TBPN Live - Open-Source AI, a16z's Playbook | Marc Andreessen & The a16z Partnership, Bryan Johnson, Chris Pedregal, Joshua Browder
Episode Date: May 14, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wand...er.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(03:10) - Is Open-Source AI Dead? (04:35) - OpenAI Restructuring (18:50) - Investors Comment on Open-Source AI (31:33) - Chris Pedregal. Chris is the founder and CEO of Granola, an AI-powered notepad designed to enhance productivity during back-to-back meetings. Previously, he co-founded Socratic, an educational app acquired by Google. (45:17) - Joshua Browder. Joshua is the founder and CEO of DoNotPay, the world's first AI-powered legal service platform aimed at automating consumer rights processes. He also leads Browder Capital, focusing on investments in innovative legal tech startups. (01:01:32) - Bryan Johnson. Bryan is the founder of Don't Die, a longevity company pioneering protocols and tools to slow aging and extend healthspan. Through extreme self-tracking and data-driven experimentation, he aims to build a roadmap for reversing biological age. (01:21:28) - Matteo Franceschetti. Matteo is the co-founder and CEO of Eight Sleep, a company that integrates technology into sleep products to optimize health and performance. His work emphasizes the importance of sleep fitness in overall well-being. (01:40:20) - Erik Torenberg. Erik is a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, where he brings a decade of experience at the intersection of investing, product, and media. He previously founded Turpentine, a media company focused on tech and culture. (01:53:52) - Jen Kha. Jen is the Operating Partner and Head of Investor Relations and Fundraising at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), where she leads the firm’s capital-raising strategy and manages relationships with limited partners. Over her career, she has facilitated the raising of over $40 billion in capital, drawing on her experience from roles at Technology Crossover Ventures, HSN, Inc., and BMO Capital Markets. (02:04:54) - Anjney Midha. Anjney is a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, investing in AI, infrastructure, and open-source technologies. He serves on the boards of several AI startups, including Mistral and Black Forest Labs. (02:21:53) - Martin Casado. Martin is a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, leading the firm's infrastructure practice. He was a pioneer in software-defined networking and co-founded Nicira Networks. (02:31:45) - David George. David is a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), where he leads the firm's Growth investing team. Since joining in 2019, he has spearheaded investments in companies like Roblox, Coinbase, and Databricks, drawing on his prior experience at General Atlantic with firms such as Airbnb and Slack. (02:47:27) - David Ulevitch. David is a general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, focusing on American Dynamism, investing in companies that advance national interests. He previously founded OpenDNS, a security company acquired by Cisco. (03:00:09) - Anish Acharya. Anish is a General Partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), where he leads investments in consumer AI applications and innovative digital experiences. With a background as a founder of two acquired startups, he focuses on products that blend cutting-edge technology with exceptional design. (03:11:40) - Marc Andreessen. Marc is a co-founder and general partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), a leading venture capital firm. He is also known for co-authoring Mosaic, the first widely used web browser, and co-founding Netscape.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're watching TVN. Today is Wednesday, May 14th, 2025. We are live from the Temple of
Technology, the fortress of finance, the capital of capital. Ben is back. Ben is back. Ben is
back. Welcome back, Ben. Welcome. He found his happy place. He found his happy place.
It wasn't in a wander, although it could have been in a wander, but now it's in the studio
and the temple is back. Ben is back, back baby that was a huge milestone for the show
yeah to actually survive for it was our days without Ben you're on a shoestring
but he's back through and he's back and we're excited also thank you to Sequoia
capital they sent us some beautiful candles they smell fantastic high
dimensional cardamom and violet embedding diffusing
Through hidden layers of spice back propagating to a musk and sandalwood base. So thank you
This is from their AI Ascent conference. They
Extremely well extremely well execute and they sent us a nice little note
From from Sonia and the team at Sequoia.
Beautiful.
She says, thanks for having me on the show
to chat all things AI.
It's no Himalayan Birkin, but hope you enjoy the candle.
So thank you, Sonia.
We'd love to have you back on the show.
I really enjoyed the conversation.
Yeah, it was great.
And we're gonna be talking to quite a lot
of venture capitalists today, John.
Yes, it's a gladiatorial battle.
It's a one man versus 100 guerrillas situation.
One show versus 100 Andreessen partners.
Let's take a look at the lineup.
We do have four founders here,
although one of them is raising a fund.
Josh Browder, you know, from Do Not Pay,
but he's announcing his fourth venture fund.
That's pretty crazy.
We were just talking about how few firms get to fund for he did it
We got the founder of granola
Brian Johnson's coming in the founder of don't die. We're gonna get to the bottom of how you die die
Before he comes on
Yeah, and Matteo from eight sleep is coming on announcing the pot a five
Let's talk about the pod 4. Now it's time for pod 5.
And then we're going live to A16Z's limited partner day.
This is the day of the year that they check in
with all of their investors.
So they're all together and we got them all calling
into the stream one after another.
We got six GPs and the co-founder of the firm.
So that'll be a lot of fun.
But first I wanted to set up the conversation
because I think that if you're talking to Andreessen,
what's the most interesting tech trend
that they seem to be, they have a unique perspective on.
And from my perspective,
that is open source artificial intelligence.
Mark has been very outspoken about his love
for the open source community.
They've backed a bunch of open source AI companies
and it's been received very well
in the open source community
and some investors love it, some don't.
And so my former colleague at Founders Fund, John Ludig,
wrote a piece that we're gonna be diving into
all about the future, he claims the future
of foundation models is closed source
and he makes the argument that open source
is not ever going to fully win, not that it can't be helpful or
useful, but we've also been having some other conversations with folks that say
open source might be a tool of economic warfare that we need to be engaging with
and maybe we haven't considered all the different angles. And so, uh,
his piece is from a year ago.
We'll see how it holds up today and then we'll talk to a bunch of the injuries
and partners about open source AI.
But I wanted to kick it off with Ben Thompson in Stratecary talking about open AIs restructuring.
We covered this when the news broke, but he kind of packaged it up in an update with a
few different pieces of information talking about how Microsoft's involved talking about
the hiring of Fiji CMO and the acquisition of Windsurf.
And so he starts it off with a quote
from the Wall Street Journal.
He says,
Open AI abandoned a controversial effort
to place its juggernaut artificial intelligence business
under control of a for-profit entity
and will instead remain under its founding nonprofit board.
We covered this story,
this exact story in the journal when it dropped.
And Sam said, hey, it's not that big of a deal. It's not that big of a deal. And then And Sam said, Hey, it's not that big of a deal.
It's not that big of a deal.
And then people were like, okay, it's not that big of a deal.
Then we won't talk about it on podcasts.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What does he want us not to talk about this?
Is that what he's saying?
It's not a big deal.
Don't make a three hour podcast out of it.
About this one thing.
Well, this one thing is no big deal.
Well, too bad.
We're making a podcast about it.
And it's four hours today, by the way.
And so the move could complicate the company's future fundraising efforts
Obviously, it's very difficult to invest in a nonprofit even though there was a wait for some cash to flow through
Unlike traditional boards which must act in the best interest of shareholders opening eyes nonprofit board has a fiduciary duty to humanity. I
Was joking that if they have a fiduciary duty to humanity if I was joking that if they have a fiduciary duty
to humanity, if you're human,
you can just ask them to do things, can't you?
Yeah.
You can just submit them tickets.
I was telling Will, make me a to-do list app.
Now. Yeah, do it.
I'm human.
So you're responsible to me.
You're in service to me.
You're in service to me.
Yeah.
But OpenAI started working on this change
after Sam Altman was surprise fired
and then reinstated in 2023.
Its big investors, including Microsoft,
watched his temporary ouster from the sidelines,
unable to wield official power over the outcome
because of the nonprofit structure.
They couldn't just sue,
hey, this is not in the interest of shareholders.
And the nonprofit board was able to make
a very convoluted argument for why they were
so suddenly changing CEOs.
The conversion would have changed OpenAI's business to a public benefit corporation while
preserving some form of the current nonprofit that controls the company.
Altman's rival, estranged co-founder Elon Musk, had tried to block the conversion in
court.
OpenAI said it scrapped the Boulder Plan after discussions with civic leaders and attorneys general in California and Delaware, which would have been a sign
off. Yeah. And so they probably just went to the courts and said, are you guys going
to veto this? Have you tried and do this? And they said, yes, absolutely. We're going
to veto this. And so very likely, okay, we're not even going to try. Yeah. That's what that,
that's what that reads like. I don't know. Um, but anyway, um, the framing of this news
and the tenor of the overall reaction
has been interesting.
OpenAI is characterizing this as a clear step back
from their initial for-profit plans,
and most people seem to be taking them at their word.
A small contingent, including Elon Musk,
are on the opposite extreme,
claiming that this is a total betrayal
of OpenAI's non-profit roots.
Unsurprisingly, strataquiri falls somewhere in the middle.
Ben Thompson, of course, with a twist.
I do in fact think this is still a meaningful change,
but also a fair one that does stay somewhat true
to the entity's roots.
And frankly, that's the part that worries me most.
And so interesting, of course,
that the open source company is now closed source.
They're maybe releasing an open source model.
I don't know if you wanna pull up the polymarket on whether or not Open're maybe releasing an open source model. I don't know if you want to pull up the Polymarket
on whether or not OpenAI will release an open source model
or what the timing is, but it seems like they do that
at some point.
It doesn't seem like a crazy strategy.
Yeah, right now it's sitting at,
will OpenAI release an open source model before July?
Polymarket has it at a 48% chance.
Wow, really 50-50 basically.
Yeah, still feels significant on 356K volume.
Okay, yeah.
So not, not.
Yeah, yeah, not small.
Yeah.
Anyway, so we'll see.
So Microsoft's obviously a big player in here.
They, it seems like they need to sign off
on whatever happens and they want a stake.
And then there's also some crazy numbers
about exactly how much they've invested.
And so the core problems facing open AI
As a nonprofit were straightforward developing AI cost
Astronomical sums of money money at that scale is only available from investors who expect a return and opening
I know eating no means to deliver return to invest. Yeah, basically you can raise a few hundred million dollars as a nonprofit. Yeah
people like you on Peter to you and things like that lots of
Beyond that you start to run out of you know, they could have just perpetually raised
Yep, they could probably have gotten to a point where they were perpetually raising a hundred million dollars a year
Yeah, but not ten billion dollars a year in my and my take on this was like it's beautiful that
That the future of AI must be capitalist.
And it's actually very good.
I think Ben Thompson kind of agrees with this.
So he says, now you can certainly make the case that the most appropriate thing for OpenAI
to do at the point that they had this realization.
And this was, and everyone started realizing that scaling laws applied in 2018 after they
released the paper, improving language understanding by generative pre training and this was confirmed with
GPT-2 they saw that they didn't really train they didn't really change the
algorithm they just increased the scale of the data and the compute and it got
way better and so they're like okay well we thought if it was just genius
application genius algorithm design all you need to do is just raise a hundred
million dollars get a hundred geniuses in a room, turn them loose, and they would
come up with the most beautiful elegant algorithm for AGI. Give them enough
time, they'll do it. But that wasn't the, that's not the solution. They need
compute and they need energy and that costs money. And so they should have
wound down the nonprofit at that point is what Ben Thompson argues. And he says, I
wonder if Altman regrets
not just doing that after all.
And this critical open AI had at that point
created very little of commercial value
to review the timeline of that critical 2019 period.
February, open AI releases GPT-2.
This was the model that showed simply scaling up model size,
data set size and compute,
produce more generalizable results.
March, open AI creates the open AI LP,
a cap profit entity that could be invested in exchange for a share of profits.
And July Microsoft invest $1 billion in open AI LP with the right to 100 X that's
returned. So they can make a hundred billion dollars to a hundred X.
Yeah. Simple ask. Well,
the funny thing here is that I'm pretty sure a hundred billion is less than what
Microsoft earns in a year
So it is like it is substantial sum of money, but it's not that much money to them
To put in context a hundred billion is 17 billion short of Microsoft's total operating income last year
And so it'd be like a nice bump.
It'd be a double.
Yeah, their EBIT was $131 billion.
But it sounds crazy, but they put in a billion dollars.
So the question is, what's more valuable?
They grew 28%.
They grew EBIT 28% from 2023.
It's amazing.
Satya, on fire.
Come on the show. On fire.
Soon.
Anyway, of course, OpenAI and the rest of its investors almost certainly don't want
to give up such a valuable asset.
I'm not sure that they will have the choice.
So the question is, should Microsoft go for revenue share or perpetual rights to OpenAI's
models that they can vend into Azure?
And they'd probably want to stick
with the perpetual rights.
The fact of the matter is that Microsoft put up the money
to make OpenAI an entity worth fighting for,
and they would do well to give up future profits
from OpenAI to secure profits of their own.
Assuming this deal happens, that leaves the nonprofit board
which has final say over the company,
and some amount of shares
in the public benefit corporation.
This is ultimately in line with opening eyes, original structure.
So I think it's a reasonable compromise. I don't like it though,
but not for the same reasons as those who think that any for-profit entity is
wrong. Rather,
I don't like the idea of an entity unconstrained by things like fiduciary duty
or the profit motive having ultimate say over what is shaping up to be such an
important company. I get the theoretical argument for people motivated by the common good
I myself subscribe to the perhaps more cynical view that base motivations like profits and doing right by shareholders are important constraints
Against utopian visions that all too often and badly and I completely agree. He's very very convincing on that point
and then we can go through a little bit of the
CIMO, Fiji CIMO, and Windsurf News. So in an Altman email, CIMO will enable our traditional
company functions to scale as we enter the next phase of growth. Altman keeps the top job and
will increase his focus on research, compute, and safety systems. Cimo's a technologist at heart, but a very pragmatic technologist.
She loves consumer companies that have a big impact.
That's why she went to eBay.
And what else did she like?
Ads.
Oh yeah.
Ads.
Yeah, so now the question is,
you interview anyone from OpenAI,
when are you gonna get promoted to CEO?
Cause now if there's two CEOs, why not 50?
Four, five.
Yeah. Unlimited.
Why stop at 50, John?
Yeah. Just keep going.
I mean, this is an entirely uncharted territory.
We've seen the co-CEO model before.
We have not seen scaling is all you need.
The scaling law applied to CEOs.
The scaling law applied to CEOs. The scaling law applied to CEOs.
Imagine, do you think that's the value
if the value accrues to the most CEOs?
CEO drives the most value, so get multiple CEOs.
More CEOs, yeah.
They need 10 more ooms of CEOs.
Yeah.
Six billion CEOs, then they'll be responsible to humanity.
This is the way.
It's very likely that the company that develops AGI
will be entirely CEO driven. Yeah
CEO one acting like yeah, they run the company. It's great
and
It's and so yeah
I mean it's obviously like a big shift to they're going all in to be the next big consumer app and
They're necessarily going to build an advertising product and I was trying to think about
this like there is a world where you charge people $200 a month
or $20 a month or zero a month.
And the $20 a month subsidizes the rest of the cohort,
but you have to differentiate the product at that point.
And so you're essentially giving
poor people dumber AI,
which feels a lot worse to me
than giving everyone equivalently smart AI.
Where everyone there's ads.
Or everyone the same content, but you either watch ads
or you don't or you have something.
Exactly, exactly, exactly.
So I truly, yeah, maybe it'd be nice to be able to pay
to remove the ads, but I don't like the world
where certain people based on their economic conditions
don't have access to the smartest models.
I think that's very, very good.
I mean, who are we?
I honestly think it was MadFez
that we were talking about offline
about how this dynamic that we've had
where billionaires have the same iPhone as somebody working at Chipotle. We've talked about this dynamic that we've had where billionaires
have the same iPhone as somebody working at a pool.
That is not gonna be the case in AI,
and that's kind of the issue that you're getting at.
Well, no, I think it ultimately will be the case in AI,
that it will be the same, because I do think the ads
and the economics will lead to GPT-5 being available
to everyone?
Equivalently and maybe there's less ads for certain people. Maybe there's certain usage limits or certain things that you pay for but
Yeah, the argument there is that if I'm paying
$2,400 a year for open AI as a prosumer, right? I use you you know, whatever, I'm on the $200 a month subscription.
They could get probably 10 grand a year in ads, in value from me as a user in ads.
Yeah. Right.
Hey.
You gotta raise the price on you.
Yeah. To get rid of those ads.
That's right.
But no, the argument is that like Google,
I would imagine, you know,
like open AI at some point would have an incentive
to just get so good at ads that they
Can extract the maximum amount of value?
It's so cocky to be like you have my ARPU at Facebook
They make 20 grand off of me because they show me so many
AMG G 63s that
They just print off of me
They found the infinite money glitch who They've shown me so many G wagons
that Mercedes has previously.
We've got another G wagon addict over here.
Six figures this year.
He's already got two and he's like.
Look at that third.
That's ridiculous.
Anyway, but obviously the company is shifting to,
it's the, what do they call it,
the unlikely consumer tech company,
the unwilling consumer tech company. the unwilling consumer tech company.
They just bought Windsurf.
It's model agnostic, which is very interesting
because you can use Windsurf with Anthropic, Claude.
Yeah, and some other news that was interesting.
Harvey just announced that they're going model agnostic.
Interesting, what were they built on before, OpenAI?
OpenAI, and OpenAI's fund was invested in Harvey.
Yeah, and so this is the point that Ben Thompson makes,
which is that there is a world where
ChatGPT is powered by Claude,
and no one notices or cares,
because all you care about is the app,
that being a great front door to AI,
and you go there, and as long as you get good responses,
does it really matter
what exact model you're using?
Not really.
The actual underlying model matters a lot less than how that model interacts, the other
tooling, the tool use, all these different things.
And so we got to dig into this more.
But yeah, the other the other interesting thing here and Ben calls us out, he says the
unusual part of this appointment is that CMO is currently a public company CEO of Instacart
And the best way to understand her decision is that is better to be the number two at a generational company instead of the number
one basically anywhere else and it's interesting to
You know in many ways Instacart was a generational company. Yeah, but but it levels. But it's $11 billion right now,
and it's been around there since IPO.
It's actually fairly up since IPO, I believe.
$25 when IPO, now it's at 45, so it's done well.
You remember they were,
I think they were over 30 in the private markets.
Oh really, yeah.
But still, I mean $11 billion,
that's what, 3% of OpenAI at the current valuation or something like that.
But the takeaway is that if you're running a startup,
why don't you just go recruit a CEO from public company to come work for you?
Totally. Totally. Set your bar high.
Massively underappreciated approach to recruiting.
Yes.
Just go look at the public markets,
see which companies have executed well over the past?
Call it eight quarters and then just go pick out, you know your favorite. Yeah
Yeah, so I want to shift over to John Ludig's piece on his sub stack
Ludig's learnings
He says the future of foundation models is closed source if the centralizing forces of data and compute hold
future of foundation models is closed source. If the centralizing forces of data and compute hold open
and closed source AI cannot both dominate long term.
So he was thinking about, you know,
this was during this wave and this big meme
that open source would just completely dominate
and commoditize the foundation model layer.
Some of that's happened,
but then we've seen missteps with llama four,
and there's some interesting context in here
but it's a year old piece so it's interesting to reflect on how it's held up and
He got into a big debate with Martin Casado who I believe is coming on the show in just a couple hours
And I'd love to hear how in Dreeson's view of open source AI has evolved because they've invested in some open source
AI companies and some closed source AI companies and so I want to know how they're thinking about it. So
John writes, two seemingly contradictory but equally popular narratives
about the future of foundation models have taken hold. In one future AI
centralizes scaling laws will hold and value accrues primarily to scaled closed
source players. In the other future AI decentralized foundation models have no moat.
Open source has caught up to closed source and will have many competing models. Today both
narratives seem true. We have powerful closed source models and a thriving ecosystem of
sankra-sanked open source models. Llama3 recently put open source on the map of GPT-4 class models.
Meanwhile, an unusual open source alliance is formed among developers who want handouts, very controversial
say academics who embrace publishing culture, libertarians
who fear centralized speech control and regulatory capture,
Elon who doesn't want his nemesis to win AI and Zuck who
doesn't want to be beholden to yet another tech platform. As an
accelerant of like, not letting it simply not it. I will spend $100 billion this year
to make sure this doesn't happen again.
Yeah, yeah, 100%.
And this is what keeps him up at night.
Yeah.
Because it might be happening.
For sure.
But I think he's doing okay.
The Lama models, they're not fantastic,
but they're definitely good enough for enterprise use,
and that's really the win case for enterprise AI
or open source AI is seeing fantastic adoption
in the enterprise where you can fine tune it
and tweak it and really understand the cost structure
and you can stuff it in all different parts
of your enterprise.
So as an accelerant of modern software,
open source maintains a cherished place in tech.
Who can argue with free stuff?
Decentralized control and free speech.
But open and closed source AI cannot both dominate
in the limit if centralizing forces hold.
Scale advantages will compound
and leave open source alternatives behind.
Despite recent progress and endless cheerleading,
open source AI will become a financial drain
for model builders.
Basically this idea that Zuck will run out
of investment dollars to pour into llama
if there's not a strong economic engine there.
And that's the main argument here.
And so open source software started as an act of charity.
The world owes the likes of Linus Torvalds
and Fabrice Bellard for endowing humanity
with Linux, Git, and FFmpeg.
Because free stuff is popular, open source became a great freemium marketing strategy.
Think Databricks and Mistral and sometimes a market equilibrium in itself,
e.g. Android, a cheap smartphone option reinforces Google's search monopoly.
Companies that earned free marketing from open source eventually succumbed to business physics.
Red Hat hid CentOS behind a subscription service Elasticsearch changed their
licensing after accidentally seeding competition and Databricks owns the IP
that accelerates Apache Spark so Apache Spark is open source but you can't just
spin up a Databricks instance you have to license their IP so you have to use
Databricks unlike the charity work of open source in the early software era
today it is subsidized by business by the use Databricks. Unlike the charity work of open source in the early software era,
today it is subsidized by businesses
with their own goals.
By the way, Databricks bought a company
for a billion dollars today.
Got announced.
They announced this at 3 a.m. Pacific.
I guess that's 6 Eastern, so not that crazy.
They're just on the Ashton Hall grind.
Play the Ashton Hall sound.
