up the title or whatever and
get to the owner and they'd be like okay if you want to book the house like it's
still going through wonder but yeah yeah how do you think about that what what
what does that tech stack look like to prevent that or help that?
Yeah, I mean, so I do think that it is like the core risk.
And I think that's even something that has been talked about
on their earnings calls is direct booking websites.
And there's ways for them to mitigate it.
And you also have a ton of supply that isn't professionally managed,
where the operator isn't going to have their own direct booking website.
They're just going to list on Airbnb.
And so I think they're actually like positioned relatively fine.
You know, I think it's like a, a travel hack that not many people use.
You know, for, for wander, like I am a huge fan of like having complete and total
control over the business and the platform that I'm building.
Like when I was a kid, um, my first little company, I was like 13, 14.
We were like hosting Minecraft servers and whatever else.
And when Minecraft got purchased by, by Microsoft, they rolled out a EULA,
totally killed my little business, had to fire like four or five people.
And so I learned about like platform risk at like pretty, you know, pretty young age. Never again. Never again.
And so, you know, for Wander, I knew I wanted it to be verticalized.
I knew I wanted to have my own booking engine.
I knew I wanted to have my own property management software.
I felt like that was the most durable piece.
And then you also have to ask yourself, as a space and a brand matures, that brand promise
actually matters.
And so if people look at Wander and associate it as a brand that says, hey, this is a quality stay,
you don't get replaced, quote unquote.
And so I think that's also a really important piece
is the underlying brand and that guarantee to the customer
they're gonna have a good trip.
How do you think about taste in the context
of what you're doing?
Wander's always felt like a just a very,
it's felt like a hospitality brand
as much as it's felt like a technology company.
Where did that come from from anywhere?
I mean, you were building coding tools historically,
which I guess it's important to have good design
in that category, but maybe when you started Coder, it wasn't even the case.
So I'm curious where it came from,
besides people like Kyle crushing it.
Yeah.
My journey as a founder has been pretty fascinating.
Obviously, my first venture-backed company
I started when I was 17, 18, Coder,
enterprise developer tools. So radically different space than, you know, travel. You know, however,
like I've always had a deep passion for design. And as a kid, I did high school online, traveled,
you know, 200 plus days a year all over the world.
And you were, you were, you were race car. You're driving race cars.
Yeah, I don't really, I don't really talk about it.
But yeah, I used to race Formula 4.
No way.
And then yeah, Formula Mazda.
It was funny.
John and I got lunch in Malibu a couple of years ago
at this point.
And I was like, oh, do you want to?
Newy drove cars at a high level.
I was like, do you want to go drive my Ferrari or whatever?
And John gets behind it.
And he like, normally when people
are trying out a car, like anybody's car,
they're taking it to him.
And he's like, really experiencing the naturally
aspirated V12.
That's amazing.
But I was confident.
I was OK.
I was confident that he was going to take care of it.
So you got the experience for it. That's awesome yeah it was it was a great
it was a great time great meal and so yeah I think with Wander I'm candidly
speaking like Wander is like my soul but like as a company like everything needs
to be high quality the software needs to be on point I also don't think people
realize like how much is truly automated with Wander like at the top you have the booking platform but underneath is literally this property
management software that's running all of the vendor communication, coordination, payouts,
preventative maintenance, task tracking. Like Wander doesn't actually employ any local property
managers. That's all just through software, the underlying coordination of vendors, which I don't
think that like anyone fully
You know realizes because of course we don't we don't market it that way
Like you know, you want it to feel like a like a magic trick
and so I think like I think that's probably where you're seeing the design come from is that
Like if there's anything on the site that that bothers us like the entire team is just obsessed over this principle of quality.
Last question for me and we'll let you go.
Are experiences or local other services
a true compliment to vacation bookings and housing,
or is that kind of a round peg in a square hole?
Yeah, the way that I look at it is that I think it's a feature of a platform. I don't think it's a
platform in and of itself. And I think that you have this rare moment where you can effectively
abstract the way that you connect to these service providers. So if you were to go back in time,
let's look at like OpenTable as an example, they had to build out integrations with the restaurants.
The restaurants had to use OpenTable
to manage their reservations or whatever else
so that you could provide this online platform.
Now with what exists from a technology perspective,
you can have an AI agent call a restaurant
and make the reservation for you.
And so you no longer need to force
these types of integrations.
And so the way that I look at it
from a services perspective is you just end up with this like a
genetic concierge that exists inside of your travel app that
goes ahead and calls the you know, local chef or the
restaurant or whatever else and you so you don't really end up
building necessarily direct integrations you more build
like an abstraction layer and a curation layer on the
experiences.
It makes a lot of sense.
I mean, I have one more question about,
SEO is really big in the early Airbnb story.
Are you looking at any of these AI SEO tools?
Do you think that it's important to show up in ChatGPT,
for example, and are there any services
or kind of best practices that you think relate to AI SEO?
Or isn't it GEO according to Andrews
Norowitz? Yeah, I don't know what the acronym is, but that it sounds like a good acronym.
It's actually something that we have started focusing on pretty intensely. So the real key
is sort of where these agents are referencing the materials and the facts that they're getting. And so what
you end up with is like, you basically need a source of truth strategy, which is a really
interesting phenomenon. Basically, it's like, how do you sort of like, become the system of record
from a fact perspective, or get the data onto, you know, a platform that is viewed as having the
facts? Like, for example, chat GPT references Wikipedia a lot.
Sure.
