TBPN Live - Marc Andreessen & Ilya Sutskever Host TBPN, Mag 7 Earnings Recap | Aydin Senkut, Dean Ball, Shreya Murthy, Lulu Meservey & Gaby Goldberg, Jakob Diepenbrock, Shishir Mehrotra, Karri Saarinen
Episode Date: October 31, 2025(13:04) - Mag 7 Earnings Recap (37:12) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (54:11) - WSJ Mansion Section (01:04:37) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (01:13:12) - Lulu Meservey, founder of the strategic co...mmunications firm Rostra, Lulu previously served as CCO & EVP of Corporate Affairs at Activision Blizzard and was VP of Communications at Substack. Gaby Goldberg is a communications professional at Rostra and former investor at The Chernin Group, where she helped build its early-stage crypto practice. (01:27:08) - Dean Ball, a senior fellow at the Foundation for American Innovation and former Senior Policy Advisor for AI and Emerging Technology at the White House, discusses the evolving landscape of AI regulation, highlighting the interplay between state and federal initiatives, particularly California's proactive stance in the absence of federal action. He emphasizes the challenges in defining and governing superintelligence, noting the lack of scientific consensus and the complexities of global policy coordination. Additionally, Ball addresses the potential for a tech backlash driven by public concerns over job displacement and rising electricity costs associated with AI advancements. (02:08:19) - Aydin Senkut, founder and managing partner of Felicis Ventures, began his career as Google's first product manager, launching its initial international sites. In the conversation, he recounts his transition from Google to venture capital, highlighting early rejections from firms that doubted his potential as an investor. Undeterred, he founded Felicis Ventures, achieving significant successes with investments in companies like Shopify and Meraki, and emphasizes the importance of resilience and belief in founders when making investment decisions. (02:34:37) - Jakob Diepenbrock, General Partner at Discipulus Ventures, discusses the recent demo day held in El Segundo, California, where nine companies presented innovations across various sectors, including energy, manufacturing, and software. He highlights a shift from defense-focused startups to ventures addressing broader industrial challenges, emphasizing the potential for disruption in legacy industries. Diepenbrock also notes the importance of building a supportive ecosystem for young founders tackling critical problems. (02:47:36) - Shreya Murthy is the co-founder and CEO of Partiful, an event planning platform launched in 2020 that has gained significant traction among Gen Z and millennials. In the conversation, she discusses the platform's rapid growth, particularly during Halloween, which she describes as their "Super Bowl," and addresses competition from major players like Apple, emphasizing Partiful's focus on creating fun and engaging event experiences. Murthy also highlights the importance of brand identity in distinguishing Partiful from competitors and shares the company's vision to become the leading platform for real-world social connections as traditional social media shifts towards entertainment. (03:03:24) - Shishir Mehrotra, CEO of Superhuman, discusses the company's recent rebranding from Grammarly to Superhuman, reflecting their commitment to empowering users with AI-enhanced tools. He introduces "Superhuman Go," a new AI assistant platform that extends Grammarly's technology to integrate proactive AI assistance across various applications. Mehrotra emphasizes their focus on embedding AI seamlessly into users' workflows, distinguishing their approach from other AI services that require user initiation. (03:10:22) - Karri Saarinen, co-founder and CEO of Linear, discusses the evolution of software development workflows in the context of AI advancements, emphasizing the need to assess and adapt existing processes rather than discarding them entirely. He highlights Linear's commitment to assisting companies in this transition by integrating AI capabilities, such as delegating tasks to tools like GitHub Copilot, enabling non-technical team members to contribute more effectively. Saarinen also reflects on Linear's design philosophy, focusing on functionality and pragmatism to inspire quality and craftsmanship in the software industry. TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.com/tbpnFin - https://fin.ai/tbpnGraphite - https://graphite.devRestream - https://restream.ioProfound - https://tryprofound.comJulius AI - https://julius.aiturbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comfal - https://fal.aiPrivy - https://www.privy.ioCognition - https://cognition.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're watching TBPN.
Today is Friday, October 31st, 2025.
It's Halloween.
We are live from the TBPN Ultradome, the Temple of Technology, the Fortress of Finance,
the Capital of Capital.
We have a fantastic show for you today, folks.
We're going to be talking about Mag 7 earnings, recapping what's happening in the public markets,
the trillion-dollar tech companies that have been powering and holding up the entire global economy.
Will they continue to hold up the global economy?
So far, the answer is yes.
I'm glad the chat is enjoying the costumes.
Jordy, who are you today?
You've got to be living under a data center
or not know who I'm dressed up as today,
none other than Mark and Drieson.
Spitting image.
Spitting image.
How am I doing?
I think you look great.
I think, yeah, I think you nailed it.
uh i saw some other folks they they they of course i am elia siskiver uh there are a lot of people
that boil down the mark in dreason uh costume to just being bald and that's of course not it
you need the shirt you need the watch you need the beard these are all the only thing i'm not
going to be able to do very well is talk quite as quickly as yeah it feels like the mustache and
in the outfit might be actually slowing you down a little bit
But I'm not trying to channel Ilya.
We were watching The Guardian video on Ilya, his interview, which is beautifully edited.
And one of the most interesting, I don't even know, it's like an interview, it's almost a podcast, but it's like documentary.
It's 12 minute video by The Guardian.
They cooked.
And Ilya is the only one who says anything the entire time.
Yeah.
There's no guest or there's no interviewer.
There's no host.
And it's just him talking about AGI will be able to do it.
anything will make it could be good could be bad and he he just has these crazy long way this these
ways of answering these questions that are really interesting and it fits with that medium i don't know
how much editing they did to get his answers to a place where it like that kind of flow but it's
fantastic ilia's weights uh ilia's words hold so much weight yeah i think that's that format that format just
worked incredibly well yeah um but anyways if you are watching the recording of this at some point in the
future, I recommend whenever I'm talking, put it on 3x speed to get the full mark experience.
And we should talk about the Gen AI company that we work with to make this possible,
of course.
I think people would be wildly impressed at how little latency there is, the kind of character
consistency.
We are partner with Fall, the generative media platform for developers, the world's best
generative image, video and audio models all in one place, develop and fine-tuned models
with serverless GPUs and on-demand clusters.
But, of course, we did this the old-fashioned way, the Hollywood way. We were at the office at 6.30 this morning. It took hours to get to this point. Yeah. And shout out to the whole team that made it possible. Yeah. It's a lot of fun. It's not a mask. It is makeup. It's a series of prosthetics that go on, layered up with a wig for me and a beard for Jordan. They kind of take you through the process.
of becoming fully bald and then add back whatever they need to, including the eyebrows.
And the eyebrows do do a lot of the work.
They do a lot of the work.
But, yeah, if you're not taking Halloween this seriously, what's going on?
You've got to be taking it seriously.
Tyler, are you taking Halloween seriously?
What did you do for?
I'm taking Halloween extremely seriously.
Well, who are you?
Sam Alman at 2008 WWDC.
Okay.
Pitching looped.
It's the, yeah, you're the spinning image.
Were those the colors of the polos he was wearing?
Yeah, I think the camera temperature is a little bit odd.
In real life, if the viewers could see, they would be...
And the hair is a perfect match, and you also had to do three hours of prosthetic makeup?
Yeah, I was actually here a little earlier than you guys.
I was in back, though.
It is so strange looking across and seeing the spitting image of Ilya himself.
Anyways.
Ramp, time is money, say both.
He's used corporate card.
pay accounting a whole lot more all in one place um when we partner with ramp they never expected to
see ilia no uh pitching ramp this is this is why you advertise on tbp and you get ad reads from
mark indreason from the great the goats the goats themselves yeah uh we have a super fun show today we
have uh lulu misservi and gabby goldberg coming on uh later we have dean ball joining uh who else we have
We have...
Tyler, do you know Ball?
You're just trying to...
Every single time we mentioned his name.
Do you know Ball?
Well, after today, everyone will know Ball.
Because Dean Ball is coming on TVPN.
We're very excited for that.
So let's take a second to tell you about re-stream.
One live stream 30 plus destinations.
Of course, we are restreaming today.
Reach your audience, wherever they are.
But I think it'd be good to just kind of go through some of the headlines.
Trump cut China tariffs after...
He met up with Xi Jinping.
In South Korea, President Trump and Chinese leader,
Xi Jinping emerged from their face-to-face for their first face-to-face meeting in six years
with a temporary detent in the bruising trade fight between the two superpowers.
The U.S. agreed to lower a fentanyl-related tariff on Chinese goods to 10% from 20%
after China promised to crack down on chemicals used to make the often-deaddened drug.
precursors, precursors. That would bring the average tariff rate on many Chinese goods to around 47% from 57%. So America's back in off a little bit. Beijing also promised to ease some of the controls it imposed on exports of processed rare earth minerals for one year. China dominates the production of the minerals, which are needed to make everything from smartphones to submarines. Wow, that's a world tour of everything.
in the trade deal. So we're slowly ratcheting things up, ratcheting things down. We had a good
conversation yesterday about this with Chris McGuire. You're welcome to go check that out. He gave us
more details on the history of the China trade war with the U.S. But the bigger news in tech world,
of course, is earnings. Amazon posted a big jump in profit and revenue. Amazon.com reported net
revenue, net profit surged 39% and revenue rose for the third quarter, propelled by
strong retail sales as well as continued growth in its cloud computing and artificial intelligence
business.
The e-commerce giant said Thursday that sales rose for the period.
They rose 13% to 180 billion, and net profit rose to 21.2 billion in that quarter.
And so you had a little bit of a take on what was.
going on in Amazon world.
They've been sort of, at the last earnings,
they were sort of left out of the AI narrative.
All the other hyperscalers in their cloud businesses
were, you know, telling great stories
about acceleration and growth.
And Andy Jassy was a little bit on the defensive.
Well, now he's back on the offensive
and the results were much stronger.
So they beat on the top line,
they beat on the bottom line.
And they also beat on AWS revenue, which is great.
The Traneum cross the board.
Two chip business grew 150% quarter on quarter.
And there's still some debate over how Traynium will scale relative to TPU, whether Anthropic
is going to buy a bunch of TPUs, maybe they're going to pull back on training.
But it seems like even if the top end is diversifying and you have open AI saying we want to be on every cloud or, you know,
That's not necessarily a bull case because there's so many more buyers coming from behind,
adding to it.
So my take was a lot of flood around Traneum underperformance relative to TPU,
but they both seem to be catching up finally.
I think it'd be interesting to see TPU on inference max.
I mean, analysis is benchmark.
Are they opting in?
Well, so TPU and Traneum, the way Dylan Patel framed it to me, at least, was they haven't said
that they're out.
In fact, they said that they are in, but it's going to take them time to actually provision
everything because it is a significant cost and it's something that requires a decent amount
of resources and there's, you know, a whole bunch of, it's a big company.
And it will determine the fate of their product line.
Potentially.
Potentially.
And so, yeah, they might, it's possible that they want to like, that they want to get their
ducks in a row so they don't just get like clobbered.
in this race.
But interestingly, AMD and V-D were both pretty happy with the results.
There were tons of positivity about AMD in certain use cases.
And Jensen on stage at GTC was spending like minutes just on inference max slides and data.
So my take from the newsletter on Amazon, I said Jassy needed this after the timeline had turned
against him pretty horribly in the last few months.
People even saw the head count reduction from Monday as bearish.
I think that just shows how far ahead Sotia was.
He did multiple rounds of playoffs earlier this year.
And obviously, Amazon has its dance partner now.
And so we'll see how this develops.
One of my favorite posts, I think from last week was somebody said,
I don't care if I get caught.
I was heavily involved with the NBA illegal gambling scheme.
My name is Andy Jassy.
I work at Amazon.com.
I didn't realize that they were like,
I feel like once you get to Mag 7 level,
you don't have like a retail army
that gets like frustrated about like,
you know, middling financial performance.
But I mean, so they were, you know,
proud member of the Lag 7.
Yeah.
Look at, uh,
the lag 7.
What's that?
They were,
I mean,
not the lag 7,
but they were the lagging part of the mag 7, right?
Oh,
that's a thing.
That's a thing.
meme? Yeah, it's a meme.
Oh, I haven't heard this one.
It's a pleasure to introduce you to a new meme.
Alphabet up 247% over the last five years.
Amazon is still only up 62% even after the pop this week.
Well, that's the story with Amazon.
We also got Apple earnings after we wrapped the show before I tell you about Apple.
Let me tell you about Privy, wallet infrastructure for every bank.
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Okay, Sarah Wang, GP, over at Andresen, just posted.
The only thing better than Halloween is Halloween AI edition, in case you missed it,
tagged Ilya and Mark.
And of course, no AI here.
No AI.
We did this one, the old fashion way.
We did this organically.
It would be interesting to actually benchmark.
I mean, obviously, the frontier video models are remarkable, but we've done this
bezel bench for a while where,
We went and did something very weird and very specific.
And on that specific use case of Tyler, a person that needs to be him,
needs to look like him, and he has to be wearing six different watches
and you have to zoom in from the very start all the way out.
And he has to be lying down.
So you really have to understand how the anatomy comes into the picture.
The models haven't really been great.
I feel like if we tried to recreate this using AI,
right now, it would get pretty chaotic.
The fact that we're live, it would be choppy.
Three hours.
You could do a face swap live.
We've had some founders come on the show and do them,
but it feels like it's almost more of just like a trippy background.
Descartes was really cool.
Yeah, Descartes was awesome.
But it was still very much felt like a video game.
It didn't feel photo real.
Yeah, and it didn't feel like you could reach out and touch.
You can, in fact, touch.
I'll be drinking through a straw today because,
yeah is it is it locking yours in my take is i i have uh i have the same level of prosthetic makeup
on but i'm just full sending it and by the end of the show i'm expecting this to be just be melting
off my face basically crumbling we'll see how it holds up we'll see how it holds up uh anyways moving
on tell you about cognition we're the makers of devon the a i software engineer crush your backlog with
your personal ai engineering team um yes did you want to go to apple or did you want to go somewhere
else. Let's go to Microsoft. Microsoft. Microsoft. Topline beat. Earnings beat. Stock traded down
three to four percent after hours. It's recovered quite a bit since then. I said I was surprised
to see Microsoft trade down following earnings, but it's recovered since Satya, in my view,
has already gotten a lot more credit for the company's opportunities in AI than Amazon and even
Google. People have known about Google strengths, but the big questions around search have held back
performance to date. Microsoft hasn't really had any narratives holding it back, but I don't think
people give them enough credit for the Open AI deal.
If you believe Gen AI is a sustaining innovation
and will transform knowledge work,
there is not a company in the world
that is better positioned from a product
in a distribution standpoint.
Again, we talked about this with Satya on Tuesday.
There are so many companies
that are trying to build Excel plus an agent on top of it.
Sure.
Or agents for Excel,
which is exactly what Microsoft is also doing
with Excel with co-pilot, right?
And they're model agnostic,
they're going to be able to bring in any kind of intelligence that they want.
And so anyways, I think, you know, they continue to be super well positioned.
It's also fascinating because they have access to Open AI's IP.
Open AI wants to be a big player in the workplace, right?
You can imagine them getting into a bunch of other applications there.
And so it'll be that competitive dynamic is just something that we're going to be watching for a long time.
Yeah, I saw some, I saw some hate.
on the timeline talking about Microsoft launched a research product and the in the in the hot
take was like Microsoft's late to launch this and it's somehow worse like they couldn't even just
copy exactly and I was and I was thinking like there is something real about like when a big
company launches one of those features like they typically have to move a little bit slower because
maybe they're regulated by Europe they're all they're international they have you know they obey all
the different rules around accessibility and they have they have like 25 they might be like
sock two compliant plus i tar compliant plus you know it's 25 other compliant levels they just slow down
like how fast you can move and how many things you can break um but that is very different
like as an early adopter it's very different to look at a new product from a you know what 40 50 year
old, you know, tech giant and say, like, yeah, I, I prefer, like, the, the cutting edge
product, as opposed to, like, what actually plays out in the market. Like, Slack was very much
the same thing, where Slack was this product that was so much better than the alternatives. Like,
if you, I don't know if you ever used, like, workplace chat pre- Slack, but it was-
I was basically born on Slack. You were born on Slack. You were born on Slack. But, but Slack really,
Slack really was like a delightful, like, you know how there's just those companies that come
out and you're like, oh, like this company takes design seriously. This company is a power user
of Figma. Think bigger, build faster. Figma helps design and development teams build great products
together. But you know how you get that vibe and then you get the other vibe where it's like,
oh, this company is owned by private equity and they don't really care. John, I got to give you,
the chat's giving you a shout out. I never knew John was so ripped. There's been some other
comments. Yeah. Put it up. Put them up, John. There you go.
Ilya. AGI has been achieved. Let's go. Ben Gilbert in the chat. You guys are absolutely saying I love it.
Welcome to the stream, Ben. Thank you so much for stopping by. You're an absolute legend. We couldn't do this show without you.
Massive inspiring, everything that they've done over it. Acquired. Totally. If you've been living under your data center, get over to Acquire.fm. Subscribe.
Let's get into meta. Let's talk about meta. Yes. Top line beat.
Miss. Massiveness, like a $12 billion. People are not talking enough about what happened.
Like, it is crazy that you could be operating such a big company and just be like,
oops, $10 billion. And it's not like, I mean, think of how they've been spending.
Yeah, yeah, it is crazy. This is like the quarter. Yeah. You know, this is like, you know,
I'm sure meta and the executive team, it's like after a weekend bender checking like your credit
card statement. Yeah. Right. It's like, it's like you, you have an idea maybe of what you spent. Yeah.
but it's way beyond that.
Okay, wait.
So, Tyler, can you look up what the actual tax charge was?
Because I don't think it was about scale AI, which everyone, a lot of people would say,
oh, there was a lot of money to pay for something that maybe he's an aqua hire, right?
Or like the $3 billion that maybe Zuck just paid for like one AI researcher.
Like, he's been on the spree.
I think this is a separate $10 billion charge.
Yeah, which is just...
Came out of nowhere.
I like the, I like the metaphor of like, you're just...
on a bender and you're just like, oh, my credit card bill is so huge this month. What
happened? Wait, so are you talking about the $15 billion dollar charge? It's five more than I
thought. I thought it was 10. I think it was 10.5. 14 point something. Fourteen? Came out of nowhere.
It was in the Wall Street Journal yesterday, but we'll. Okay. Yeah. So, okay, so apparently
it was a one-time tax charge related to the Big Beautiful Bill Act. What? So I'll read into this
more, but it's not the...
It has nothing to do with research and says nothing to do with the YAR.
In the X chat says, from what I read, they missed only because of the tax pay payment,
which is only on paper, not actually cash, and they said it would save them on tax costs
over time.
Okay, okay, thank you. Noah. That's very helpful. Yeah. Okay, okay. So they're changing
the amount of, like, how they're accounting for these taxes. And so they took the hit to
earnings. But is that, is that why is the stock traded down 10%? Is it specifically because
of this one-time tax charge? Like, I don't know that it is. I think it's,
It might be more.
I think it could be a little bit of vibes in the mix.
I liked your vibe-based analysis.
Your take was rough to be completely rebuilding an AI while simultaneously still finding footing
in hardware.
Core business rips, though.
My take in the newsletter was the timeline loves the core meta-business, but doesn't have a lot
of faith in Zuck.
I think that sounds harsh, but I think that is generally real.
People thought Bezos, who had a similar level of control over Amazon, was crazy to spend
like he did building AWS.
and he was ultimately completely vindicated.
People thought Mark was crazy going all in on the Metaverse and VR,
and so far that part of the business has not shown any signs of being ROI positive, right?
Obviously, they're still shipping.
The new Meta-Raybans are like the leading publicly available pair of glasses.
It just feels like the win case there is like an AirPods-sized.
business, right? Yeah. It's hard to get to, okay, yes, this is going to be as big as
I don't. Even Waymo. I don't know. I don't know. I think that if you actually win that
category, it could be an iPhone size business. Yeah. So I'm not saying that it's, I'm not saying
that he shouldn't be investing there. But I don't think the market believes that he's going to win that
category yet. Which is fascinating because what, what, what company do you think is in the lead in
terms of VR and AR right now.
Rank them.
Who do you think is in the league?
I think the challenge is when products are not at the level where people are saying,
I love this.
I use this all the time.
I use this every day.
I can't live without it.
You don't get credit for being at the leading edge.
Yeah.
People aren't saying that yet.
Like people expect Apple to come over the top and do, you know.
They tried and they didn't pencil.