We're announcing something at 3 a.m.
They are, many people have called Databricks
the Ashton Hall of data analytics.
Data analytics, yeah.
And so John writes, that begs the question,
if Meta is only pursuing open source
insofar as it benefits themselves, which he believes,
like they're not doing it completely charitably,
it's not a charity, it's not a nonprofit.
What is the tipping point at which Meta stops
open sourcing their AI?
So sooner than you think, exponential data,
frontier models were trained on the corpus of the internet,
but that data source's commodity model differentiation
over the next decade will come from proprietary data,
both via model usage and private data sources.
And so the feedback loop in Ch GPT is what's valuable.
The thumbs up, the thumbs down, the follow-up questions.
You issued a response, did they close the app
because they were satisfied or did they ask you 25 more
for follow-ups to get the real answer?
So open source models have no feedback loop
between production usage and model training.
So if you're running Llama,
that data doesn't go back to Facebook.
Exactly, Exactly.
And then there's exponential cap capex,
a lagging edge model that requires just a few percent of metas.
40 billion in capex is easy to open source. Nobody will ask questions,
but once you reach $10 billion or more in capex spend for model training,
shareholders will want to clear ROI on that spend.
The metaverse raised some question marks at a certain scale too. Diminishing returns on model quality within meta, there's a large upfront benefit
for meta building open source AI model, even if it's worse than the frontier closed source
counterpart. There are lots of small AI workloads, think feed algorithms, recommendations, and
image generation where meta doesn't want to rely on a third party provider like they had
to rely on Apple. But it's unclear whether Facebook products benefit much
from models approaching AGI quality.
It's equally possible that Meta's model improvements
will be very particular to their own internal use cases.
And that's like what we talked to that,
the company that trains small language models.
Task specific models.
Yeah, they had task specific models.
And so you could imagine that a lot of Meta's AI workloads
are not going to need AGI level universal.
Fas-Teen-o.
Fas-Teen-o, that's right.
Fas-Teen-o.
Fas-Teen-o AI.
Fas-Teen-o.
And so you could imagine that there is a Fas-Teen-o like.
TLMs, task specific language models.
And so you can imagine there is a Festino-like team
inside of Meta actually figuring out,
OK, we just need to translate every caption.
Let's build a model specifically for that.
Or we just need to flag everything for profanity, right?
Like they could build a model for that.
And they're not going to need AGI-level massive models
for that.
And so Zuck is not running a charity.
He's a savvy capitalist. While Meta can justify scaling CapEx on incremental models for that. And so, Zuck is not running a charity, he's a savvy capitalist.
While Meta can justify scaling CapEx on incremental models
for their own ends, their open source strategy
will only make less sense over time.
And so, then John goes into developers and consumers.
As a developer choosing an open source model,
what do you get in terms of cost, model quality,
and data security?
Open source models have the illusion of being free,
but developers bear the inference cost,
which are often more expensive
than comparable LLM API calls.
You either pay a middleman to manage GPUs
or end host models or pay the direct cost of GPU depreciation.
In capitalist America, free is never really free.
You should wonder how you'll ultimately be monetized.
This isn't Linux where a single developer built the product
as a gift to humanity.
These are cash incinerating endeavors
whose only way out is to eventually monetize you.
You're probably committing to a closed source compliment
in time.
I'm not afraid to be monetized.
Yep.
Are you afraid to be monetized?
I'm fearless about being monetized.
Monetize me, go right ahead.
Even Android eventually monetized via Google Play.
There's like a pretty good metal song, you know.
Yeah.
Monetize me.
Yeah.
On model quality, like housing, healthcare, and education,
a paid version is generally better than the free version.
Even within software, the open source winner
is rarely the best product.
Android is worse than iOS.
Open Office is worse than Office, or Google Docs. Godot is worse than Unity. Free. Android is worse than iOS. Open Office is worse than Office or Google Docs.
Godot is worse than Unity.
FreeCAD is worse than SolidWorks.
A corollary is that engineers focused
on the best platforms make more money.
They're more likely to build cutting edge products.
Everyone's celebrating Lama 3.
Yeah, here's the kicker.
Everyone is celebrating that Lama 3 is on par
with GPT for a year later.
A year later.
The product quality gap between iOS and Android or macOS and consumer Linux has stayed wide
for a long time because the best software creators are aligned with paying customers.
When you choose closed source models, you're not making a point in time decision on model
quality.
You're paying for future model improvements where the roadmap is aligned with paying customers.
Yeah.
And then he talks about data security a little bit.
Some enterprise need the utmost data security,
financial services, healthcare legal.
But I'm not sure using open source models on-prem
or via third party cloud hosting is actually safer
than using third party LLMs in the cloud.
This is a legacy belief from the early internet era
where an on-premise data center was the Fort Knox
of data security.
As a customer, I'd trust Microsoft
with healthcare data security more than my IT department's
self-managed data center.
Ooh, putting founders funds IT department on blast there.
But very nice, very nice IT department over there.
They're very nice.
I know them.
And that bridge has already been crossed
when 65% of the risk adverse Fortune 500
already uses Azure on OpenAI.
It makes you wonder who is
dealing with data that is too sensitive for cloud-based LLMs, of course. And so then he
goes into national security and this is why I wanted to pull up that Aaron Ginn clip, which
will play in a second, but even if it makes eventual economic sense for model builders to
build open source, should they? Advocates like Yan LeCun claim that open source AI
is safer than closed, but it makes me wonder
if he really believes in Meta's AI capabilities.
Any reasonable extrapolation of capabilities
with more compute data and autonomous tool use
is self-evidently dangerous,
and we've talked to some other folks about this.
So let's play the Aaron Ging clip
because I wanna react to that.
But the new AI Gunner-ho initiative has already started.
They're already around the world.
We know this, we see them at different data centers
that we work with selling their stuff.
And it comes as a fully complete solution
with DeepSeq open, like a Manus models,
combined with infrastructure, combined with support.
Manus has that kind of distribution already.
You're not talking.
No, Huawei is designing for their open source ecosystem.
So Huawei is being the hands of E.
Right, right, right.
I think what Joey's asking is like,
have you ever run into a country that's not China,
that's like, yeah, we have Huawei Ascend
and then we have DeepSeek and then we have Manus
because Manus came out of nowhere just a couple months ago,
feels like that would be a very quick ramp to be like it's deployed in another
country as a part of the AI Belt and Road initiative.
DeepSeek I can believe, Manus I would give it.
So yeah, give us the update on that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's deployed.
Like DeepSeek and Manus are everywhere in Europe.
Like they're everywhere.
And again, it's open source.
If open source works as a distribution strategy.
They're not open source because they're trying to care. They don't care about open source. They
care about defeating us. And so the approach that this is why OpenAI made that announcement of
we're going to do this combined deployments of software plus infrastructure is because they're
mimicking what China's doing. But the proliferation of the open source models,
go look at OpenRatter.
Like you can just see the growth in other models.
Those other models are Chinese.
Okay, so there's this debate about now,
so where I think John left off is that
if we're open sourcing all American AI
and truly the best American AI,
you're immediately giving it to near-peer arrivals
Geopolitically and that's risky
What Aaron is saying is that if we don't do it they will and there could be this AI Belt and Road initiative
Where a country that's a little bit more of a coin toss
Might say hey my options are pay open AI a ton of money or use the free Chinese model.
I'm going to go with the free Chinese model. And that draws me closer to their economy. And that
pulls them away from us. And so in terms of forging durable relationships with countries
that are kind of on the brink or could go either way, having a strong American secure open source AI ecosystem
might actually be an advantage to us
in terms of like broad AI economic warfare.
And so, yeah, and the question
that's something that I've been like this a little bit.
I think the question becomes how much does being able
to deploy that truly bleeding edge leading models
matter, right?
Does it matter if you're deploying GPT-6
versus the open source CCP equivalent of GPT-5, right?
How big of a difference is that, right?
Everybody's gonna have a different take.
But yeah, we got-
Let's dig into it today.
Let's tell you about ramp real quick.
Time is money save both easy use corporate cards, bill payments, accounting and a whole
lot more all in one place and let's invite our first guest into the studio.
Welcome to the show.
How are you doing?
It's granola time.
What's happening?
Congratulations.
How you doing?
We're doing great.
Would you mind introducing yourself and the company a little bit?
Totally.
My name is Chris.
I'm the co-founder CEO of Granola.
How much you wanted me to tell about it? Tell us everything.
Yeah, I mean, two minutes.
In two minutes.
Specifically the evolution of the product because I know people think no taking,
but you're doing a lot more. So give us kind of the, what was the initial,
the initial minimum viable product?
What's the product today?
Where's it going?
Totally.
So we launched Granola a little under a year ago
and the idea was the best way to take notes during meetings
and to do that in collaboration with AI.
So it's an app that lives on your Mac.
It looks a lot like Apple Notes.
You can take notes however you want,
but it listens to the conversation in the background,
and when the meeting is over,
it'll rewrite your notes to flush them out to make it great.
Yeah, that's the basic product.
We tried to keep it super simple, really minimal.
I think that design resonated.
I think we can talk about that, but I think there are a few things about the way we built
that that people really liked.
And then I think what we noticed happening was that once you start using Granola, what
happens is you have a meeting and like a notification pops up saying, hey, this meeting's starting.
Do you want to use Granola for it?
And once you start using Granola for lots of meetings, it kind of becomes this like
searchable second brain
repository thing.
You can kind of be like, hey, what did that person say?
And you kind of turn to it.
And we noticed lots of users doing that.
And then kind of the evolution, like what we launched today,
is now you can do that across your team.
So now you can chat.
We added a bunch of support for these great reasoning models.
And you can chat across meetings, across your whole team,
and ask questions.
And it's a stepping stone towards the bigger
vision of where we're going.
But yeah.
Tell me about Search.
Are you stuffing every granola note into a vector database?
Or are you just doing it in a huge context window?
What are the different strategies
to actually surface insights?
I mean, it's definitely evolving.
What we found is like,
RAG or like stuffing it into a vector database
is really good for certain types of like information lookup,
like search.
What it is terrible at is basically if you ask questions
like, hey, like coach me,
like how could I be better in my one-on-ones?
Or when, let's say you're trying to sell something,
it's like, hey, when I get this type of question,
how good are my answers and how does that compare
to the answers that other folks on my team give?
Rag completely breaks with that.
And what we find is people turn to Grinola
to ask a lot of these kind of analysis type questions. Like, hey, what are the biggest burning fires, right, that I should be focused on or something like that?
And rags not suitable.
So we actually make a lot of use of stuffing these massive context windows with the right with the right transcripts and notes.
The favorite context window to stuff.
I know Gemini's got a big one but yeah yeah
they all have trade-offs and we do the big ones scare you. No the big ones scare me.
Open AIs context windows perfect. We just we just today starting today we let
users choose before that it was you know we do it we have everyone's going model
agnostic this is a trend right yeah we have everyone's going model agnostic
This is a trend right? Yeah, I mean when surface model agnostic now who else were you saying?
Harvey just went model agnostic. This seems to be the trend really drinking the
commoditization Kool-Aid yeah, the the product person in me
Feel I've mixed feelings about about surfacing it to the user
It's like one more thing a user has to think about,
and your average person shouldn't have to think about,
we should do the best thing.
So it defaults to auto, so we try to choose the right model,
which for a lot of it is like Sonic Cloud 3.7,
like the reasoning mode of it, because we
find that for the type of queries that we're getting,
it works the best.
But if you're a power user, now you
can choose Gemini 03, like whatever you want.
Cool.
I gotta ask, what was your reaction to Notion's launch yesterday?
Many people said it was a Granola clone.
Do we have a Shots Fired sound effect?
Yeah, we need like a Shots Fired sound effect.
But yeah, I'm curious to get, I'm curious to get, you know, your reaction to it.
I'm sure it's not even the first time that somebody's taken a little inspiration from you guys
over the last year.
I mean, it feels like it means we're doing something, right?
Is my first reaction.
Like, it'd be easier if I didn't like Notion.
We really like Notion, right?
Like, we think they're great.
Like, Ivan actually DM'd me on Twitter,
letting me know it was coming beforehand, you know,
as in like, hey, like, it's really cool. You know, he's like, we respect you. I hope this leads to
us pushing each other to build better products for people. So like, I like them. What it
means for, I mean, I think the world changed overnight with AI. And we're like, 2% of the
way there figuring out like, what does that mean in terms of products and tools? And there's just a ton to build right? I feel like transcription from the beginning has always been a
Commodity right everything is gonna have transcription
So I think the question is how do you go from what we have today?
To like a true AI assistant that kind of understands you and helps you like be a thought partner and do most of the work
You want to do.
Yeah. What was the,
it feels like there's like three different like approaches to building a new AI enabled note taking app or something like that in this world.
It's like a greenfield project with startup that has a fresh clean slate.
Like you guys, there's notion, which is like a well-funded scaled company, but still in founder mode can still like, we saw this with like Figma,
roll a bunch of new features in move, still pretty agilely compete.
And then there's the hyper scalers, which are just like, we have a new monopoly.
And yeah, it might take us 10 years to add this feature,
but you're probably still going to be using an iPhone. So, uh, yeah,
expect Apple notes to get an update in 2035 or something like that.
But I'm interested in know kind of like, do you see the market that way?
And how are you thinking about, uh,
the broader competition?
Because I imagine that if you just look at the overall,
like people taking notes,
Apple notes is probably still the number one product or something like that or
notepad. Um,
and so maybe that's the real opportunity and you and notion can both win
Yeah, I think
It's an interesting question it okay, so what one angle is like I think we underestimate
Jeff
You remember when mobile came out and everyone tried to pour websites to?
You remember when mobile came out and everyone tried to port websites to mobile to the iPhone and like it took us a little while to figure out that that doesn't work and that mobile
apps should look really different.
Yeah.
The jump from mobile to set from web to mobile is a fraction of the jump of like pre AI to
post AI.
So I really think the future is going to look very different.
I think and in a very different future, I think the products that are kind of like invented
in that new medium tend to do better.
That doesn't mean like the massive companies won't be able to add really cool AI features,
but if you think about the AI features you use on a daily basis, how many of them were
launched by startups that came out in the last two years versus how many of them were launched by startups that came out in the last two
years versus how many of them were launched by big companies.
It's an interesting assessment to do.
The way I see it is there's a ton of opportunity.
I really think when Sam and I started Granola, our vision was never meeting notes.
Our vision was to be a tool for thought that is contextually aware and AI powered
like from that, you know, you can you can see this stuff that we wrote before launch and
Meeting notes just turned out to be a frickin awesome wedge. Like we thought it would be a good wedge turned out
It's an amazing wedge way better than we thought because there's like so much information in in our conversations that we don't
Is there also like a viral loop there where people are sharing their notes with each other
onboarding I imagine?
Yeah, I mean, it's like basically the granola product is nothing like there's no growth
stuff built in like until today.
It was like single player product.
Oh really?
It's something really.
Yeah, there's something super inherent about the information and meetings and wanting to
share that.
Right.
So it's all been like word of mouth until now.
Yeah, I think but I imagine if I take notes in a meeting, I could share a static link and we're not multiplayer in that.
But I could share my notes and then I'm seeing granola.com and I'm just.
That's true. Yeah. You can't you can't share a link.
And now you can even you can like put a bunch of meetings together in a folder and share a folder and someone who doesn't have granola can now see those and, you know, if they log in and then.
Granola.ai. Sorry, I got the domain not wrong.
I'm curious, do you have a strong thesis around agents?
I can imagine at some point companies have agents
that are calling people and companies wanna kind of
understand the context of those conversations
and what happened, what kind of next steps
need to take place.
Is that something that would live in granola
or is that more at the CRM level?
What's your theory there?
Oh man.
I mean, I think the, you mentioned CRM.
I think the product categories that we've had
for the last 20 years, whether it's like,
okay, you have like a Wiki company, you have a CRM,
you have like your docs company or et cetera.
I think those are all gonna get redrawn.
Because I think in an AI world
It's it's all about context right and then how do you make use of that context to do work?
So yeah, yeah, if you have agents calling people
I don't think that's very different from other folks on your team calling people and then how do you make that context useful?
I think that could live in ganola. I also think
Agents are just one of those terms or I think we throw it around now, but we don't really,
there's probably like 15 different things
that today we're calling agents
that are gonna be their own separate things in the future.
And it'll be really interesting to see how that evolves.
So I got a real time follow-up question
from our mutual friend, Michael at Lightspeed,
who is in the new round, but he asked,
is there an opportunity around agents to take action based on meeting notes, right?
Because in a beautiful world, humans get together, they have a conversation,
you figure out next steps, and then things immediately start to happen
autonomously.
Oh, 100%. Like, that's the whole future of granola is basically like, how do we use this context for meeting
notes but also in the future, email, Slack, Google Docs, whatever, to help you do work?
And our vision for granola is AI should do all the busy work for you, right?
And you should only be left with the judgment.
So you can imagine a world, you come out of a few meetings, it's already kind of done
all the post-meeting work or suggestions and few meetings. It's already kind of done all the,
the post meeting work or suggestions and all you have to do is kind of be like,
ah, a little bit more this way or yet that looks good. Yep. Yep. Yep. Yep.
Do that and then move on to your next thing.
What's the use of the funds? 43 million big series B.
Uh,
is LLM inference a material cost to your business right now?
Is it just hiring more engineers product people doesn't seem like you're gonna be training foundation models if you're moving to
Model agnostic, but what's the use of funds look like over the next 12 to 18 months? Yeah, I mean I like I said, I think there's a
like in this pivotal moment in history to build the future tooling of work and
It's a big vision and we need to hire the best people in the world to go out
and build that. And there's a, just a ton to build. So that's the primary use.
Um, LLM inferences, it costs money. Transcription actually costs more.
So we transcribed millions of minutes, millions of minutes a day right now.
So that actually does cost some money, but people also pay for granola.
So like that, the funds are really like,
can we go after this massive vision?
That makes a ton of sense.
And what's the dispersion of the team
gonna look like over the next couple of years?
I know you're in London now, you are an American now.
Yeah.
What does it look like?
Yeah, I mean, I think we,
so when we launched Granola, we were four people when we launched, you know, we were four people or
18 people now we're still tiny, right? But we got a great group of people here. So we're
definitely going to grow the team in London because I think there's a lot of talent, but
our ambitions are global, right? So we're definitely going to be opening up more offices,
probably in the US, probably multiple in the US. But that CBD awesome very cool thank you so
much for the rest of the milestone congratulations and I've seen that
Friedman making some money size Lord that's all right yeah he's very thank
you so much guys yeah quickly let me tell you about public comm investing for
those who take it seriously they got multi-asset investing, industry-leading yields, trusted by millions,
and they have a massive news dropping today.
Now you can vibe code your own portfolio.
Basically, vibe coding indexes.
Yeah, yeah, you can go and type in,
I wanna create a synthetic index fund
around founder-mode CEOs,
or I wanna find CEOs that have been tenured for
more than 20 years people that have been quoted in their in their transcripts
referencing Warren Buffett and it'll just pull it together and make it for you
and you can you can very cool yes you can do my personal favorite CEOs who
don't believe in meetings no that's okay. That's cool. But even better CEOs that deadlift
Building you can just go build an index based on I love it
Guys that are very into Olympic weightlifting fantastic. Well, we have Josh Browder in the studio
He's a CEO. We'll ask him. Does he deadlift? We got him now because he's going in the portfolio
Welcome to the stream, Josh.
Good to see you.
It's great to have you on.
It's been too long.
How you doing?
Thanks for having me.
Love the show and I love Wander as well.
I see that Wander.
Oh yes, you're one of the first investors, right?
We did an audit.
I'm proud to be the first investor.
The first investor.
You found your happy place.
The first spot on the cap table.
That's fantastic. So yeah, give us a little bit of an introduction. And,
do you call yourself a CEO or a venture capitalist at this point? You,
you you're on fund four. So moving more into the VC world. What's the story?
So definitely a founder at heart. I'm the founder of do not pay,
which helps consumers fight companies and governments.
The very first use case was parking tickets. But today I'm announcing my fund that I do on the side, Browder Capital Fund 4. I'm very
lucky we've raised $30 million from a lot of the best investors and I specialize in
backing undiscovered, uncredentialed founders. So we're living in a world now where this
is like these crazy seed valuations are like 50.
Everyone going to like one company gravitating towards like chasing hype. I'm the exact opposite.
I back more Teal Fellows than any other investor or fund. And I really try and create my own hype
and almost incubate them. Obviously, it's up to the entrepreneur to build their business, but I put them on the right circuit.
And the very first company I did this with was I was the angel investor
in a company called owner.com.
I'm in the pre-seed and it's now, yesterday they announced their billion dollar.
Congratulations.
How are you thinking about this?
How are you thinking about the fund sizing?
I feel like most funds when they get to fund for they're thinking 3 billion.
But you've kind of kept it small. What are the advantages of that?
So I was lucky.
I took about three weeks to raise and I've got some raises in my career and this
was a very smooth process.
And I deliberately kept it small and disciplined. I was lucky I had
a lot more demand. I want to do a good job for people. I want to do a good job for the
founders I back and my LPs and I think smaller fund sizes far outperform larger ones. In
terms of what I'm backing now, I actually have a founder living with me that I don't
know too well. I invited him into my home. Another founder, I put his visa on my credit card,
personally.
Third founder, I co-signed for the apartment lease.
So it's really just about putting people on the right track
and being their first believer.
That's amazing.
What overall trends are you excited about
or staying away from?
What's your take on defense tech?
The application layer in AI, you've kind of built the perfect company to
benefit from foundation models. Didn't have to train anything, but I'm sure
do not pay is benefiting from AI and agents and reasoning models. But what
are the trends that you're most excited about right now?
So I'm founder first. So wherever the top founders are going, I go.
For example, a recent company that I was the first believer
in with Corrie is called Pilgrim.
I think he was on your show a few weeks ago.
They raised an amazing round, I think, from Cantos
and others, which is a top defense investor.
Also excited about AI.
I'm an investor in a company called Assured, which helps insurance companies process their claims.
And they've received huge traction in the market.
I think every company will be an AI company, though.
So I try and stay away from founders
who are too smooth with their pitching.
The AI first.
I think about this with Do Not Pay.