And so like that, candidly speaking,
it's a little bit harder to like, quote unquote,
hack versus like traditional SEO.
And there's definitely gonna be like an entire push.
And I actually think you're gonna see a lot of value
creation from platforms like Wikipedia
come from the fact that they are viewed as
like a source of truth.
Very cool.
Anything else, Jordy?
You said there's 300,000 homes that you guys have sort of soft circled as targets.
I'm assuming you're going to get all of them in the fullness of time.
What do you want to do in the next?
What do you want to do by 2030?
Do you have a target?
Yeah.
I mean, hopefully by 2030, we've accomplished that for sure. Um, that's the pointing to
the point and pointing to the, I like, I can't wait for there to be like five homes left
and you're just following, you're following around in a helicopter being like, I got you.
I got you. Give us the keys. We'll, we'll, we'll, we'll get it done. And before I jump, one thing I want to note is
as a sponsor of, of this show, how incredible you guys are and how happy we are. And so
to anyone who's watching this, thinking about where to spend their ad dollars or what podcast
to sponsor, I can not encourage you more enough to work with these boys.
They are incredible and the ROI is through the charts.
Thank you.
That really means a lot.
You guys bet early.
You're one of our very first ones
and we will never forget it.
Yeah, I think my favorite thing is that people might think
that we ran the song by you before doing it live.
We did it live.
We didn't get any pushback,
and I think it's all for the better
if there's less oversight.
So we've been having fun.
It's funny, did we create the song?
We created the singing.
We created jingles.
We created the jingle.
We created the jingle from first principles.
You guys created the copy,
we created the jingle.
No, we literally, they didn't send us any copy.
We didn't ask for any copy.
We didn't ask like,
how do you do an ad read for your company?
We just went to your website and just sang the first tagline on there. If it
had said anything else, it's so drilled into my brain now that I just assume that you guys
were, we just, we just went to wander.com and started singing, find your happy place. Well,
we should take you out. I want to make, I want to make like a rate. We should, we should
make like a radio. Absolutely. Hey, this is John and Jordy from VPN.
Anyway, thank you so much for coming on the show.
This is fantastic.
And congratulations on the series being.
I'm super excited for you and the team.
And John and I are basing our summer plans off
of Wandered Location.
For sure.
Thank you, guys.
Congratulations.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye.
Cheers.
Thank you guys so much.
Later, John. One last news item I want We'll talk to you soon. Cheers. Thank you guys so much. Later, John.
One last news item I want to hit before we get out of here. We were talking about the
polymarket on Elon Musk out as Tesla CEO in 2025. It is lower than ever. It was around
20% in March, crashed down to 18, 15%, was recently sitting around 13%,
and now is down at 9%.
And so the news about Elon leaving the US government
has been a bull case for him staying as Tesla CEO,
which makes sense because he has a lot of work to do,
a lot of opportunity between self-driving
and humanoid robots.
Who better to run that company than Elon?
And another one I've been tracking, Circle IPO in 2025
is up to 94% chance.
It drops to 47% chance on May 21st, so about a week ago.
And it has just rocketed up to 95.
And I expect we'll see some news on that front.
Yeah.
I mean, the other markets, since we're in polymarket mode,
these are fun.
I love changing these.
So there's, of course, our market on how much the iPhone
17 will cost.
Over $1,000 is a 13% chance.
Over $1,500, 2% chance.
Over $2,000 is only a 2% chance.
I think Tim Cook's gonna get it done, keep iPhones cheap.
The other interesting thing is which company
has the best AI model at the end of May,
Google's running away with it at 96.5%.
Yeah, that's May.
If you go out farther, if you go out farther to the end of the year Google's at 40% open a opening eyes at 22%
XA is at 23% and thrope except 7% and so a little bit closer of a horse race towards the end of the year
What I want is I want benchmarks and evals for video models now because the o3
Seems to be just completely running away with the game,
but we haven't seen what the next iteration
of Sora looks like.
OpenAI clearly cares about that.
They've been building a product in image via,
in fact, the first consumer product from OpenAI
was not a chat model.
It was Dolly.
Dolly 2 was the first product they released.
And then ChatGPD came out. and so it's obviously in their DNA
They're not just gonna let that they're not gonna just gonna let Google run away with it
There's so much more that you can do in video. We see this was runway
We see this with a bunch of other products in the space
It'll be interesting to track that but we don't really have a great benchmark or eval for that
So we'll have to get one and then we'll have to put it on polymarket got anyway we will see you tomorrow it's gonna be a
light show yeah Rora launched a new product today a filtered showerhead there
let's see yes for Rora filtering your showerhead cleaning up the water you're
bathing yes this is a product that was in the works for a couple
years at this point.
We were pretty strategic about when the right time would
be to roll it out and made the best shower
filter in the game on a bunch of different metrics, flow rate,
filtration, ergonomics.
And yeah, go check it out.
I made a code or I had Brian, CEO, make a code,
TBPN, a little discount.
And yeah, excited to see how this goes.
So we will be back tomorrow, little bit of an earlier show.
I'm doing some traveling and it'll be no guests,
just me and Jordy chopping up the timeline.
Take a throwback episode.
I think these are some of our best
It's gonna be fantastic
So probably an hour hour and a half around 10 a.m
If you're looking to tune in we will of course let everyone know and it'll be in your RSS feeds
And if you're listening in the RSS feed, please go leave us five stars on Apple podcast or Spotify do it Ben Ben's pointing
a gel blaster at us right now
Thank you for watching. Take care guys. We'll see you tomorrow