No, I know, but now they're working on a pair of glasses and it's going to integrate with
your iPhone.
great with iMessage and like that's going to be a real competitive you know challenge for
meta yeah no no no it's a really good it's a really good argument it's really so at the same time
giving meta some credit uh reels is now a 50 billion dollar revenue run rate let's go uh let's
hit the hit the gong for the reels team threads is also where is our where's our mallet
ilia gong hit incoming the moment you've been waiting for clean clean
Moving on, the market reacted positively the scale AI acquisition and hiring spree,
but I think investors have the right to be concerned about meta's vision and ability to generate
revenue from their Gen AI efforts, either directly or indirectly anytime soon.
I'm still shocked they release Meta vibes, knowing how much scrutiny their first release
as a new team would get.
The product showed a complete lack of vision, in my opinion, and just product quality
when compared to SORA, which launched about a week later.
So it felt like they knew SOR was coming.
They wanted to be first to market with an AI native social feed.
And they did not bring the heat.
The old case is that they just completely burn the ships on the meta AI app.
Like, because that app was originally, the reason that I have it on my phone is because I got meta raybans.
And so when I got meta raybans, I had to get the meta app to use the raybans.
Then it turned into the meta AI app and it was like, hey, do you want to use this as an LLM?
And I was like, I'm basically good on that front.
But thanks.
And then they were like, well, do you want some AI video?
Would you like some slop in this drop?
Which is just like a wild canvas to be iterating on so quickly.
They used to launch different apps every single time.
But not this time.
I don't know.
The MetaVibes needs to turn.
I still like the Mid Journey model.
I think it is beautiful.
I think there is something cool to be done with that.
I'm not judging the outputs, but the big problem is that you couldn't as a user
consistently generate beautiful things.
Yeah.
Whereas with SORA, it's not like they were necessarily beautiful, but at least they were entertaining.
And that's what kicked off that viral.
So the main thing is, like, for Microsoft, Google, and Amazon, it's a lot more clear what winning in AI actually looks like.
I think MET is going to have to clarify what the wind state looks like beyond just saying we're building personal superintelligence because investors are smart enough to know that that personal superintelligence doesn't mean a lot today when the business today.
is focused on monetizing the world's attention.
Yeah, yeah.
And so I expect them at some point
to have to kind of clarify what their plans are.
Yeah.
Tesla beat earnings missed,
a beat on revenue missed on earnings.
The stock reaction was down about 4% after hours.
You reposted the Bucco Capital bloke post.
I'm always so confused when Tesla goes down on earnings
as business performance is completely irrelevant
to the price of the stock.
and it has been more of a vibes-based stock for a while.
I had a more by the book analysis.
I said, if Elon goes straight shot to the full self-driving equivalent for
humanoid robots, basically no tele-operation,
the project should be years behind what's going on with 1X,
I would imagine, just like the Waymo dynamic.
Like Waymo was able to launch a lot sooner because they could always fall back on,
hey, there's a human tele-operating this thing,
so you can trust us on the city streets.
and they've had a pretty good track record
because of that. Tesla's going
full moon shot, full send,
but it's going to take a little bit longer.
No one debates the fact that
Tesla's Robotaxi fleet
is a year or two behind Waymo's right now.
Now, the Tesla bull hope
is that you come from behind and start compounding
because you have just structurally better costs,
way more manufacturing capacity,
more of a flywheel on the actual data,
and the training. There's a lot of options.
I mean, I said they also need to build a full-size SUV.
You can't wait for that.
I just think it's so crazy not to build a full-size SUV in America.
Like, Americans love full-size SUVs, and you see them, it's like, I mean, it's as crazy
as not being in the truck market for as long as they were.
Yeah, it's interesting that Tesla has been so dependent on the luxury sedan for its entire
history, even though the luxury sedan has, like, completely fallen off in popularity.
I saw some data on Lexus's sales.
Lexus used to sell one of the most popular luxury SUVs,
and they sell either like single digit thousands now of them a year.
So it's like that category has gotten just killed by the SUV.
And Tesla, of course, has the X and the Y.
But it's not exactly what you're, if they were to ship like the Cybertruck SUV,
I think that would sell significantly better than the.
cyber truck.
Yeah.
I wonder if they'll ever do multiple brands.
It's so normal at every other car company,
but I see no reason why Tesla would ever do it.
Yeah.
Like, Lexus is what, Toyota's upmarket brand, right?
Yeah.
Isn't that the linkage?
Yeah. I don't know.
I doubt you on whatever.
I mean, plaid was sort of like the trim level.
Yeah.
I wonder if they'd ever do a different trim level.
Yeah.
Plad plus, like, like, what does
equivalent of like the my bach of
Tesla. If Plaid is their
AMG, right? Yeah.
I don't know. I don't
think he cares about. They have that in
China. They have like a
my bachified model
X or model
model S that's like
chauffeur where the seats, the front seats
are pushed forward basically.
I have other Elon Musk news,
but first let me tell you about Vanta.
Automate compliance, manage risk, prove trust, continuously
Vanta's trust management platform, takes the manual
work out of your security and compliance process and replaces it with continuous automation,
whether you're pursuing your first framework or managing a complex program. Elon Musk on data
centers in orbit, SpaceX will be doing this. He said he's going to do data centers in space.
Didn't we say this out loud yesterday with someone? I don't know if he was on the show or not,
but it just seems obviously if there is an opportunity. If it's a thing and it's big,
they're going to try and do it. It's easy to be bullish on space right now. But if you're investing
in different categories, you have to imagine that if there are adjacent opportunities besides Starlink
for SpaceX to do, they will enter them if they are large enough categories. And so, again,
that's... What does that mean for StarCloud? I mean, I can still think, I can still imagine them
over time figuring out like niche, more niche use cases, but, you know, building the,
building the satellite cloud, I think is something that Elon is not going to just,
you know, happily hand over to someone else.
Yeah. So, let's read through a little bit of this from Ars Technica.
An artificial intelligence, as artificial intelligence drives the need for vastly more computing
storage and processing power, computing storage, does that mean?
Interest in space-based data centers has spiked.
Although several startup companies, such as StarCloud, have begun to address the problem,
address the problem
they haven't
they're like identifying the problem
maybe prototyping
this is very oddly worded
I'm like struggling to read this
the idea has also
attracted the interest of tech barons
in May it emerged that
former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt
acquired relativity
space due to his interest
in space-based data centers
that's fascinating
I know that relativity was
was not doing well with kind of the V1 strategy and there was this turnaround project and
Eric Schmidt came in and was, I think, paying a ton to keep the business going and really
investing.
I had no idea that that was his thesis.
That's fascinating.
Then earlier this month, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos predicted that gigawatt scale data centers
will be built in space within the next 10 to 20 years.
That's big.
Now Elon Musk, who's SpaceX owns and operates significantly more space.
based infrastructure than any other company or country in the world has also expressed interest
in technology. After Ars wrote a story about the potential of autonomous assembly to construct large
data centers in space, Musk responded on X by saying that Starlink satellites could be used
for this purpose. Simply scaling up Starlink V3 satellites, which have high-speed laser
links would work. He said on the social media site X, SpaceX will be doing this.
Very interesting.
Yeah, I think it makes sense.
The question is just like, yeah, what is the actual timeline for any of this?
This, I mean, no one really expected Starlink to ramp as fast as it did.
And then it just, like, kind of worked.
But if there is, I don't know, a bunch of, if there is a lot of, like, actual fundamental, like, foundational science around, like, heat dissipation that needs to be done, that might be something that's a little bit bottlenecked.
But at the same team, at the same time, I kind of, like, I would kind of bet on the SpaceX team to figure that.
stuff out since they already do a ton of heat dissipation and material science just on.
Yeah, it's also just fascinating to look at the space industry versus the automotive industry.
Like the automotive industry is the most brutally competitive, challenging business where Elon is
having to compete with every car manufacturer in the world. Obviously, there's export, import,
controls in automotive. But in space, it's like, you know, you can imagine that being
not a perfect monopoly, but certainly having every possible.
advantage in order to dominate in that category when the time is right. Should we talk about
Apple before we continue? Yeah, definitely. Apple beat top line, beat on bottom line. China sales
decline year over year. If you've been paying any attention to Apple, you know that their
China business is slowly going away. iPhone revenue, they missed just by $300 million.
Not, 50 billion, or 49 billion this quarter.
Yeah, iPhone revenue is 49 billion versus 49.33 estimate.
Stock is relatively flat since then.
Yeah, so this is the real, like, this is the real bombshell in their strategy.
Consumer intelligence research partners, a third-party analyst firm, said it observed great interest in the pro and pro-max models.
while the new iPhone 17
Air model showed virtually
no sign of traction.
So...
I saw my first iPhone air
in the wild yesterday.
Didn't, no, you saw that one get smashed.
Tell that story.
Which one? Oh, oh, this was genuinely, like,
the most... I posted about this,
but during L.A. Tech Week,
we had a dinner...
Why did you put it in quotes?
It was L.A. Tech Week.
Well, there wasn't, I mean...
It literally wasn't an L.A. Tech week of it.
You're like, Los Angeles.
Los Angeles Technology.
No, so we had dinner with some folks.
Yeah.
And there was a founder there from Venice.
From Venice.
And he was saying that the iPhone Air is the strongest iPhone ever made.
And that he challenged anybody at the dinner.
There was like 20 people.
Do you remember Bend Gate?
Do you remember the...
Do you remember Ben Gate?
Gate, Tyler? It was like the iPhone 5 or something.
I was, and I was pretty young.
Okay, yeah, you probably before your time. But there was a time when the iPhone launched
and you could just bend it. And it was like a lot of phones were getting bent. So this guy
is going to you and he's going around and saying that no one can bend this phone, right?
No, no. He said nobody can break this phone. No, we can break it. He said this phone is
absolutely unbreakable. Unbreakable. They've tested it internally. You cannot break it.
it is the strongest iPhone ever.
He compared it to every other iPhone,
even the titanium iPhone.
And so he was bending it like this, going crazy.
And he challenged anybody at the dinner.
Who wants to try to break this phone?
And Agundo founder, I'm leaving both of them unnamed.
A gondo founder.
And we got Gabriel from Open AI in the chat.
Good luck, man.
You're building cameos over there,
but you're going to compete with us.
We're doing it the old-fashioned way.
Yeah, we're doing it the old-fashioned way.
It just took us three hours sitting here in makeup.
What do you mean three hours?
It was more like four hours.
It was like four hours.
So Gabriel, you sped that up just a little bit.
But, you know, I think we're sticking with this for the meantime.
Okay.
So anyways, this founder challenges the entire group at dinner.
Can anybody break this phone?
The Gundo founder raises his hand, takes the phone, and like tries for a second and just snaps
it basically.
Just completely shatters it.
Completely broken, won't even turn on.
And the Venice founders sitting there saying, like, he was like in disbelief.
Like every, the whole room just went completely quiet.
And he was like, I'm going to, I'm going to email Tim Cook about this.
Emailing Tim Cook, what is he going to do?
You're not supposed to smash your phone.
Anyways, on Apple, John, your take, you said sort of the inverse meta-core business,
not at risk due to AI, but not investing aggressively.
Consumers seem happy to just open an L-LM app could take.
I said Apple's trading it 40 times PE with very low growth.
this feels steep, even if I don't think
they're threatened by AI in the near
term. And then I highlighted a quote
from Bernard Arnault
from LVH. He said, I don't know if
in 20 years' time people will be using iPhones
but I do know they will
be drinking Dom Perion.
It's a good one. And hopefully they'll be using
graphite.com. Code review for the age of AI.
Graphite helps teams on GitHub
shift higher quality software faster.
In other news,
we should close
it out with NVIDIA just to finish this little earnings
wrap up.
Basically,
John, your take
was on top of the
world, but is
that head
that wears the
crown heavy?
Core AI Factory
build out going
flawlessly, but
unclear why
NVIDIA is pushing
data centers in space,
humanoid's quantum
computing, mumbo,
Jumbo.
Maybe it's real.
Maybe just
forward of the same
old AI story?
Question?
Yeah.
I said, I don't
think Jensen
would be just
chugging beers
in camera in Korea
if he was having
a rough one.
So we'll see how
it nets out.
Their earnings
are not until November
18.
Some beers. Yeah, what's wrong with checking some beers? Especially, I mean, you got to, like, he is superlative at this point. I believe just quantitatively, he is the most value creative founder CEO in human history. Like, no founder CEO has created $5 trillion. I mean, like, no one's created $5 trillion in any, in any capacity, whether in the CEO seat or not. Because like, with,
a, with a Microsoft or with an Apple, you have to start having the conversation when you're
having the goat debate on how much credit do you give to Tim Cook for market cap creation,
how much credit do you give to Steve Jobs, right? And same thing with Satcha Nadella and Bill Gates.
Like, obviously, Sotja has taken Microsoft from $300 billion to $4 trillion. Does that mean
that he's 10 times better than the founders that started the company in the goat debate of
value creation.
Like, he did have a big, he had a lot of great shoulders to stand up.
It's not entirely about number go up.
Exactly, exactly.
But with Jensen, you don't even have to have that debate because he's been the founder
CEO the whole time.
And so he is, he deserves a beer.
Let the man have a couple beers with his boys in South Korea.
He's been on an absolute beer.
A couple more posts here.
Jay Bolthard says, I'm sorry, but no company generating the cash meta is with the margins
it has should ever be raising money.
Of course, they announced another bond sale yesterday morning to fund their buildout.
Jay Bolt, heard it absolutely pathetic.
Maybe just spend a little less and don't pay every AI scientist like their show, Hey, Otani.
Yeah.
I want to understand more about the private credit dynamic here because I believe that they're like a good CFO would tell you that if you're,
you're buying land, you should get a mortgage because it can be secured. And there's just,
there's just some like cost of capital math that you should do. And it would actually be
irresponsible. Like if they were saying, hey, we're going to build a new data center. We need to
buy some land. We need to buy a building, buy a bunch of GPUs. And they're like, and guess what?
We're not going to use debt. Like that's like, that's like paying off your mortgage, basically.
And it's like, okay, yeah, you can pay off your mortgage. And you can be like, I'm one of those guys
that doesn't have a mortgage. And it's like, congratulations, but you're probably not using capital
efficiently.
Yeah. And so I, when I hear that they're setting up a big data center and they're raising
debt for that particular deal, I don't have like red flags flying off in my mind.
But I don't know. This, this, this, this, this, this, bultard guy does.
Semi analysis, how to post here, uh, quoting, uh, Sundar said over the past 12 months,
nearly 150 cloud, Google cloud customers, each process approximately one trillion tokens with our
models for a wide range of applications.
For example, WPP is creating campaigns with up to 70% efficiency gains.
Swarovsky has increased email open rates by 17%.
Let's give it up for increasing email open rates and accelerated campaign localization by 10x.
Semi-analysis says AI is not a bubble.
Enterprise AI is very strong.
Nearly 150 enterprises each process one trillion tokens with Gemini models for a wide range of apps.
And then they say, wait, that's less than a million bucks per year per enterprise.
enterprise or 150 million of annual revenue, i.e. 0.3% of GCP annual revenue.
So the fact that Google leads with token count instead of revenue growth tells you everything,
if enterprise AI was actually strong, those 150 companies would be spending 10x more.
I don't know about that because when you're a big company, like you don't want to break out
like more gap metrics, non-gap metrics than you absolutely have to. Like, because if you
develop some monster of a business, like the AWS IPO story, the whole idea that Amazon had this
amazing business. It was like, oh, yeah, like, just include that and everything else. Like,
definitely don't let everyone know. And Sotja told this to us on the show was he was like,
when AWS had to disclose what was going on over there, it was the best day for us, because everyone
looked at our business and we're like, they got the same thing going on over there. They got a
monster of a business cooking. And so the question of like, how,
Google positions this, like, do they want to share dollars? But I don't know. I just wonder,
I wonder what the shape of GCP adoption is. If it's nearly 150 Google Cloud customers
each processed one trillion, I wonder how narrow that slice is. I mean, yeah, if Sundar would come out
and says, we got Enterprise AI to $150 million run rate, everyone would be like,
but it sounds really good when you say one trillion yeah yeah that is a weird weird way
to frame it I don't know uh I mean this is all this is all so weird because it's like
okay so then what's actually happening in the core business because they they they
they crushed earnings they did they did great and it's like so are we just in this world
weird world where everyone where every business is like yeah I totally want like I'll
take one million dollars of tokens, but then I also need $75 million more of just traditional
databases. Is that what's going on? Like, what's actually driving the growth, if not the
token generation? There might just be something longer tail going on here, too. This might just
be like this slice of this 150 enterprises that's actually, you know, that only makes up, I don't
know. The big question is just, what percentage of GCP annual revenue is AI?
is Gen AI.
Like, we've seen that the KAPX at meta,
they have core AI, they have Gen AI.
Like, everyone wants to track that now
about what workload is happening.
Sometimes the hyperscalers don't know
because they just said,
look, I just rented you a bunch of GPUs.
Are you inferencing a recommendation algorithm on it?
Are you playing video games on it?
Are you generating tokens on it?
We actually don't know because we respect your privacy
and you can do whatever you want.
with it. So all we can tell the market is like, hey, we sold a lot of GPU hours. And it's all,
it's all masked. Anyway, Tyler, what you got? I mean, yeah, a trillion is just like not a lot
at all. Because opening eye is doing like just on the API like something around like 250 trillion a
month. So compared to that, I mean, if it's a trillion over the past like year, even if it's
150, I mean, that's like, that's pretty bad. Each 150 trillion to,
tokens. And you said,
I was doing like 260 a month. I actually can't keep these numbers straight anymore.
Like there's,
I, it's like, everything is like, nothing's in apples to apples. And I think that's very much
intentional. I think that you don't want to be easily comped across anything. That's why
everyone just focuses on valuation and then revenue and revenue scale.
Dylan Patel says so many people hated on us for the AWS acceleration thesis a couple
months ago. And we were right, of course. Only we can do these calls due to our deep knowledge and
insights with core research data center accelerator and tokenomics models. Amazon, and they does
the AMZN with and just drop sales at seminalysis.com. So I expect a semi-analysis to be printing the next
legendary chart 24 hours. This was crazy. I wasn't sure if this was fake news or not, but on the
Coinbase earnings call yesterday, Brian
Armstrong went there was a prediction market that people were betting on which
words he would say during the earnings call and he waited until the end and he just
read through and read off every single word that he had missed he says you know I
just wanted to add the words in here Bitcoin Ethereum blockchain staking and
Web 3 to make sure we get those all in before the end of the call so completely
trolling we've had that a few times during interviews because I was tracking the
prediction market about what Coinbase will say on their next earnings call. And I just want to,
you know, add here the words Bitcoin, Ethereum, blockchain, staking, and Web3. It's actually crazy
that he hadn't gotten to Bitcoin until then. Like, it really tells you a lot about how
mature the Coinbase business is that you can get to the end of your Q3, 2025 earnings call,
without mentioning Bitcoin, which was like the entire reason the business is.
exists. But the business has grown so much. There's a lot else going on. It's possible that
he said it and he just didn't remember. Maybe, maybe, but it is funny that he's just.
But yeah, one thing is, we've had prediction markets created around different interviews
done and it is wildly distracting when I'm looking at the chat and people are like,
say this word. Say that word again. It's crazy. Say it three more times. It's a very weird
postmodern hyper techno capital accelerationist like aesthetic. So it'd be like,
people are gambling on the words that you're saying on a live stream it's very very weird uh i don't know
what his i would love to know brian's honest take on like how he feels about that like there's a
little bit of just the market is going to exist it's going to be a thing and so he by doing this
he's kind of trolling the market to just say hey you're never going to be able to reliably bet on this
market because you never know what I'm going to do, uh, which is one way to interact with it,
as opposed to being like, hey guys, I know that everyone has a prediction market up on what I'm
going to say. And so please don't do that. It's like, no, just like go create chaos and then
everyone will just know that it's a meme and chaos. Well, it's going to just drive more attention
to the next earnings call because people are going to go. Oh, that's interesting. Well,
I'll just bet yes on everything in case he does that again. Oh, my odds might be at like 95% for
every word. And then he just says like he just doesn't mention it at all. Yeah. And then
everything you know it's certainly it certainly kind of cements him as uh as just a very in the culture
CEO and a very a very like online founder which i think is positive um we are of course
partner with polymarket as a prediction market uh we're usually tracking the largest
companies on there largest company at the end of 2025 invidia has been predicted of course and
what's the percentage it's like 99% now i mean there are a trillion above everyone else there
It was a horse race, though.
Yeah, it was really close midsummer.
Yeah.
At one point.
I mean, the market caps were eclipsing each other, and they were going back and forth.
And at one point.
Yeah, June 1st, Microsoft and Nvidia were both at 37% exactly.
Yeah, it's been a pretty crazy year because of the tariffs and the AI narrative and the deep seek moment, the horse race has changed a few times.
And Microsoft has been in the lead.
Apple's been in the lead
but NVIDIA is running away with it
and that deserves a beer
with your boys in South Korea
and so that's what he's been
up to.