We've added AI to our business.
And really, every company should do that. So these AI first pitches I think about this with Do Not Pay, we've added AI to our business and really
every company should do that. So kind of these AI first pitches where the founders are saying
all this jargon, like we're building LLM operability dev tools. What does that even mean? So I'd
like folks on like real problems and real solutions.
Yeah, I think we actually met Jake Adler of Pilgrim together when we were camping a year
or two ago. I don't know if that's the first time you met him, but that was the first time
I met, I think both of you in person.
There's the first time I met him in person, but this is more in the COVID era. So I was
like doing my program over zoom. But I really enjoyed playing mafia with you guys. I think
you can, um, founder are invested by how good they are at mafia. Yeah, yeah.
A lot of bluffing.
It's fun.
I mean, on the topic of like, I mean, I love Jake, I love Pilgrim.
I don't feel comfortable due diligence in a company like that because it's so out of
my wheelhouse in the biotech space.
Is that one of the benefits of being early stage and founder led is that you can kind
of just bet on the founder and you're not,
you don't need to do all the technical due diligence or do you like to dig in on that stuff and just
get up to speed? I don't want to get into trouble by revealing any like specific numbers, but
of my biggest kind of wins, they've been sub five or even around two average.
And so that kind of risk is baked into the valuation entry price.
I've seen, I've been an operator for 10 years now.
I've seen things come and go.
And if you have a founder who truly it's their life's work and they're technical, they have
some sort of good success.
And so they just have to keep at it and stay in the game and not run out of money. And then they become really big.
How long do founders stay under the radar today? Right.
And if you can invest in a founder at five posts, right, they're typically,
you're either friends with them.
You can add a tremendous amount of value or they're flying under the radar in some form of another. And then it's at a certain point,
they become kind of discovered broadly and they start getting, you know,
these rounds start getting bit up. It feels like with the internet today, uh,
even X, you know, uh,
a kid can drop out of college and immediately get, you know, uh,
three term sheets in a week, especially if they can go viral,
which is like a common thing that we're seeing now with X is that some founder
does some sort of stunt gets a ton of attention. Um, and then there's a
question about whether they can build a product, but it certainly drives venture
capital interest. But yeah, I'm interested to hear your take on that.
So I think we're seeing a rise of like super credentialism. Now these top VC
firms are even tracking
math competitions in high school.
And you have these founders, they tell the perfect story.
They're like, I won Intel, I won math, I went to MIT,
I dropped out of MIT, I worked to open AI,
and now I'm starting a company.
Those ones are super chase, everyone's chasing them,
there's lots of competition.
But for me, I really think it's about creating
one's own winners. And so the best entrepreneurs I've backed, they didn't have those credentials
coming in. And maybe they needed to be put more on the right track in terms of what they
are working on. And a lot of sometimes investors even passed on them. And so I'm really, I'm
not saying the math competition winners made bad
founders. Obviously there's some huge wins with that,
but just because someone's good at math doesn't mean that they make a good
founder.
And there's like more innate qualities that other people aren't signaling on.
How do you think about kind of the geopolitics of entrepreneurship right now?
We're in kind of this, this odd realignment towards America. There's
some VC funds that are pushing really hard to invest in Europe. There's other folks that are
great at, I mean, you said you paid for someone's visa. Clearly that sounds like you're bringing a
founder from somewhere else to America. What does the trade imbalance look like in the founder ecosystem?
Is America still bringing enough, uh, talented entrepreneurs here?
Is it still fertile ground for, uh, the global entrepreneurship community to come to America or Silicon Valley and build generational companies?
So I'm originally from England, as you guys can probably tell from my accent.
And I think that America is by far the best place to build a company.
People are more ambitious here.
The capital availability is like 100x.
I think a concrete example is like the most valuable
private company in the UK is like Revolut,
which is like a bank clone.
The most valuable private company in the US
is like OpenAI or SpaceX.
There's like order of magnitude bigger.
So I encourage any founder I back to move to the US or SpaceX, there's an order of magnitude bigger.
So I encourage any founder I back to move to the US and also to move to the San Francisco
Bay Area.
Unfortunately, still being in the Bay Area really matters a lot.
The companies don't have to start in the Bay Area.
They could start in Arizona or wherever they drop out from, but they should really move
here.
Pilgrim is a great example.
Jake started in Canada and then moved to the Bay area.
I also think there's a huge arbitrage on the O one visa.
It's people it's known as the genius visa,
but it has like over 95% approval rating depending on the year.
And so you get someone the O one visa and they're a true genius.
They moved to Silicon Valley and then they hit the ground running
Hmm
What about advice for young people?
Do you think learning to code or being able to code is still a positive signal or in the age of?
Cursor and windsurf and Devon and AI tools. It's becoming less relevant
I think the biggest thing is like distribution and being an online first and having these skills of distributing your product.
Coding and being technical is important, but it's just one skill.
I backed the WAP founders, WHOP as an early check, and they were really deep in sneaker
bot communities and things like that because everyone is starting a company now and you
need to break out.
I feel like a lot of Stanford students are just starting companies just for the
resume. Um, there are, so you,
there's so much noise and you have to kind of wade through that.
Yeah. The WAP founders are definitely doing it for the love of the game.
They're killers. It's amazing. What a great company.
Can you give us, uh, I know it's not why you're on the show today,
but can you give us an update on, on do not pay?
It seems like in so many ways the company was incredibly well positioned to benefit
from improvements at the model layer.
Give us the update there.
Yeah, so Do Not Pay is an incredibly efficient business.
It's a very small team.
It's only 14 people and seven of those are like expensive employees and seven contractors.
And when I started Do Not Pay, it was really about templates to get people out of parking
tickets.
And admittedly now, ChatGBT can write you a template letter.
But AI has improved our product by 5 to 10x.
So instead of helping people with parking tickets now, we have AI agents, they log into
someone's Comcast account and start
negotiating with Comcast to get people's bills down. And the big companies have AI and we
have AI and it's like AI versus AI warfare. But we're more motivated than the Comcast
of the world. And so we're winning like thousands of these negotiations a week. And I think
it's a good lesson that I tell all the people I back is like, you can't rest
on your laurels.
You constantly have to be innovating, change the product and adapt with the times.
Yep.
That makes a lot of sense.
Fantastic.
Well, thank you so much for coming on the show.
We appreciate you and good luck with the new fund.
I feel like my only concern for fund four is that some of these bigger multi-stage funds are going to sort of pay private investigator to follow you around and just sort of like see who you're meeting with, you know, ahead of time and be like, oh, Josh is trying to do another.
The preempt.
Trying to do another, you know, 500K on five mil.
Why don't we offer them five on 25?
Has that actually been a problem for you at all?
them five on 25.
Has that actually been a problem for you at all? Have you, are the like the bigger funds,
the crazier dynamics, is that a trend that
early stage VC should actually be worried about?
No, I think Josh's playbook is he meets them,
he buys 10% before anybody knows about it
and then says, hey, you know, you guys, you know,
take them on a road trip.
They're not ready for the big funds
They need about a month to kind of
Stuff like that. Yeah, that makes sense
So it's not it's not strictly like they wouldn't be sniped even if they could be found because they're just not
There's not in a place to do those types of rounds. That's interesting makes a lot of sense
Well, thank you so much for joining of it. This is fantastic
You're the update Josh and yeah, congratulations on the new fund.
Thank you.
See you guys soon.
Bye bye.
We'll talk to you soon.
Well, that's a great cue to talk about Linear.
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and building products.
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Jordy has been using it for the past 35 years.
He loves it.
I wish, I wish.
It was fantastic.
Planned his home.
Years before I was in the womb, I was running on Linear.
Now you know a funny little anecdote,
Linear's sending us some merch.
Oh yeah?
And the automated email to notify us
that they were sending us merch
that's not even available online was like perfectly designed.
No way.
That's crazy.
Like it was truly incredible.
I'm like, okay.
Yeah, culture of design.
Yeah, every single touch point matters.
We should also talk about Numeral, numeralhq.com,
sales tax on autopilot, spend less than five minutes
per month on sales tax compliance
It's sales tax a GI John. It is we got to get we got to get blueprint on numeral
Yeah, Brian just come on this entire pitching him bit. What are you doing for sales tax?
What if he's just like a Marty on new more?
It's possible. It's a highly efficient business. I'm excited to talk to him about it
benchmark series a
Anything else you tracking on Polymarket these days?
I saw.
I'm still obsessed with the world's largest tech company.
Nvidia is surging right at the same market cap as Apple,
but Nvidia has the momentum.
Yeah, largest company end of May,
the gap has been closed, John.
Oh yeah?
It's still, so Nvidia is at 42%,
Microsoft is at 50%,
and Nvidia has a lot of momentum.
Oh yeah, Nvidia's 42% now.
Wow, they really are ripping today.
They were at 20 something just yesterday.
Good to be Jensen, good to be Jensen.
I was posting this that if Nvidia does it,
if they pull it off and they're the biggest company,
they're gonna have to teach Jevons paradox.
It's a $60 billion, it's only a $60 billion gap.
Jensen can do it.
Wait, really?
He can do it, it's a horse race.
All he needs is one more, he needs one more.
One more deal. With a global. You know, he needs one more conference with a global.
You know, he's been on the conference circuit,
but it's working.
He seems to be at a new conference every single week,
but clearly he's getting business done at these events
and he's striking deals.
And I'm sure it's like, you know,
he meets someone super important,
like the head of a country,
and then says, my people will talk to your people
and we'll ship you a hundred thousand GPUs
yeah he definitely has envelopes or not not napkins with with full fully
fleshed out contracts on them you know they just just how many zeros do you
want behind the one of the number of GPUs you're ordering yeah of hoppers
fantastic I don't know if Brian's here yet.
Let's check on him.
And yeah, I mean, maybe we can do some timeline
while we wait for him.
We got some posts we can talk about.
Mischief, collabed with Mercedes.
This is a fantastic looking collab.
They created a trash can with pedals.
Seeing this almost made me angry
because I want every piece of it.
Yeah, you were like, oh, what did they do?
This is so frustrating.
Yeah, you thought something was wrong.
Yeah, did they do something that we were thinking
about doing or something?
No.
No, just an incredibly well executed partnership.
You can kind of scroll through these.
And I guess they're gonna be selling them all.
There's an AMG coat hanger.
That looks like a fantastic coat hanger to hang your jacket on.
The couch is just insane, too.
We got Brian in the studio.
Welcome to the stream, Brian.
How you doing?
Hey, guys.
How's it going?
It's great.
It's great.
It's great to have you on the show finally.
How'd you sleep last night?
Really well.
Actually, that's not true. No, no, I just
started a new sauna protocol. Okay. And 200 degrees
Fahrenheit.
What's the sound of the we do? Isn't it like 130 or
something?
Yeah, I mean, I can get my sauna. So yeah, I've been
nerding out about saunas for a decade now and currently my sauna can get up to like 165
and then it'll trip like a heat limit.
I'm not even able to get to that range yet.
You're in the minor leagues.
Yeah, it's in the minor leagues.
Okay, so 200 degrees, what else is special
about the new sauna routine?
Yes, I read this yesterday, let's see here.
So a, yeah, at 200 degrees, it takes
about 20 to 30 minutes to bake an egg until the white is set and the yolk is still soft.
So yeah, it's hot. Cause I've done seven days now and my sleep has been disrupted. So I'm
still getting, I'm still getting good sleep scores. I'm my total time in bed, but my nervous system is, is pretty high. So, yeah. So what do you have to, are
you wearing gloves? Are you wearing like any type of protection on your head at 200 degrees?
What do you need to actually make it not, you know, cause your hair to fall out? Yeah,
exactly. So today's day eight, I think I have the system sorted. So I
sit on this ice pack, and then I have another one that I put inside my shorts to cool the testes,
because it does lower sperm quality. Sure. To make sure that the balls need to be cooled.
And then I have another ice pack laid over my head, because it can make hair brittle and
cause scalp irritation.
So those seem to be adequate.
Where did people used to never, people used to never believe me when I said I
had, I got an ice pack on Amazon specifically for use in the sauna.
That is like a more like a cup.
They stopped.
They discontinued them.
I think it was just me and Brian buying them on there.
The special cup ice packs.
So where did this idea come from?
Is there new research or did you just discover old research or I mean,
I imagine that you want to know that there's some sort of data out there about
the effects of this. Uh, or are you just coming up with this idea on your own?
Yeah. I mean, our process has been,
we've rolled through all the scientific literature and said what things have the
very best evidence to improve health span lifespan.
And then we've just gone systematically down the list.
And so sauna has always been a target of ours, but most of the data in sauna is
observational, which is a lower grade of quality data than interventional, where
you say, if we're going to do this thing and it's going to solve the, you know,
whether you're going to see where that has an effect or not.
And so we just finished up with hyperbaric oxygen therapy and now we're
pointed at sauna.
So we completed about 40 measurements for sauna baseline.
And now we're testing like even seven days in.
I'll tell you, I just did this analysis this morning.
My I had a five, six percent drop in my central blood pressure,
which is an improvement, a 21 percent improvement in my central pulse pressure,
50 percent improvement in my augmentation pressure and 50% improvement in my augmentation pressure,
and 25% improvement in my augmentation index.
So we're looking at all these vascular age markers.
So even seven days into sauna,
it looks like it's having some meaningful effects
in my vascular health.
How are you thinking about the potential
of hyperbaric oxygen chambers?
It feels like the next frontier, the people
that have a cold plunge in a sauna at home are probably thinking about adding one. You've
used them quite frequently, but is that the next trend that you're expecting to see broadly
on the hardware side?
Yeah, the hyperbaric was the best therapy I've ever done. Wow.
And so we've, we've tried so many things and they, what was unique about it, it's whole
body health improvement.
So it improved my brain and my gut and skin and inflammation markers and like protein
markers that the cause Alzheimer's were down.
Um, try anything. Was it the cause Alzheimer's were down? Try anything others. Is there an equivalent to like altitude that you're at or are you just like in the stratosphere
there or is it like you're in you're in Los Angeles but you're effectively in Denver or
is it more like K2 or Everest?
Is it like space?
Exactly.
So what happens is you it's a hard shell chamber and then you pressurize to two atmospheres
Which is the equivalent of about 33 feet underwater underwater. So it's yeah, it's pressurized and then you breathe in a hundred percent oxygen
So when you breathe in oxygen the atmosphere is about 21%
so you're getting oxygen through your body, but at this high concentration plus the
the high concentration plus the, the, um, the, the pressurization, you basically flush your
entire body with this hundred percent oxygen. So it pushes it to via the plasma. So it gets
it out to all the extremities and that has an effect of growing new blood vessels, of
getting oxygen to parts of your body, which you just don't get at. So it's that 90 minute
exposure to oxygenation to an entire body that, which has this whole body effect.
It seems like a lot of the interventions that you do kind of have, there's some that have power
lot outcomes like sleep, diet, exercise, and then there's some that are more on the long tail.
How have you thought about as just being like a science communicator, relaying the relative
importance of these because some of these seem like they're extremely expensive for a minor gain,
but it's worth it for you because you're running the experiment and this is your life. But for other
people, it might be a distraction to say, oh, I just need a hyperdermic chamber and then I don't,
and then I can eat McDonald's. Yeah, exactly. I mean, I think the big change for me was in the
past few months, I've been able to figure out how to compress everything
I've learned into one biomarker. And that I just didn't think that would be possible
because before if you talk about health, it depends on what era of guru you're in, you
know, it's sometimes it's like an hour or it's very troll or cold plunge or sauna or
like take your given, you know, a celery juice or whatever. Um, and the marker I think that
is actually durable over time is resting heart rate before bed. And so the reason why this
is so good is it basically is if you show me your resting heart rate, I'll see your
soul. It's an accounting of your life decisions. And so the thinking is this that like, so
tonight when you go to bed, if you lay your head on the pillow and if you have a wearable, just take a few deep breaths and then look at your
resting heart rate.
If you don't have a wearable, just take your pulse, you know, do it for six seconds times
it by 10.
Let's say your resting heart rate is 60 beats per minute.
Your singular goal now is to drive that down.
And so over the next week or two weeks, you want to have that be 55 beats per minute instead
of 60. And when you see that happen, two weeks you want to have that be 55 beats per minute instead of 60 and
When you see that happen your sleep is going to be improved and when your sleep is improved
You're more likely to exercise when you exercise you're more likely to eat Well when you eat well, you're more likely to so creates this really positive domino effect
And the other thing it does is it it's a check against
Behaviors that drive your resting heart rate up at night. So a lot of our worst behaviors are between like 5 p.m. and midnight.
We're tired, we're stressed, we want to just be left alone because it just all feels too much.
And oftentimes food can be a soothing mechanism or other things, you know, a drink.
So activities in that late night, even though they seem soothing to us, they drive up our resting heart rate and that necessarily reduces your sleep quality, which then reduces your
likelihood to exercise.
So I basically, I now work with all kinds of people helping them understand which things
increase heart rate and which things decrease heart rate.
But once you build your life around that, it solves all the fundamental problems with
health that you wanted to basically layer. And then once you get that solved,
you can then of course, flatter up and do other stuff, but really that's it.
Like that is the marker that you can peg all your electric stations on.
It's really great starting point.
What ingredient are you worried that we'll, that we're consuming a lot of, uh,
the sort of maybe broader biohacker community is consuming a lot of today that
in 15 or 20 years from now we'll discover is actually terrible for us because we've
done that. We've done that a bunch of a bunch of times in the fat is probably the biggest
one. But is there anything that comes to mind that you're kind of wary of that you don't
you're maybe not 100% convicted on yet, but you you're starting to watching it, spend more time thinking about. I'll tell you, we got pretty surprised. I was taking
rapamycin. This is considered by many in the longevity field as a very promising drug.
And probably, I mean, anti-aging scientists disagree on almost everything, but there was
probably more consensus around rapamycin around than anything else out there.
And I was taking it for several years.
We meticulously tracked my blood levels
to make sure we were on a good dose.
But we all we stopped last year
because the side effects were too significant.
Like lipids were being messed up.
My blood glucose had some alterations.
I had soft tissue infections.
And then a month after we stopped,
a paper came out that showed that 16
epigenetic clocks showed that it actually accelerated age. So this is not the end all be all to say rapamycin
is toast. This is just to say that it's not like a slam dunk easy one. It's complicated. And so we
stopped, I stopped taking that drug, but I guess I get a good example to your point of we – I think we're in the very early stages of truly understanding anti-aging and biology and certain interventions.
I think we're good on sleep and exercise and eating nutritious food, but even then that branches out into some complexity.
But I'd say rapamycin is probably, to your point, a really surprising outcome for where consent like emerging consensus has been.
And now we're not doing it anymore.
And so there's a few other drugs we've been looking at.
We have a similar path we're looking at right now,
but that's probably one of the bigger ones that I would identify.
Do you think anti-aging will be solved in some form via pharma or a collection of lifestyle decisions, right?
Because in many ways, lifestyle decisions today,
allow you to have a longer health span, lifespan,
but in some ways, we had the founder of New Limit
on the show last week, which is working on longevity.
In many ways, it feels like if we can all just extend
our lives long enough to get the, you know,
the sort of pending miracle drug that, you know, adds whatever another 100 years, 50 years,
whatever that number ends up being. But I'm curious how you look at it.
Yeah, I think we need much more robust interventions that the type that Brian's working on with New
Limit. Did you guys have Brian on? Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love what he's building.
I'm an investor there.
I think that that's a very promising path.
And what a lot of people, I think, don't understand with what I'm trying to do is
I'm not suggesting that one can jump past one 20 or find a path to not die by
going to sleep and exercising and eating well.
I'm suggesting that this is the most disruptive moment in the history of the human race.
We're giving birth to super intelligence. It's going to transform society in ways we can't understand.
And in this approaching an event horizon, I'm suggesting literally the only thing we know is that none of us want
to die in this very moment.
And so I'm really trying to give birth to a new ideology, a new way to understand ourselves
as a species.
But, you know, ideology and philosophy is very hard for people to engage with.
So I speak about things that people understand, like going to bed on time and not eating junk
food and, you know, not basically doing things to slowly kill yourself.
That in a few years time, I think we'll look back at this moment and we'll say, that was not eating junk food and you're not basically doing things to slowly kill yourself that
in a few years time, I think we'll look back at this moment and we'll say that was insanity
in the early, you know, before the early, before the late 2020s, humans used to do things
that was some form of slow suicide.
Can you believe that that is just incomprehensible?
So really, I guess I'm, I'm trying to get out this from a philosophical, ideological,
spiritual, cultural perspective
by the practices I'm doing now,
but I'm grateful that people like Brian
are working on the more robust interventions
that actually will meaningfully change how we age.
Are you worried there's not enough companies
like New Limit taking you know, taking on this monumental
task?
It feels like, you know, at least within the tech community, there's a bunch of ways, you
know, there's a million easier ways to make, you know, $100 million than longevity.
And that automatically, you know, people self-select out of that path.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I'm not surprised at all.
And my diagnosis of the situation would be that currently
the strongest incentives are pointed
at the accumulation of wealth, power and status.
If you look at our day and say,
how much effort do we put behind those things?
And we do that because when death is inevitable, we've chosen a YOLO game of we're going for epicness, right? Of achievement
or being remembered for a given accomplishment or of status and power in society.
And we just haven't crossed over that threshold yet where people really believe that we can begin
to dramatically extend our lifespans. And so if AI progresses to a certain point where it even opens the window or a longevity
intervention makes a breakthrough where it's like, huh, is this moment really different?
Like, you know, people look at the health and wellness stuff, they're kind of like,
I don't really care.
Like if I lose an extra 10 or 15 years of my life, whatever, I don't want to live those
years anyways, I'd rather have this preferred life now.
So I think it's just, we're just really caught in a cultural moment
between the death being inevitable and don't die.
And it's, it's happening right now. We're starting to cross over, but I think there will be an event or a few
events in the coming years, we'll sort of change it and the humanity's going to
snap and say, I think this might be it.
Like, and I think we'll have a big cultural shift.
How do you think about like, you know, the, the, the, events in the coming years, we'll change it. And the humanity is going to snap and say, I think this might be it. Like, and I think we'll have a big cultural shift.