Did you fully understand
there's an article here
Microsoft seemingly just revealed that OpenAI
lost 11.5 billion last quarter
that seems like
in line with what we've
been
kind of assuming. It's like
it's a massive loss-making business
I don't know that we'd heard that they were on like a 40 billion loss run rate, but that
kind of lines up with the amount of money that they've been raising.
Maybe Intel.
Like you mean the like the most, the biggest who's losing more money than opening up?
Do you count CapEx as losing money?
Because I would, I would almost, I would almost certainly assume that these are not losses.
these are investments.
So like if I raise $10 million for my startup and then I'm like, okay, I'm going to buy a office building for $5 million, like, that's not negative $5 million earnings.
That is negative $5 million cash flow.
I've lost $5 million cash and I don't have liquid cash anymore.
And so I would assume that a lot of Open AI's losses are actually investments in CAPEX,
one way or another.
But they're also,
I mean,
stock-based comp is factored into this as well.
Yeah.
And that's also,
in many cases,
a non-cash expense.
And so still important to track,
still significant.
But all of this stuff,
it's like,
I'm kind of in like a wait and see
until the,
until the S-1 drops,
until we can actually get data.
Do you have any intel?
Yeah, so apparently this is,
this is double what they've,
like,
what has previously been reported.
So I think before there was a report,
it said,
the first half of 2025, they're going to do 3.5 in losses.
So this is basically double that.
But even that, it's still, I don't think this is very surprising at all.
It's so hard to track how much money they're actually raising
because they'll raise for a particular deal.
They'll raise for Stargate.
They'll be a secondary transaction.
It's very hard to understand, like, how much cash is actually going from investors
on to Open AIs, like, for-profit balance sheet that is, like, available to burn.
And then once you have the cash, like, I think everyone's fine with the idea of Sam Altman burning money for 12 to 18 months and going out and raise more.
Like, that's not crazy when you're growing your business, especially in a new category.
In other news, Palantir sues former employees for stealing company secrets, company alleges pair violated non-competes to create copycat AI firm.
Interesting.
They've, the two employees, they're accusing them as stealing confidential.
data to build a rival company called Percepta, backed by General Catalyst.
I would not want to steal from Palantir.
Bad idea.
That seems like one of the worst companies to steal from.
They will find you.
Yeah.
And they will kill you.
I'm not about that, but it is a wild thing.
Yeah, you think about a company that's going to have, like, you know, things pretty locked down.
Their whole stick is going to what's going on.
They know that, I remember I read the article yesterday, but I believe they tracked that the employee
had slack themselves a document
that they then opened on their phone
and presumably, you know,
saves. So
we'll see how this nets out.
They say that taking access
to Palantiers crown jewels
such as source code and customer workflows
to create what it called a copycat
platform.
So they're just trying to block them from
using the data
and to force the return of
stolen materials.
One of the comments says
Never
Never go against a company that sued the government and won
Interesting
Shamsanker was on the
Ross Douthit.
Ross Douthit. It was really good.
I don't know how much you listen to, but
he
It's funny because they open with the classic question
of
of like what does Palantir actually do
and I don't know
like why are people so confused
by that question it's so crazy
me it's like
and Sean explains it extremely well
he's just like like
you have data we help you understand
your data we help you understand
what's going on there
you know it's it's he's like
it's a data analytics firm sir
it's the same other thing um when
when Trey Stevens went on Sean Ryan
yeah like the questions were like almost the same exact
questions like what does Pallenture do like
And then you read the comments and then everyone's like, this is the antichrist.
Yeah, people go crazy, crazy, crazy.
And I think it's, like, Sean met this great example of like when you want to make a thing.
Like if you're running a manufacturing plant, you will have a system for tracking, like, if you're trying to make like Yerba Mote, you will have a system that stores like the specifications of the can, what type of ink you're using here, the size of the can, the shape.
what materials, how this gets printed, like that will all be managed in a particular software
system. Then how you're actually making the cans will be like, oh, okay, I'm producing 25 cans a
second or whatever. That will be tracked in a different system. Then you might have a CRM to sell.
Who do I sell these cans to? I'm selling them, you know, every month, Jordy buys a bunch.
So I have a CRM that tracks you. And he's just describing like the different enterprise software.
software tooling sets like CRM, CMS, warehouse management system, inventory management system.
He's just describing those and explaining how Palantir can tie them all together and how
Palantir can build them. And sometimes you need custom ones for specific, for specific industries.
Well, let's check him with the Palantir Bulls. Anyway, yes, what does the, what do the Palantir Bulls say?
The Palantir Bulls will get exhausted at these levels.
Full send.
I like the guy doing the back.
Our team workouts should look like that.
We don't break nearly enough of a sweat
compared to this. This is so sick.
Let's go.
Look at this.
Bro, backflips?
I like that guy who's just like
racing it like it's a chariot
or like it's a horse race. That's hilarious.
Yeah, this also seems slightly sped up
maybe. What do we think? Do you think this
is like 1.1 axe?
It's slowed down.
Oh, you think it's slow down.
Get on Julius.a.I. What analysis do you want to run? Chat with your data. Get expert level
insights in seconds. Um, where to you next? We got the mansion section. There's a bunch of stuff we can go through. Um, did you hear that the Hampton's market is making an epic comeback? Let's go. Finally.
The moment. Home sales of $10 million or more houses are surging on the east end, even topping the COVID surge in the Hampton, New York's,
affluent beach vacation destination, the luxury real estate market, has come roaring back.
Have you ever been to the Hamptons?
I still think I've never been.
I actually, I actually, Bobby Cosmic was worried about the Hamptons.
Maybe as a kid, but not as an adult.
The number of home sales above $10 million on Long Island's East End has surged to unprecedented
levels, even topping the area's pandemic.
Boom, the uptick comes even as Florida and other locales for place.
New York City as a primary home for many billionaires.
The Hamptons is, for a lack of a better term, kicking ASS at the very high end of the market.
Wow, uncensored swear word in the journal.
Absolute dogs over there in the writers.
Wow.
I mean.
Out of control.
Out of control.
We would never.
We got to get this under control.
No, I think that's not that bad of a word.
A.S.
The high end Hampton's market was in the doldrums before COVID, home sales of 10,000.
million or more plummeted from 58 in 2015 to 30 in 2019 as the Ritzie area faced increased
competition from areas such as Nantucket or Hudson Valley. And so there are some stories here to
the banner born. I've been working at my land thesis. Yes. I think, I think, I think that it's
probably the most underrated asset class right now. Well, don't spell the alpha. I mean, I mean,
I'm down to, I'm down to sure the alpha with, uh, with, uh, with, uh, with the, with the, with the team. Um, yeah, I just think throughout, you know, all human history people were like, how do I acquire land? Yes. And then at some point or another, people just stopped, right? It became just about getting the home. Yes. And not thinking about land. So where, where do you want land? Do you want to buy fifth avenue to, to, uh, to, to, I just want to buy up land in.
the area that I love the most, which...
American jurisdiction?
Of course America.
California?
Of course California.
So Southern California?
I'll never give up on California.
I still think there's, I still think there's huge alpha and just acquiring massive swaths of
Alaskan land.
Yeah.
I still think of that.
I've been working this one out for a while.
Yeah, I think it's massively underrated because if, if global warming is real and
unstoppable, and we can't fight the force of global warming, well, then temperatures will rise,
and Alaska will be the last beachfront property. It'll be balmy. It'll be amazing. Everything else
will be a desert, but Alaska will be nice and temperate, and that's where you want to be.
And if we cure global warming, if we stop global warming, if we wind up figuring out how to
manipulate the environment, we become, we harness the...
You can manipulate time. Yeah, manipulating time, manipulating the weather.
if Augustus is successful, if geoengineering is successful, well then it's not going to be cold up there
because you'll just be able to transform it into a lush, a lush environment, 702 and sunny all day.
So I think in either scenario, no matter where you land on global warming, is it unstoppable, is it preventable,
Alaska looks great in that world.
What do you think?
Did you ever resolve your beef with the Alaskans?
No.
I locked.
So I posted on X.
Actually, it was Twitter back then.
Like, four years ago, I posted, like, we got to go to Alaska.
We got to build some condominiums.
We got to build some strip malls.
We got to build some skyscrapers.
It's too nice up there.
And I was basically like, we're going to, we're all the tech people, all my tech friends,
we're all going to go to Alaska.
And the Alaskans did not like this.
And they said, stay out of Alaska, you tech boy.
And I was getting, I was going to attack both the left and the right.
You kind of listened, too.
I did.
In fact, I did not invade Alaska.
But I was getting lots of DMs from Alaskans who are, you know, gun, totin, good old boy, Americans.
Do not step foot.
You wouldn't last a day up here.
You're not tough enough for the Alaskan wilderness.
And then I was also getting canceled by the left Alaskans who are like, this is my indigenous homeland, you can't come here, that type of thing.
And so I was getting it from both sides.
I wound up locking my account because the post went majorly viral in Alaskan, like Twitter, like Twitter, like Twitter, like Twitter, of course I was joking around, but the internet doesn't care about that.
Twitter is.
Twitter is such a small place already, imagine how small Alaska Twitter is.
There's like six posters up there, regional posters.
But this is the lesson for folks who post and are worried about getting canceled.
Not that you should go out there and get canceled.
But if it does happen, it usually starts by somebody quote posting you.
And you can tell that, you know, you posted something.
You got 100 likes, but the quote post is taking off and people are having a lot of fun quote tweeting you.
That's when the like ratio on the original post is just abysmal.
Exactly.
So if that happens, you can just bail by locking your account, which then kills the quote
tweet because it doesn't show up in the quote tweet. And so no one's liking or retweeting
a quote tweet with just this account is locked. And so it just kills the virality of the
quote and the dunk. And so you stop getting dunked on. And then no one can really like
DM you or reply to you or dig through your account. And so usually at least in the short term,
people are kind of like, uh, moving on to something else. I'm not, I'm not letting it
percolate. Um, we should talk to Lulu about how to handle cancellations when she hops on.
She's, of course, seen a bunch of these.
Speaking of people who should be canceled, someone owns a disgusting house in Los Angeles.
We've got to dig into this.
The mansion section is really getting wild today.
They put a curse word in here.
Don't like that.
They also are listing an $85 million mansion here for sale in L.A., an estate with a curated collection of S-E-X toys.
What's going on, mansion section?
Why are you getting so wild on Friday, October 31st?
Spooky.
It has a pleasure suite.
Not like them.
A pair of Los Angeles mansions, one with a pleasure suite,
outfit with a curated collection of sex toys,
is hitting the market for $85 million.
The seller is British music producer Alex DeKid.
He's 44.
He spent 14 years building one of the houses, a roughly 24,000.
14 years?
Yeah, he started when he was 30, I guess.
He thinks in decades.
He thinks in decades.
In addition to the pleasure suite, the Hollywood Hills home,
Dekid called his entertainer's fortress has eight pools, very cool, an auto elevator, and a private
nightclub. In 2020, Dekid purchased an adjacent five-bedroom home with its own pool for around
7.6 million property record show. He bought the roughly 6,125 square foot house with the idea
of adding it to the main residence, he said, but ultimately decided to use it as a guest house
instead. DeKidd bought the first property
a Spanish-style home in the Byrd
Streets area for around $4.3 million in
2011. The purchase came shortly after
renegotiating his first publishing
Mr. Morale in the chat. Alex DeKid.
He's 44.
His real name
is Alexander J. Grant.
I basically got this house thinking
it would be a six-month remodel,
but after more than a year of renovating
DeKid decided to raise
the house, destroying it, and
start over. It was like making an album
for me, DeKidd said. I got these other ideas. McLean, who's known for designing modern mansions
is a madman just like me, De Kidd said. The four-bedroom house has a glass elevator for cars,
a pleasure suite with a Murphy bed and mirrored wall, contains antique chairs customized with
patent leather, upholstery, restraints, and chains. I think we're beyond the days of it being
taboo to enjoy pleasure,
DeKidd said.
I wanted a place where you could feel comfortable and intimate and explore.
All right.
Let's go to the next time.
We're not past it.
It is taboo.
Tear your house down.
I don't know.
No, the mansion section is all over the place today.
Shutterstock founder sells a bridge Hampton home.
What a great time to get out of shutter stock with the dawn of
generative imagery. This has to be one of the hardest businesses to make. He's not out yet. He's still
the executive chairman. Yes, but he's clearly sold enough to to buy 57 million dollars. We should have,
we should have John on. I'd be interested to hear how he's, um, yeah, how, how, how, I mean,
I'm sure they get so much traffic still. Yeah. And I imagine they just help people generate assets
based on other assets. I mean, the bull case is the Reddit thesis, right, where you're licensing the data
And that's actually very valuable.
And the stock sort of pops off of that.
He sold his ocean front house in Bridge Hampton, New York, for 57 million, according to people familiar with the deal.
He bought it for $40 million in 2014.
He's listed the house.
The buyer of the identity, the buyer's identity couldn't be learned.
Huh.
We've got to figure that out.
Get to the bottom of it.
Let's see.
Set on more than two acres, the modern Bridge Hampton home has a gym, a game room, and a media room.
Interesting.
Outside, there is an infinity.
pool. You'll love that.
There we go. An outdoor kitchen, a fireplace, and a television, a private lighted walkway
that leads to the beach.
Hmm. Sales volume in the Hamptons hit a 14-year low, but it's coming back, and the founder
of Shutterstock is getting out at maybe the top, but a local boom. Very fun. What else is
going on on the timeline? Back to the timeline in the journal as well. BlackRock.
There we go. Search every bite of serverless vector.
in full-text search, built from first principles
and object storage. Fast, 10x cheaper, and extremely
scalable. Continued. BlackRock
stung by loans to businesses
accused of breathtaking fraud. An entrepreneur
tapped private credit funds to finance
his telecom businesses. Now the
lenders say he defrauded them.
So
stock market news over O'Neck says
we have our fourth private credit
collapse in two months. And this
one shows exactly why institutional lenders
shouldn't be justified to verify their own collateral.
Bakim BombBot ran Karyok's Capital, a New York Telecom financing outfit that convinced BlackRock's HPS investment partners in B&P Paribus to lead him $552 million.
The entire deal was built on one claim.
He had legitimate receivables from T-Mobile, Telstra B-Fix, Telecom, Italia, Sparkle, and Taiwan Mobile backing the loans.
None of it was real.
Brom bought Forge contracts that appeared to be signed by representatives.
from these carriers.
He created fake invoices
supposedly issued by these companies
claiming they owed Karyok's money.
Then he spoofed email addresses
mimicking these carriers' real domains
and sent verification emails
to make the receivables look legitimate.
By stacking these fabricated invoices
on top of each other,
he created what looked like
$500 million plus in collateral.
Lenders sought assets
and funded the deal without catching any of it.
Here's where it gets embarrassing
when HPS and B&P Peribus
finally tried to verify these receivables,
by actually calling T-Mobile.
The carrier said they had no idea what Cariox was talking about,
no contracts, no invoices, nothing existed.
One phone call would have instantly revealed the entire fraud.
These are supposed to be institutional-grade lenders
with world-class risk management,
yet somehow they missed basic due diligence.
While all this was happening,
BramBot's people were also stealing cash
whenever payments came through the lender-controlled collection accounts
instead of applying those funds to the debt,
they diverted the money offshore, so he wasn't just fabricating,
collateral. He was stealing actual cash flows in real time. Lenders sued in August 2025 and
froze all assets. Then they filed for the company Karyox filed for bankruptcy with up to
$1 billion in liabilities and basically zero assets remaining. HPS is sitting on half a billion in
losses with nothing to recover against. The kicker is that BlackRock acquired HPS for $12 billion in
July 2025, specifically to expand.
into private credit and get access to its $148 billion platform.
Within 90 days of closing that deal,
they're holding a half a billion dollar fraud loss on receivables
that HPS supposedly vetted and monitored.
I mean, that's not that big of a deal, right?
5%.
I mean, it's not great, but, you know, it is like 5% of the deal.
Like, I feel like people get deals mispriced by a couple percent every once in a while.
I mean, it's just this is a big deal in the broader context of like private credit has
exploded as an asset class.
Yeah.
There's a lot of, you know, people of, you know, we saw this with the, what was the, what
was the, um, A.V in the chat?
Large scale fraud is actually a sign of good times.
I mean, that's true.
Yeah.
Um, but, uh, yeah, who, who knows?
But anyways, that, that auto parts, uh, company that, that went bankrupt a while back also
had a bunch of private credit in the mix.
And so I think people are just waiting for more and more.
We got to dig into that story of the satellite repossession, maybe one of the, the private credit gets crazy.
I mean, there's a famous example of one credit firm buying Argentinian debt and then repossessing a aircraft carrier or destroyer, like a military boat.
And apparently the same thing can happen in space with satellites.
Like, they are, it is possible to, uh, more or less repossess them. Uh, and so I, I think a lot of these, a lot of these deals, a lot of these, uh, a lot of these private credit deals are like, you're, you're on a knife's edge in terms of like, are you going to get, continue to get payment or are you going to need to get the value from the assets? Whereas in venture capital, it's just so much, it's just so much further out on the risk curve that you're, you're, you're never like, or how, yeah, am I?
A big piece of my business is making sure I can liquidate the Apple display monitors in the office or the Herman Miller chairs.
It's like, no, that's going to be basically immaterial to your business.
It's going to be the difference between, you know, like 99% of the value is going to come from 1% of the investments anyway.
And then of the money you lose, you're not going to be recouping an extra 5% making a difference.
In some more positive news.
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Britain over at Microsoft says,
please, Mr. President, respectfully let us buy this truck.
Let's go.
He was responding to.
Wow, 64,000 likes on that.
And Palmer says, working on this.
Working on this.
And this got another 20,000 likes.
People want these little Toyota trucks.
But what does this mean in the Palmer context?
Does this mean he's going to call the president and ask Trump to allow it?
Or is he going to make a mod retro version of this car?
Is Anderol going to produce this?
Like there's like 12 different ways that Palmer could like solve this problem of like Americans not being able to get cool trucks, which is interesting.
Yeah.
I don't know if these these trucks are blocked, either blocked in the U.S.
or just you would have to import one yourself.
Yeah.
But they, I mean, Enios is basically,
I think Enios has basically done this.
They're, they have a, what do they have?
It's not the main Grenadier.
Yeah.
But they have, I'm pulling it up right now.
The quartermaster, the quartermaster from Grenadier
looks quite a lot like this truck.
But it's certainly, I think this one from Toyota International,
nationally sells for like 10 to 20 grand.
Like it's very cheap.
Yeah, people love to point out the fact that the Ford F150 has the same bed length as these tiny Japanese K trucks.
But interestingly, that's just why you should always buy the Ford F250 Superduty crew cab with the long bed.
Because if you just go for the biggest truck, then you will be bigger than the Japanese K truck.
uh people love people love the k trucks they have fun with those uh well if you're starting a new truck
company you got to get your brand mentioned on chat chp t you got to go to profound reach millions
of consumers who are using AI to discover new products and brands um Andrew Reed says if I ran a company
my first act would be to ban hard boiled eggs in the office hard boiled eggs are really an insane snack
that is put these in quotes because the smell the smell is so unbelievably bad yeah that you should
be forced to eat them outside only. Yeah. It's, uh, it the, it's, is it more, it's not more
protein than a steak in a bag. You got to go chess. That's the, that's the way, if you want to have,
uh, if you want to have protein on the go, uh, throw a steak in the bag and take it with you
everywhere, uh, the hard boiled eggs in the office that seems like a, an odd choice. Um, probably a time
in a place.
Name one time and one
place. One place would be like, you know
how in offices they have like, like, well
where you can go to the smoking area.
Like I wouldn't have a problem with somebody going
and if there's like a cigarette smoking area,
like a back alley and you can go
into the back alley and scarf
scarves, uh,
hard boiled eggs. That seems
reasonable. People are smoking less
or yeah, go outside, put one in each
you know, uh, cheek
and then go back in the office. Like chipmunk mode?
go chipmunk mode and then and then just pretend like you don't have them i don't know yeah i've
never been i've never been big in the in the hard boil day thing i have however been it big into
linear linear is a purpose-built tool for planning and building products meet the system for modern
software development streamline issues projects and product roadmaps uh our first guests of the show
are in the restream waiting room we have lulu missurvy and gabby goldberg stopping by
Whoa.
Look at this.
Oh, shit.
Hey.
Hey.
Hey.
You look fantastic.
Is that a wig, too?
I don't know what you're talking about.
But it's great to see you guys.
We were watch shopping during our break between sauna and eating cheeseburgers for breakfast.
The lore.
The lore is coming through.
And Gabby.
Hey, John.
John, John.
Yes, John.