How do you think about like this internal motivation as something that can overpower
an unhealthy lifestyle? I'm thinking about Warren Buffett drinking six Coca-Cola's a day,
kind of rejection of everything that we know about health and wellness.
And yet he's been phenomenally successful and performant in a very stressful
important job for what?
Seven decades or something like that. Uh,
Donald Trump's in a similar category.
The it seems like there's something to the motivation and like the human will
potentially, but is that just all pseudoscience in your mind?
Yeah. I mean, people, they, they do reference Buffett a lot, right? And, and it's like, also,
it's like someone's grandma who lived to be one or two who drank and smoked every day.
And those examples are just not practically relatable, right? Like those, those are genetic differences that they got,
they won the genetic lottery and they live despite their choices. But if most people do
what they do, they would die prematurely. I think it really comes back to the ideology that Warren
Buffett played a game in life about asset accumulation, right? And he won the prize. I
mean, he's arguably the best investor of all time. So he really played that game very well. And so the question is, if you were to basically take a Warren Buffett like persona today, what would they do? Would they try to amass assets, or they try to amass existence? And so what I'm suggesting right now is the highest ROI investment anyone can do is to stay alive. And that's
what I'm trying to do is I'm trying to basically, I've attempted to become the healthiest person
on the earth, like the, you know, but the best biomarkers to demonstrate a new game
of status and accomplishment is here. And it's about health and wellness and it's about
your ability to exist. And so this will take time because it's a massive shift in our culture,
but really it's just like, we've all,
whether we've agreed to this explicitly or not,
we've all agreed to this wealth, power, and status game,
and we play it independent of whether we're aware of it.
And I'm just trying to say that that is a game,
it will shift and a new cultural emergence will arise
and Don't Die will be the prominent thing we'll focus on.
Last question I have, do you think people pay too much attention to scale data sources like,
you know, the concept of blue zones, right? Is it should individuals be focused on, you know,
highly personalized health and the approach that you're taking, which is, you know, sort of real
time experimentation, rapid testing.
Because even, I'm curious if you have any type of thesis here,
but I think many people have said
that Japan having this immense longevity might actually just
be pension fraud.
Because people have an incentive to say,
like, yeah, grandma's still kicking. Keep giving us the, you know, 10 K whatever.
I'm not making any accusations myself, but I'm 65.
I could retire next year.
People love to read into, you know, this region, they're drinking two
glasses of wine, so I should drink three and I'll be okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, what you're touching on is a real problem where if, if
somebody encounters the idea of wanting to be in good health for whatever reason, like,
let's just say a person wants to be hot, right? They want to look good and be hot. Then the
next question is, what do you do? And once you step out into the world and you say, what
do I do? You're faced with hundreds of different opinions and they're all in conflict with each other.
And then if you take another scenario where somebody's got something that they're dealing with, they have constant headaches or they have sleep apnea or they have an autoimmune disorder or take your thing, they've got a complicated situation.
What do they do? And so up until this point, you've had to go about and navigate the world of experts. And now these AI tools are better than almost all the experts in helping people solve their
given problem. And so the next thing to close this loop is now that we've got a source of
advice that is reliable and that everybody has access to, is now really a function of
measurement is can you actually get data that then improves the AI's ability to make very
precise assessments?
And that's what I'm working on personally is I've become the most measured person in
human history and I've seen firsthand when you have data, it's incredibly helpful to
figure out what's happening.
And when you don't have data, you're in the dark poking around.
And so we're trying to figure out how to scale data and access because once you pair that with the AI
Then the the question of what to do becomes so simple which again is why I believe we're at this moment of shifting dramatically
where
The complexity and the friction between someone saying I want to be healthy and knowing what to do is extremely short
Whereas now it's like so big and so complicated. It's like, honestly, not doing it. So I
think we really are like this moment is so rich and has such
high potential. It hinges on data with closed loop of AI. I
think we're off to a new race.
It's exciting. All right. Very exciting. Well, come back on
when you have more news. Yeah, always welcome. This is
amazing. Thank you so much. I'm gonna hate you guys. Be well.
Bye.
We got Matteo we got Matteo coming in in the waiting room
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Oh really?
At scale.
No idea.
And we're excited to have Mateo from 8 Sleep today.
Massive day, congratulations.
Huge news.
I gotta update my ad reads.
I'm always talking about the Pod 4 Ultra,
it's the Pod 5 today.
It's the Pod 5.
Congratulations. Pod 5. Congratulations.
And this is particularly huge for the podcasting industry because I've said this before, but
in the high stakes world of professional sports, sleep is extremely important, but arguably
a higher stakes world exists, technology podcasting.
You need to get your sleep if you're going to be podcasting three, four hours a day. And that's why we say you'd be proud. I legitimately get angry at John when
his sleep scores are down. It's terrible. It's tearing us apart. I take this game,
this podcasting game very seriously. And I take John's sleep very seriously.
And Jordy's been smoking me. But yeah, give us the update. Explain to us what the how
the launch is going. What's the overview? Break it down for us.
Yeah, of course. I mean, first of all, it takes sleep with developed technology to improve your sleep.
That's literally what we do. And the way we do it is by focusing on controlling and personalizing all the environmental factors.
We started with temperature in the cover, which is a cover that you can install on top
of your mattress. It tracks everything about your sleep and health, and then it changes
temperature to give you better sleep. And then we took temperature to the next level
now with pod five. So you also get the blanket and you can sleep in this sort of micro climate. And guys, I know I'm biased because of the CEO of 8 Sleeper. It's
freaking cool. I have been using this product for nine months and I have given it to some
friends of people inside the company and they all love it. It doesn't matter if you like
it cold or warm.
Anecdote, John's wife messaged John this morning
when she saw the launch and she was like,
just sending exclamation points.
She's being like, we have to get one.
Do you know if she sleeps hot or cold?
Extremely, she's cold.
She wants it to be a blazing fire.
An inferno.
An inferno.
A cocoon.
So bad.
So she will love it because now she will be surrounded by temperature,
cold temperature everywhere.
It's like going in the freezer and closing the freezer and just leave there.
And I like my side freezing cold.
I'm minus 10 and she's plus 10 every night.
But she says you can tell him I love him for inventing this.
It's really like the greatest upgrade of the entire year to our house.
It's fantastic. That's awesome. And so temperature is one. Yeah. Right. And we tackled that biggest
factor impacting your sleep or outside sleep medical disorders. So there was plenty of evidence.
We didn't even bend the wheel. We were just the first ones to really commercialize a consumer
product that would do something that it was already proven to work.
And then we got into elevation. And so we introduced the base, the base goes underneath your mattress, and it raises your head if you're snoring. And so you will see a drop in your snoring by up to 45%.
If you have problems of circulation with your legs, we raise your legs.
And the most important thing that
very few people know, I don't sleep flat anymore. Meaning sleeping flat is from the eighties.
You need to, you need to sleep in a position where you raise a little bit the head, a little
bit to your, uh, your, your feet and it takes away any sort of pressure on your back. Yep.
Is snoring actually bad for you
or is it just annoying to whoever's sleeping next to you?
Sorry, say that again.
Is snoring actually something you should be worried about
or something you should be trying to mitigate
from like a health perspective
or like a personal sleep quality perspective?
Or is it just annoying to whoever's sleeping
in the bed next to you?
No, it's negative for you.
It negatively impacts your sleep architecture
and it can limit the amount of oxygen
that gets to the brain.
Because if you think the real true problem of sleep apnea,
which is a form of extreme snoring, if you will,
is that when you have these episodes of snoring
or sleep apnea, less oxygen gets to the brain.
And so if your sleep apnea is very strong, the reason why you feel very tired in the morning
is because you kept lacking oxygen in your brain during the whole night and your brain
cannot rest.
And so mitigating snoring is very important for your own health and is important for your
partner so you don't bother them with your noise.
Now, the latest bass also comes with the speaker now, and the speaker
plays soundscapes that you can play to fall asleep, to stay asleep. And then we have this
partnership with Uberman where we are introducing an SDR, so non-sleep-depressed, is a sort
of meditation and breathing. You can play that with the voice of Andrew, and then you
just fall asleep
and you sleep like a baby.
SDR, I think sales development is representative for Andrew Huber and is just there pitching
you on sleep.
I've talked to a lot of people that are considering sleep and I think it'd be really great for
you tonight.
Yeah, I think there's an opportunity to do an ad-supported 8 Sleep with the speaker now
and we'll record ads.
Yeah, we'll record ads and you can fall asleep to the sound of us
just reading ads constantly.
And even at 1 a.m.
Hey, have you heard about Ramp?
Have you heard about Ramp?
Exactly, I can start playing ads for Ramp.
Well, if they already have an 8 Sleep,
we don't need to do an 8 Sleep ad again.
Maybe an Easter egg.
Yeah, maybe an Easter egg. When you wake need to do an eight sleep ad again. We may need to drag. Yeah, yeah, yeah, maybe we need to drag.
When you wake up for certain days, there is a ramp ad.
By the way, my Tesla, sometimes I start,
no, I go into Tesla, I use the radio very few times,
but then there are ads on my Tesla
when I wanna use the radio, so.
Wow.
Everything's ad supported now.
You gotta upgrade to the ad-free version of your car. It's a dark, very rear-endered, this is the future. That's ad supported now. You gotta upgrade to the ad free version of your car. Ad free version of your car.
It's a dark, very re-ventured,
that's a very black mirror, but welcome.
Welcome to the future, it's gonna be cheaper.
It's gonna be ad supported.
What else have you looked at in the sleep world?
I know that you've launched some adjacent products.
I'm thinking like, you know, you're in blankets,
are we gonna see pillows?
Are we seeing supplements and other clothing and
pajamas and all sorts of different things like how do you view the sleep
market and what have you gone after first and what do you see on the horizon
or even I like blackout curtains right oh yeah try to black out try to try to
black out your room is you you know, there's solutions.
Yeah, what do you like?
What have you already done and what's on the roadmap?
Yeah, so if we go back, you know, to the beginning, right?
We use AI and technology to improve your sleep.
So anything that can improve your sleep
is something we are gonna do sooner or later.
Where there is technology is the top priority.
There could be other products
that maybe they don't have
embedded technology, but that we develop based on our data
because we are becoming one of the largest
lip labs in the world.
So supplements, we launch a first line of supplements
that we develop with Peteratia.
And the reason is we have all these data,
we know what works or doesn't work.
Sometimes you read people saying,
oh, should I take melatonin, should I take magnesium?
We have run clinical studies.
But from a technological standpoint,
I would say the two coolest buckets to me are,
one is environmental control,
and the second is body scanning.
And I'll tell you about both.
So environmental control is, okay,
today's temperature was the blanket and the cover,
elevation and sound.
Then you should imagine
that yes, there will be more thermoregulated products because temperature is the killer
feature.
But I want to control air, oxygen, light, noise, sound, sense, everything.
So everything that we can optimize, because the key difference between us and the wearables
is wearables do a decent job at tracking stuff, but they don't do anything for you.
Our job at Aidsleep is don't wear anything and we are going to do the work for you.
So this is the environment.
Then it doesn't matter how long you sleep, it's still a lot of time.
And so the goal here is to work on body scanning technologies where we can scan your body every
single night to detect if you are developing certain health conditions
before you even know.
Crazy.
And that is part of our R&D.
Have you been able to look across the anonymized sleep data and noticed any
interesting trends I'm thinking right before tax day or how do people sleep
before Christmas?
Or is everyone excited?
Anything that you can tell us about
how the global sleep community trends one night or another.
Do people sleep better during winter
when it's cold or summer?
I don't even know.
Have you learned anything from aggregated data,
anonymized of course?
Yeah, we have a look at some of this stuff. Again, as you said, aggregated, anonymized, of course. Yeah, we have a look at some of this stuff.
Again, as you say, the aggregated anonymized.
So obviously we don't know anything about an individual.
But like, for example, I think the city where the town
where they sleep the best is in Northern Australia.
We have seen people sleeping more after COVID,
meaning after COVID the trend generally changed.
Women tend to sleep longer
than men. During the election day, people went to sleep like a couple of hours later.
Oh, wow. And then we can start tight or connected to certain specific events, right? Even sport,
like Super Bowl, all that kind of thing, which is pretty cool. Or you see if there are bad days in New York and there's
no day in New York, all that kind of thing. And it's pretty interesting to see these patterns.
This in terms of, I would say, consumer behavior. Then with AI, our models are reaching a point
where they are smarter than us and they start connecting the dots of things that we don't even medically know.
Meaning, let's say that you join a sleep and let's say you share that you have certain
health conditions.
Our models start understanding that there could be, based on these parameters, you might
have a certain likelihood to develop a certain health condition that could be completely
disconnected from sleep. It could be diabetes. It can go, it could be completely disconnected from sleep.
It could be diabetes, it could be Parkinson.
It could be a neurological disease.
But by correlating all these aggregated amount of data,
hundreds of millions of nights of sleep,
we can predict the future of health.
I gotta ask, how did the Charles LeClair partnership come together?
Was that a two plus year kind of, you know?
Let me start with a cool story and then I'll tell you.
So the day we signed, so I go to Monaco for the day we signed and I'm at the hotel and
we need to go to this place where we sign and then we do the first photo shoot. And so Charles comes to pick me up and he comes in a Ferrari because
he drives a Ferrari. And so I said, look, you're the best Uber driver I ever had by
far.
Yeah. Being driven around Monaco by Charles is a good, good, everybody should do it once in their life.
The interesting thing is Charles bought the pod
two years before the partnership. We didn't even know.
That's always the best.
Yeah. It's always the best. And so when we got connected two years later,
he already knew about us. He loves the product.
And when I teach him our health vision, health is very important for him.
And he's like an AI geek.
You would never expect that.
But he reads everything about AI.
So when we meet, we never talk about Formula One,
because I don't want to bother him talking about work.
And we just talk about AI and health.
And so when we met, we had dinner, it was actually before the F1 GP Miami last year. And it was a Thursday
night. And before the end of the of the of the dinner, we say,
look, we want to work together, we'll figure it out. I'll do
some steps to I mean, I'm sure you have a decent cost and you will make some
steps towards me because I'm a startup and I don't have money.
And within a month the deal was done.
Wow, quick.
That's awesome.
That's amazing.
Well, yeah, I get, you know, I'm not excited if I have a bad night's sleep and I got to
go podcast for four hours, but I can't imagine getting a bad night's sleep and then needing to go race
around it. Uh, you know, hundreds of kilometers an hour. So it makes sense.
Well, congratulations to you and the team. It's, uh, an amazing, uh, milestone.
And, uh, we are, you know, stoked to be partners. Proud to be partners. Yeah.
Of course, you guys are doing a great job.
So I'm a big supporter and thank you for everything.
Thank you so much.
You're the man.
We'll talk to you soon.
Thanks for coming on.
Talk soon.
Bye.
Cheers.
Bye.
Fantastic.
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And we have,
we're going into the Andreessen Horowitz LP meeting. We sent one of our producers out there set up a, uh, a zoom room.
Hopefully it looks really nice and we have an absolutely stacked lineup of
Andreessen Horowitz, general partners and some operating partners.
And we should be able to take you on a whirlwind tour of what's going on in Andreessen world what
they're investing in what trends they're looking at and what deals they've done
because we really have a full full list here finishing out with Mark Andreessen
but it should be a lot of fun Eric will be kicking it off he's been on the show
twice we we broke the news here not really's been on the show twice. We broke the news here, not really. He came
on the show shortly after announcing that he was joining Andreessen Horowitz. And he's
been a close friend of ours for years and it's always fun to talk to him about media
and venture and tech and all of those things. So he'll be kicking it off with us, breaking
down how the transition's been, what it's like working at Andreessen and how he's settling in, has he ripped any huge checks, we're
gonna get to the bottom of it. So we will bring him in in just a minute and in the
meantime why don't I tell you about bezel go to getbezel.com your bezel
concierge is available to source any watch on the planet seriously any watch
Mark Andreessen is known for
wearing what what does what do you wear on Rogan he wore a which one was it an
Omega the botch of James Bond the Speedmaster the recently voted by Nico
Leonard as the most iconic watch in history he had a whole debate with all
of his team the great youtuber about watches if you're interested in following him.
So maybe we'll see what Mark's wearing.
Maybe we'll see what Eric's wearing.
I don't know if we'll get into watches.
We always try and spice it up, but some people want to stay on message, surprisingly.
They want to focus on business.
But we try and throw them off.
Try to throw TJ off with some car talk. He wasn't really having
it, but we'll get to him one of these days. We'll bring them
back for a car segment eventually. Anyway, let's see if
Eric is ready. We do we have a red, green, blue, yellow card.
Let's see yellow. We're, we're almost ready. So let me tell you
about wander.
Find your happy place. Find your happy place.
Book a wander with inspiring views, hotel, great amenities, dreamy beds,
top tier cleaning and 24 seven concierge service. It's a vacation home,
but better folks. The other thing that we could talk about is, uh,
four years ago, the verge wrote of Elon Musk's Tesla
bot announcement. Don't overthink it it's a
joke it's a distraction and an empty promise this was the event where Elon
hired a dancer to come out dressed as a robot and is dancing around and it looked
very silly and Elon is saying lol because now of course the Tesla robot is
dancing and it's clearly very real. But somebody was saying it dances like Brian Johnson.
Oh, really?
Brian Johnson's got that.
That is very specific style.
The interesting thing is that you have to know that like Elon likes humor.
He likes telling jokes and he also knew what was capable.
He could have just white label.
He could have bought all of Boston Dynam dynamics and had a dancing robot on stage,
but he chose to put a human in a suit, probably to troll people.
I imagine like that had to have been,
he had to have known what would happen that people would see that and be like,
that's obviously a human in a suit that looks goofy. And so, you know,
we know that you didn't do a real robot, Elon.
This is a joke.
So he's almost, I feel like he was baiting the media
a couple years ago because what he was proposing,
like a humanoid robot, was not impossible
by the laws of physics.
Elon, of course, lives by the laws of physics.
And he gets to take his victory lap today, of course.
Anyway, what else is interesting going on?
Oh, HBO has rebranded again.
Max is now HBO Max.
And Derek Thompson.
This is so funny.
That was absolutely brutal.
I mean.
It was crazy.
It was crazy that they went from HBO Max to Max.
They rebranded three times as Max.
They have three different logos.
And now they're bringing back HBO Max.
They're maxing.
They're HBO maxing.
Somebody said back then, and I think this was on point,
was that HBO is such a good brand to drop it.
It's crazy, it was always a crazy, crazy move.
But why even call it HBO Max?
Why not just call it HBO?
Yeah, they should just call it HBO Max.
Well, that's what ESPN did recently.
It was in the business section today.
ESPN prices its new service at 29.99 a month.
And it's called?
And it's called ESPN.
What a concept.
The internet is as important as the linear TV
over the air TV.
And so make your OTT option just the same name.
It's genius.
It's so basic.
Derek Thompson was saying,
if Max is paying a marketing company
a million dollar annual retainer for naming strategy,
this is pathetic.
But if Max figured out that it can add and remove HBO
from its streaming title every two years
to create a bunch of free outrage publicity,
I sort of respect the play.
So who knows, is it 3D chess?
Are they playing 4D chess?
Who knows?
Anyway, we got Eric Torenberg from Andreessen Horowitz in the studio.
Welcome to the stream, Eric.
How you doing?
Three Pete, three Pete champion.
Kicking off a record.
I have has eight Andreessen partners ever been on one podcast.
I don't think so.
I said Nixon went to China. Torrenberg goes on TBPN.
Yeah, look what happened. Look what happened. You open the floodgates. It's been fantastic.
How has the transition to Andreessen been? We asked you when you joined, what your plans were,
were you hitting the ground running or you ripping checks on day one? You're a couple weeks in the
gig. I expect some sizable checks to be written. What you got for me?
I feel like TVPN is my, you know, what did you get done this week?
You know, it's my third week, fourth week.
And no, it's been amazing.
I mean, just the scope of the firm, almost 600 employees.
I mean, I don't think people fully appreciate all the amazing things that are happening
here.
I've been spending a lot of time in the different deal meetings of the different funds,
just getting up to speed in how we operate,
meeting the broader team,
starting to build out this media org.
And I feel like, you know,
I talk to employees at OpenAI all the time,
they're like, we've got so many things cooking.
And I feel like there's a little bit of that here too.
Just Ben and Mark are so entrepreneurial
and that leads onto the different vertical fund leads that you're going to hear everyone's going to you're going to chat with today and people hear from.
And yeah, it's just been incredible.
Yeah. Is Andreessen the biggest venture fund ever in history now?
I can't imagine there's a well, I think if you count the original ships that went looking for whales are pruning, they probably had like something like a thousand spread across maybe a few ships.
Yeah, because I mean, there's like this narrative in venture generally,
like Andreessen is really big and no one's ever done it at this scale before.
And like maybe that's weird or different or good or bad or whatever.
But the other way to think about it is like think about the other major financial
institutions that are huge, much bigger,
sometimes an order of magnitude or two orders magnitude bigger. And are they in founder mode or are they like 200 year
old behemoths? And all of a sudden, when you frame it like that, I become very bullish
on the founder mode organization, even though there's obviously all these competitive dynamics
and different strategies. But it is very interesting to see a new financial institution. We got
this from when we were talking to David on the show. Um,
uh, and, uh, it was just very interesting to see that, uh, this David Haber,
uh, that, that he came from Goldman, uh, worked on firm wide strategy there,
told us some of the history of how Goldman had developed all these pods.
I was doing a deep dive on their, uh,
their special situations group and how that spun up and spun out during the O a
crisis. And like, it's such a storied firm,
but I don't think you can get there by maintaining some small size.
You have to become an institution. That's exactly what, what, what, what,
what you've done.
And I think the core insight, you know,
self-worsening the world and the sort of the implication behind that,
that the winners are going to get bigger and bigger.
And there's going to be more of them is
Just perfectly coincided with the firm going super big and you need a lot of capital to to support that strategy and it's it's worked out
Tremendously. Yeah, I mean yesterday we were talking about this weird dynamic where
You would expect the power law to apply to start up outcomes and we've seen this from time to time again
It's very obvious and it also just makes sense based on market dynamics, how, you know, power accrues, et
cetera.
But venture capital funds also follow a power law.