Oh, sorry, very in the paper this one.
Do you want to show, we're live.
You want to show the watch you got?
Oh, this?
Oh, this is nothing special.
This is just my AP offshore, but it's been a good for a while.
So, yeah, great to finally cross that off the list.
What watch did you get, Jordy?
Oh, I got the Jaeger Le Cout.
Oh, there we go.
Oh, there we go.
It's in the same color, you know, to do the band-green.
And it matches the new my bach that I just bought.
You know that's how you heard.
My bach.
My bach.
My bach is outside and it matches this watch.
And really sorry, guys.
Let's get right into the show.
John, you ready?
Let's do it, Jordy.
All right.
You're watching TVPN.
There we go.
Today is Friday, October 31st.
We are loving.
Live from the TBPN Ultradome.
You even got the horse.
Technology.
The torture is inside it.
The capital of capital.
They got the whole stag.
What is that?
Is that the soundboard?
What is that?
Oh, the air horn.
Oh, the air horn.
Happy Halloween.
Happy Halloween.
Happy Halloween.
Well, well done.
Good to see you.
The chat is absolutely loving this.
How did you?
Big fancy both, Ilya and Mark.
How did you guys advise,
oh, wow, with the loafers up on the desk?
The level of detail here, the schick is remarkable.
Here, we'll fire back.
Someone else is a schick to us.
It's a lifestyle.
On a more serious note,
what's the advice to clients on how to approach Halloween?
any is it just ignore it's a distraction
nope uh it is as with every other day a chance to only lock in more
we actually yeah we printed out some examples yes take us through it please what else you
got for us you're disappearing what is this this oh this is Halloween uh the Halloween
starter kit I've seen this but what is what is in the image okay so this is spirit Halloween
the Brian Armstrong set.
It includes one great.
For the whole head, right?
Oh, perfect, perfect.
Yes, yes.
The whole head,
everything below the head is strictly optional.
Wait,
why didn't we consider that?
We were in,
we were in makeup for three hours this morning.
We could have just shaved her head
with a razor in the morning.
That would have been so much easy.
Would have done 90% of the work for us, really.
And I could have just,
I could have just,
I could have just grown a beard.
Yes.
What other ideas do we have here?
let's see so we've got oh here's here's one that john and i like printed posts we
the level of detail here is amazing this is insane continue we might have to lose the virtual
background by the way we're like it's really cutting in and out oh what is this i can i can see it
what is this uh stressed out guy smoking gay Halloween what do you mean you're stressed out
higher Miyazaki. Look at this. This is a fine. Yes. That would be a fantastic costume. Oh,
someone did it. And that's what that post is. Someone's real possible. That makes sense.
Yeah, you see you're kind of tripping in and out. It is a wild. And then here, we thought this was
very disrespectful of you in particular, Mark. Oh, yes. You see this person. We will admonish
them on the spot. We're looking for them. We did like this comment from the random recruiter. This
is my sleep paralysis
I do
I do look like
the sleep paralysis
demon
that's hilarious
I look a little
that's scary
I don't know
if I'm doing
Mark justice
yeah
the uh
it's it's a remarkable
remarkable effort
we did have a
yeah who do you think one
we did like
um
do I look more like
ilia than he looks
like Mark
who wins
the costume contest
today. I think it's the Ilya thing. You think so? I think so. I was getting freaked out before the
show. We had like five minutes after the costumes finish. Watching a six eight jacked Ilya
just like come around the corner is is scary. It's a wild, wild experience. Yeah. It's easier to
climb the mountain when you're six eight. Yeah. It's all in the eyebrows. The eyebrows are really
everything because as they were working on getting the the makeup on um i was like there's no way this
is going to work like this is not this is going to look like party city level like it's it's fun
that we did this but this is not going to look convincing at all and uh and it's definitely a crazy
your post lulu this isn't reposting uh john's post this isn't a i this is human craftsmanship
but it's actually crazy so like the the uh crew that typically works on
like, you know, normal film productions.
They did, was it like 50 different layers of stuff that they were putting on our heads?
It was one of the most complicated.
They're painting, they're doing, they did like a base layer.
They did the head.
They painted over our eyebrows.
They glued, you know, things over the eyebrows and they put another set of eyebrows on.
Then they painted over that.
It's going to take like probably an hour to just get, get all of this off.
They said 45 minutes.
Okay.
I don't know why you'd want to take it off.
Yeah.
do you think uh do i mean obviously we're in a unique position because we get to kind of have
some fun on the show it's like almost a comedy show in many ways uh do you think there's any hope
to bring back april fools day in a cool way or will tech just like flop on that immediately
it's hard to do someone told me a couple years ago on april's day that actually doing it
on april fools is the cringy part you interesting they're surrounded by so much
many people doing it badly that it's really from that. And they were saying, if you think of a
great prank or jade or joke, just do it randomly. Why wait till April 1st when everybody
Yeah. So there was a company that, the YC company that pissed a bunch of people off because they,
they created an IDE that has like brain rot in the, in the software. So you can do like gambling on
steak. You can do subway surfers. And like they pissed, they, they, because it's on the YC website,
I feel like they're putting like, you can gamble while you code.
They piss a lot of people off.
And I think if they had just dropped it as like a feature that was like a real feature
that you could play around with but wasn't like their entire brand,
it would have hit a lot harder and been and gotten a much more like funny positive reaction
versus people just being like, I hate this, blah, blah, blah, blah, like, you know, why does this exist?
Yeah, it's almost like taking, yeah, taking the joke like too seriously.
when you haven't established your brand at all,
then people,
there's just,
you're making people do so much work.
I guess that's the,
I guess that's the benefit of doing something on April 1st
is that you're,
there's a lot less work to be like,
is this a joke?
You can just kind of,
you can kind of lean on,
on, you know,
the audience needs to like,
uh,
like,
you don't need to,
you don't need to,
you don't wind up in the situation where you have to explain to like 10,000
people like,
we're kidding, we're kidding, we're kidding.
Like people kind of put it together themselves.
and be like, okay, I'm good.
Are drops dead as a meta, do you think?
Like, it feels like launch videos and drops are both kind of over.
So I don't think that drops are dead.
I think that that specific style of drop with the launch video has been over,
it is completely saturated and overdone.
Yeah.
I think you just have to, like, people are not going to stop announcing things and stop dropping
things and just have to find new ways to do it.
Well, I meant drop in the context of, like, we made this product with our branding on it kind of thing.
I thought base did a really good job.
Did you see basses drop for their one billion dollar round?
It was a newspaper.
And I thought that was, like, well executed in the sense that, like, it had a lot of text.
It had a lot of content there.
Yeah, Tyler has it there.
Join the charge.
And I just thought, like, yeah, it's like, it's not just like a T-shirt.
it's like way way deeper uh and i'd say the same thing for the for the launch videos it's like
uh we we found a very unique aesthetic yesterday i'm not going to share it because i think it would be
a good launch video of uh but there there are there are specific formats where it's immediately
identifiable as like oh that's that type of video and if you use that as your launch video you'll
break through and you'll be the first person to take you know the like right now it's like
the default meta is basically like after Game of Thrones stick around for the interview with
the actors like that's the aesthetic of most launch videos right now it's like cinematic couple minutes
interview with a few people kind of like mini documentary they said we couldn't build enterprise
enterprise category no one they said it was impossible yeah they didn't get a little commoditized
but yeah fresh ideas i'd said at one point that somebody should do a version of it of those
sorority dance videos.
That's a great one.
That's a great idea.
That's a great one.
If you have someone who can do flips or if you just like all wear a matching
up, it has to be a company.
If you're like solving cancer,
doing cancer, that's probably not right.
But as long as the joke is not too close to home.
The problem with being a slop adjacent company that jokes about slop.
Sure.
Now it's so obvious that that is very close to what you're doing and now you have to
defend yourself.
Like what was that car company that was going to do that rebrand a couple?
couple years ago. Jaguar. Jaguar was really bad to you. Yeah. Oh, there was another? There was another one
where they joked about a rebrand. I don't even know if it was a joke. They claimed it was a joke
because people hated it. I don't remember this at all. Claiming after getting a reaction that
people don't like something and then saying, it was a joke is not an effective strategy. You've seen
that a little bit. The substrate launch was crazy. That was kind of like a Lule
Lou and Gabby masterclass special.
Well, James will let them know, yeah.
Yeah.
We'll let Lou and Gabby know they'll feel really good about it.
James Proud is in heavy founder mode, by the way.
He did a lot of the writing and outreach and a lot of that themselves,
which obviously we think is the right way to do this.
Like the founder can't just sit it out and deploy it to do it all for them.
But yeah, substrate, very cool company.
Absolute, what we call it?
Absolute dog.
There we go.
An absolute dog.
That's the word.
That's what we love to use.
He's an absolute dog.
Straight from Pat McAfee.
All right, guys.
Well, have a great rest of your day.
Yeah, get back to the gym.
You know, before we go, we should talk about Ramp.
Oh, please.
What's your got for us?
We almost had a whole conversation.
Before we go to the gym, let me tell you about Ramp.com.
Time is money to save both with corporate cards, bill, paying, and more.
The average company saves 5% worth worth it.
There we go.
flawless adreed incredible we'll have you guys we'll have you guys do a proper
proper guest uh guest host hosting uh session just hosting would be fantastic if uh clearly well
if we ever yeah any more some morning where we're like uh we two hours in the gym not enough today
yeah we'll call you guys up and and you can fill in but uh looking sharp uh are you uh hopefully
hopefully you guys have some other costumes for for later this evening trick-or-treating
but if not you know tell them to uh tell them to go to tbpn.com all the kids you run into and
and send all the children tbpn.com and add up apis capital capital cabby's going to hand
out apes everyone so you got to get over there got to get over there uh great to see you guys
talk to you soon both cheer bye bye um we have to do a real ad read for numeral hq.com
sales tax on autopilot spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance
science. We have Dean Ball coming on the show next. I don't know if he knows that we're
dressed up his mark and Ilya. Tyler, do you know Ball? Of course I know Ball. You can't keep
getting away with it. It's one of the jokes that keeps getting funnier. Dean Ball is a senior
fellow at FAA, author of Hyperdimensional, former senior policy advisor for AI at the White House and
strategic advisor at the NSF, previously at the Mercatus Center. Do you know the Mercatus Center?
Of course. Why do you know the Mercatus Center? Tyler Cowan. Of course. The absolute goat himself.
He's been at Stanford Hoover Institution, the Manhattan Institute, focuses on AI emerging technology. He's
in the Restream waiting room. Dean, welcome to TVPN. How are you doing, Dean? Good to meet you.
Welcome to the show. Hey, guys. Thanks for having me. Sorry to jump scare you on Halloween. We're having a lot of fun
here. I love it. It's crazy. You're, you, you, you look exactly like Dean Ball. Your,
your costume is flawless. Almost to a T. It's amazing. Were you in, were you in six hours of
makeup this morning? Make me look like Dean Ball? Exactly. Yeah, that's exactly what I said.
Make me look like the former White House policy advice. Yes, yes. Yes, yes. That actually would be
potentially the most like scary costume is getting prosthetic makeup to look like yourself. Oh my God.
that might feel it's a very jarring very bizarre experience looking in the mirror and actually seeing
like for the first time of my life seeing something that looks materially different from the way and
and i and i will say i i did i did ask john i was like is is dean ready to do it
somewhat serious interview with us in extremely unserious characters and we talked and we thought that
we thought it'd be a really fun conversation even though um even though we look absolutely ridiculous but
It's great to have you on the show finally.
Yeah, great to have you on the show.
Thank you so much.
Featured a bunch of your writing on the show over the last year.
So I'm very happy to have you on.
Well, thank you guys very much.
It's great to be here.
Let's kick it off with sort of what's top of mind for you.
There's a lot of different policy positions that I'm sure you could be working on.
FAA is a pretty big organization.
It feels very, very significant to me, especially right now in this moment, but also
just feels like the organization generally has been on a massive upswing.
What has been the key focus this year for you?
And then let's just kind of like continue to to dial in the aperture and go and go deeper and deeper as we go.
Yeah, absolutely.
So, I mean, started the year, I was still a kind of policy scholar and writing at think tanks, including at FAAI.
Worked on state policy, you know, all the crazy bills that were coming out at that time for AI regulation.
And then in April moved to the White House.
And so I wasn't writing anymore.
My focus was really entirely on the AI action plan.
which the Trump administration released in July of this year.
Then a couple weeks after that, once the action plan seemed like it was in a good place
and well accepted within the sort of bureaucracy of the federal government,
I thought it would take longer to get it rolling downhill, but it really didn't take that long.
So once I felt like it was in a good place, I retired from that role
and went back to the private sector where I feel like that's my strength, writing, communicating, things like that.
What do you think is a bigger force in AI regulation right now?
A, constituents who just don't like AI, I'm worried about it taking my job,
I don't like the way it looks, it's slop, it's bad, it's brain rot, whatever,
like anti-AI for just genuine direct, I don't like it, reasons,
versus jockeying between labs of like, if I can get this law through,
I will have an edge over you and we're kind of doing jujitsu between both people who are actually both pro AI, but just trying to get a business edge.
Is there one camp that you think is like more powerful?
I think for the most part, it's the first thing you mentioned.
I think it's that there's generally kind of a negative AI sentiment among the public.
It's not that high salience of an issue.
So people will say I want AI regulation, but then when you ask them how important of an issue is that to you, it's like 8, 9, 10, you know, immigration.
economy is much higher.
And once you get down to 8, 9, 10,
it means it's not really an issue
that that many voters
are actually making their decisions
at the ballot box on.
And so there's,
but there's this general motivation
that a lot of politicians feel
of, you know,
oh, well, we let the internet
get away from us.
We let social media get away from us.
We can't let the same thing happen again.
And so we have to be preemptive
and regulate this time.
That's basically their attitude.
Then why is California
trying to kneecap AI?
Like, is it just a bigger issue?
within California? What are the dynamics in California specifically?
So California views themselves much like the Europeans do. They view themselves. First of all,
the one big difference is that California is also an exporter of technology, but the people in
Sacramento are not. San Francisco is the exporter of technology. Sacramento views itself really as a
nationwide regulator. So their mentality is the federal government's not going to act, especially
President Trump, you know, they would say President Trump was irresponsible. So we have to act for
him. And, you know, one thing that a senior European diplomat told me when I was in government
is when we want to talk policy in America, we fly from Brussels right over D.C. to Sacramento.
Interesting. So they're coordinating, you know, the European Union has a, has a coordinating
office in San Francisco where they meet with legislators and, you know, companies. And it's
basically like this sort of transnational governance regulation happening between California.
and Brussels.
Interesting.
And so, like, is it correct to frame the idea of the motivations of Californian regulation
as, well, nationally, AI regulation might be eight or nine, but in California, it's much
higher because there's more visibility?
Or is there something else that's driving, like, the California regulation movement?
I'm not sure it's a higher salience issue for the voters in California.
but I think it's a higher salience issue for the legislators
because the legislator smell power, right?
I mean, you can regulate this,
you know, what I think will be a multi-trillion dollar industry
while it's still nascent.
Before, you know, one of the things about regulating now
is like if you tried to regulate the iPhone now in a major way,
well, like, 150 million Americans or whatever use iPhones
and so they'd be like mad at you.
But like AI is still a little bit nascent
and there's all kinds of use cases
that might just be killed in the cradle.
and you can control it, you know, much, much easier when it's a younger technology.
And you can control it if you're California.
You can control it for the entire country, more or less unilaterally.
And it's a democratic supermajority state.
So they have all the cards.
So if it's a low salience issue, is there a world where this is all about, like, leverage to get, to generate more taxes, to create a more balanced budget?
What are the different incentives that are working within the California political, like, jockeying that's going on?
I think certainly regulatory power is one of them, but I don't really think they're after money, particularly.
If you're a California legislator, the basic reality is that money kind of just prints itself.
They're basically opposed to scarcity, like petro state.
Okay.
Because of technology.
Yeah, the petro dollars are not oil.
Instead, it is capital gains taxation.
Yep.
I was once talking to a California legislator who was on the budget committee, and they get these
like, you know, every other week or whatever.
They get these, like, reports from the state treasury about the state's fiscal position.
This was a couple of years ago, sort of right post-COVID.
Yeah.
And they were like, we had a $10 billion surplus in the last, like, month.
And they were like, where did $10 billion come out of nowhere?
And it was the SNAP IPO.
Yeah, wow.
It was all, just one IPO generates that kind of revenue for the state.
So, you know, and it's going to be like that on steroids when, you know, when the Frontier Lab employees start to have their liquidity events, the state is going to have an enormous windfall of capital gains tax.
I mean, yeah, there was a rumor just earlier this week about opening eye going out at $1 trillion, which would be.
Yeah.
Yeah, and already already the employee pool of the public, the PBC is worth roughly at current marks like $130 billion.
So multiple in that, it's going to be substantial.
How does this power struggle between Sacramento and D.C. around regulation play out going forward?
I think people like SACs have been, you know, not only talking about what Anthropic is doing,
but I imagine doesn't want AI to be regulated, you know, at a state level.
But how do you see this playing out over the next, call it six months?
Yeah, I don't think anyone wants to see AI regulated at the state level,
except for the California legislators.
And so, you know, at the end of the day,
I think that President Trump and AIsR. SACs
have made their position clear
that we want a nationwide legal framework
to govern AI.
The question is going to be, can Congress act?
You know, can Congress get together
and come up with something
that sort of everyone can agree to?
And I think we don't know the answer to that yet.
I think, you know, it's hard to see where the politics will go.
AI politics involved.
They don't involve quite as fast
as AI, but they evolve quite quickly.
And so we could be in a totally different, there could be a total vibe shift between now
and say June.
June's probably your cut off before the midterms to sort of get something serious done.
And so, yeah, can it happen?
In principle, sure, but we'll, you know, we'll see.
What are the, I don't know, like, what are the regulatory frameworks that either you think
will actually land on or California is advocating for?
I just remember, we were watching the Elias Sitzkiver interview with a Guardian a couple of years ago.
And the point he was making was, like, in the long-term AGI might see humans like we see animals and just convert the entire Earth, like, you know, all the land into solar panels.
And, you know, sort of like a complete AGI doom scenario.
That doesn't seem like the focus of regulators today.
He also was mentioning the risk of fake news and the idea of generative content, potentially muddying the waters of understanding what's real on the Internet.
That one feels like it's totally here today, but has also kind of always been here because of Photoshop.
It is such an interesting, you know, tech, I don't, correct me if I'm wrong, but tech has never gone through like a tech lash where there's so much video footage of the key players talking about the doom states of technology.
So if you look back, go look at interview footage of Sam Altman and all these people.
And they will say, like, yes, there's, you know, or Ilya that when you're referencing, like, it's very possible the world will be covered with solar panels and data center.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And we were playing that video this morning while we were getting this crazy, you know, costumes on.
And like, the people that were doing it were like, that sounds horrible.
Like, they listened to the whole thing, and they were like, I don't want any of that.
And so it's not like during social media, there wasn't footage of Mark Zuckerberg being like, like, it's very possible.
But the election could be stolen.
Social media won't be social.
Yeah.
Like, the Facebook data could be used to target voters or something like that.
And so that's just like incredible ammo that I imagine in Sacramento that are pulling up.
And it's like, okay, you want to go with what this guy wants and not what are.
Yeah.
What's the dynamic there?
Are they actually pulling up Dumer clips?
be like, oh, I didn't mean that. It was just kind of a sci-fi thing. Yeah. It helped with fundraising, actually.
It really depends. So there's people in the California legislature and elsewhere that have sort of very mundane concerns. And that's like sort of your modal policymaker, I would say, that's kind of, yeah, your misinformation, your deep-pakes. The things, not that they're not serious, but that are here today. And then there's the people that are thinking about these sort of very far-flung doom scenarios. There's not that many legislators who do that, but there are a lot of people in, like, quote-unquote AI policy.
who think about that.
And so they do influence some of the legislation.
One of the funny things, though, is that thus far, the legislation that that camp,
the sort of AI safety camp, has been able to get through,
has actually been, like, somewhat more measured than some of the crazier stuff that we've seen
from the people that don't know anything about the technology and just kind of have a
generally hostile attitude, like the state of Illinois banned mental health chatbots,
which is basically like if I ask chat GPT
you know if I say like hey I'm having a bad day
can you like tell me something that make me feel better
in Illinois that's like a chat bot engaging in mental health services
and it's illegal that's crazy yeah it's like really it's really crazy
yeah that's not like a domer bill you know no
that's like people with Nashville's been yeah
going on their own path with with because of how big the music industry is there
yeah can you get us up to speed on that like the regulation of AI music we were
talking about Suno earlier this week. I think we're going to have the founder on, but
we'd be very interested to hear how that landscape differs from other regulatory pushes.