And you would imagine that also the size and scale of the firms might also follow a power
law as there are increasing returns to scale.
So it's been interesting to see kind of that play out.
In many ways, the power law just keeps applying no matter what lens or frame you
take. There's like, there's going to be a big outcome. Uh, anyway, Jordy, anything else
you want to run through? Can you break down LP day? Like what are, what's actually going
on today? What are we zooming into? Uh, break it down. The thing I'm trying to triangulate
is what's, what's the next coinage? You know, what's the next American?
We got to break it here.
That's the trillion dollar question.
Or it'll drop as a big piece either in the Wall Street Journal or on a blog and then
we'll get you the same day to break it down.
Yeah, 100%.
And today and tomorrow is going to be us presenting sort of, you know, one our biggest portfolio companies
or some of our best ones that you'll you'll you'll you have Alex tomorrow coming on the
show of Laniya from Worldcoin.
But then also the different leads of Jen who runs LP Day is coming right after this and
also just our fundraising, I believe over 40 billion dollars to date.
But then also the the heads of the different vertical funds.
40 billion, that's huge.
That's the most deserving.
That's the biggest size going ever, I think.
Maybe beaten out by Stargate, but other than Stargate, you're up there.
All in.
I'll let Jen go deeper on it, but also just David George who leads our growth fund, which
has done phenomenally well. Then go deeper on it, but also just David George who leads our growth fund, which is
done phenomenally well.
Martin on the infrastructure side, Ange who works AI underneath him, David Ulovich on
the American dynamism side.
The LP Day is really just us talking to our LPs about what is the latest in terms of how
we're doing, what we believe, what's happening in the market,
where we think things are going, and it's really giving them kind of an inside purview.
And we're going to release some of the best talks.
But again, of course, you're going to hear from Mark and Jason himself about where we
are and where we're going.
In terms of kind of like advice for founders, what is the role of an LP day in the life
cycle of a startup CEO that becomes a fun driver.
I've seen some times where founders go to these LP days and then a couple of
months later there's a direct investment from one of the LPs.
Is that part of the dynamic or is it really just an opportunity to kind of, uh,
come and share like the story of the business with the wider business and
investment community?
A hundred percent. So we have a very influential LP base jet general,
get more into the specifics and it's,
we're more diversified than your average event firm. So we have, um,
LPs that, um, you know, a lot of firms really focused on, on endowments.
We've got some incredible endowments as well. Um,
but we also have a lot of other partners,
including a big international partners and a lot of companies are looking for, you know, especially some
of these AI companies, you know, Andrew will tell you about sort
of the open source AI companies that he's worked with looking
for the global global partners. So so yeah, we know we have
world coin, etc. So there are a bunch of companies that have
international presence that are growing international presence
and want partnership from from from big players globally. Some
of them are here. And yeah, we're definitely looking to.
I mean, we saw that yesterday with Nvidia, Jensen went to Saudi Arabia,
announced some big deal, the stock popped.
It might be the biggest company in the world is so back.
And Jensen gets invited to these things.
But if you're two years into your entrepreneurial journey,
you might not get a seat at the table.
But an LP day could be an opportunity to meet someone from that community, correct?
Yeah, yeah, no, I understand.
Ben Horowitz was also there as reported,
which is why he's not joining TBPN today,
but Mark will give you the scoop there,
or perhaps Jen, but yeah, no, there's a lot going on
in terms of international partnerships,
and so expect to hear more from us on that front. Yeah. Now, I'm sure the fund is aligned on most of the strategies and kind of topics and hot takes,
but there's probably a lot of internal debate as well around how these future tech trends will
play out, especially the things that haven't been codified or really decided. Are there any topics that you're hearing the partnership kind of go back and
forth on or debate internally, whether it's future of AI or how geopolitics
plays out or anything, a re-industrialization, different strategies.
What is keeping the partnership, you know, excited in, in big partner meetings?
I'll give you a couple. So one is more of a meta topic, which is this idea of, you know, a lot of people say a lot of things about us and how much should we engage?
You know, should we just get some of the work? Just working with founders, just, just, you know, driving great returns for LPs or when do we correct the record? When do we step in versus? Hey, it's not, you know, it's not worth our time. You
know, there's this famous this rap rap beef. Yellow once called
out Eminem or maybe it was MGK MGK called it called Eminem. And
then Eminem was like, Oh, man, now I got to answer this fool.
I'm gonna like build up his profile and in responding to him.
And so it's a little bit of that. You know, there's one
example, Eric newcomer, who like Ben Smith unclear sometimes it's a little bit of that. You know, there's one example, Eric Newcomer, who like Ben Smith, unclear if that's a real
name or not.
If that's a, I don't want to dox him.
Yeah, don't dox him.
Don't dox him here.
Don't dox him.
Yeah, we don't dox here.
You know, Eric Newcomer, who is a friend of mine, he's a good guy, but on his podcast,
he did say or certainly apply that
it was one rumor that our crypto fund has made
a lot of its money betting on speculative things
and then selling off.
And that couldn't be further from the truth.
You know, we are not a meme coin fund.
We hold most positions.
And so that's a straight up.
There was at least like one good company in that fund,
right?
Like am I thinking of Coinbase maybe?
Yeah, like that was the biggest potential one.
Yeah.
The Christix and got into it like the seed in the series A and the series B and the
series C and like basically every single round.
Yeah.
It's that turned out okay.
It's a terrible industry.
Yeah.
That's, that's an example of disinfo.
There's a lot of disinfo out there.
And so we debate how much we should weigh in.
Of course me coming in, I'm like, nah, let's correct the record a little bit.
So that's one on the highest level, how the firm operates.
In terms of where things are going,
I'm excited that you'll have both Martin and Ange today
because in AI, we have a big, and David George,
we have a big debate internally around defensibility.
And is it gonna look like previous platforms where if it's not state, that's the moat
because they can be exported, it's context.
Context is the moat in that you chat with chat with chat GBT and it gets to know you
better and that's what's going to keep you.
Or is it brand?
Is there these things just moving so fast?
We hear all the time about people who are building cursor for X that brand is what keeps
people going even if it's not context or they're just not as defensible as previous players.
The numbers don't lie and the user growth and the revenue growth is just astronomical
and as aggressive as we have been, we talk internally like we should be being more aggressive.
We should have been more aggressive.
There's winners in every category and it doesn't seem like they have dominant market share.
That's a mistake that we've made historically is thinking, oh, OpenAI won this so there's
not going to be another big provider on either the model layer or the apps.
And so it seems like the market is expanding where OpenAI continues to do phenomenally
well and also there's winners across the stack
and room for more.
So where-
How has your mindset shifted being at a platform,
multi-stage fund now where,
historically if you were investing,
maybe you could do personal checks across different stages,
but ultimately you're very early stage focus.
Has it been enjoyable being at such a scaled fund
where you can realize like,
oh, I didn't get into the series A of that company,
but I wanna meet the founder now
and really get to know them
so we have an opportunity to be in the B
or the C or the D, right?
There's really no sort of cap and really get to know them so we have an opportunity to be in the B or the C or the D, right?
There's really no sort of cap on when you guys can get involved and partner with the company. And that's a totally different mindset of being able to think truly long term.
Yeah. And it's a bit of both great because on the angel side or seed side,
it's easier to invest in people who are doing the
same thing or YC is in God knows how many competitors, companies that absolutely hate
each other.
I'm not going to mention names but if you get sense.
Bigger multistage firms just don't have that same luxury so you got to pick and you got
to be right.
And also to your point, if you don't hit something in the A,
you know, we weren't the earliest backer of Andro,
but we're the second biggest backer now
because we just caught it at the right time
and just backed it all the way afterwards.
So even if you don't get in at the Z or the A,
and I was spending a lot of time with the growth team,
there's big opportunity to get involved.
So that's an encouraging sign.
And just once, like, I didn't know what I didn't know, it's kind of like
I used to live in Detroit and then I moved to San Francisco.
And I was like, why do I live in Detroit?
Why did I live in Detroit?
And it's similarly like just being at a place like this, I didn't
I didn't quite realize what I was missing.
That's great. Well, let's kick it over to Jen.
I know we're running over time already.
I'm sure we're going to be bumping up against stuff all all day long.
But thank you so much for hopping on and kicking it off.
KBPN correspondence lining off.
Thank you.
Always good to see you.
Good to see you.
Uh, yeah, keep these soundboard going.
Jen told us that she wants some soundboard.
We'll hit it hard.
She's the operating partner at, uh, Andreessen Horowitz and is
responsible for fundraising.
LP day is obviously a huge day for her.
So we will bring her in in a second.
We'll ask her what's on the minds of the LPs today
and whether or not America is back.
Welcome to the stream, Jen.
How are you doing?
Jen, good to see you.
Hey, hey, good to see you all.
There was a world where we didn't talk
and I just hit the size button over and over
and over and over and over.
And it's just a 10 minute segment of just us.
Yeah, why don't you kick us off with how much money you've raised for Andreessen so we can just
get Jordy an easy layup here. All right, let's do it. By the way, for the audience, I told Jordy
ahead of time, my sole intention is to have all the sound effects the entire time I'm talking here.
Welcome to the stream, Chad. Welcome to the stream. Let's go. Welcome to the stream. Let's go. By the way, by
the way, as KV said a few weeks ago, first time caller,
long time listener. But before we get into the content, I
have to say, I have to do just a quick plug for your true
early fans. You know, I know you had to do the gift guide
for the Super Bowl of pronatalism, right? Yes, yes. You
had to cover tariffs, you had to cover drug pricing.
There's a lot happening. But before we get to the real
topics, it's been a while since you've talked about a Mon
property rankings.
Yes, it has. It has.
We're working on the Amon 600.
Why don't you come on with us? Why don't you join us for the
updated power ranking on properties?
Exactly.
This is the news that moves Silicon Valley for sure. Yeah. Yeah, we can get kind of like a debate going.
Yeah. Anyway, by the way, I've got it. So I've raised over 43
billion in capital and over the course of my career, most of
that was at ease. But I spend all my time across all the funds
across crypto summers, tech winters, everything
in between.
I'm the professional yapper to the capital behind the capital, so the LQs.
So that's where I spend all my time.
What's it like having everybody, or not everybody, but many people under the same roof?
I'm surprised you have even 10 minutes to get away today.
You're probably one of the more popular people in the room.
Well, it's definitely the quiet before the storm right now.
So things are kicking off here shortly, but it's it's awesome.
It is.
There's a lot obviously happening in the world today and also
our LPs are busy people.
Last week was Milken this week with the Saudi Conference.
There's a lot on everyone's minds.
We could talk about what's happening with the endowments.
And, you know, people are looking for some optimism. We're probably the bright spot in
their portfolio right now. Uh, and so as a part of that, it's exciting to gather everyone
here.
Yeah. There's a lot of like hot take and micro themes around, oh, if there's a, if, if Harvard
goes for profit or something, that's going to flood a huge amount of endowment money
out of venture capital or Yale's going to sell their stakes or something like that.
But can you talk about some of the more macro themes if we zoom out the last 10
years or more,
how have trends changed in the LP base of venture capital more broadly?
Yeah, well, the asset class has definitely gotten obviously a lot more
sophisticated, right? It used to be a small cottage industry and the asset class
has just grown alongside of course the outcomes. And so as a result more sophisticated, right? It used to be a small cottage industry and the asset class has just grown alongside, of course, the outcomes. And so as a result of that, the sophistication level
of not only the venture capitalists, but also the expansion of LPs have commensurately changed as a
part of that. So you just don't have endowments or foundations or family offices investing. That's
expanded to sovereigns now, who have a different type
of opportunity cost of capital.
And then you have big pensions now actively playing the game as well.
So CalPERS, for example, very famously missed out on the last 10, 15 years of returns, and
now they're making up for lost time as a part of that.
And so traditional pools that didn't used to invest into the asset class are now wanting
a seat at the table, largely again, again because increasingly the percentage of GDP that's being taken over
by tech has just exploded.
I heard you mentioned to Eric, you know, Nvidia is about to be this monster of a company just
jumped up.
About to be.
It's only a 60, it's only $60 billion gap between.
I checked this morning, so get this. So, Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft independently are bigger than the entire stock market of
most of the G7 countries.
So Germany, UK, France, it is wild.
It's actually bigger.
It's rough out there.
It's bigger than all the G7 countries, except obviously for the US and Japan.
Yeah.
I mean, speaking of the international stuff-
Well, a month ago, people were buying French bonds.
That was a mistake.
No, it's good to see.
Yeah, what is kind of the trade imbalance, the trade flow
in terms of venture capital?
I imagine there's a lot of money flowing internationally
into American venture capital firms,
but VC funds also invest abroad and internationally.
Is there a trade imbalance there?
Is there more money flowing into America than flowing out or is it kind of 50,
50? Like how has that evolved?
Yeah. So our, I will only speak for a 16 Z.
So eight 16 Z is still 90% plus in North America.
That being said, you know,
our portfolio companies that have spent a lot of time abroad and focus on a lot of distribution as a part of that. So I heard your Saudi correspondent yesterday mention that folks
in the defense in Saudi, all of a sudden are like, we want Anderil, we want Ceronik, we want all
these early stage technologies. And guess what? Every country wants to modernize their government.
They want Silicon Valley tech on speed dial. And so there's a massive interest in all areas, especially in our American dynamism practice, for new technologies, and they want
to re-platform to the new AI age. And so we actually, at A16Z, have brought over almost
close to 300 plus companies around the world, spending a lot of time in Saudi and the broader
GCC. And particularly, yeah, it's funny. I was watching the Qatari motorcade
welcome Trump earlier today,
and they went so hard on it.
But it's that kind of classic thing
where they're gonna go to technology first and foremost.
And so as a part of that,
that is the leading driver
of wherever trade actually ultimately goes to.
What is the takeaway from Saudi Arabia
and what's going on with KSA and MBS?
How are you thinking about Saudi Arabia
more broadly these days?
Yeah, so we spent a lot of time there,
largely again, to help our portfolio companies
with expansion and MBS is pretty phenomenal.
Everyone's talking yesterday a lot about Trump
and how the vibe has shifted, right?
The America's so back, right?
And I feel like that deserved a gong.
Jordi, like, it's back.
It's back.
America's back.
I was caught sleeping.
I was caught sleeping.
You were sleeping at the wheel.
You gotta be on top of it.
I got more here.
I'll stay, I'll keep the soundboard up
and you just keep going.
Good.
But MBS is like an amazing leader, right?
Everyone's talking about Trump, but I think the other part of this is like in the eight
years since Trump's first visit, MBS was basically able to get every tech leader in the world
at that conference, right?
He's absolutely crash.
And the whole country, by the way, his people love him.
If you go to the country and you see people's cell phones,
they have MBS's photo as their background on their phone.
And then if you WhatsApp with people,
their profile picture is MBS,
which makes it obviously very confusing.
But when was the last time a world leader
was as beloved as he has been?
And that's largely again, because he's very conscious
of the fact that the future needs to be tech first
he's got 70% of the population under 35 and
That population is watching Netflix and YouTube and so he's very conscious of the fact that he needs to modernize his country as a part
Of that and he's retooling all the capital away from oil into tech as a part of that very cool
Well last question then we got to move on. Yeah, what are people getting?
You are one of the co-creators of a mega fund.
What do people get wrong in the sort of mega fund debate?
Because oftentimes the people that are debating
have sub-9 figures of AOM.
And I just think it's like, unless you're playing,
unless you're in the arena. The big ones scare me. The big ones scare them. And, you know, I just think it's like, unless you're playing, unless you're in the arena.
The big ones scare me.
The big ones scare them. But yeah, what are people getting wrong about the the Mega Fund debate today?
Yeah, it's a totally different game. And obviously, again, I'll only speak for ourselves.
What we're playing is very different than, you know, obviously seed funds and small emerging makers are playing. So it's very, very difficult to paint the broad paintbrush across every type of venture
capital firm.
But I think the premise of it still holds true.
So I heard Eric mentioned this earlier, Mark pioneered the term software's eating the world.
And the reality is software didn't just eat it, it door dashed it, it devoured it, it
asked for seconds, right?
And so everyone's obviously now playing catch up
as a part of it relative to this massive opportunity,
but also more importantly, firms haven't scaled,
most VC firms haven't scaled to reflect that.
And so from a capital standpoint,
not only have we scaled the capital,
but we've also scaled the firm as a part of it.
So if you look at every single team at A16Z,
it's actually no bigger than the original incarnation
of A16Z.
So the deal teams are actually pretty small.
They're no bigger than four to six people.
So every vertical that you'll talk to today
has a deal team focus that is much more oriented around
not only that vertical, but also making sure
that the fidelity of conversation that you have is super high.
Because otherwise, as you've scaled the firm, if you have too many people around a table,
it ends up being like a presentation, right?
And so when we think about the firm, that's the big part that we focus on.
Have we actually not only made sure we've scaled the capital to reflect the market opportunity,
but also have we also scaled the firm to reflect how we actually wanna run the organization
and making sure we're actually covering each vertical
with that domain level expertise.
That's amazing.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, I mean, my contribution to the Mega Fund debate
is if you ask a series C or D founder,
hey, are you happy that there's potentially hundreds
of millions or billions of dollars available to you to raise in the private markets?
Are they going to be like, no, I'd rather do a small cap IPO and spend years dragging
it out in the public markets before it?
In the SEC, in my, in every financial statement.
Anyways, I think that should end the debate by itself.
No, no, no, no, yeah.
Jen, it's fantastic having you on.
The crowd loved it too, I've got to say. The crowd loved it too. I gotta say.
Come back, come back on again soon.
This was great.
We'll do that.
We'll do the Amman power ranking together.
Have a great event.
Yeah. It's a, it's funny.
Underrated narrative is that they are this mega fund,
but I was looking at who invested in Josh Browder's new fund,
$30 million.
It's like four injuries and partners. Yeah. It's like you for Andreessen partners
Yeah, it's like Mark Chris like all the guys and he raised money from Andreessen for do not pay as well
So there's been this like really yeah, like Josh have a lot of exposure Josh's a 16 D round
I think it was a series a wasn't it like 4% dilution round. Yeah, it was really low
They clearly like working with him. He backed him on the fund. Yeah, and he's taken such a contrarian approach
to building the company, seven full-time employees.
Yep, dividends.
He was like the first company to be like,
I'm profitable, you remember this?
He's a master of media.
He's always on TV.
I'm like, how'd you do that?
Anyway, our next guest is here.
Runs in the family.
Welcome to the stream, how are you doing?
Great. Looking fantastic.
What's happening, What's happening?
My name is Purnas Anjane. Friends all call me Anj. You should feel free to as well.
Anj, fantastic. Well, great to meet you. I would love to kick it off with a little bit of overview
of what you're investing in today, what you're excited to be presenting at LP Day. And then I
have a bunch of questions on open source AI and the specific trends that are going on in the market right now.
Sure, I have the fun job of spending the $40 billion
that Jen raises for us.
Fantastic.
So I'm a general partner in AI infrastructure practice,
which is basically all the computing systems
that people need and rely on to build great products
and services on top.
And I basically spend most of my time as a glorified customer support and
compute intern for scientists building foundation model companies, training
models, all the stuff that happens, you know, at the intersection of, of, of
research, and then actually trying to figure out how to get that research out
into the real world.
Okay.
So I started at the firm two years ago, almost to the day.
And I came to the firm after a couple of years as a founder and then I found a company called
Ubiquiti 6, which we then sold to Discord.
And I ran the platform there for a few years during the era where we went from basically being a chat app for
gamers to, which was about 70 million monthly active users to about 200 million monthly
actives basically in six months because COVID happened.
And the homework assignment was, Anj, go build a developer platform business for us. And
it was around that time that I got a call from some friends who were running research
at OpenAI who said, hey, Andri, we've just trained this model called GPD3.
And we think we're onto this thing called scaling laws, where if we can combine compute
data and algorithms in the right combination, we just might have a shot at creating God.
Classic.
Okay. How much do you need to get started?
They're like, sorry, are the audience, the live audience here got a little
excited, excited about God in the box?
Um, well, you know, as a, having just gone through the journey as a founder,
uh, I was like, okay, how much do you think that's going to cost us?
I mean, God, God should be pretty, pretty cheap in these times where religion seems to have left the room. Um, and you're like, yeah, it, you think that's going to cost us? I mean, God should be pretty cheap in these times where religion seems to have left the
room.
And they're like, yeah, we think we can get by with five.
And I said, okay, five million shouldn't be a problem.
We can probably scrap that together next week.
And this was Dario, who is a longtime friend and now founder and CEO of Anthropic said,
no, I don't think you realize I meant 500 million.
I said, okay, that's going to take a little bit longer.
So I was one of the early angels into anthropic at the time that gave me sort of my crash
course to scaling laws for neural language models, right?
The idea being that you could get these language models to predict the next word in a sequence.
And if you kept scaling up both the amount of compute you train these things on as well as the data set,
then you'd be able to predictably improve
the performance of these models.
I'd call that the pre-training era.
What I spent a lot of my time,
and so for the better part of the last three, four years,
I've basically helped teams like Anthropic.
I usually get a call from them before there's a company
when they're scientists who have this sort of moment
where they realize they're scientists who have this moment where they realize they've unlocked
something repeatable, where you can very predictably improve the performance of these models on
some axes.
They usually give me a call and they say, we've had the Enlightenment moment.
We have no idea how to commercialize that and turn that into a business.
And so I've worked with teams like Mistral,
which is working on open source models.
Last year, I led a, the first round
into a company called Black Forest Labs,
which were the creators of stable diffusion.
It was the open source image model family
that I think sort of introduced the world to the idea
that open source language and image models
can be pretty powerful.
And so that's what I spend most of my days doing,
helping folks get their clusters set up to train models
to then build products on top.
And I think at this LP day,
there's sort of two big things I'm getting asked about.
The first is, okay, Anj,
two years ago it was all about pre-trained models, like the
pre-training era, AI scaling laws.
What's going on now?
Why is everybody talking about post-training?
So that's one big question.
And then the second is, hey, what is going on with Sovereign?
Why are countries announcing $100 billion into data centers. And why are they all talking about wanting their own AI champion company, whether it's
Mistral in Europe or whether it's Alam in Saudi.