Yeah, so you're talking about something called the Elvis Act, which passed last year.
And yeah, basically that's a bill that's about like name image likeness, basically saying if
you're a celebrity residing in the state of Tennessee, you can't, if someone makes an AI model
that mimics your style
or mimics a song of yours
or your likeness or something like that
then you have a right to sue them
not for copyright
because copyright is a federal issue
but name image likeness is a sort of property right
that's like done at the state level
yeah that's a creature of state law
for the most part yeah
yeah so that's what they control there
yeah and and is there any early read
on where that will pencil out.
We were talking to, I forget who we were talking to,
we were talking to somebody about how that is,
oh, it was Zach Kukoff.
He was talking about the, like,
how the Elvis Act plays into national geopolitics
and some players who are on the national stage
are wanting to win in the, at the more local.
Pretty smart naming the Elvis Act sounds like something
that anybody would want to pass sounds cool.
You don't think it would go farther
if it was the Gunna Act.
What's going on?
You had a post, it was last week, calling out.
There's a group, Max, Tegmark said a stunningly broad coalition has come out against
SkyNet, AI researchers, faith leaders, business pioneers, policy makers, NATSEC folks, and actors
stand together and they say, we call for a prohibition on the development of superintelligence,
not lifted before there is one, broad scientific consensus that will be done safely and
controllably, and two, strong public buy-in.
It's kind of a crazy thing to try to require, from my view, because even the scientific community cannot agree on much, and everybody has these wildly different, you know, strategies and incentives.
And then, of course, it's very possible that the public will never, to rely on the public of how we should develop technology that has to do with national security.
and try to make it like a direct democracy.
But maybe unpack what the latest is on that front.
Yeah.
So, I mean, the statement is very simple.
It says no superintelligence until we have agreement that it's good
until there's broad public buy-in.
So I think the first problem with this is, like,
look, if you want to have a letter signed by a bunch of important people
or celebrities and whatnot, that says superintelligence
is something that has profound implications
and we should really think about it,
and we should have groups of, you know, civil society,
type of stuff. That's fine with me. There have been letters like that in the past, and I haven't
complained about them. But when you say ban, you're making a ask about public policy. Not only that,
you're actually making an ask about global public policy because, you know, the superintelligence
could be trained in China, could be trained in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia. A lot of other
places are amassing large amounts of compute. It's not like we're the only people that can do
this. And a lot of the researchers, you know, who do this work are highly mobile. So, like, you
need a global treaty to ban superintelligence. That's what they're asking for. And the problem is
that not only is there not scientific consensus about the safety of such a thing, more importantly,
there's not scientific consensus about what superintelligence is. If GPT-5, or let's say GPT-7,
say that it can make novel advancements in mathematics, it can come up with new theorems
and whatnot, come up with new science. But say it also can't autonomously plan a wedding for me.
I think that's a very plausible future, by the way.
I think it's super possible that we'll get advanced, you know, genius mathematic AI
before we get sort of an agent that can like plan a wedding for you over six months.
Truly, truly agentic AI.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so like what, you know, which one of those is super intelligence, right?
No, no, I mean, take it even more extreme example.
We were reflecting on the original open AI definition, which Ilya was like reflecting on,
which is AI, you should be able to tell it to do a job and it should be able to do that, any job at the level of a human.
And we were sitting for three hours getting makeup done and we were like, okay, to replace this job with AI, you need like the most flawless humanoid robots because this is not a digital task.
You need dexterity, but also understanding the artistry of how the colors blend and mixing the different chemicals and stuff.
like it's just like it's just like and and that's for like you know just a it's just makeup it's like
it's not it's not as complicated as the iMO gold medal and yet because it exists in this
cross domain world it's somehow more challenging so yeah it's just a fascinating thing that we do yeah
the other dynamic that's interesting now is like like uh i feel like the industry like is
somewhat going through a small period of disillusionment when like the big labs are uh you know or
Open AI doing like SORA and announcing erotica and stuff like that and realizing like wait like
I thought we were building you know super intelligence like why are we you know creating more forms
of social media and but that's at the same time that you have like peak sort of like fear and like
peak pressure to make moves from a regulatory standpoint because people are afraid of you know runaway
super intelligence and, you know, losing their job and all these things. And also, big tech companies
have been doing layoffs. And the CEOs want to say, like, well, we did these, like, as a CEO,
you want to say, like, well, we're getting so much efficiency out of our, you know, AI. Like, of course
we're doing layoffs. But in reality, it's like they just went through. They've been bloated for a while.
There's, you know, X is a good case study of, like, you can cut, you know, like a lot of people and still have a
functioning business and so
I don't know there's just such a
complicated moment do you think there's
a massive tech lash coming
uh yeah probably
uh would be my guess it's
I don't know exactly what'll cause it maybe it'll be fears
about labor market which could be real
could be not could be caused by AI
could be not um could also
be uh electricity prices
I think that's that's very possible
and so like yeah yeah so again like
the super intelligence band like it's doing
populist politics that are based on kind
vague emotional sentiment and that's like the problem with that is that those kinds of broad
statements that implicate policy tend to not lead to good places defund the police was one of them
net zero by 2030 was another one where it's like we have no real plan for how to do this but we're
going to articulate some broad goal that sounds good that everyone can kind of you know you can just
slide down the incentive curve um of politics and um it's it's it will not lead to good places i basically
guarantee you. Yeah, that makes sense. Even if you're worried about AI safety, even if you're worried
about AI safety. If you're to rank the reasons, like, if we rank like AI safety is like the
eighth or ninth most salient political topic. And then within AI, you rank the most salient
worries, job losses, energy prices, those are at the top. How far down do you have to go until
people start caring about dead internet theory? And like the sloppification. Because it does,
feel like it's aesthetically like risky because if you launch a model early it's sloppier it doesn't
have great aesthetics and then you're and then you're faced with the question of like so my internet
went my electricity prices went up and i got slop as opposed to my internet prices went up and
yeah i actually got like i'm kind of superpowered google search like it's actually pretty great like
it's definitely helping me at work yeah yeah i mean i think it's a little bit of both i think there's a lot
of people who say like, uh, deterioration of the internet is definitely happening.
I think that's true, right?
I mean, I think it's the current experience of the internet has gotten worse, I would say.
I mean, with the exception of the AI models themselves, which are great.
But yeah, I mean, that's, like, probably true.
I think it's, I think it's up there.
I think it's way above, like, catastrophic risk, you know, like, I think if you were
to put, like, autonomous cyber attacks, you know, bio weapon development, I think that's
probably lower than this sort of slop stuff.
I would guess, yeah, it's interesting to see.
I don't know if anyone's ever done that, but it'd be interesting to see.
So we were reflecting on this.
This week we had Christina from Vanta on talking about security,
and then we also had the CEO of CrowdStrike on,
and we were kind of blown away, reflecting on,
we've been in the AI boom for two years, at least,
and we haven't really had a moment where we're like,
oh, yeah, that major cyber, that outage, that cybersecurity incident,
that problem, that hack, that virus,
that's generative AI uniquely.
that hasn't happened.
Like, ABS went down last week
and it was just misconfigured
DNS on a database.
There's been a bunch of crazy
cyber attack stories.
None of them have been, you know,
related to Gen. AI just yet.
I still think it has to be coming
at some point.
But until you get that
solid anecdote, it feels very hard
to go and run the campaign
of like, never again.
Will we allow this to happen?
When it hasn't happened for the first,
first time. That's how it always goes with tail risks. You know, people can't really internalize
them until they actually happen and then there you go. I actually wouldn't shock me if we see
something like that in the next, you know, six to 18 months. Because the models are now getting
good enough that that kind of thing seems possible.
Cyber or biological?
Cyber. Bio is going to take a little bit longer, but cyber. Cyber. Maybe even cyber might take
or bio might take much longer because like actually making a bio weapon is still hard in the physical
world, but cyber is purely digital. There's already many skilled cyber attackers. So it feels,
it feels like plausible. Luckily, you know, cyber defense is keeping up right now. We've seen a lot
of advancements there too. Yeah, yeah. There are definitely like script kitties that go around
and just like to unplug different pieces of the internet for fun. And it's almost like it can be
state actors, but it's also, it just feels like low stakes. It doesn't feel like often like these like
little cyber attacks are like life and death. So they feel lower stakes. They feel more like theft
and, like, economic crimes almost.
But being like, I'm going to go release a bubonic plague.
Like, that feels like way more, like, active war or, like, mass murder.
Like, it puts you, it takes you from, like, script kitty who wants to, like, you know, deface a website with a DDoS attack to, like, okay, you're doing a mass shooting now.
You posted a couple.
It's interesting how.
Yeah, yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Oh, I just think it's interesting how, like, these cyber risks, though, like, we think of them as, like, yeah, it's not an active war.
it's just an economic crime because it's like purely digital. At the same time, like, if North
Korea had a bunch of people that were like going into hospitals every other week and like stealing
medical equipment or like taking people's patient records, we'd be like, yeah, we're going to
kill you. We're going to destroy your country if you do that to us. So it's weird. It's, it's interesting
how people think about these things and sort of compartmentalize them. Yeah. You posted a couple
days ago, my sense is that selling Blackwell chips to China would quite possibly be the most
unpopular tech policy move of the Trump admin, especially on Capitol Hill.
It's plausible that the long-term, really even near-term result will be much more compute regulation.
Any updated thoughts on that front?
Blackwells didn't, I guess, come into the negotiation in South Korea,
but are you still expecting them to be a part of some sort of deal?
I think it could very well happen eventually.
And by the way, the wisdom of doing it changes over time, right?
Because the chips get worse over.
The chips, you know, there's new chips come in and they get much better.
And so, you know, like, the idea of selling Blackwells to China in two years is very different from the idea of selling them today.
I think part of the reason that it seemed like many people in the Trump administration, you know, were opposed to this move was that, like, you know, we're racking Blackwells in American data centers right now, right?
Like, it was different with the Hopper because the Hopper was a previous generation.
So the H-20, maybe the pill went down a little bit easier.
But I think with this, it's like, yeah, I think I think that, you know, you have to, I think it's on the merits and politically. You got to wait. Yeah, you got to wait. Yeah. What did you think about basically giving American companies a rofer on Blackwell? Is that something that you think makes sense?
You mean like this is like the, yeah, yeah. Basically like every American, if every American company says, we're good, we got enough. Yeah. If Infidia says there's no more American companies that want to buy from us, well, then yeah, you can go sell some to China. That feels so much more reason.
Yeah, there's a bill in Congress right now in the NDAA, the end of year defense bill called the Gain AI Act that basically tries to do this.
You know, I think it's an interesting idea.
I think the problem always is like how exactly do you operationalize that, particularly because there's things, you know, in this that are like, well, the public, the hyperscalers are going to have to disclose things kind of to the public about like, you know, that's sort of sensitive proprietary information.
So like, how exactly do you do that?
I personally have not been super in the weeds on gain.
But like, yeah, I think that I think the implementation is a challenge there.
And that's kind of what I was saying, though, is like, you know, so many people in Congress
are opposed to the idea of selling Blackwells to China right now that I think if the admin
had done it in Korea this past week, I think there's a very high chance that you would have
seen maybe some legislation with unintended consequences pass.
What about the idea of you don't sell the Blackwells, but you do allow Chinese companies
to purchase cloud computing resources
from American hyperscalers?
Is that more palatable?
Who gets upset in that world?
Well, that's the status quo right now.
Sure.
You know, that's basically what happens right now.
And so...
Wait, wait, but could DeepSeek or High Flyer
actually go to AWS and say,
we want to do, you know, a billion-dollar training run?
They could, yeah.
There's nothing restricting them from that.
Now, I think Deep Sea kind of rolls their own.
I think they build their own data centers and do everything themselves.
But, yeah, like, I mean, Chinese companies definitely do make use of American compute.
Now, that being said, I think the Chinese government doesn't like that.
I think the Chinese government does all kinds of things to incentivize them from that.
So it's a complicated thing.
That makes all that sense.
What's your approach to truth-seeking?
One of the challenges in trying to even, you know, conceptualize what the right policy approach is on a number of these issues,
is that everyone is just heavily conflicted.
Like there's just so much money sloshing around.
It's like the people that have the most knowledge of what's happening at the frontier
quite possibly have somewhere between 10 and, you know,
a billion dollars kind of like riding on a certain approach.
And so I'm curious to know like kind of how you try to clock like the truth.
I always try to start from technical fundamentals.
So when I decided to get into writing about AI policy,
one of the first things that I learned to do was like train a toy neural network
for myself, just so I could see how things work.
And I like to really understand the sort of roots of the technology
that I'm talking about, whether that's the physical world or the digital world.
And that helps a lot.
That helps ground you quite a bit to understand those sort of actual constraints
and where the technology might actually go.
And then beyond that, you know, it's listening to a lot of different people.
It's understanding financial incentives closely, right?
You have to understand how everyone is incentivized.
And you kind of know, like, there are a lot of areas where incentives are for you to sort of spin reality in a certain way.
Those are a lot of other people who have incentives to just basically tell the truth.
And you have to just be able to differentiate between those things.
And so, yeah, you know, I mean, it's like, it's basically just, you know, there's no simple way.
It's just read a ton of stuff, listen to a lot of people, maintain an open mind and be humble all the time.
Yeah, that makes sense.
What, like, like, how are you forecasting next year?
What do you think the most important issues?
Is it more of the same?
Is it, is there going to be a new conversation that you kind of see on the horizon?
You know, basically, like, is the debate around, you know, chip sales just.
going to continue throughout the entire admin, or do you think it'll at any point settle?
I think that debate will continue. And then I think, you know, more broadly, though, my guess is that
that issue becomes less salient in AI policy over time. And probably more people join the sort of
join the debate. Right now, AI policy is very much an elite conversation. You know, it's not something
that a lot of people, like the average American, so to speak, is thinking about that much. But I think
that starts to change. Again, maybe it's the electricity prices, maybe it's the jobs, maybe it's a little
bit of both. Maybe it's also some crisis that happens, like cyber stuff. But I think that, like,
in general, the salience will go up. And it will also be quite complicated because I also expect that
in 2026, just like this year, a very meaningful fraction of GDP growth will be coming from AI.
So, you know, policymakers are going to find themselves, I think, in a bind.
Oh, yeah. Sorry. I know we're wrapping up.
but I'd love to know your thoughts on like the AI as the only driver of GDP meme.
How real do you think that is?
How bad do you think that is?
Yeah, it's interesting.
Some people hear that and they're like, this is bad.
And then the other take is like, if we're not doing this, like, it's even worse.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think it is a big chunk of it.
I think it's probably at least like 25 to 50% of growth right now.
Another big chunk, like the Q2 number was really high.
It was like 4%.
And a chunk of that is definitely companies stockpiling in anticipation of tariffs.
So they're like mass importing stuff, which is going to be counted toward GDP.
So it's like there's some of that going on probably.
But yeah, I mean, I think that it's almost certainly the case.
The GDP, you know, if I had to put a, if I had to guess, I would guess it's something like 40%.
AI is something like 40%.
And of course,
that's,
and that's just enabling AI.
That's just AI CAPEX.
That's not even, you know,
what is AI enabling.
Like business services and accelerated revenue growth and,
productivity and stuff.
Like,
how much of Google's revenue should be counted in like AI GDP now or like
Instagram Reels?
Like if it's an,
if there's an AI slop video that goes viral and that generates 20 million
in AI, ad revenue,
are we counting that in GDP?
We have no idea yet.
It's going to be years before we understand it.
Last question that I'd be curious
to get your read on
is sentiment around
we're a couple months out
from the Intel
deal.
How is Washington
and like Capitol Hill feeling
about that deal?
Obviously it looks good on paper
for the taxpayer,
but
But do you expect to see more of this kind of thing?
We've sought with MP materials as well.
Yeah.
But what's your read?
I think you'll absolutely see more of it.
More equity positions.
I'm long USG equity positions in private companies.
For better and for worse, I think that will continue to be a thing.
We've seen it throughout the critical mineral supply chain.
In fact, a lot of other companies, not just MP.
And how new is this on, is this the Trump thing specifically?
Is this a, is this a 20-20s thing?
Are there other examples of Americans doing this?
It's not new under the sun, but it's new in recent history.
Okay.
Particularly for companies that have like sort of consumer brands.
Sure.
But yeah, like it is, it is this sort of national champion model is not something that's been, it's not, it's not, again, America did it, you know, a lot.
You know, there are periods of American history where we did this a lot.
And not in a total crisis, like government motors, general motors, the bailout of the banks,
like that is very different than, okay, Nvidia and AMD are doing pretty well.
Intel's not exactly going bankrupt.
There's a lot of market cap there, but we're still going to come in and do something.
I think Intel's position was really precarious and you really needed that.
I mean, I think you needed not just the injection of capital, which they were going to get either way,
But kind of that vote of confidence and kind of that indication to the market that like, hey, this really is like, you know, the U.S. government is serious about this. That says things to open AI as they think about developing their ASIC. It says things to Apple. It says things to Nvidia. It says things to all sorts of people. And you've already seen some of these companies respond in kind with, you know, new orders to Intel or at least partnerships with them of various kinds. So I think you'll see more of that. In terms of Intel itself, I think people in D.C. are pretty nervous still because Intel's got a serious hill to climb, you know? They've got.
got a promising roadmap and they have to execute on it.
And thus far, the execution has been shaky.
And their track record shouldn't make you confident.
Has you been?
Yeah.
Have you been surprised that we haven't seen an open AI Intel deal yet?
Sam Alman seems ready to do deals with everyone.
Intel feels like it needs a deal.
It needs several deals.
That feels like a match made in heaven.
And yet, I haven't seen it yet.
What do you think?
I have to think it's gestating.
Yep.
I have to think that, probably other companies too.
I mean, if they're smart, they will.
Yep, yeah, totally.
Just as a political matter.
I mean, there's just so many, like, I've seen so many pundits like Asianometry laid out the thesis that Nvidia should dual source their CPU for Grace, for Grace Hopper, from Intel, make the CPUs there, don't go to TSM for those, support Intel as a fab and a provider.
So, fascinating, dynamic, and I feel like the Intel story is going to be one of the most interesting.
Any plans to write a book?
You've written a book?
You know, I've been...
No, I haven't.
No, no, no.
But I'm thinking about it.
We'll see.
More to come, maybe.
I'm pondering it.
Hard to know what to say.
It feels hard if you're kind of, like, writing about what's happening to, like, pick something and, like, start writing, you know, hundreds of pages when, like, everything's so in flux that you could write, like, you know,
six chapters that then maybe made, like, that aren't even an important part of the story.
Sure, sure.
Yeah.
If I picked up the phone and called an agent today, you'd probably be looking at a publication date of, like, Q1, 2028.
Someone, just the other day, I was asking, like, why the hell of these supply chain so long for, for, like, why is the timeline so long for books?
And they told me, it's because it's a manufacturing business run by humanities majors.
No way.
It's like, yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's funny.
Maybe the answer is Kindle print-on-demand or something like that.
There you go.
Kindle Digital Publishing, right next to all the literatica.
We can slot in some geopolitical analysis.
The AI slot books.
Yeah.
Oh, there's, I'm sure there's so many.
Somebody's going to hit you up and be like, I can generate you 10 books by next week.
Where can people find you?
Where can people follow you in the meantime until the book drops in 2020?
You've got a substack at Hyperdimensional
and on Twitter at Dean W. Ball,
the Ball-like football.
There we go.
Thank you so much, Dean Ball.
Great to finally have you on.
Welcome back anytime.
Chat all the time.
Thanks, guys.
Great to chat.
Cheers.
Have a good one. Bye.
Let me tell you about fin.com.
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And we're breaking news from Sam Altman,
gpt six will be renamed gpt six seven you're welcome he's doing the six seven mean but it's a it's a joke it's a
joke okay but wow that one really did not hit it's remarkably remarkably not oh it's a joke
funny uh i i i i this got 30 i thought you're gonna i thought you're gonna say i thought you're gonna say
it'll just be the chat gpt 20 20 20
six. I would like that.
I think that actually would be a better naming scene.
No, he's having fun with the 6-7 meme.
Go through some timeline with Tyler.
Not my schick. Not my schick.
Well, I will first go through Adio.
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Let's see.
What in the timeline should me and Tyler talk about?
What is here?
Tesla Roadster, Sam Altman, has asked for a refund.
He says, a story in three parts, a tail in three acts.
Act one, your roadster reservation is complete.
This was in 2018, long time ago.
Tyler was five years old.
He put down $45,000 as a reservation payment.
Then Act two, Sam Altman emails, reservations at Tesla.
Hi, I'd like to cancel my reservation.
could you please refund me the 50K? And he's just trying to, he's just trying to ris an extra
5K out of Elon. Did you notice this? Oh, oh, because it was originally 45. It was 45K.