And so I would say sovereign AI, which is really the idea that you want to control your
own AI, you want to control what it can and can't do.
And the idea that progress in AI is not coming necessarily from pre-training.
It's coming from from post-training are the two big themes for this year for me.
Yeah. On the on the open source question, are you are you thinking about Mistral and Black Forest
Labs as kind of like the red hat Linux model where they will be almost like implementers in
the enterprise? Or is there a real world where you're underwriting against total and complete victory of the open source of the open source paradigm at the foundation model layer and then related to the international topic you uniquely bullish on Mr. All because it's an international company as opposed to an American company,
because it has this,
this specific advantage of being in Europe and that driving extra value for the
company.
Oh, I know. I think so. Of course, you know, Europe is 400 million consumers.
So just mass economy that's decided to gear up to
build the basically the single largest infrastructure
build out I think we've seen in the continent in like 60 years.
They just passed an $800 billion defense bill they're calling Rearm Europe.
And a huge portion of that is flowing to AI and computing teams for sure.
So we can talk about that.
But that wasn't when I led the series A into Mistral two years ago, $200 million round.
Europe was, I did not expect that we'd be in the middle of this massive sovereign AI
buildout.
I mean, the bet was very simple, is that if you look at the history of computing infrastructure,
there's basically two frontiers.
You've got the capabilities frontier, and then you've got the efficiency frontier.
So the capabilities frontier is usually dominated by closed source.
If you look at databases and storage and networking and so on, you usually have a company like
Cisco and so on that pioneers some new capability.
And then, or actually in the case of Linux, like you said, you had Microsoft show up and
build Windows, closed source.
And that usually opens up the aperture for consumers, because consumers are often the
first to flock to new use cases.
The enterprise cares about something slightly different.
They care about cheaper, faster, more control.
And that's usually dominated by open source.
So two years ago, when I was running the platform or the Discord, we got early access to GPT-4.
And the OpenAI guy said, hey, we've got this new model.
It's going to come out in six months.
Can you guys just figure out what it's good for?
And we ran an experiment.
We ran a bunch of tasks through it.
And it was extraordinary on a couple of them.
And we said, OK, great.
Let's go to production.
Well, it turns out, when you're working with sensitive data,
in our case, this was a social platform.
So GDPR, CCP, all of the compliance stuff,
really critical that our data doesn't leave our servers,
right, you want control over where the weights are running
and what the weights can and can't do.
And so we looked around for an open source alternative
to GPT-4 and we just couldn't find one.
And that's when I realized, okay, for every dollar
that you're seeing in enterprise or
large company prototyping or proof of concept revenue, there's like 10 more waiting for
the open source alternative.
And really, there was no alternative until later that summer when Llama showed up.
Llama was the first time there was a comparable open source alternative for two close source models. And
well the creators of llama left and started Mistral. So that that may be
investment. That's great. Can you take me through the deal for Sesame AI? Obviously they
went viral, but the founder had had a previous Andreessen backed company, I think in Oculus.
How did that come together and how is the company developing?
And even your first interaction with the product
that blew you away.
Because in many ways, their initial launch
and the website, and I think you guys had already
completed the investment well before that,
but so many people, that moment was truly eye-opening for them
where it was like, okay, I could imagine this feels
like talking to a friend.
It felt really real.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah, Sesame's a fun story
because we started that company two years ago
at a time when everybody in this space was like,
look, this idea that we're gonna have a new computing
interface was completely seen as like a crazy idea.
There's two parts of this, Asami.
One is the hardware and we're building AI glasses
over there. And the second one is the hardware, and we're building AI glasses over there.
And the second part is the actual companion,
which is the voice interface
you guys have probably tried out, the voice AI, right?
And when you put those together,
the idea is that it's a system that has so much context
about everything you're doing, about your life,
that it becomes the primary interface to computing.
And, I mean, two years ago, about your life, that it becomes the primary interface to computing.
And two years ago, I would say a lot of people had seen and watched like Her, the movie,
right?
But when I'd sit down and I'd describe to people that, hey, what you really need is
this beautiful marriage of hardware and software.
And that's what's going to be the primary interface after smartphones.
People would just look at you like you're crazy.
And so I was like, okay, there's only two people I know who are crazy enough to believe
this.
One was Brendan, who had been an angel investor in my last company, Ubiquity.
Brendan was the CEO of Oculus.
A few people on earth who had built a hardware startup and sold it for billions of dollars.
I think Oculus sold in total for north of two billion.
And Ankit, who was co-founder and CTO of Ubiquiti 6, which was my last company.
And Ankit was running the voice, part of the voice, SDK and infra at Discord.
But 60% of all Discord voice minutes,
daily minutes are spent in voice channels.
Wow. Wow.
That's when I realized, people don't realize it,
but for many, many, many consumers,
voice is actually a much more frequent interaction modality
than like looking at a screen.
Yeah.
And so the idea was if we can combine those two, we might have a shot at building whatever comes
next after smartphones. So that was the idea. But the key insight, I guess, or bet was that
it has to feel realistic. Like Siri just doesn't work. You just nope out completely when you try
to talk to Siri and you're like, okay, I'm talking to a robot. But instead, if we could get the companion to cross the uncanny valley, if we could get
you to think about talking to Sesame, and we have two companions right now, one is Maya,
the other is Miles, if we could get you to think about using and talking to Maya and
Miles as companions, not as robots, then that's when you'd really start using it
in your daily life as an interface constantly
to all the services you use.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, totally.
How do you, in the context of Sesame,
what's been the thinking,
because obviously it sounds like you've been on the board
since day one or, you know, I don't know the exact mechanics,
but how has the company thought
and how
do you think broadly across the portfolio around this balance between being heads
down building and needing to capture the attention of the tech community, the
broader potential user base? Because I feel like it's this interesting dynamic right now where there's so much to build.
Like in some ways, companies should just be heads down
and almost be silent, right?
And this is like the SSI approach is to basically say
like we're not, you know, maybe gonna release anything
that we consider less than, you know,
a really significant evolution.
But Sesame kind of like popped its head up and said,
hey, look at us look look what we're doing
but then now it seems like you know, it's taking more of the approach of
You know being willing to fly under the radar for you know, call it the next who knows how many months?
I'm happy to report that
It it doesn't get any easier the more money you raise I found like like on day one, we hadn't raised any money, right?
So we're just three guys sitting in a room and talking about ideas.
And I would say the heuristic for most people who come from the software era is like, hey,
ship fast, ship early, ship something you're embarrassed about, right?
And then iterate.
And AI is a little bit different. Frontier AI is a little bit different because you often need a critical, you need to have a
capability threshold that is sufficiently transformative enough that
people will put up with all the tons and tons of like friction that there still
is to use AI today, right? So you guys may have noticed, but when you go to the Sesame site and interact with the
demo, right?
It's quite fast today.
One of the things we really, the team like spent a ton of time honing was the latency
of voice responses.
We had to make it feel like it was sub 200 milliseconds.
It felt like you're having a conversation, right?
Two years ago, it wasn't there.
It was excruciatingly slow.
And we knew that nobody,
people would miss the underlying personality of the model
if we hadn't solved the systems problem of latency.
And I find it comes down to this really delicate,
the overarching problem of like, hey, when do we ship?
When do we actually put this out in the world
versus being heads down?
It comes down to this constant tussle between taste, which is who at the company has such
a strong opinion that the product experience is good enough and the ruthless sort of machine
learning approach of running evals, right?
The idea that you build a model, you test it in an environment, you benchmark it, and
you see how it does on that eval.
And if it hasn't improved that evaluation score, you keep going.
And basically, you've got to have...
I've lost count of the number of hours we've spent debating that tension.
And it's extremely uncomfortable for traditional software teams to do the eval-driven approach
because the list of features you can kind of deterministically write out and say, check,
check, check, these are the things we need to ship, build.
Once you've got the V0, the MVP, we ship.
That's not how AI works.
AI research and post-training is eval-driven, which is you have an intuition for what you need to do to improve
the model, but you don't actually know until you run it through an empirical test. And so the answer
comes down to how good are your evals? And so if I was to boil down what works for the best teams,
they have great product taste, but they also have great taste in evals, which is what is the right
evaluation metric to build for um, for your team.
And then you basically stay heads down until, until you've,
you've unlocked both of those. Does that make sense? Yeah. Yeah. Fantastic.
Well, thank you so much for joining. Uh, good luck with the rest of LP day.
Yeah. Yeah. We'd love to have you back and talk anytime.
You know where to find me. Fantastic. Bye. Cheers. Cheers. Uh, next up we have Martin Casado, general partner.
He's on the board of cursor world labs, dbt labs, Kong, five Tran,
ideogram ambient AI. This guy's a lot of boards. Brain trust, co-active Netlify.
Um, uh, he leads the firm's $1.25 billion infrastructure practice and has built
quite the AI portfolio.
So we're excited to have Martin on the show, uh,
discuss open source AI, his views there, what's cursor doing, uh,
welcome to the stream Martin. So good to have you here. How are you doing?
Again.
The live audience is really just... they couldn't hold that.
They're out of control.
Anyway, thanks so much.
Thank you so much for joining us.
I'd love to know your take. Let's just jump right into it
since we're running a little bit behind.
Cursor, obviously it's becoming this
front end, almost aggregation play.
It's the front end to AI coding.
It's potentially model agnostic.
What does that mean? What have you learned from that? aggregation play is the front end to AI coding. It's potentially model agnostic.
What does that mean? What have you learned from the cursor journey around how
value accrues across application layer versus foundation model layer?
Yeah. So, um, I mean, I think that there's two things, you know, that, that led up
to this cursor moment. And one of them is one of the first use cases for AI
was code, right?
We had Microsoft Copilot, and a lot of people used it.
But like, and so there's a bunch of users,
and their behavior was trained by Microsoft.
But the models weren't quite good yet.
And in the last year, we had this RL movement.
And as a result, the models got way, way better.
And then, of course, it just happened
to have this kind of magic timing, where
it did something very similar to what ColdPilot looked like,
but used these greater models.
And now that they've kind of caught the wave,
they're able to not only serve these amazing models, but like for every
magic experience you see the, the, the users have, they've starting to like have their
own smaller models.
And so it's just, you know, very unique point in time, very unique position.
And then of course, a very unique technology wave behind it.
Going back to the foundation model layer, can you talk about how you're thinking around
open source in the foundation model layer, can you talk about how you're thinking around open source
in the foundation model wars has evolved?
I remember you and John Ludig were talking about it last year.
Since then, we've had Lama 4, which kind of fell backwards,
but then DeepSeq was a huge moment.
And we just had a guest on the show yesterday
who was talking about the importance of
offering the world open source foundation models that they can build on.
Because if we don't do it, our near peer adversaries might.
How is your thinking evolved, if at all?
And where are you seeing the most opportunity in the foundation model wars?
So it's not clear to me that the model space is significantly different than the software space when it comes to open source.
So in the software space, we've got 20 years of history of this.
The close solutions tend to aggregate the value first and the quickest.
And the reason is, is you kind of need to make money to change people's behavior, right?
And this is like, you need to have Unix before you have Linux, and you need to have Oracle
before you have MySQL, et cetera.
And the same thing seems to me to be playing out in this AI space, which of course, OpenAI
was first, and they've aggregated a ton of value, and Anthropic for code.
And then even if you look at the non-language models like image, mid-journey was first and
that's closed in 11 labs.
And so it seems to me like the first movers will close source and they'll continue to
close source and they'll aggregate a lot of value.
But then for every first mover, there's always the opportunity to enable the masses, right?
Like everybody else.
And there's always a lot of value there, right?
And this is kind of where these open source models come in.
And what's amazing and everybody should realize is, right? And this is kind of where these open source models come in. And what's amazing, and everybody should realize,
is just because DeepSeek is out there
hasn't changed the calculus or the growth
of these other companies, right?
It's been fully accretive.
And so I think the only sin anybody
can make in AI from an investor standpoint
is zero-sum thinking, because the reality is
every time something new gets introduced,
it's not at the expense of something else.
It finds new territory to gain value in.
And open source is no different.
So it's a very important part of an ecosystem.
It's been part of the software ecosystem for a very long time.
It'll continue to be.
I do think that US should have open source models.
And I think it's very important for continued US presence and technology in that conversation. But it feels very healthy to me, both the dynamic with existing closed companies and
then new companies that can be built on the open source.
Yeah. Are you a fan of aggregation theory or this idea of like the front door to artificial
intelligence cursor is kind of that for coding. And we're seeing that in other applications
that are popping up where the underlying model
might not even matter.
And where I'm going with this is that there's one world
where another country wants their own foundation model
so they know that the weights are trained
in a way that they want aligned with their views
on speech, for example.
But there's another world where the individual country
should be thinking about how do we create
the dominant consumer app
that people actually use?
Because even if we have the model,
if nobody's using it,
because they're just opening up a certain URL
and they go to another country's model,
what do you think of them there?
I mean, I think the story of AI has been,
the markets are much larger
and they're growing much faster than anybody had expected.
And that's just resulted in actual fragmentation.
So everybody had these theories early on.
If you remember, Oh, there'll only be one model.
Oh, the models are not defensible.
Oh, the apps are just GPT wrappers.
Oh, like the apps are going to take all the value and you know what?
They're all wrong.
Like everybody's been wrong.
Like the only people that have been right are like, you know what?
These things are massive.
I mean, let's just take OpenAI, which is one of the most remarkable companies and maybe forever
intact, right?
But they were the first to image.
Remember that with Dali?
Yeah, totally.
Yeah, they were the first to code with Copilot.
They were the weights.
They lost that.
They were the first to video.
And Sora was amazing and remarkable,
but they're not the leaders in video.
And yet, they're still the dominant AI company on language.
So what are the takeaways you can take from that?
In my view, every one of these is a massive, massive market
that's too big for one company.
And so OpenAI has done a great job focusing on chat GPT.
And you could have the same discussion
between the model and the app layer.
And so you're talking about aggregation theory.
So there's two views of the world.
One view of the world is like, everything consolidates
into one company and there's another view,
which is there's like a model per thing that's a behavior.
I'm definitely in the second one.
And I just, you know, even though we're relatively early,
we do have four years of experience with this.
And the story has just been disaggregation.
It really has.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
How are you, how do you think about revenue quality in the enterprise and environment when the Fortune
500 sort of has a mandate to just buy AI?
Some things they're going to...
That's a great question.
Okay, so there's a lot to this question and I'll try to be as succinct as possible.
So the first most important thing is AI today is mostly a prosumer and consumer movement.
So even though the people are working in the enterprise, it's an individual use and individual
behavior and it's not like a big budget buying thing.
And so I would say the vast majority of the companies we work with, it's this more kind
of bottoms up prosumer thing.
And so that's clearly real individual demand.
This happens in all super cycles.
Like it was the same thing for the internet, right?
It was the same thing for PCs.
It was the same thing for like the iPhone, like the true smartphone, like post Blackberry.
It was like individuals.
And so, you know, from that standpoint, like I think we're very, very comfortable.
This is a real secular movement because it is individuals that are driving the behavior.
There's a second point to all of this, which is in the early internet days, you had all
sorts of funny accounting because it was quite frankly because people just didn't know how
to do it.
But at the time, people weren't even paying.
So they would just kind of say everything.
And of course, in these early super cycles, you have all of that.
They don't know the difference between GMV and take rate.
And run rate is not a gap thing.
And so they kind of have deals.
There's clearly all these funny numbers out there.
And that's just an artifact of massive, massive growth
and success.
And we'll rationalize it as an industry.
But for sure, that's going on.
But it's less about enterprise budget moving.
And it's much more about, I've got this consumer phenomenon.
I have no idea how to really do the accounting.
And so it just requires, from our standpoint,
just to go through things and really normalize it.
Yeah.
That's great.
It makes sense.
I mean, we could talk for another hour about this.
We'd love to have you back on the show.
This is fantastic.
But thank you so much for even taking the time
that you did.
Yeah, I wish we had more time. This was great. No, love it. Thanks so much. It was a real pleasure. Cheers. We'll talk to you soon. Have show. This is fantastic. But thank you so much for even taking the time that you did. Yeah, I wish we had more time.
This was great.
No, love it.
Thanks so much.
It was a real pleasure.
Cheers.
Have fun.
Cheers.
Bye.
Yeah, we didn't even get to Fei Fei Li in World Labs,
the deal that he led there.
I've never heard.
Spatial intelligence.
I've never heard Martin, you know, I've seen his posts.
Yeah, of course.
I've never heard him talk.
No.
Potentially a hall of fame.
Hall of fame, Yapper.
Can we get a sound board for that?
Hall of fame, Yapper for Martinapper. Can we get a sound board for that? Hall of fame, Yapper for Martin.
Okay, we got David George, Leaves the Growth Fund,
coming in next.
I'm gonna want the Ashton Hall sound effect.
I'm gonna want lots of sound effects for this one.
We're getting too serious right now.
We gotta take it down a notch.
Everyone thinks, oh, they managed 40 billion.
You gotta be serious.
You gotta be on Talking Points.
No way.
Yeah, what's that?
We have a fully executed lease on our new studio? Oh, let's hear it for us
You know why that's exciting because we're gonna be what we're gonna be able to walk
For four hours sitting for four hours is
Brian Johnson is sitting is shaking his fist. Yes, thank goodness. Sitting is very bad.
Don't they compare it to smoking cigarettes
in terms of the effects on the body?
It's terrible for you.
It's terrible for you.
And we're gonna be walking around.
Hitting the biggest gong you've ever seen
that we've yet to reveal on the show.
We'll be whacking that thing.
You're gonna be hype-mogging me,
but I had an idea we can put a measuring tape up on the wall
so that I can periodically walk over and prove that
yeah yeah anyway uh we got David George in the studio welcome to the stream David how you doing
we're trying to keep the energy up it's a big day I love it great to see you thanks for coming
on the show yeah thanks for coming I love. I would love for you to break down
how the growth fund actually works.
And Dresden's known for these specialized funds,
but then I know that the growth fund cuts across all of them
and you see deals all over the place.
Do I have that even roughly correct?
How do you think about supporting the companies
in the portfolio that maybe get picked up
at the earlier stage?
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, look, fun to be on here with you guys. Big, big fan.
Thanks. Yeah, I mean, you have it right. So we have seven different funds. I think if
you talk to some of our early stage folks, they're very domain focused. And
that means, you know, they know the products, they know the markets, they know
the technologies at a very deep level. And then the growth fund, where we sit, is kind of across all of those.
So ideally, the way it works is we can work hand in hand with them and take kind of the
best of the best ideas from each of those sectors and then invest stage specific at
the growth fund.
And so what we do, probably half our effort in dollars, historically, have been follow-ons,
supporting existing portfolio companies.
And that's worked great.
There's something we talk about all the time,
which is GameFilm.
And there's no better way to have GameFilm
than to have my partner having done the Series A and Databricks.
And then we get to see it all along.
With that comes access, relationships with the founders,
all that stuff helps.
But then the other half of what we do
is invest in net new companies that were not previously
investments in A16Z for whatever reason.
And so we started this in 2019.
I had a big list when I joined.
I'm like, all right, I know the six existing portfolio companies that I want to go try
and create a new deal in.
And then I knew a bunch of the ones that I wanted to invest in outside the portfolio.
And we've been fortunate to have some success.
We've invested in outside companies like Roblox and Figma and SpaceX and Waymo.
And then obviously a lot of success doubling and tripling
and quadrupling down with existing companies.
Well, it's a great time to tell everyone
that TBPN is sponsored by Figma.
So thank you for the shout out.
This is one of the other moment,
put some dollars in your pocket, put some dollars in our pocket.
Yeah, that was what, didn't you do that deal
in like April of 2020 or got announced back then?
That was, that was a crazy moment in history. Congratulations. or got announced back then that was that was a crazy
It's great moment in history. I got a lot of stories about that one man, but we
So we had been courting. I remember I met Peter Levine
when I was like right at the tail end of figuring out whether I was gonna join and and
He's like we need a growth fund. I'm like, okay, like I was gonna tell you that
And he's like, you know,
like, we got to invest in this company, Figma, like, it's crazy that we're not investors
in this thing. Like, it really pisses me off. All right, well, we can go fix that. And so,
you know, I joined and we courted Dylan for like, you know, a year, year and a half. And
then, you know, COVID hits, we all think the world is going to melt. We've been trying
to convince Dylan to do an investment with us.
And like the world's falling apart.
And he calls us and he's like, I'll do a deal now.
And I'm like, oh, God, go.
Part of the deal.
Dylan Field.
Legend.
Absolute dog.
This is brutal.
Put you on the spot.
I know it was, but it was great.
Obviously, we're thrilled to be his partners.
That one was funny because we
You know like if you take a traditional growth investing lens and look at a company like figma at that stage
You know you could look at a spreadsheet and look at market reports on mark
Good size it and you know what what you'd see is like well
There's not that many designers and sure the number of designers is growing, but how compelling is that gonna be?
And you know if we didn't have have depth of product and technology and market insights we would
have missed the obvious thing which is like it's not just a design tool, it's a tool for
designers plus front-end engineers and that functionality is all merging together and
the proportion of designers is massively growing relative to engineers.
And there's even gonna be business uses.
And so, Figma is an awesome one.
It's a great example of a company where
traditional lens would probably miss it
for what it could be.
But it's one of these things we call model busters.
It's like you do a little spreadsheet
model, and it show these numbers. And it like it turns
out like, it's all wrong, like the market size. And it could
just totally exceed it. So
can you talk about love when it breaks the model busters, the
aperture of growth equity deals. Obviously, the traditional
growth round
is post-product market fit.
Maybe you're up in the 50 million plus raised range,
but we're seeing these crazy deals get done
with pre-revenue, pre-product AI companies
raising hundreds of millions of dollars.
Are you putting that in the growth bucket
and are you changing the way your team thinks about deals to look at to set yourself up for looking at those bigger but earlier stage deals or are you trying to think about how can we fit those into a venture portfolio or venture fund?
Yeah, let me just talk to you about like the buckets of stuff we do.
Please.
And so, you know, there's a big bucket of stuff that we do, which is, you know, traditional high flying growth equity companies.
And so a bunch of the companies that I listed would fit that, you know, Databricks, Roblox.
And those are like mature businesses, like they have, you can do a DCF on them.
You can do market multiples, like you can do real, real work.
But yeah.
Yeah. So that's one bucket. and I'll talk more about those. But
I would say my observation from you know, doing growth
investing for the last 15 years or so is, you know, there's a
bunch of instances of those that like, end up being way bigger
and better businesses than anybody would have thought.
Yeah. And that shouldn't be surprising. Because if you just
look at like the composition of the biggest and most important companies in the world, they're all tech thought. And that shouldn't be surprising, because if you just look at the composition
of the biggest and most important companies
in the world, they're all tech companies.
And their market caps have sort of extended
beyond anyone's idea of what they could be,
both because they exceeded market size estimates,
and also they came up with new products.
And so there's both flavors of those
when we talk about model busters.
But that's one class of things that we're doing.
In the AI world, there's another class of things
that we're doing, which is it slaps you in the face
that it's working.
Like, these are the fastest growing companies
that we've ever seen.
Like, we're investors in a bunch of the fastest growing
companies of the previous generation,
like Wiz and Slack and Deal.
And if you put them on a chart with companies like, you know,
Purser or 11 Labs or XAI, like, they
get to that 100 million stage way, way, way faster
than that previous generation of company.
So that's a bucket.
And there's not like hundreds of those yet,
but I think there will be hundreds of those as the AI
applications come
Because the groundwork is being laid for that. Um, then you know, you asked about the sort of
Kind of you know earlier stage kind of companies that raise a lot of dough. Yeah, we do do those
But you know, we keep an extraordinarily high bar. So, you know, we're investors in
You know companies like SSI
That are working on, you know, really exciting new things with the best talent in the world We're investors in companies like SSI
that are working on really exciting new things with the best talent in the world.
That was part of our thesis in investing in character AI
is backing Noam Shazir.
And you kind of squint and say, okay,
this is a person that we can back
and we know that he's gonna create something special.
So those are the chances for it.
He's on the paper.
It's a founder bet, but you can really go risk on.
Yeah.
I have a question for you around kind of modeling
market sizing in this AI era.
Everybody likes to say there's an opportunity
for software to not just, to basically get paid
for end work.
So instead of creating, let's say software for accountants,
you can create software
that does accounting services, right? And the TAM expansion there of, you know, these end markets
for, you know, that look more maybe more like payroll spend, or services spend, it starts to
get really exciting because they go from, you know, hey, this is a hundred billion dollar market to
this is, you know, could something could be a multi trillion dollar market around labor.
The question that I've been personally kind of wrestling with is if you if software solutions
are delivering services, maybe there's a short period where you can capture, you know, a huge
amount of that, you know, spend, but over time that those opportunities,
there will be other software providers that are, you know,
competing to do that services work
and won't that have like some type of deflationary effect
and overall maybe not, maybe markets aren't getting smaller,
but maybe prices can't stay as high as they are
in a sort of human-led service
market.
So what are your high level, how are you
thinking about market sizing given?
And I don't expect you to have a perfect answer here,
because again, a lot of these companies
are model breakers, as you described.
The model busters, man.
The busters.
The busters.
People.
People. Well, model busters, man. Model busters. The busters. Beautiful. So yeah, I love this topic, because it's the fun one
that everyone is debating right now, is like, well, we
can go capture labor.
And without a super deeply developed and astute strategy,
that's just not going to happen.
And so if you look at
like some of the biggest technology breakthroughs of all time, the way that those get priced isn't
the replacement of what they're delivering. Yeah. Competitive forces come in and actually like
there's return on capital. There's like, you know, different competitive positioning and often that
gets competed away. So my rule of thumb is when you have these major technology
waves, just assume that 90% plus of the surplus
is going to be on the consumer or customer side.
And that's great, because you can still, if they work,
when they work, you can still create incredible businesses
out of it.
So if you take the previous wave of technology change,
you know, what would you or I or probably any average American person pay for an iPhone?
Like a lot more than a thousand dollars. Yeah, like a hundred thousand dollars. A hundred K. Like, you know, like we've captured like 90% of the surplus and it still turns out
that Apple has an amazing business on the back of it. Yeah. So, you know, captured like 90% of the surplus and it still turns out that Apple has an amazing business
on the back of it.
Yeah, interesting.
So, you know, technology can be kind of magical in that way.
In the previous cycle, if you just take iPhone
and cloud computing, those things together created
like 10 trillion of new market cap across internet software,
mega cap tech.
Now, a lot of that got captured by the large tech companies, but a ton of it went to new companies as well.
And so my simple framework for AI right now is the more disruptive the technology itself actually is and the more potentially disruptive the business model, the more that favors the startup and the less that, that favors the incumbent. So like,
what was the mobile version of salesforce.com sales.com,
but it feels forced.com. If that technology wave, instead of being just, Hey,
access salesforce on your mobile device. If instead it was like, Hey,
we have completely new workflow. We have a completely new interface,
a completely new database. And oh, by the way,
a totally different business model. Maybe you'd have a completely new interface, a completely new database. And, oh, by the way, a totally different business model.
Maybe you'd have a startup.
Yeah, that makes sense.
We're talking to David Ulivich next.
How does growth underwriting work in defense tech or hard tech or American dynamism?
I imagine it's different because there's more debt, there's more capex, it's a slightly
different business, not zero marginal cost necessarily.
How are you thinking about underwriting
the next, the hard tech boom?
I, this is a great question and one that we sit around
and talk about all the time.
So our lives are a lot easier
because we have an amazing early stage
American dynamism practice.
And so we see a lot of things,
we're on the cutting edge of the trends,
we have the right networks.
My simple rule on that is you can create venture scale
amazing outcomes that are even better than the software only businesses, but they're
probably going to be fewer and further between. They're very, very hard to pull off. We saw
this at not quite the degree of difficulty as others, but still quite a hard one at Samsara,
which is one of our portfolio companies,
which was one of the first companies
that was sort of a modern hardware plus software
public company.
And they've demonstrated that they can create
an incredible business out of it.
Right now, the four that I always go to,
that I talk about that are the sort of champions
that I always reference are Anderil, SpaceX,
Flock Safety, and Waymo.
These are four of our biggest portfolio companies that we've led a bunch of rounds in, and in
some cases, are some of the largest shareholders.
In the case of Anderil, it's a model buster because they have made multiple products work,
and they now have trust.
And that's an even more defensible position
than a software company could ever be in.
So there's 700 billion of defense market cap
for them to go get.
And I think they'll go get a lot of it.
And they might create new market cap too.
You know, SpaceX has, you know,
one of the best competitive positions
of any company of all time.
I mean, it's like the British East India company of space.
It's incredible.
They have like 20 ex relative market share.
Like that doesn't happen anywhere.
And then, you know, Flock is doing some crazy stuff.
I always say it has the craziest ROI of any company
we invest in because it's like, we stopped kidnappings.
Like, you know, recovered lost kids.
Yeah, it's crazy.
You know, they solve like greater than 10% of all crime
in the United States today.
That's just incredible.
And then, you know, Waymo is the last one,
which is, you know, super exciting.
Obviously, there's a tremendous amount of R&D
and invested capital and difficulty in building that company.
But it's a magical experience.
Like I, uh, I took my family from Kentucky and way most, uh,
this weekend and they were like, Oh my God, they were very nervous.
And they were like, okay, this is a better driver than you.
So, uh, that's, uh, it's super exciting. It's growing really fast. But yeah,
the simple thing for me is like, they can be better businesses, but they're much harder to pull off.
Yeah, that makes sense. Well, thank you so much for joining us.
We're going to kick it over to you. This was amazing. This was great.
Really enjoyed it. I can talk more. Thanks guys. Yeah. Cheers.
I don't, is there anybody that deploys more capital than he's up there?
He's on the leaderboard. He's in the conversation. It's funny. His,
his, his list of investments. Yeah.
I thought they were ranked in order of significance, but they're just
alphabetical order. And in many ways they just get more.
So it's like it starts basically at Andrew all and ends at, at, uh,
X and X AI.
Big, big checks. Well, we're excited to talk to David Ulovich,
general partner at Andreessen on the American dynam, yeah. Big, big checks. Well, we're excited to talk to David Ulovich, general partner
at Andreessen on the American Dynamism team.
We need an American.
We need, this is pretty American.
This feels pretty American.
But we need, I'm proud to be an American, or Freebird,
or something on the soundboard.
Anyway, welcome to the stream, David.
Welcome.
Good to have you here.
Hey, how are you?
We're great.
I'd love to talk, just jump right into it,
about army modernization. We talked to general George
We had driscoll on as well
How optimistic are you for early stage startups? We know it's working at the growth stage
But is this is this time really different?
We've been beating the drum of american dynamism for a couple years. There's a lot of startups now
Is there something changing in the army right now?
Yeah, I think there is something changing and it has to change and you hear the enthusiasm from general george general fenton
Yeah, secretary driscoll
And you hear from everyone else you talk to who's just you know
Not just the people that you haven't spoken with but the people that are walking up and down the halls and the people that are working
um in the dod that they know
um for a variety of reasons both from a we don't have the tools we need, we're not procuring things fast enough, we're not manufacturing things fast enough to support the defense industrial
base, we are treating our systems that we thought were not attributable as quickly as
we would.
So there's a whole bunch of reasons.
So I think people recognize there's a need for change.
I think the question is, will this be the moment for change?
And if you look at the change that's happening elsewhere in Washington and throughout the
government, I think you have no reason other than to be optimistic that this is going to
be one of those moments.
And there's going to be a lot of pushback from the Primes and from people that have
sort of had a delicious steak lunch every day for the last 25,
30 years. But like, this is the most for the early stage startups. I think,
I think, you know, we can talk about the early stage startups,
but I do think it's a moment of change.
Yeah. I mean on American dynamism, national interest investing broadly.
Is there a structural reason why venture capital has led here? Because you
could have seen this boom play out like biotech, where companies go public much earlier, you
could have seen a private equity boom, where old subprimes or primes get turned around
taking private LBO and revitalized and reindustrialization really could have happened that way, but it
doesn't feel like it is. Do I just have a narrow aperture on venture because I'm in this world or is
there something structural going on?
Yes, to both. Um, I think it has to be venture capital first,
because we're at a technology transformation moment, right?
Whether it's being able to use AI from a computer vision standpoints and just
rapid changes that only startups can really embrace and react to
and take advantage of quickly.
Or just the fact that they can attract the best talent.
You know, like private equity firms really manage
to the bottom line, so they're not gonna pay top dollar
for the 10X engineer the way a venture capital
or venture capital backed startup would.
So there's a bunch of reasons why it has to be
a venture backed company.
Now that said, I think you're going to see the private equity world quickly follow all these small sub primes and people that contribute to the manufacturing base are going to not be able to keep up with the demand. And I think you're going to end up getting rolled up, you're going to see people doing even venture back startups that sort of have a private equity sort of lens like what Jay Malik is doing.
You're going to see these things start to come about where the private equity model is going to kind of make sense.
But even those things might be ventured back just like you see Jay doing with AMCA.
Yeah. A lot of people think defense when they think American dynamism, but obviously the aperture is much broader. Can you talk about the interesting fringe of the, of the,
the circle of competence that for what you can put in the American dynamism
bucket as it's grown, I've seen some energy deals, there's hardware,
there's all sorts of stuff, but, uh,
what excites you in this kind of like next era of American dynamism?
Yeah, look, we're going to invest in anything that we, as we say,
supports the national interest. So that defense is a big part of that
Public safety is another huge area people don't think about I think that I think on the venture side
I'm probably the largest public safety investor in the country if not the world
Energy, you know, we have this insatiable thirst for energy. So whether it's on energy generation or energy transmission or energy storage
Those are all huge opportunities.
You know,
the battery ecosystem that we live in today is entirely dependent on China.
That might be at risk down the road.
So we need to have an energy storage infrastructure in this country that's not
dependent on China.
That creates a whole bunch of supply chain opportunities.
So everything from mining to reprocessing and production of minerals and
turning those things into batteries is really important.
So the aperture is wide and then I would include everything from transportation, logistics,
education.
You know, the tent is big.
Rolo welcomes anybody that wants to build for American dynamism, but the investments
tend to focus on defense, energy, space, public
safety, those things.
On energy, I know you're in radian.
I'm a huge fan of Doug.
What he's building is fantastic.
But it is small modular reactors, I think one megawatt reactors designed to replace
a traditional diesel generator.
I'm cautiously optimistic that we're gonna see
someone figure out how to just copy paste Diablo Canyon
all over the country.
But it feels like that might need some sort of change
on the regulatory side.
Are you optimistic about that being the catalyst
and will that happen?
Or do we just need an entrepreneur who says,
you know what, I don't care about the red tape,
I'm gonna go figure it out,
I'm gonna go copy paste Diablo Canyon 45 times,
or is that not even the right strategy?
So look, we are all three of us on this pod right now,
have survived the greatest nuclear disaster
in modern history, which is that after the Vogel 3
and after Vogel 4 reactors came online,
we didn't just go build Vogel 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, take all the workers who knew how to do
it, all the supply chain pieces of the cement makers and the steel manufacturers who knew
how to make all the components and pieces, that we didn't just take them and stamp them
out across the country.
Like that was the biggest miss in our lifetimes, frankly, and it's very depressing.
Now, that said, from a startup standpoint, whether it's radiant, and you are correct, it's one megawatt. I think there's only two ways to win in nuclear. You have to do it at one
megawatt or the 1,000 gigawatt scale. There's a bunch of reasons why I think radiant will work
and why the gigawatt scale can work.
One change on the regulatory front that I think people don't appreciate, yes, we need
reform in the NRC and we need the regulators to be much more productive and positive to
approving new reactors and making the fuel supply chain more readily available.
One of the things that's held up new reactor designs for so long is that when you make
a change to your application or you make a change to your design, you then have to go
through this hugely laborious process of figuring out all the different statutes and regulations
that your change impacts.
And there's an entire army of consultants that get paid tens of millions of dollars
a year to just help navigate all of the
Requirements for nuclear regulatory process or fuel how to transport fuel all these things with AI
You now have the ability to parse through all these regulations so that when you make a change you can say hey
You know this, you know, hey language model. Tell me what are the of the hundred thousand pages of regulatory paperwork? What are the things I need to go update in my application that are affected?
So things that might have taken three months and ten million dollars of consultants work now
Maybe just takes a few minutes of asking the GPT. Hey, how do I update my application?
Based on these changes or and that applies to the regulator as well
The regulator can now go through the applications if they're using a language model or GPT that's tuned for the regulatory code around whether it's fuel or reactor or transport, they can actually say,
hey, look, how do I evaluate this application?
What are the things I need to watch out for?
And the entire process for nuclear regulatory approval should really be condensed dramatically.
And that was never possible before the AI boom.
So people don't always realize why we need nuclear power to capture the AI boom. So people don't always realize, while we need nuclear power to capture the AI opportunity,
we're also gonna use AI to, I think,
enable the nuclear opportunity in future.
That's very cool, Trudy.
Do you have anything or?
Yeah.
My main question is, you know,
I'm sure this is something that you guys talk about
internally, but you know, you have these categories, right?
And let's call it defense, public safety.
What's your kind of internal dialogue around making
net new investments in something like public safety
when in many ways I imagine flock safety is like,
flock safety is the flock safety of X, Y, Z, right?
Like people, I'm sure come to you with pitches
and oftentimes for things that are just inevitably
on the flock safety roadmap, you know,
and it's why not just put another billion dollars
into them is kind of a calculus that I'm sure you guys run.
This is like the enderall of whatever
is gonna be enderall.
Look, sometimes that's true.
And we just try to put more money into enderall.
We try to just put more money into flock safety. We've sometimes that's true and we just try to put more money into Andoril. We try to just put more money into Flox Safety.
We've done that many times.
I think that as we get smarter and learn more about these markets, we recognize that the
surface area is just much, much more expansive than we realize.
So take, for instance, 911 services.
Well, Flox Safety doesn't do anything with 911 services.
Being a 911 operator is a thankless job.
It's an exhausting job.
The turnover
rate is very high. And that entire world needs to be totally reimagined with AI where you
have AI operators answering the calls, triaging the calls so that the operators can deal with
calls more efficiently. First responders can have more information at their fingertips.
Flock safety is not going to do that. Another example, you read constantly about what's
happening at Newark Airport with the FAA air traffic control system. Obviously, a venture backed
startup can do a much better job than whatever we've had for the last 30 years trying to
make the air traffic controllers better equipped with really dated radar systems, not getting
the information they need about what's happening down on the ground at the airports. That's
just an obvious opportunity. Well, neither
Andrew nor Fox safety is going to do that. So we just think these
surface areas get bigger and bigger the more we look, especially
the ones that have not been disrupted by modern software.
Totally. Yeah, that makes sense.
Last question on on space investing.
There's a lot of startups that are predicated on declining launch costs. Are you
seeing the trend in launch cost pricing and dollar per kilogram to orbit on trend or ahead of trend?
Are we lagging there? You would have to ask my partner, Catherine. I'm not the space expert. I
have to confess. But I think that the cost is going down. And, you know, we're seeing companies are now and sort of that, that next echelon of what happens
now that launch is achievable. Sure. What about when we really expand and be able to return things
to Earth, you know, reliably and quickly, VAR has made a lot of progress there. So when that really
unlocks, like, then what what companies come next, I think, is a question to ask and that we're asking.
Yeah, she's been on the show, we didn't get to answer, we didn a question to ask and that we're asking.
Yeah, she's been on the show.
We didn't get to answer, we didn't get to ask her that,
but we'll have to ask her the next time that she's on.
But thank you so much for taking the time to chat with us.
This was really great.
Yeah, great to finally have you on.
And enjoy the rest of the LP Day.
We'll talk to you soon.
Cheers.
Thank you.
Yes, thank you.
A little round of applause.
Fantastic.
Next up, Anish, who I think your buddy's with.
You've chatted with a few times.
I'm excited for this conversation.
You can tell me some descriptions.
Well, more than a few times.
Oh. Dear friend.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
Yes, yes.
Your boys.
My boy.
Your boy.
Yeah.
I'm excited to chat with him.
Yeah, it's good to.
Long overdue to come on the show.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
We've been trying to make it happen for a while.
Glad we could make it happen today,
even if it's just for 15 minutes.
But we'll bring him in.
What are you interested in talking through?
What are the interesting angles to take with him today?
He's focused on the application layer.
So a lot of the, if you see Andrew's in the building.
Consumer, enterprise, is there delineation there?
Both?
Both, but lean in consumer.
Sure.
So yeah, I just want to get into the app layer,
what he's seeing, how he's, you know,
he's a extremely busy guy and I've seen his process.
He's in ARC boats.
Have you seen that?
The electric boat company?
Yeah, that was like a super, that was a super,
super random deal that a, it doesn't fit.
I mean, he says he's AI apps investing
in an electric boat company,
but I've met the founder's very, very cool company.
Anyway, welcome to the Streamin' Niche.
How you doing?
Hey, what's up guys?
How you doing?
There we go.
What's going on?
Why are we not in person?
I wanna see the size.
I know, I know.
We're gonna come soon.
Well, we just signed a lease today, actually, for a new space.
So next time you're in LA, we'll have to have you over.
And we do have a comically large gong that has not been shown.
But it's about the size.
It's at least, I think, like seven feet tall.
So you can look forward to hitting that in person.
Pretty exciting.
It's you, man.
We used to get to hang out all the time.
And now we've got to do this to see you hang out all the time. And now we got to
do this. I know, I know, I know, we both we both got busy. But
it's great to see you. Thanks for making time today. There's
so much so much to talk about. I was telling john, before, before
you joined a little bit of your background, but why don't why
don't you introduce yourself and maybe give a quick overview on
on your focus at the firm.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
It's great to see you, Jordy.
So I'm focused on AI apps.
I lead our consumer team.
So we do a lot in consumer.
We do a lot in B2B.
I've started two companies.
I sold the first to Google, second Credit Karma,
which is why I've done a bunch of FinTech investing as well.
And this is great, man.
I built my first company in 2008,
and this is the most excited I've been since 2008. Like everything is working and people that are more technical
are winning. So it's just like a fun time to be building or be around building.
Did you always have conviction around the app layer? There was a period over the last
few years where people were kind of oscillating between, you know, there's no value in the
app layer. These are all rappers to back to, you know, just kind of back and forth.
I'm guessing you never lost faith.
I don't know, dude.
I think the rapper thing was such a mid thought, you know, like maybe for like two
months. Yeah.
Is it giving me a break?
Am I allowed to swear on here or not?
Our kids are watching.
Yeah, we keep it usually pretty clean.
But we're working on a bleep effect now.
But yeah, go, go,, go swear at the people.
OK, I will not.
I'll save it for a beer when we hang out in person.
But look, if you look at the kind of evolution
of that comment in particular, sure, there was a minute when
it seemed like you had to either spend $100 million
to train a foundation model, or you had to be a, quote unquote,
rapper.
But as soon as you started to see fine tuning,
and then all the things that came after it,
and then, of course, open source,
that stopped being a consideration. So anybody who tells me that there's this like
wrapper concern hasn't thought deeply enough about it I think. Yeah I also think there's
an effect there which is people that aren't seeing enough real data from companies at the
application layer and seeing the growth rate of some of these companies where you're meeting with,
you're meeting with companies all the time
that I'm sure you're, that are growing at rates
that would have shocked you in 2021
that you're even passing on
because it's maybe not even best in class now, right?
I don't, you know.
So I'm-
Yeah, and the top decile is not zero to one in,
you know, 12 months or zero to two in 12 months.
It's like zero to 10, zero to 15.
We've seen 10 to 80, like, and bananas, you know, 12 months or zero to two in 12 months. It's like zero to 10, zero to 15. We've seen 10 to 80 like bananas.
What is it? Yeah. Yeah. Uh, I mean, uh, talk about open source a little bit.
Are you seeing that impact, uh, financials in any way? Um, you know,
obviously tokens can be expensive. I've,
we talked to some early stage founders who are pre-launch and they're like,
I need
$500,000 of like open AI credits to just do the pre work that I need to do to make my my my startup work I haven't heard about that. I mean we were in the free AWS credits
If you go to YC you get a bunch people would not burn through those they're burning through tokens
Have you have you seen that as as a meaningful cost driver at the early stage and has open
source shaped that at all?