Now, okay, with interest, with inflation, Sam clearly deserves 50, but it's a wild move to just
have 45K on the line and be like, can I get 50? Can we round to the nearest 50? But when you're, you know,
Sam, I guess it makes sense.
It's probably pretty reasonable.
So he says, can you refund me the 50K?
I think he's actually just rounding.
I think he's like, yeah, send me 45, but I'm going to refer to it as 50 because I'm rounding
to the nearest 50K, I guess.
But then he gets an address not found.
Reservations at Tesla.com is unavailable to receive emails.
He could use the extra 5.
You think so?
I think you could put it to work in the business.
No, nobody's losing more money than an opening eye.
That's true.
Every 5K can go a long way.
That's true.
Yeah, Tesla and SpaceX seem to be doing less.
That's one minute.
That's one minute of SOAR costs.
It's true.
Every minute counts.
But, I mean, this just feels like they changed whatever the email is in the last seven years.
But it is remarkable that the project has been in process so long that the email address
has been forgotten.
And also, I would assume that this type of stuff happens all the time because I imagine that
people are canceling and placing new Tesla Roadster orders like all the time.
So you would think you'd want to be monitoring that box.
Well.
Oh, well, it's funny to read into it as like more, more, you know, battles between Elon and
Sam, although I don't think that's what's going on here.
It's more of just a funny cork of their email configuration.
Byrne Hobart says, wow, Elon passes the replies to your email in under a minute test.
That guy is going places.
Bullish.
Well, whatever you think about Tesla, you can buy it.
You can sell it on public.com investing for those to take it seriously.
They got multi-asset investing, industry-leading yields, and they're trusted by millions.
Jordi Hayes, what would you like to do next?
Let's bring in our next guest.
Aidan Sankath, welcome to the stream.
There he is.
You look fantastic.
How are you doing?
Hey, Jody and John.
Happy Halloween.
Wait, wait, wait, what are you drinking?
What is next to you?
Wow.
Do you recognize this drink?
Of course, sir.
Cheers.
Cheers to you.
That is Andrew Heberman's Matayina Yerba Mata.
We refer to it as a podcast in a can.
It's hard to drink this on my end.
The fake beard is getting into the drink.
But it's great to see you.
You're looking sharp.
Do you wear a suit often?
You look very natural in it.
you know what i used to wear a uniform in high school uh it's coming back to me and i'm a huge
formula one fan so i feel like i'm already wearing like this is the cap you normally get uh when
you're on the podium with kind of the reeds so i feel uh very good taste here championship championship
hat uh how'd you actually get into venture it's a good story uh i was google's first product
manager and then first international sales manager um always
wanted to start something. Both my parents were entrepreneurs. And I felt it's just kind of the way
of the value you go from being an operator to being an investor. But interestingly, originally I thought,
hey, maybe like the right way to do it is like go get a stint at a venture firm. And the five
firms that I talked to not only told me I wouldn't make a good VC. They told me I wouldn't even
make a VC. I just did not have a word at all. So I'm sure many people also told you that your idea
would not run. Yeah. What like did they have any good?
reasons? Did you agree with them on anything? Obviously, they were wrong, but...
It's so funny. Like, I wasn't an engineer. I wasn't senior enough at Google. I never had
done anything in Venture. Like, again, maybe on paper it makes sense. But to be honest with you,
it's the best thing that happened because I always feel rejection. I call it rocket fuel.
And it was such a simple situation where I had to burn the bridges and the only way to prove
the skeptics wrong to actually get into the business and do well. And even after 20 years,
I'm like, 10 IPOs is still not enough. 100 exits. I think it should be 200 exits and maybe then
the point will sink in. Hit that gong. Oh yeah. Great hit. How big was your, how big was your first
fund? The first fund, actually I started as a solo LP and solo GP, which was only four and a half
million. And then our first institutional fund in 2010 was only 41 million.
Modest amounts. What story did folks tell at Google about the funding of Google that helped
you kind of understand how venture works? I've heard this story about, you know, Sequoia invested.
That was probably more like a traditional round. There's also this maybe apocryphal story about
somebody going to their car and writing a check before the company was even founded.
Like, what was your introduction to just like the concept?
Jeff Bezos taking a flyer?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What stories did you draw on where you were like, this worked out for this particular
person really well in the Google story that I felt and experienced, and I want to go
and recreate that?
I mean, look, I was there, like, right after the Sequan Klein around.
First of all, the biggest thing about Google
is that what people sometimes misunderstand
about this business is all about outliers,
positive outliers, and the best training for that
is to actually be at an outlier.
And I think more than the VC story, to me,
it was my experience working for Larry Page
because every single thing that I've done
in that first year for Larry,
he would like see it and I'm like,
this is kind of 1% of what I'm expecting.
Like, you need to do things 10x faster, like 10x more.
And then it's like, you know what?
Maybe humans are not meant to do that.
And my joke is like one of my projects was to launch Google in international languages
because I was an engineer.
I spoke six languages.
And I'm like, look, you know what I can do for Google is make sure it's launch in
non-English languages.
And he was frustrated with that.
And so I always tell people, I'm an occasional and accidental father or grandfather of Google
translate because they're like, from now on, anything.
that's internationalization or translation, let's make sure machines do it and not humans.
That makes sense. What was your first true home run adventure?
So the first true home run adventure, you can define it in many different ways. My first
billion dollar exit was Marraqi, which started as a Wi-Fi project in Mountain View with
Google, and I was one of three X Googlers that invested in it. And the first IPO was Shopify.
And that was amazing, like showing up to Nice, not for Google's IPO, but, you know, as an investor that, hey, like, you know, early believer, and the company was great.
And what was crazy is, like, $2.7 billion valuation at IPO for Shopify.
And today, there are, like, 150, like another 50x from that.
Google was similar.
Like, it went 40x from the IPO.
And that, like, in a nutshell, is, like, positive outliers.
and I can't imagine better examples of outliers.
Yeah, that's remarkable.
Completely.
What about more recently you've done Mercor, Superbase, and others.
Maybe we start with Mercor.
We just had Brendan on earlier this week to talk about the new financing.
You guys have been in a couple rounds now, is that right?
Two rounds.
Two rounds.
We are huge fans of Brendan and his co-founders.
Look, I think it's another great example.
When I started right after Google, we told going zero to 100 million in 10 years was a great achievement, maybe 8 to 10 years.
You know, I had companies like Shopify Go IPO in six years, but Merckor is a new breed of company.
They went zero to 100 million in gross revenues in 11 months.
They essentially have built this great platform where they can essentially find any type of talent or discipline in the world, find the people.
have AI interview them and generate expertise and data based on that.
And it's just like, again, like, what's so exciting about the AI age is these companies
you never thought, like, would be at this kind of scale, are able to deliver these things
because it's just that age and that opportunity.
We're very lucky to be part of it.
You know, we're huge fans of Brandon and team.
And then SuperBase is another great example.
Like, we are like, listen, some of the most valuable tech companies were database companies.
And somebody is going to build a developer-friendly backend.
At that time, there was a front-end company with no real backhand company.
And it was crazy because when we invested in SuperBase, we did almost a growth around valuation,
and the traction was not even close to a million in ARR.
And since then, the company has grown 50, 70, 80x plus in just a few years.
And that makes me think, like, what you're doing is really special
because the private companies are growing 500 to 1,000 percent.
and public companies are growing at 20%.
So it's a 50x delta.
So in case anybody's wondering why it's interesting and exciting to be in venture or to be involved with private companies, the very best are doing an insane job.
And I think those are the stories that need to be out there.
And that's why I love my job.
I feel like it's the best job in the world.
They announced their Series A in October 28th of 2021.
I'm assuming you guys did the deal like, you know, some late summer or something.
like that. At the time, was that a deal that you think maybe other people would have passed on
because of the price? Like, it just looks crazy. Obviously, it was the peak. So we did the CIRSB,
and it was really interesting. Not only did multiple other VCs passed on price, but they went and
then invested in competitors because they could get in at like half the valuation. But we never
compromise what we believe is, you know, our belief in the founders and the company. And look, I mean,
at the end, this business is all about early belief, and as all the founders, we get to
participate in their journeys, and Super Bay is a prime example.
They had all the initial signs that things could be really great.
Like I said, you know, traction was really low.
They were starting to, like, essentially, like, take off among developers, and it was built
on Postgres.
It was very technical, and people are like, no, nothing could be worth that valuation at that
stage with only that much signal.
And I think that's kind of the magic of Felices is that when we back these incredible founders, you know, the success is far from obvious.
But then after we invest, like these companies go through these insane hockey stick growth curves and SuperBase is a prime example of that as is Merckor.
How do you think about what is different about this boom, this moment from previous cycles?
the top things that
have really changed in the last two years
that justify more investment
that change the job of the venture capitalists
are, you know, we're seeing higher growth rates.
We're also seeing higher CAPEX requirements
for some tech companies than before.
We're seeing just more potential new markets
because you could be going after a labor pool
instead of a different, like an existing market.
There's entirely net new markets.
There's questions about enterprise adoption, churn.
What in your mind is different this time around from the mobile wave, the cloud wave,
or anything else that informs how your underwriting deals this year?
Yeah, I mean, look, I have seen the internet wave as well as the mobile wave.
There are a couple things that are really different.
So one is the point that we were getting at is that venture game,
it is like very basic, is essentially.
Essentially, it's a growth game.
If you find a company that is growing 50x faster than public companies, it's going to end up in a good place.
And even if you're off by 10x on price, if you're in one of those companies, things are going to work out for you.
Also, interestingly, 20 years ago, like when I first got into business, a lot of people would worry about distribution.
But the reality is today, like everybody's watching YouTube, everybody has a mobile device.
Distribution is no longer a problem.
what is really interesting that is different is the AI age, normally before with software,
first the budget was limited. I don't think any company is going to spend more than 10%
of their budget on software, but also the value creation was different. Like software, yes, it
is helping you, but still people are working with it. You have to put data in it. And then to
get value out of it, you have to look at the results and say, okay, now I'm going to do something
based on what the software is telling me. And the software is like streamlining it a little bit.
in AI age, what's really stunning is like,
you now can have a full closed loop
without humans where everything is being done by AI.
So the data entry is automatic,
the data output is automatic.
I sometimes think of a turbo engine in a car,
like one of the like interesting technologies is
you take the exhaust gas and then if you channel it into the engine,
the car can accelerate a lot faster.
So in some ways, like what is happening with AI,
there is growth vectors in so many different areas.
I had to make an engine,
example since I'm wearing a Formula One like hat. But first of all, there is so much more
value creation and now you're going after labor, which depending on the sectors you look at,
is like 40, 50, 60, 70 percent of a company's budget. So the dollars at stake is so much
larger. How much more important is it now to think about terminal market structure?
Because I completely agree with you. The growth rates are insane. The risk, I feel like, is not that
the growth isn't real. It's just that there's, you pick a market and there's one company that goes
from one to 10 million in ARR to 100 million in ARR. And you project that out and you're like, well,
the market's 50 billion. They're going to get there really fast. But if the market can support
50 companies that all grow really fast and they all take 2% of the market, then you will see some
sort of S curve in the growth rate at some point. And I feel like there's some markets that will probably be
perfectly competitive, some that will be highly monopolistic and everything in between.
And it feels like as a venture capitalist, it's going to pay to be the type of person that can
clock how markets play out. Does that map with what you're thinking, what you're trying to do?
Look, I think you're getting at a very important point, which is it is not just enough to have
high growth, but you need to have durable growth. And we use the examples of Google, Shopify,
even like more recently we had companies like Canva. And I think one of the things that people
sometimes really underestimate is that that kind of high growth compounded will generate stunning
results. And one of the things that I learned from both Google and Shopify is that if in when you
choose the right markets, you will probably get the sizing wrong. But if you choose a mega, mega market,
even like at what we think success, there is still so much of the market left. Like one of the things
that I never realize is even when Shopify, when IPO, it was less than 1% of that market.
And that's what helped it, like, get a 40x growth after that.
Same thing happened to Google, and the very best companies can also expand the market.
So to your question, though, one of the things that we really pay attention is what are the modes of these companies?
It's not just that they have the chance of high growth, but how durable will it be?
A lot of times it's the founders.
A lot of times it's also different elements.
For instance, we very frequently talk about data modes at Felices.
Right?
One of the things that helps you differentiate is if you have data that nobody else has, since data is the new oil, that's going to be a huge differentiator because at the end of the day, there's a lot of AI tech, and that's more pervasive.
But if you have data that nobody else has, that's going to be tremendous value.
And if you start doing something where you basically become a key part of the process, people are not going to rip you off.
So we just recently won a term sheet over a healthcare AI company, and what was interesting is, through AI, they've been able to.
to service a part of the patient market
that here too was not possible to be served
at a positive return.
And the moment they fix that part of the market,
hospitals are like, why am I only gonna give you
35% of the market?
You know what?
The rest of the market, there are 19 players,
but I'm just gonna come straight to you.
It's too much work.
You guys can take 100% of our referrals.
So it's a yet another good example of if you do a really
great job with the hardest part of the market, you can essentially have a much larger portion
of the market. Nobody wants, like, is interested in, like, somebody who's only going to win one to
two percent. They want people that can do everything together and not just one part of it.
And again, that's kind of also the big leap from software is maybe only solving one part of
the problem and they want, like, a full solution. I want, like, a full turnkey, not just like,
hey, the software can get you the numbers or analyze things or be the system of record.
now everything is about system of action, and AI can enable that.
And if you have a data mode on top of it, obviously that drastically increases chances
that not only are you going to have high growth, but the high growth is going to stick with you.
Did the venture industry learn its lesson in 2021?
Things got a little bit crazy.
There was a lot of top signals.
We had a crash, but at the same time, you did companies like SuperBase at what was then
a crazy valuation, and then now it looks like, you know, you bought it. It looks like you stole it.
Now, this time around, it feels like, you know, that we were, I remember in 2022, it felt like we
were going to go into like a VC apocalypse. It certainly doesn't feel that way now. Do you think,
do you think we learned any key lessons, or are we going to kind of relearn them in the future?
let me tell you an interesting lesson or maybe like a key secret is that venture business is
you have to be consistent you cannot sprint and pause sprint and pause if you're not
growing in this business you're essentially losing stagnating there is no such thing as cruise
control or like steady state and i think the mistake that happens with a lot of vCs if their
conviction is not deep, and they're essentially playing the market game. There are a lot of
followers and not a lot of original thinkers. What happens is the moment the market gets risky
and things look dire, people pause and like, oh, you know what, like I'm going to stop
making investment. And one thing I'm really proud is even in the 2021, 2020, vintage and 22,
when things were really expensive, we still kept on making investments and we never slowed
down. And, you know, we were basically like steady growth. And part of that is because, look,
this is not public markets where if there is 20% growth
and your entry price is wrong,
you're going to lose a lot of money.
But if you find the right companies
and you do have 50 to 100x growth ahead of you,
even if you overpaid for them,
you're still going to do well.
In fact, the only way you're going to do well
is to have these positive outliers
that are fund makers.
And so I think the biggest lesson is,
like, a lot of VCs, like, spent too much time
of, like, this valuation high and low
and this trend and that.
The reality is you've got to be a surfer
that can surf any wave in any season, and not just one.
Like, you can't just go to the beach and call it quits.
You need to go back out.
And, you know, I know Georgia lives in Malibu, so he's going to like the surfer analogy.
But part of the other thing also is that you have to find the companies where there is going to be so much growth that even if you got the price slightly wrong, it's not going to slow down.
So anybody who's like, oh, like, we're going to be in this business and it's all about the price, they're misunderstanding.
it is all about like being early and understanding that incredible growth that's going to follow,
that's going to basically give you the long-term success.
And so I feel there is definitely a delta between the VCs that are original thinkers
that still had the conviction and the courage to make those bets and not just like super base
for us, but also companies like an 8-N, that was a sleeper company in Berlin and all of a sudden
in fall, like multiple VCs have woke up that they're doing a great job in Agentic AI.
Yeah, that's a company. Interestingly enough, I saw it on getting, people started making videos about it on Instagram, which I look at as much more mainstream, before I saw anything about it on X, which is, I think, a good sign. It means that it actually has traction outside of our little Silicon Valley bubble.
how do you think about how do you think about your your philosophy on expertise versus like being a generalist
yeah there's a lot of expertise on like a category yeah like judgment around human but take me through
like advice for a venture capitalist who's joining your firm advice for someone who's graduating high school
and thinking about how to pursue.
Like, what is your philosophy on generalism versus becoming an expert in something?
I mean, look, I think journalism in general, it's a really good thing.
But I think, look, there are a couple really interesting secrets or insights.
Number one, just to give you real data to make this point, is that when I started in venture,
the other thing that people underestimated is like, they're like, listen, all these sectors
you're going to invest in, you're not an expert in.
any one of them, and you're not going to be able to make a good investment.
I think what people misunderstand is if you're an expert in a sector, you're going to look at
a company, and you're only going to look at the orthodox way of doing things, and when
somebody comes in as an outsider and, like, I want to do something the way it's never been
done before, you're going to say that's never going to work.
And so, like, the paradox here is the expertise, right?
Like, the experts are supposed to know the field really well, but that also anchors them in
the way that things are done traditionally.
versus a generalist is going to be first principles and say, you know what, there's actually a new way of doing things.
And if this thing works, it's going to be amazing.
And at Feliz is like the most interesting stat that I'm most proud of is that we made early investments in companies, 53 of them, that exceeded a billion dollar in valuation.
Not a single one of them was led by an expert.
That's amazing.
And so like that's the thing.
When you guys started, you were not media experts or like proven media.
people and you had a great idea. I would tell you the funny thing is in our case like I've been
working in and around advertising my entire career. John had been an expert on on like content
production but we certainly were not experts on hosting a show. And I know and if you had asked
us even literally like 12 months ago if you had asked us like would you be hosting would you
ever see yourself hosting like a daily show we would have been like uh like I always love that
Paul Graham formulation, which is like most co-founders, if you look at the co-founding
teams, it's usually like two or three people where each of them are somewhat experts in like
two or three disciplines. So you have someone who knows like marketing and finance and operations.
And then someone who knows like front end and back end and technical design and architecture
and also some of the tradeoffs about how the product design works. And so you wind up with like
you know, some level of expertise in 10 different categories bundled up in two to three people
on a specific team that seems to work really well. But yes, they're not like pure play experts,
which is what we think of, at least what I think of when I think of expertise.
A hundred percent. Look, I'm going to add two more things, which is I think one of the other
elements of being successful, whether you're a founder or investor, especially as a VC,
is it all about the people. And I've actually done sales at Google and you would say,
that related to being a venture at the end, it's a people's game. The founders are not, you
know, taking money based on numbers, but if they can trust who you are. And so, like, being
good with people and being able to relate to them is really important. So these days, when people
are starting in the business, whether they're a founder or a future VC or emerging VC,
I'm like, look, your biggest asset is your network and the people that you know. But the second thing
is, especially for venture, you need to be exposed to outliers, right? Like, I feel like my training
at Google, you know, every single thing that Google has done in the six years that I was there,
not a single thing was standard.
Every single thing we did, we did a completely different way that has been ever done before,
and the results were stunning.
So if you've never been at a company where the founders and the firm was crazy enough
to do things completely differently, and you kind of understand that culture, that mindset,
right?
Like, we did talk about being journalists, but it is also important to have been exposed to some
of these things. And then you're like, okay, you know what? Now that I have seen it, it's in my
DNA. It's in my blood. I can kind of like see other signs of that. So being good with people,
being able to understand outliers, at least being exposed to them, I think our key ingredients,
at least in venture. So those are things that nobody ever told me like, hey, this is going to be
really important for you. But now after 20 years of doing it, I can tell you that it is very important.
And, like, journalists, like, I worked in every discipline across four continents.
I've done finance, sales, marketing, product.
That was also really great.
I didn't have to be deep expert in all of these things.
But being able to understand so you can, like, see around the corners and find little things, you know, just enough to make sure that you're not going to make a stupid move.
But you don't know too much that you would be too anchored in it and you would be skeptical of a brand new way of doing things.
Well said.
I just can't get over how good your outfit looks and your frame looks.
Yeah, you're ready to co-host with us.
Yeah.
Come to the altar.
Thank you.
Like, honestly, like, I'm down to that.
I love this hat and I'm enjoying my...
Are you an S-F?
Yeah, are you an S-F?
We are in Menlo Park, actually.
We do have an S-F office.
Okay.
But we are in the Bay Area right now.
Well, hopefully we can cross over soon in person.
Yeah, let's hang out soon.
Are you going to be at F-1, Vegas?
Uh, I'm, I'm, I'm thinking about it. So my older son is in varsity football. If there is no conflict with
this game, I'm definitely going to be there. Okay, cool. Let us let us let us know if you are. We will
look quite different. Uh, so you can watch some older footage to recognize us over there. Uh,
thank you for hanging out. Yeah, this is a lot of fun. And I'm impressed with how that you were
able to, to do a normal interview when we look, uh, so ridiculous. But, uh, it was really fun
chatting with you. And thank you for sharing. That was a blast.
I say Mark and Ilya, but very well done. A great impersonation. And Jordy and John, it's such a
pleasure. Let's do this again. And the audio team is appreciative as well. You're looking absolutely
crisp. Everyone's a fan. Everyone loves it. Great stuff. Awesome. Talk to you soon. Have a great,
have a great rest of Friday. Have a good day. Bye. Me too. How'd you sleep last night, Jordy?
I got a 92 on 8Sleep.com.
Get a pod five.
Code TbPN.
I got a,
32 minutes.
Perfect.
93.
Oh, you beeped by one.
I smoked you.
Very good job.
Well,
our next guest is in
the restream waiting room.
Let's bring him
into the TBP and Ultra Dome.
Wait,
is that who I think you're,
did you get full prosthetic makeup
to look like Jacob Deepenbrock
from Discipleus Ventures?
Is that what's going on here?
That is correct.
You guys have to caution
better that.
Yes.
You're,
your jacob costume is flawless uh how was uh how was demo day take us through it what were the highlights
what are the new trends uh what what's the actual structure maybe start there what's the structure of
demo day these days yeah yeah so yesterday 2 pm got started we did it long walls space here in el cugendo
one of the og el cagendo companies used to be abl uh shout out to dan pmont uh started at 2 p m i think we had a
probably 60, 70 people
come out for it. I had a panel
with Augustus, Isaiah,
and Ted.
The godfathers. The brothers.
It was a good group. It's a great group.
Founding fathers.
Everybody was
hating on SF, which was all
up with investors in the audience.
Why hate on SF?
Oh, well, Paul.
Well, so one thing is
when we were
there earlier this week,
I thought they had
like somewhat solve the human feces on the ground thing. And it was like, John and I walked home
from, uh, walked home from dinner. Granted, it was about a mile walk. And it was like at least six.
It was through the tenderloin, which is a rough spot. There are rough spots in L.A., but,
uh, El Sigundo is beautiful. At least when I walked around, it was, it's very clean.
And if you're, if you're an industrialist, the smoke stacks, you know, that's actually a plus.
That's actually a plus. But yeah, well, uh, so how many companies graduate? And, and, and it's, and
it's a proper demo day. Like people are given pitches, raising money like that. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So we had nine companies pitch yesterday from all over the country and a couple from out of the
country as well. We start off with, like I said, panel, nine pitches. They all kind of go out
to their booths afterwards. And then all the investors get to know and get to talk to them and meet
them afterwards. And then they had a sick little after party in Manhattan Beach afterwards.
so it was great
but I guess companies
was happy to run through some
I also posted a thread as well
if you want to pull it up
yeah yeah yeah yeah
we'll have the team pull it up
but yeah yeah read through
and let us know
who's online
so I will say less defense companies
this time than ever before
a lot more
yeah I was going to ask
when we across the different YC
batches like there's very clearly
like some core themes
and trends that you've seen
so I'm not surprised
to see like less we probably like don't we don't need the same volume of defense tech companies now
I think in general like there's just been so many like every category now you think the job's finished
I don't think the job's finished but I think it's like probably healthy for like every category now
as a few players yep they can now fight it out one or two will rise to the top yep we don't necessarily
need 10 more backfilling trying to go after the same types of contracts yeah I think I think my
general thought is like, I think defense, like, prove that you can kind of disrupt these legacy
industries and, like, build massive companies in, in these kind of legacy industries that
haven't really had venture interest until the annual and SpaceX. And I think it's now like,
okay, like we will do these, like, hardware, we will do these kind of more, I guess, less tech,
less venture heavy industries. And there's a lot of stuff like that unlocked. So like with
energy, within mining, we did something like, so I always make this point where, you know,
Sam Jamico, I mean, SF founder, but he runs Impulse stove. It's a stove company. And I don't want to, you know, tell his story for him. But it always feels like, obviously that's not a defense tech company. That's not an andoral competitor. But that's the type of, that's the type of company that maybe doesn't exist unless we make like hardware cool and get founders and get, and get VCs piling into the category. But take us through some of the, some of the companies from this batch. Who stands out?
Yeah, I mean, it's a small enough batch where like
Take it through all.
I'll get, I'll go through all them.
So starting off, we got Petra Power.
Shout out to Aaron Goodman.
Hopefully you're watching right now.
He's doing basically replacing generators.
So basically building a new electrical chemical process to replace the generator.
And there's like a massive bottleneck generators, obviously energy.
That would be shorter is pretty real, especially with the new data centers going up.
And he already has received nine months.
million dollars in DOD contracts, which is pretty crazy.
First one.
Second one is a pretty fun one.
Making shoes in America, autonomous
shoe manufacturing app price
in the USA. That's bold.
That's very bold.
I'll go to make it in America.
Okay.
There's all these missiles,
drone companies. We're making shoes, guys.
We're making shoes in America.
I love it. I love it.
Three hedges.
They're one of the few software companies.
They're basically building a commodities
hedging app for
SMBs,
typically oil and gas to start.
Interesting.
It costs a lot of money
to actually have like a hedging team.
Yeah.
And they said 95% of
distributors just can't afford
a full team.
So they basically make it,
their whole thing is Robin Hood
for industrial companies.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We've seen a lot of startups do the
sort of like treasury management.
Just like earn a little bit of yield
because maybe you don't have access to an investment bank
and a whole treasury team.
And so plenty of companies have offered
that type of product, it makes sense that you would need something a little bit different
in the industrial space.
Imagine day trading commodities on your phone from Lhwanda.
Those are that, too.
What is actinide?
Actinide is pretty cool.
So basically what they do is they enrich is isotopes, basically.
So they started off with one material.
So there's three materials in the Russian, so there's Russian stations list.
This material we can import or cannot import.
there's three materials that are actually removed from that sanctions list, which means
you can get as much as you want because we just need them.
The highest cost per gram one is a material called Turbium.
It's used in cancer medication.
They basically make this material.
And it's a $2 per gram material.
They enrich it.
It's $36,000 per gram.
Wow.
And then they already have, it's in the tweet as well.
They already have some contracts on the very large contracts.
They just signed literally in the last week.
It was pretty sick.
like Monday morning,
yesterday,
Monday morning signed two contracts,
locked in there with some companies
that everybody
watching knows very, very well.
Yeah, the traction so far is pretty,
pretty amazing.
Yeah, it was great.
I think we definitely seen,
like, over the last couple of batches,
like kind of the increase in traction,
just because people want to be here in El Salvador,
people kind of see the brand we provide.
And that's, I think, pretty evident with the company.
So, techs.
Dot Pro is Bloomberg for Heavy Equipment,
procurement. So that's, oh, dealerships, interesting. So actually figuring out, so Bloomberg,
you think that means looking across all the different industries, like how you can go on
Bloomberg and find someone's auctioning off a, you know, a private jet, but they're also
selling some slug of equity or something like that. So this is a platform to connect buyers and
sellers. It basically brings together people who want to buy. Very cool. Mining equipment and
heavy machinery more generally. There's like no central database with all this
information. Just like Boomer X in Texas calls Boomer Y in Arkansas. And then they
hopefully make it happen. But there's no like label database of all this
equipment. Basically just like compile at all. I'm kind of like with like Carfax
for example. Like early on there's like no data. And like basically they just went out
and like called all the dealers. Like hey like how much does this work? How much is this worth?
Is Loris sort of like the V2 of the vertical farming era? It says they
turn grocery store rooftops into autonomous farms?
Yeah.
So like my take here was like vertical farming obviously been tried.
Yeah.
It didn't really work because it was all like climate like kind of carbon credit driven a
lot of the time where like the actual uneconomics not make sense with that gone.
Basically they removed like one of the biggest cost of just real estate and they basically
just put these like blow up farms on grocery stores roofs.
And then it's like a pretty, I mean the numbers are here like they have like they don't
pay for the actual unit.
They have people to go and license them
and bring them out to grocery stores
and then they get like individual profit
based off what the grocery stores make
and then the goal is bring the produce profits
per grocery store up by 50%.
The produce is then sold directly
in the grocery store that it's sitting on.
Exactly. Cool. Interesting.
Co-location.
They're already like in store there.
That's awesome.
That's a pretty big contract recently
which is pretty exciting.
I think we look generally like this, again,
food security is important.
Yeah.
This stuff that was tried last, I don't know,
five years ago,
so it didn't really work because of the, you know, economic.
Like, this makes sense.
There's also these general tell ones that, like,
need to make food in America.
It's, like, actually healthy.
Cool.
So that's them.
Lark, Kai, legend.
At Skunk Works right out of college.
There's this new Moses standard, basically,
which is, like, open source.
Like, if you have a component,
it has to actually work with every type of system.
There's no way to actually test this.
They basically have a software that can test the compliance for any component.
And then eventually you're going to build a system.
hardware to the test it in a more in-depth fashion, starting with the software.
I like Blitz panel.
That's a good name.
Blitz panel reminds me a mixed panel.
They're a pretty simple company.
They make electrical panels for cheaper, and they have a whole automation process.
He's built out.
He was at Pipe Dream Labs in Texas.
It's a huge problem, and now he's basically just building the...
Yeah, going through all this stuff, it really shows you that there are, like, a lot of stuff
that fits in thematically
that does not feel like
it competes with Anderol, for example.
But it's all, it feels
like aligned with the general
theme that you've put together of
cool, hard problems.
There's a little bit of American dynamism, a little bit
of military stuff in here. Tell us about
the last company, number nine.
Yeah, yeah. So, Architas, Energy.
This guy
reads old German papers from the
40s in German, and he found this
process that basically,
What kind of German papers is he reading?
You can guess.
You can guess.
That doesn't instill confidence.
Tell this guy to clean it up.
What is going on?
No, the papers are scientific papers.
Okay, okay, okay.
That needs to be clarified.
Good, that needs to be clarified.
Papers about scientific processes.
Okay, yes, yes.
They did have some good scientists.
In the 40s.
Exactly.
And one of these papers in particular goes this way of making hydrogen for cheaper.
Okay.
And if you put hydrogen cheap, you can make crude oil for cheaper.
Very cool.
Well, congratulations on the demo day.
Thank you so much for coming.
Yeah, really cool lineup.
It's great.
I mean, it's cool to see a lot of people focus on energy.
I mean, that's that like, yeah.
People will criticize, like, you know, accelerators and like for having like being like
too on trend.
Totally.
But it's actually healthy.
Like we want a big group of companies like going after a bunch of different problems.
This just doesn't seem like that narrow of a trend.
It feels extremely narrow when you introduced it the first time.
And it just felt like, oh, it's just a fence tech or something.
But clearly, like, it's such a big area that some of these folks, if they're both successful,
like they're not even going to do business together because they're operating completely different layers of the stack.
It's just a fantastic end result and really cool to see the growth here.
So congratulations.
I think one last point about the general defense market that I think is interesting is
like a lot of these big companies like annual like Saroni like the big like here once have
already chosen like a winner and like they're not going to back another annual competitor.
So it's like you need to have like the stack, like the capital stack makes sense.
It's not to be every single level of it and like all these funds have already chosen somebody
as like their winner.
It's kind of hard to come in and like be back with these funds.
So I think there's like so many opportunities in how to come because again,
legacy industries are like open for venture.
there's a lot of talent flowing in.
That's what we're trying to take advantage
of this new movement.
The best talent in capital
actually interested in solving
these hard to critical national problems.
Thank you so much for coming on the show
and breaking it down for us.
Congratulations on another successful demo day.
We will see you next demo day
and hopefully before that, of course.
Yeah, great to see you,
have a great weekend.
We'll talk to you soon.
Cheers. Goodbye.
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the globe. Our next guest is
a living legend.
This is amazing. The founder of Partifold.
I'm sure she's dressed totally normal.
Yep. Welcome to the show.
How many
Halloween parties did you get invited to?
Okay, is this AI?
Yes.
Is this AI?
Hi.
I wish because it would have been a lot easier to put on.
Did you do this yourself?
Or did you have a team?
I did do it myself, which is why I missed a few spots.
Oh, it looks great.
This is incredible.
I mean, I feel like Halloween is probably high pressure, like, on the Partifle team.
You guys are facilitating a lot of Halloween events.
Like, you kind of have to really show up and do it right.
So congratulations.
This is your Black Friday.
This is our Black Friday.
This is our Super Bowl.
This is our D-Day.
Yeah.
Well, thank you for taking some time to talk to us on your Black Friday.
Is it actually Black Friday in the sense that, like, the servers will be melting?
Or is it just like, it's the best opportunity to capitalize on the value prop that Partifel can deliver?
Yeah, I would actually be curious, what are the biggest holidays for, or just days, celebrations?
Halloween is by far the biggest.
Really?
No way.
People celebrate Halloween like 10 times, right?
Like, everyone can go to multiple Halloween parties and it's very valid.
You're only going to go to one New Year's Eve party.
Maybe during the holidays, you're like traveling, so who knows if you'll be around.
everyone's here, everyone's locked in, everyone knows what the job is.
And so usually it's like you'll have six Halloween parties.
And I don't because I like the entire Partifal team.
I'm like kind of on call today this weekend.
But that's why I'm dressed up right now.
Yeah, I love the idea of you being on call and then there's some serious thing happening
in the business.
And you're just dressed up as a group together.
And then you dressed up like this.
It's very serious.
Yeah.
That's great.
It seems like you're not melting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The servers are not melting because our engineers crept heavily for this, but it is like a triple on-call
situation.
How has the business been growing?
I know that a couple months ago, there was like, oh, Apple's coming after you.
And that felt like maybe it was just always going to be.
Focus on yourself.
Apple, focus on yourself.
But was that even like an OSH-I-T moment or was it just kind of?
like, okay, we didn't really see any blip in the numbers whatsoever, and we've just been on a
growth trajectory the entire time. When it happened, it was definitely, are you not allowed to
curse on this show? We don't curse on this show, but you're welcome to, but kids do watch.
Our kids watch. So if you, whatever you say, our kids will repeat to us later.
It'd be like, what did Trey I mean by that? It was an oh darn moment. There we go.
Oh, shucks.
Oh, shucks.
Oh, shucks, but then we're like, let's wait to see how this plays out
because I think so many startups go through the thing
where some big player comes in and they try to reheat your nachos
and it either works or it doesn't.
And I don't know, have you guys gotten an Apple invite?
No.
No.
There you go.
There you go.
Yeah, I mean, it seems like an obvious, I mean, the other thing is Apple is not good at fun.
Like, they did the Gen Moji thing and they were laughed at for it.
It was, like, kind of a cool product, but again, it doesn't even get real usage.
And I just think Apple was always known for magical software because it was just, like, so polished and good.
And I think they're becoming less known for that.
Yeah, I have another take here.
I'd like to know if this resonates with you, you're obviously on the inside of this.
But I feel like the invite product has like, there are technical features that someone can clone and check the box.
But the brand is so important.
And I feel like when I get a part of all, it says something about what I'm going to expect walking in there.
When I get a paperless post, that's a different vibe.
That's a different thing.
When I get a physical piece of mail that invites me to something, that's also a different brand.
different vibe. It sets me up. It's the welcome moment to the actual event. It's part of the
event experience. And so I feel like there's a world where you could clone all the features,
but it's not going to bring the same energy, which is actually what your customers are buying
in some way. Part of the product. I think it's part of the product. But how do you think about
brand and how you stand out from the competition? I think it's brand. And there's something about
you have to want to break the rules because a party is not like a corporate.
meeting, right? A party is a party. And so we from the very beginning have always been like
the party page should feel as much fun as the party itself. Like you're already asking guests to do
a lot by RSVPing. Like you might as well make it fun for them and give them a reward where they
get to see the guest list after they are. Like you you got to make it something where people can
actually feel bought into the experience. And you don't do that by, you know, building something that
just looks like an online form or gets buried in someone's email. But I also think there's an
interesting, like, cross-platform aspect of this, too. When you think about Apple, like, if I want to
invite people to my party, I want to invite my friends who have an iPhone. I want to invite
my friends who have Android. Like, I don't care what phone my friends have. They're still my
friends. And so I think it's really important. And it's just, it's hard for certain companies to
execute on this. Does the Apple app only work if you have an iPhone? It does work. It does work.
for Android.
Okay.
It's just,
that's just like,
that's just mean, okay?
Not even being able to invite Android people to parties.
That's just mean.
I mean,
well,
they're already green friends.
They're already like,
look like this.
Yeah.
What,
so we,
oftentimes,
you know,
if we're talking to an enterprise software founder,
we don't typically ask the question,
like,
what's the 10-year vision?
Like,
where does this go?
Because usually it's like more seats,
more contracts,
more products margin expansion
but how do you like you know and I'm sure you've just been learning about what
part of all is as you as you built it but like has the vision like what was kind of the
founding vision what is it today how is it changed and kind of where are you going because
I've always I've like I've seen like your posts or like different press hits throughout the years
and there was some really funny post about like not having any not
making any money that stuck with me. And obviously just like, you know, joking about it or
whatever. But like, yeah, where did you start from and where are you going? Yeah, it's funny how many
people took that post like very seriously. It's like, you can't joke on the internet anymore.
What was the exact line? I forget. It was just like, Partful won't make money. VCs gave us funding
to help you party, enjoy it, babes, something like that. They're always like,
very serious news articles of, like, Partiful said that VCs gave me a party. Like, is it true?
That's kind of a, if you guys aren't making money, if you guys aren't making money, it's kind of a
systemic risk to the part, to big party, you know? Yeah. No, we will definitely, we will definitely
make money, uh, just not right now. The, the long-term vision is, if you look at where most
social apps have gone, they've kind of turned into entertainment platforms, right? Like, when,
when I open Instagram, I'm being fed a bunch of real.
I'm seeing less and less of my friends' content.
TikTok is obviously huge, and it's also an entertainment platform.
And so when you really think about it, the content that we're consuming is more and more just like, it can be Netflix, it can be YouTube, it can be reels, it can be shorts, it can be TikTok.
But it's all just you're watching entertainment from people who you don't actually know.
And so what's gotten lost in that is like, where do you go if you want to actually connect with your friends?
Where do you go if you want to meet more of the people who could be,
your friends because less and less you're discovering them online. And so what we want to do is
create the home for you to hang out with your friends, see them more easily, discover new things
to do and new people to do them with. And we think that as big social actually stops becoming
social and starts becoming big new media, that big social deserves to exist. And right now it's
small social, it's part of all. But the goal is become big social. I love it. Yeah. I love it.
I mean, we were talking to Brian Chesky is somewhat similar thesis, and it's grown on me so much, the barbell idea, you're going to be, there's going to be the internet slop feed, there's going to be a lot of content and stuff, but then you're also going to want to touch grass, and both can be true, and you can kind of toggle back and forth. What's the most underrated part of fold that you've ever seen?
Okay, so I, they're somewhat rated. It's not fully underrated. But I'm obsessed with the performative content.
So there's like performative male contest that's happening right now.
I saw in San Francisco there was like a performative reading contest.
Okay.
Performative reading.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just like there's something really funny that's happening where online meme culture,
people are using Partifle to take that offline.
Sure.
So they're taking like things.
I know, by the way, I know I used to go to the same gym as a kid who like initially went viral for the performative reading.
in New York where he was reading like, uh, like some infinite jest or something.
It wasn't that. It was like, it was like a feminist feminist, feminist text or something
like that. And he's like, you know, reading. And people are like, hey, he's been reading the same page
for like 30 minutes. Like what's going on. And that, I'm sure that was part of what kicked off
this kind of thing. Yeah. Yeah. Or like group seven on TikTok. Like there's not like a group seven
meet up, I think, this weekend in New York. So it's like,
The speed at which every single internet meme now has a real offline part of a event that people are actually going to, this is actually happening, that's been pretty cool to watch.
Take us through the SF party culture. I'm hearing 996. It's getting crazier. Everyone's working nonstop. Is that a bear signal for your business? No one's going to be partying, right?
Are they just using it for like happy hour? Come talk about SaaS. Oh, that could be a bull case.
Break it down.
9-96 culture is very concerning to the party community.
I'm here to declare a state of emergency in the outset party scene.
We have to end it.
The drinks, happy hours are coming back.
It's okay to crack open a happy dad at 2 p.m.
Pass me that happy dad.
I'm going to crack that open right now.
Let's get the party started right now.
Yeah, do tech companies need to bring back boozy brunches during weekdays?
Was that ever a thing?
Like, what's kind of the solution here?
Maybe that's what we should start using our VC dollars for.
The power lunch?
The power lunch?
Yeah, yeah.
Funding everyone's boozy lunches and boozy dinners.
I mean, that was kind of the joke in 2021.
It was like there was, like, you know, people used to joke 30% of all dollar, venture
dollars go to meta.
And then in 2021, it felt like 30% of VC dollars were going to, like, founder dinners.
Like, it was just a founder.
You could basically eat for free.
a founder by just going to a different founder dinner every night with a with a fintech
yeah okay i i want to keep going i know we're way over time but uh i want you to synthesize
something you've been thinking about uh this this idea of like rage bait marketing being not
effective long term synthesize that with some i feel like particle's done a little bit of it but
you haven't like crossed any line so it's always like worked out like even that even that example you
gave of like, oh, we're spending all our VCs money. That's kind of rage bade marketing,
but it never, it never bubbled up to the point where people were like, oh, you don't have
a sense of humor about it. That creates goodwill. Yeah. So I've always loved the part of a brand.
The VCs are financing this party. They can, and for the user, that's cool. Yeah. But, but
there's, that's, that's quite, that's quite different than like the memes that were going
around earlier this year, people being like, I used VC dollars to buy this Lamb
Oh, yeah, and myself.
Yeah, how do you think about, like, rage bait, where the line is on your brand?
Obviously, you came on a show that's, I don't know, mostly a joke, but somewhat serious, dressed up.
Like, you have fun, but then there is the line.
How do you think about that?
We, there's a little bit that I think you kind of have to acknowledge it.
Like, if a company's pre-revenue, like, you know, there's clearly VC funding that's backing it.
So you can't not talk about that, right?
And I'm a beneficiary of VC's funding a lot of free Uber's.
in my peak partying era.
So I have a responsibility to pay it forward to the next generation.
Yeah.
But I think we're here to make people happy.
That's the entire purpose of the company.
We're not here to make people angry.
And so there's only so much rage baiting that like we, a particle can do that's authentic
because it's like, no, the rest of the internet makes people angry.
And we're like the one thing that's trying to not do that.
So I think this part of why we tell the line is just not as authentic to us
if, like, you know, the Twitter mobs are up in arms.
There's also, John, you were writing about the come for,
come for the tool, stay for the network.
Oh, sure.
This is a great example.
It's like a perfect example, but a stronger, like, I think a stronger example than.
Come for the tool, stay for the network.
John Coogan, Chris, Dickson.
Chris, it was me quoting him.
Last question.
And we have to have you back on and go way deeper.
But I'm super interested.
It seems like Partifle has complete and total domination over like tech,
culture in terms of like if there's a party that's happening in SF tech like you found your
beachhead you've landed you've dominated uh how much time are you spending hunting around to find
like these crazy adjacent markets for okay there's someone who collects some odd object in
the Midwest and like you just dominate in Milwaukee now because like it you're like dominant is
part of full because I don't yeah it's grown it's grown a lot so we've never had boots
on the ground in a market like D.C. or Boston or Chicago. And those are all huge part of them.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We're growing like crazy in London. Yeah. We do a piece on the ground there.
Yeah. And it's all just web flywheel stuff, right? Yeah. Yeah. Just, you know, network effects.
Yeah. Just good old fashioned viral growth. Hit the gong for network effects.
Let's hit the gong. Great hit. All right. This was super fun. Thank you for.
taking 15 minutes out of your, out of your Super Bowl to come on.
Hopefully no crises later today because the people are depending on it.
And I'm excited for you to become big social media.
Yes.
We're very excited for you.
Thank you so much.
We'll talk to you soon.
Happy Halloween.
Bye.
Talk soon.
Our next guest has been in the reaching room for far too long.
Shishire Metcora from Superhuman, formerly, grammarly.
we're going to break down the
rebrand. We had him on
when they acquired Superhuman.
Yes. Welcome to the stream. How are you doing?
Congratulations on the next iteration. We pressed you
about this. We asked you, is there going to be a rebrand?
And you were like, nothing to it now? I think you did.
But congratulations, it's done, and it happened really fast
actually. Many corporations
would take a year. I don't know. It feels fast to me.
But anyway, how's it going?
What are the key changes? What's the thesis? Why did you go with Superhuman and not Grammarly as the key hero brand?
Yeah, that's great. We did talk about it a few months back when we bought Superhuman. There's two big changes we made. We changed the name of the corporate entity to be superhuman instead of Gramerly. It's a little bit like the Google Alphabet transition. There's still, Gramaly is still an important brand in our portfolio of products. We now have four products under the
the Superhuman brand. It's Grammally. It's Cota. It's mail, which you used to know as
superhuman before. And the other big announcement is we added a fourth new product we call
Go, Superhuman Go, which brings a new AI assistant product, takes the best parts of Grammally
and makes it a platform. Okay, explain that more to me because... Okay, one, before we jump into that,
I will say, Superhuman is a perfect name for a suite of AI-enabled apps at a time when
a lot of humans, especially even, I would say more so outside of the tech bubble, are like worried
about being obsolete in an age of AI. And so this kind of ethos of like, let's give people
superpowers, very strong. It makes a lot of sense. Exactly. You nailed it. That's why we picked
the name. I had two tests. One was it need to be brought enough for the suite. First thing you said,
and the second one was actually the word human is more important than the word super. And it's
actually part of the Gramerly DNA because Gramerly has always been about empowerment of humans.
you still, you know, we help you assist you in your writing task, but you still, at the end of the day, submit the article, you submit the essay, you write the email, we're just helping you be more human. So I love the concept of superhuman that way.
Okay, so walk me through the actual instantiation of the product. I understand the grammarly is, you know, like a widget.
But yeah, let's maybe talk about Superhuman Go, the new product, because that's what I have no context on.
Yes, please.
Right, right.
Yeah, and actually we tease that a little bit last time I was here, too.
And the core idea is a simple reframe of Gramerly.
So Superhuman Go takes the core underlying technology layer of Gramerly and opens it up as a platform.
So most people think about Gramerly as a grammar assistant, and that is a big piece of what it does.
But underneath it is a layer that allows you to bring AI to proactive, embedded experience in every tool you use.
Gramerly works in about a million different web apps, desktop apps, and mobile applications.
And now you can run any agent, not just your writing assistant, on top of that platform, embedded, connected, and personal.
How do you think about the wars at the various layers of the stack?
There's a war.
They're fighting all of them.
I mean, there's an AI assistant in basically every web app now.
Like if I go into Gmail, it's asked me to use Gemini.
And then at the browser layer, there's Atlas versus, you know,
what perplexies got going on.
Six companies built on Chrome.
And then there's also the OS layer.
So I was reflecting the other day on Gmail was trying to get me to use Gemini.
Chadjib was asking me to use Atlas.
And then Apple was trying to get me to use Apple Intelligence.
And it's three helpful AI assistants all in just you want to summarize this email.
So you said the keyword that you said ask.
Yeah.
So actually, interestingly, my frame for, if you took all,
those AI providers, and you put them into buckets. I call it the assist players, the chat players,
and the do players. So the chat players, that's what you're referring to. There's a chat bot
everywhere. ChatchipT is obviously synonymous with that category, and there's now dozens of them.
Those all ask you to go chat with a virtual human assistant. There's a set of folks working on
what we call do, which is I want an AI agent that can go do things on my behalf as headless tasks.
And I think the most popular one right now or the one people are talking about,
a lot about is all the ones in the coding space. You know, the Anthropic team said
39% of their queries are for headless agentic tasks and being used for developers writing
code. But at the bottom of that stack is another category we call assist. And that's the category
where we bring AI to you. So I'll give you one fun stat. We do about 100 billion LLM calls a
week. It would make us a top AI provider based on anybody's volume. But we do that across about
40 million users, which if you do the quick math on that, that's about, that's a few thousand
AI calls a day per person. So if you're a really, really good Gemini user, or you're a really
good JCPi user, maybe use it a dozen times. Yep, a dozen times. We do it. Yeah, every time you
press the key, every time you load a new dock, load a new app, we proactively bring AI to you,
and we're figuring out all the places we can invisibly insert AI so it can assist you right
where you're working. Yeah, that makes sense. Will you, any plans to
get into the browser game or are you going to let people duke it out there yeah that's not our
plan i mean i think i think we work our strength is that we work everywhere by the i should say
i'm so excited that there is a browser game i remember when i was at i was at microsoft when
chrome came out and i worked at google for a long time and i watched i watched that happen and then
it just felt like it went away for a long time it's pretty exciting actually that there's a
competition in browsers but we work wherever you work we work in browsers we work in the desktop
we work on your mobile phones um to be honest some fragmentation
in the browser world is probably good for us.
I mean, it makes even more valuable
to have an assistant that follows you everywhere,
and that's the core of the technology we've built anyways.
But, you know, I don't see us in that game,
but I'm very curious to watch it.
Fantastic.
It makes a lot of sense.
Well, congratulations on all the progress.
You dressing up for Halloween later?
I am dressed up on the Superhuman CEO.
Yeah, there we go.
It's fantastic.
That's the most locked-in costume.
That is the incredibly locked-in costume.
I love it. He's super, Superman himself. Yeah. Yeah. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Congratulations. Great to get the update. Love the new name. We'll talk to you soon. Cheers. If you have a new name, you need to get on adquick. Out of Home AdQuick. Made easy and measurable. Introduce everyone to your unified brand. Say goodbye to the headaches of out-of-home advertising. Only AdQuick combined technology. Out-of-home expertise and data to enable, efficient, seamless ad buy across the globe. You also need to get a luxury watch to say.
celebrate your new rebrand.
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Your bezel concierge is available now to source you any watch on the planet.
Our next guest is dressed up as the co-founder and CEO of Linear.
I can't wait to talk.
Come on in.
Carrey, how are you doing?
Great to see you.
Great to see you.
Well, great, thanks for having me again.
And yeah, like my plan was the same as everyone else.
I could have to dress up like you guys.
There you go.
I saw it's already done.
So I thought like, well,
I'll just do a different thing and not dress up.
No, you're locked in, locked in, see of linear.
You could, you could plan to, like, if you grew out the hair on the sides,
I bet by next year you could do a pretty good impression of one of us without even a hat.
For sure.
A pure play.
Great to see you.
I think, did we overlap almost it?
Were you at the GitHub universe on Tuesday?
No, I wasn't there.
But, yeah, that's why I couldn't join.
but yeah we can we can talk about that or something else yeah yeah i mean we talked we we got a good
whirlwind tour of what uh microsoft's doing obviously is satcha was taking a victory lap on the open
a i deal uh and we talked to the codex team over at open a i we also uh talk to some github folks
and i think i think the general uh shape of software development in 2025 is becoming clear
there you have asynchronous agents that you can fire off you're doing code review you also
So I have a tab completion model, an IDE that's getting smarter every month.
But I'd really love to hear how you see linear evolving in that context and how, and what, I mean, you can think about linear as delegating different tasks.
How do you delegate when you have super long running agents?
We were talking to the Codex team.
What do you say?
Something ran for 60 hours.
60 hours.
It's like, that's something you need linear to manage at this point.
But take me through how you're seeing folks change their use of linear and what you're doing with the.
product.
Yeah.
One of the things I've been thinking about is that a lot of linear was founded before all
this like AI things started happening more.
And as well as like I think like most companies out there today have like even like large
companies, they started before this, this was happening.
So I think we're all in this journey of kind of like an evolution of like how do we do
these things.
So like what are the workflows, what needs to change and like what doesn't change?
I've been like thinking about like the whole.
kind of writing example.
So, like, we used to write on paper,
like we write documents on a paper,
then we move to typewriters,
then we move to, like, online,
like a text processing on our computers,
and then we meant to, like, online writing.
The writing is still, it's like you have a piece of paper on the screen.
You're still doing the writing activity.
And then now, like, okay, like the AI can also do some of the writing activities,
but it's kind of like a lot of the tooling changed around that activity
or that concept or that need.
But the activity itself didn't change.
So, like, we still have, like, documents and papers as an idea because it's useful.
So I see that, like, kind of, like, the chains on the software industry similar.
That, like, the AI doesn't mean that we will just throw everything out of the window.
Like, there's no longer, like, any of these ideas or workflows or something.
But it's more like we have to kind of, like, go piece by piece.
Like, does this still make sense?
Okay, it does make sense?
Let's do that.
And then, like, does this have to change?
Okay, it does has to change.
Or it would be better.
it changes. So I think like our thinking with that has been that like we want to help companies
move to that direction as well. So we do have the, for example, the agents platform where also
GitHub co-pilot now integrated with. So you can delegate tasks directly to the GitHub co-pilot.
It can work on the background. You can you can then like come back to see like what the results are
and review the code.
We also have, like, other agents.
Yeah, is there any world where the ability to delegate to agents enables more non-technical
people, it gives more non-technical people a reason to have a seat on linear?
Yeah, I think, like, it's something like we're definitely, like, seeing today.
And I think, like, it's one of the values we can give to, value we can give to organization.
So, like, IDs and technical tools are used by engineers.
but like what we even see in our company now is like designers are making fixes with the agents
when they see something like oh this is like a little bit off i can like properly
instruct the agents like find this in a code base do you do like a version of this and you can
also like in our case you can preview the result through linear so you can actually see like
oh this is how it is and and tested um so i think it's like it gives like a nice loop for a
non-technical person to sometimes just, like, fix things when they see something, and you don't
always have to, like, assign it to an engineer. How do you think about, like, project management
software broadly evolving? Like, do you expect to, are you guys experimenting with any new
paradigms? Like, agents are great, and that right now we even call them, like, human-like names
oftentimes, right? Everyone has their, you know, like, sometimes it's a girl name, sometimes it's a guy
name and like the way that we're using them today is very much like a teammate that might suggest
that we're not going to see a bunch of new UI paradigms but are you in the team kind of like
what doesn't get shipped that you guys are kind of playing with you know behind the scenes yeah
I think like I like to think about there's like two areas one is the organizational workflow so
like that goes everything from like what linear really offers is like coordination and
prioritization and communication and visibility to the organization, like, this is the direction
we're going and this is how it's going. And these are the people working on those things.
And so I think, like, with AI, we are looking for those, like, problems and, like, what can we
actually fix there or, like, improve there with the AI. And then I think the other is the individual
engineering workflow, like, where does that change? So I think, like, there is definitely
like something we're thinking about that, do the issues still make sense?
Do pool requests still make sense as a concept when you are more like working with
the AI to develop something?
I do think like there is still need for reporting things like box and like even and or like
capturing issues, having discussions around it.
So I don't think like everything is going to change that.
I think like a lot of times what really help companies with this.
like some kind of direction and some kind of kind of like a guidance to their teams like
here's here's so like a system for you to operate in and these are the pieces and this is the
goals and then you let them like do their work so I at least like to see that it's not like
I don't what we think about the SaaS future or like SaaS products it's it's more about
making them more proactive or self-driving.
Like we like to say, like, self-driving SaaS is that we're not yet at the stage of, like, with
transportation, like, we still need cars because we don't have teleports.
So we need to now, like, we have the stage of, like, let's make those cars self-driving.
And so I think, like, when it comes to software products, I think we are also there that I don't
think we are at the stage yet, and maybe not for a long time, that we no longer need no
software products, but I think they could be much more proactive and driving things on their
own, on the background, without you interacting at all. So the idea would be that bugs just
fix themselves. So like when bugs gets reported, someone, like the AI will fix it. And you don't
even have to see it. I think there's still an... Eventually, I'm excited for the future when teams
can just go into linear and just watch a bunch of work happening. There's, you know, it's an agent
An agent finds a bug, another agent solves it.
An agent has an idea for a feature or a user gives an idea that agent ships it.
It's, you know, the fully autonomous future is wild.
I wrote a post maybe it was a couple weeks ago at this point or last week about the uninspired company of Silicon Valley
and how I mentioned at one point that companies, I'm sure now, like so many companies have copied linear.
I'm sure there's companies now that copy linear without even knowing,
like the origin of design language.
They're just like, oh, this is just the way that design looks.
So I was wondering, like, your philosophy on, like,
you guys get a lot of credit for kind of, like,
creating an entire way, you know, feeling for software and design language
and all these different, you know, UI elements.
Do you ever have a desire to, like, reinvent the next person?
paradigm and kind of ship something that would, you know, create an entirely new, you know,
version of the software that would completely re-skin it?
Entirely skeuomorphic.
It's all just, like, wooden blocks and grass simulation.
Yeah, or do you just continue to own it and be the godfather of modern software as a
service?
Random fonts everywhere, random colors everywhere.
I think we definitely think about that, like, especially on the website side.
that like, well, what is the next thing we can do since, like, everyone is kind of like
doing this thing we're doing.
So I think there's definitely that need, but I think in the end, like, we try to be
functional or pragmatic about the design, that it still should serve the purpose.
I believe that old, like, design quote of the form follows function.
So it's like, you're not like, with productivity tools or other tools, I don't think, like,
the point is to be an artist or something like you're.
not trying to, like, invent something crazy things just for the sake of it.
I think it needs to be, like, to the purpose or the function of the tool.
And then, like, around that, like, there's always, like, you can, like, try to figure out
what needs to, what could be better or, like, maybe you can go against some convention
when you, when you have that reason.
So, I mean, we're always looking for those opportunities.
And I think for us, like, part of the, like, the mission of the company is to accelerate
and inspire builder.
So we also do in a way like that we're accomplishing the mission of inspiring a lot of different companies on how they design or like focus on the craft or quality.
So that's that's kind of like personally what I also wanted to do that could we like shift this industry a little bit more into like we can do nice things and it doesn't always have to be.
It's just like what metric goes up or down and like or some other reasons.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Made the world a more beautiful place.
I love it.
That's a good time.
Thank you so much for coming on the show.
Thank you so much for taking the time on Friday.
Next time you're passing through LA,
come by the ultra-domin person.
We love to hang.
Ideally on a day when we're not dressed up like fools.
Like a couple of characters.
It can be a little bit more serious.
But thank you so much for taking the time to chat with us.
And thank you for supporting the show this entire year.
It's been very helpful.
One of the very first few.
We've had a lot of fun.
And everyone in the chat is celebrating linear.
Conor says he just onboarded his business onto Linear today, like 20 minutes ago.
Let's hear for that.
John Axley says, Linear is TBN royalty.
That's right.
So awesome to see, Kari, in the Ultradome.
Thank you for coming by.
We will talk to you soon.
Give our best to you.
We'll talk to you.
We'll talk soon.
We'll talk to.
Thank you.
Goodbye.
Cheers.
There's one scoop I want to talk about.
Katie Roof is confirming a scoop from TechMeme that Axios is dropping.
Human interest, a 401k platform for small and medium businesses that aims to cut down on administrative work,
raised $100 million at a $3 billion post-money valuation.
This is a leak, but I know the CEO of human interest.
He's a good buddy.
And so I just want to say congrats to human interest because it's a very cool company.
And Elon has a new pod up on Allen.
And on Rogan.
He's on a press tour.
He's on a press tour.
We got to get him.
Maybe this is the time to strike.
Maybe we get him on TBPN next week.
The team seems to like the idea.
We'll work on it.
Thank you guys for hanging out with us on such a crazy day.
It's going to be hard to, we were, while we were putting this on, we were talking about
how do we want up this next year?
Yeah.
What could possibly be as iconic as these two titans of industry.
Didn't we do Elon and Joe Rogan?
That would be good.
I think throwing in a Rogan is a good one.
You as Rogan, even though you're 14.
14 inches taller than Rogan?
Yeah, yeah.
I could see, I could see a Rogan.
We could do Rogan and Alex Friedman.
That could work.
Maybe we could do a human.
Lex would be the experts.
Yeah, the experts is good.
As other podcasters, kind of hits.
We could do a David Senra.
We could both be David Centra.
How about that?
David Senra by David Senra.
Yes, we could both be David Senra.
An executive producer.
That'd be a lot of fun.
I think your mustache is actually falling off your face.
I feel this weird thing where.
it feels like I'm sweating underneath everything.
Yeah.
But I've had this like scratch up here by this like fake vein and I'm not able to
it.
And so I'm looking forward to taking this off.
It's actually so trippy.
A lot of people are asking, are you going to, am I going to go home and trick or treat
with the kids like this?
I was thinking about it.
No, I do not want to traumatize my young children.
Yeah.
I will be dressing up as something else.
but thank you for tuning in with us today.
Have a wonderful Halloween.
And thank you to the team that helped us pull this off.
This was a very special, funny thing.
I never thought we'd be doing this,
but that's the nature of this show.
And so thank you for everyone that supports us.
Leave us five stars on Apple Podcast.
And go out and have a wonderful evening and weekend.
Be safe.
We will see you back here on Monday.
We'll talk to you soon.
Can't wait.
Goodbye.
Cheers.