Yeah, there's actually two things to talk about here. One is,
it's actually amazing that there are real costs because it forces companies to
make money. So it forces them to charge real prices right away,
which forces them to deliver value that substantiates the prices they're
charging.
So the business model quality is way better than it was three years ago because
ironically, because the underlying software has gotten more expensive. So we're seeing
way better, especially in consumer, Jordan, you know this, right? Like so much of consumer
was this field of dreams investing. You know, we'll build it and someday we'll have ads,
whatever that meant. A lot of times it didn't work. And now like day zero, people are charging
for subscriptions and they're making tons of money. And actually the most interesting- And their strong willingness to pay
because people have had such magical experiences
on the consumer side, people will be like,
sure, I'll pay 50 bucks a month for this, right?
Or more.
This is why the most interesting question right now
for builders is what is the thousand dollar a month
skew of your product?
Right, it's not can I charge,
it's what is the like insanely expensive thing and this is why I
think for consumers like you're gonna have food, you're gonna have rent and then you're
gonna have software.
That's what the consumer spend looks like.
On the open source question, John, I think we're actually seeing is this routing layer
emerge where companies are routing to different models based on capabilities and cost.
So in some cases, we need something that an open source model can do,
or you kind of make the cost benefit trade off, you do that.
Other times, you might route to Claude,
because you've got a coding thing that you need to generate
or a long form writing.
Open AI's got really good general purpose reasoning
models.
So the routing layer is actually a very interesting thing,
and it only exists because there's so many models
and because there's open source.
And that's changing the considerations
for companies like OpenAI that are now moving up the stack.
They bought Windsurf.
They're doing a bunch of things at the application layer
because they're no longer the sole provider of the models.
How are you thinking about the line between consumer,
prosumer and bottoms up adoption in the enterprise?
Cause I'm sure you've had this already
where you make an investment into what looks like a prosumer tool,
and then suddenly you see some Fortune 500 company adopting it
in different patches.
But it used to be those early stage startups would be like,
oh, well, one person from an at Google.com email signed up.
So let me just put Google on my landing page.
Now it's like, yeah,
they're actually getting meaningful adoption in the enterprise just from the
bottoms up perspective. But yeah, what are you saying?
From my mindset, everybody's a consumer.
I think the greatest thing ever happened to consumer software is giving people
expense cards at companies. Instead of IT buying something,
individuals are buying something. And of course,
and it's not like you've got this work that's, you know,
work brain and personal brain.
Like you bring your personal brain to work
and you want to use consumer grade software.
And we're seeing products like CREA,
KREA, that's one of our best companies.
You know, this team is like cracked.
They like live to get every model.
They're so technical and the product has a sort of aesthetic
and a sophistication that a regular IT buyer might not understand
But it's getting huge adoption in the enterprise because the people that are in those companies want to be using the best tools
And this is what they look like
How do you think about the gap between what's happening in these like super agile startups a couple people?
They ramp to a hundred million in sales really quickly. They're in the enterprise. They're making a difference. Consumer adoption versus like McKinsey is also making like billions of dollars selling like PowerPoint
decks on AI adoption. Is there a world where someone closes that gap and builds like a McKinsey
for as a startup or something? Or is that is that a dynamic that's actually good and maybe
McKinsey's underrated in some weird way? I mean, I would argue that the main thing McKinsey knows how to do is sell to the
enterprise. There is no product there. Their product is deep research.
Or worse. Everyone's a McKinsey consultant now.
Yeah, because any CEO can
first question they ask, how should my company be using AI?
And then they go and sign up for a bunch of stuff.
How are you thinking, what's your timeline around
ubiquity of ads in consumer AI?
Because we're in this interesting moment where
a lot of people are paying for models.
Some people are using free version of models,
but ads aren't ubiquitous yet,
but the movement from OpenAI, you know, VGCMO coming in from Instagram, obviously signals
big ads business there. My take, I was debating with Jordy was that I love the world where
every human being, regardless of their economic condition, has access to the smartest possible model.
But I'd love to know your take on ads in AI products
because it feels like it's coming,
but we haven't really seen it yet.
I mean, I think the more spiritual question for us
is what is the front door to the internet?
And the front door to the internet has been Google
for so many years.
And it's really interesting actually,
because Google is sort of search-based and intention-based,
and the browse-based web that existed in the 90s,
we've kind of moved away from.
A lot of the browse-based behavior is now in Insta
and TikTok and these other places.
So it's useful in the command line era of AI.
Like, you know, chat GBT is a command line product,
essentially, and I think it's gonna evolve
in a really different direction and wherever that
terminal state of that direction is, we'll define the monetization model.
I'd be surprised if it's ads, maybe it will be. Um,
so I don't know that we'll ever see in the way that we see them today in the AI
ecosystem.
What about, uh, what's happening with the hyperscalers broadly? Obviously,
they're all investing insane amounts of money in capex,
but they've been
by most reports lagging on the product side.
Is this something where their monopolies are so strong, they're just going to wait it out
and develop the products internally?
Is there a wave of M&A coming in AI apps?
Are they going to try and build or buy or what do you, how do you think all this plays
out in the big tech world?
I mean, probably all the above, you know, number one, I think when you have a new technology,
the existing companies do a good job of extending their lead in their existing markets with
the new technology.
So I think a bunch of that will happen.
You know, Microsoft will get better at delivering the word processor they've always delivered
and Google will get better at delivering the search results they've always delivered.
The real issue for Google is not somebody builds them on search, but that there's a new front
door to the internet.
So the new categories are where the upstarts will dominate.
And that's where I think we'll see a lot of the M&A activity.
But it's probably all of the above.
The one most surprising thing for me, not just for sort of incumbents, but often for
incumbents is just that people aren't using the products.
Like I talked to VCs, you should test investors on this. Like give me the five things
that you're actually using every day
and if the answer is chat GPT, come on.
So there's such an opportunity to build intuition
by actually just using the products
and yet so few people do it.
It's like this alpha that's hiding in plain sight.
Well, that's great.
Thank you so much for coming on the show.
We'll definitely have you back.
Come back on again soon.
It took us too long to do this.
I'm in person, I wanna ring the gong. Oh yeah. Well, we have a sound bar now. We'll definitely have you back. Come back on again soon. It took us too long to do this. It's not in person.
I wanna ring the gong.
Oh yeah.
Well, we have a sound barred now.
We'll talk to you soon.
All right, see you.
Let's play them off.
Thank you so much.
Talk soon.
And next up we have Mark Andreessen,
the founder of Andreessen Horowitz.
Why is nobody talking about Mark Andreessen?
No one really knows about him.
And I think what we need is just one more Twitter thread
breaking his career down.
This was something that probably made us laugh.
It was a top three laugh last month
was somebody posted a thread on Twitter and said,
why is nobody talking about Mark Andresen?
The clickbait really, really did a great job there.
I think that was probably entirely chat GBT generated,
but shouldn't need much of an introduction.
No.
But big day for him.
So we're glad to bring him in
and ask him about open source,
what he's learning from the.com boom,
American dynamism, geopolitics, raising a huge fund.
There's so many things to talk about.
So excited to have Mark on the show,
excited to go deep with him on everything Andreessen's up to and the firm that he's
built. So we will welcome him into the studio. Welcome. How are you doing, Mark?
Hey guys, what's happening?
What's happening?
It's been a great day.
I'm going to hit this real quick.
We have a sound effect board. Thanks so much for joining us.
And thanks for wearing a suit.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Exactly. Yeah, you look special. Yeah, special occasion.
Yeah. Congratulations on the podcast. I just want to start
out by saying I've been watching is just is tremendous.
Thank you so much. You know, I have a funny story. We the
moment that I realized that you were maybe paying a little bit
of attention to what we were doing. And it gave me some
conviction that we were on the right track is we did a reply guy of the week to this guy, Baldo.
And it was like this inside joke. And I was like, Holy shit,
Mark just followed Baldo. Very talented guy. But yeah, so it's
thank you for following along. And it's been awesome talking to
your whole team today. Yeah, fantastic.
So let's go through some hot topics. I want to start with
we're in the AI era.
You obviously lived through the dot com era.
There's some comparisons.
What have you learned and what?
How is this time different?
Companies are making more money.
Valuations are high.
But how are you thinking about teaching the next generation what they should learn or
what they should ignore from the people that might say this is the dot-com boom to point out
Yeah, so look I guess I'd say I think is mark 21 said history doesn't repeat but it rhymes and so, you know
I think people looking for like a direct compare contrast
Sometimes you see people like drawing charts or the stock markets gonna do the same thing or whatever
Like I don't think that stuff ever quite happens that way, but you know, it does rhyme
And you know the line that John Doerr had in 1995
I remember was that the internet is a cream that you rub on investors to get
them all excited. Uh,
so
door said that.
I have many, many, many, many John.
Oh yeah, exactly. Um, but, um, uh, you know, so, you know, I, I like that now.
Um, you know, look, the AI, AI, I'm sorry, the internet. But, you know, so, you know, AI is like that now. You know, look, the AI, sorry, the internet went through, you know, went through phases.
People actually forget, but there was like, you know, there were like these, even the
phases like on the way up from, you know, 95 to 2000, you know, there were these phases
of like skepticism and panic.
You know, it looked like the whole thing was going to fall apart in 98.
And then, you know, in 2001, you know, after the dot com crash, you know, like all the
big companies just just completely wrote the
internet off and they just said, thank God that's over.
Then the internet itself just kept growing.
Then by 2005, it was back to where it had been before and the rest was history.
People are bipolar on these things.
They get overly excited.
They get overly depressed.
I just always thought then, and I think now
the substance matters, the substance overwhelmingly
matters, and so is the technology great?
Are the products great?
Are people using them?
AI is off to the races so far with just unprecedented rate
of growth of actual use.
Yeah.
Right?
And you see that in all the numbers.
And then look look the businesses
I you know, I just I talked to another conversation yesterday with like, you know a company that's raised raised seed money
They're already over 10 million error with this incredible, you know
It's just and you know, there's like a lot of them like that, you know
They're all over the place and so, you know, the the things that are working the products are fantastic
You know, the users are getting tremendous value out of them and and as you know, the base technology is moving really fast
So I feel really good about it.
Yeah, I mean, it can move faster because we have the internet.
Like these apps can get to hundreds of millions
of daily active users because there's hundreds
of millions of people.
There's billions of people on the internet.
Very interesting.
Not to linger on the dot com stuff too much,
but I'd love to know a little bit of a history lesson
around the way the browser wars played
out and is there anything you can learn from that that applies to the open source versus
closed source AI debate?
You've been very opinionated on that.
I'd love to know kind of if is there are there any previous eras of tech that you're mapping
to when you think about open source AI?
Yeah.
So, you know, a lot of the browser wars, you know, there was kind of a little company, kind of big
company thing, and I think that's repeating itself.
I think one of the ways to think about what's happening right now is OpenAI is kind of growing
up to become Google, and Google's kind of reinventing itself to be OpenAI.
There's a similar thing there.
Then Microsoft and Apple and Google control the operating systems for end user devices,
and they all have AI strategies and
Amazon as well.
So a lot of those issues are going to come back up.
Two of these big companies are actually on federal trial right now in big FTC cases in
Washington, DC, actually in the same courtroom.
And so many of those issues will repeat or will be intense.
The open source thing in tech has always been the wild card.
I think it's always been an incredibly positive wild card
I've you know, I've always been in an enthusiastic supporter of it. My original work was all open source
And so, you know the real thing that happened open source is in operating systems
You know basically Unix one and then and then you know, specifically Linux one, you know for everything on on the back end
And I you know, like you you know
I remember like in the 1990s there was like a furious operating system war, and there were these
companies that were making huge amounts of money on server operating systems, companies
like Sun and many others.
And then Linux just commoditized that entire thing.
I think it's plausible.
We'll see.
But look, it's plausible that open source AI may just be the standard.
Whether that derives out of DeepSeeker, Lama, or any of the other new things that are coming
out, we'll see.
But I think that's entirely feasible.
And I think that would be obviously,
there are companies that would have to adjust to that
if it happens, but the other side is,
if kind of the world had AI for free,
I think that would be a pretty magical result also.
Yeah, totally.
I mean, shifting to the geopolitics of all this,
is it important not just that there's
an open source champion,
but that there's an American open source champion or a Western open source?
LLM
Yeah, I believe so and I believe so for two reasons. One is just actually cultural reasons
Which is just you know, the way, you know open weights is great
But like the open weights like they're baked right like the the the training is in the weights and you can't really undo that
And so and and so are you being trained by?
You know a company or an organization or set of people with American or Western values
Are you being trained by by by you know company with Chinese values?
And look, you know, there's issues on both sides, you know, they you know, the American trained models have their have their issues
They have their weirdnesses, you know, but the Chinese train models, you know, look they like score really well
You know, they literally the Chinese benchmarks. They literally have like line items for like Marxism, right?
Right and hit you know deep-seek like is like a hundred out of a hundred on Marxism
And so it's here for deep sea really not out of the park with that one. Congratulations. Yeah, exactly
It's fantastic, right? And so it's like alright, so these are gonna be you know, this is gonna be the technology
That's gonna intermediate your the legal system, the courts, the education
system, the medical system.
If you guys have kids, do you want your kids to...
Your kids are going to be learning from these things their whole lives.
Do they fundamentally have Western values or do they have sort of CCP values?
I think it's really critical.
And then the other thing just, I would say, just close your eyes and just imagine two
states of the world. One is which the entire world runs an American open source
Lm and the other is where the entire world including the u.s. Runs on all Chinese software
And I you know I don't know for me. That's a you know very straightforward
It's a very important topic and a very straightforward answer yeah
I mean in the American dynamism context is it kind of mission accomplished there, or are there new?
Is it kind of mission accomplished there or are there new territories that you're looking to expand into?
With the broader American dynamism thesis we talked to do you about energy and whatnot? But what is exciting about you outside of artificial intelligence on the national interest investing side?
Yeah, so let me look we made tremendous progress
I'm super proud of that team. And then, you know,
this this in this new political environment, the new administration has embraced it, but also a lot
of Democrats are actually quite excited about it also, and our event that we hold has has lots of
people from both parties. So I think there's a, you know, there's this unified view now, I think,
in the American, at least in the political world of like, all right, it's time, you know, it's time
for the US to step up on a lot of these things. It's time for the US to build more. It's time for the US to step up on a lot of these things. It's time for the US to build more. It's time for the US to reinvent energy.
It's time for nuclear.
It's time for infrastructure, housing, all these things.
And so I think there's a lot of momentum.
I think we're at the very beginning of it.
One of the ways to think about what we're doing American
dynamism is we're going after all the sectors of GDP that
are really big and not yet basically affected by tech.
So education, healthcare, housing, defense, law, just to pick five, those are giant important
slices of the economy that largely have not been transformed by technology in the last
50 years.
The US Defense Department spends, it's coming up on a trillion dollars, very little of that
money is going to technologies and companies that have been invented, frankly,
in the last 20 years.
You know, most military hardware in the Department of Defense,
you know, the F-16 is from the 1970s, right?
Like the U.S. plane that does high altitude photography,
the high altitude spy plane, it's still the U-2.
Yeah.
Which is, it's just like literally a 70-year-old plane.
So, like, there's just like enormous changes just like enormous changes that really have to happen.
And I think everybody kind of in the system knows that,
but it's hard to get there.
And I think a big part of that is these new companies
that we try to support.
They need to show up and make their case,
but the entrepreneurs are fantastic.
And then we see more receptivity coming from the system
than we ever have.
Talk about the position that the firm is in today.
In many ways, it feels like you and Ben and the team
had somewhat of a crystal ball
to see how the private markets were evolving,
companies staying private longer,
AI being this massive platform shift
that's gonna upend every industry
and then now the sort of political environment
that enables industries
to kind of get a second or third life.
Did you just get lucky or did you see a lot of this coming?
I mean, I think we got a few things right.
We got a bunch of stuff wrong.
We buried those ideas up behind the shed.
So we made a bunch of mistakes along the way or changed a bunch of things.
But we got a few big things right.
I think the things I think we got right.
The venture ecosystem, as you guys know,
has just evolved enormously in a very positive way.
And the kind of old model of having
a bunch of mid-sized firms, they kind of sit on Sand Hill Road
and wait for the founders to come in.
Those days are kind of over.
You have the rise of the high scale firms like us.
But you also have the rise of all these seed
and angel investors that are really first money in
and then really working closely with founders
from the very beginning.
And I think that ecosystem is healthier than ever
and doing really well.
And so that's been a big change.
And the IPO is like, I don't know,
I would say we have changed on that,
which is I used to complain a lot.
I used to give these interviews years ago
and like early 2010s and just complain about that it was basically becoming impossible for companies
to go public and the things that had caused that to happen and what needed to change.
And then, of course, nothing happened. There were no reforms. There were no improvements. If
anything, everything got worse. And so, we and others adapted to that by basically putting ourselves in a position
to fund companies later in their life cycle at higher, larger amounts of money later at
growth stages. And it's now much more common for companies to do these tenders and these
kind of private sales even for their employees. So that's been a big change. But look, I don't
know, maybe the best directional bet we made was just technology was going to keep becoming more important.
It's just like in every area of our life, the bet that in sector X, tech is going to
be more important, there are going to be big tech companies built, they're going to really
matter.
That's a very good bet.
I think frankly, it's hard for me to ever see that ending.
What are you, you guys are with your LPs today, tomorrow, what are you hoping You know you guys are with your LPs today tomorrow
What are you hoping they they take away from the event? Oh
So this is not a John Doerr quote, but I'll give you another quote
When we were raising money originally we're going around we're gonna rate
we raised our first fund in 2009 and you know the world had you know completely collapsed after the financial crisis and
we you know went around and we sort of briefed all the
venture VCs we respected to just give them a heads up
for what we're doing.
And one of the GPs took us aside at the end and said,
you know, you guys have been dealing with like these
very smart public market investors.
He said, you know, part of the job you're going to hate
the most is working with these LPs.
You know, they're just terrible.
And he said the key is you need to treat them like mushrooms.
You put them in a cardboard box,
you put the lid on the cardboard box,
and you put the box under the bed,
and you don't open it for two years.
That makes a ton of sense.
They're like, what's the markup today?
Yeah, make sure that it was somebody else.
That was not John.
And so, look, the view Ben and I always had
was the exact opposite of that,
which is our investors are our partners. And look, that know, look, the view Ben and I always had was the exact opposite of that, you know, which is our investors are our partners, you know,
and look, that's how we want to be treated
by the companies we invest in.
You know, that's how we always viewed it
when we were running public companies.
Our investors are our partners, you know,
they're in it with us together, you know,
they're making a big bet on us and trusting us.
And then, you know, look, correspondingly,
the promise that we made to them is like,
look, we're gonna try to deliver excellent returns,
but in this business, it's just gonna take a long time.
And you guys know this, for any company that really succeeds,
it takes 10, 20, 30 years to really have it succeed.
And along the way, a lot of things happen,
everything from negative headlines to lawsuits,
disasters, chaos, all kinds of crazy twists and turns,
changes happen along the way.
And so I just think it's really important for us as a firm.
We really always need to make sure that we're treating
our LPs as full partners.
And so what we're trying to do is be as,
just really open the kimono all the way,
show them everything, kind of expose them
to everything that we're doing, make sure they really
understand it, go as deep as they want to go
on the technology and on the companies.
And this is like year 15 of this for us, and so far that, I think they would say that that's gone well.
That's great.
Last question from me.
Just general advice for the next generation of entrepreneurs.
Are you hoping more college, less college, more coding,
less coding?
There's a ton of technological change right now.
How can the next generation of entrepreneurs
set themselves up for success?
Yeah, so there's an old Steve Martin line.
He wrote this great book on how to be a successful stand-up comedian.
It's a short little book, really well written,
and every aspiring comedian in the world opened it up
and said Steve Martin's advice for being a great stand-up comedian,
and it was, be so good they can't ignore you.
It's like, okay, thank you, Mr. Martin.
I'll get right on that. like that that remains the best advice
I think which is just like quality like we said like quality bears out like quality shows
And so, you know a you know, really excellent thinking coupled with a high degree of you know energy and courage
You know team building a great team and then a great product, you know
And a real, you know insight into a market with customers,
figuring out how to not just design a product,
but also design a business.
Like that's basically, like my view,
and my view of that as an entrepreneur always was like,
that's my job as an entrepreneur.
And like if I put a lot of time and effort into that,
I'm very serious about it, I can hopefully do a good job.
And I think time spent improving the quality of the thing,
that the product and the business is almost always better
than time spent trying to, I don't know,
networking or polishing a presentation
or trying to get positive press coverage
or kind of all the external stuff.
And so it's really the quality of the thing.
And then again, my hope would be that we as a firm
and others like us, that we really recognize that
and see it, kind of see it when it shows up.
And I think that's the thing. And then I think the other thing would be, look,
AI is superpowers, right?
And if you, as a founder, have access to, say,
chat GPT deep research, it's just like, oh, my god.
I have a PhD level.
It used to be so hard to get information, right?
And then it's been so hard even still to figure out
what to do with it.
And so to now have these tools for thinking
through everything and increasingly being able
to do things like write code,
we ought to see a generation of founders here
that are just incredibly capable relative
to what we used to be like.
And we're starting to see those.
We're starting to see, I would say, a handful of those.
That said, I'm still waiting for the real conceptual breakthroughs. used to be like. And we're starting to see those. We're starting to see, say, a handful of those.
That's it, I'm still waiting for the real
conceptual breakthroughs.
I'm still waiting for the company where it's like,
it's got 1,000 employees, 999 are bots.
I haven't seen that yet.
Somebody's gonna really figure out
how to use this technology to really,
not just bring a product to market,
but fundamentally change how companies operate.
And I think that's probably the next big unlock.
How do you think about an individual's edge
around their own proprietary knowledge?
There had been talk with Warren Buffett retiring.
He read something like 100,000 plus earnings transcripts.
He had this incredible recall.
You're often credited with having this incredible recall,
and it certainly can give you an edge in thinking through, you know, net new opportunities and
decisions. Do you, do you think that edge remains in a world where all human knowledge
is accessible in a single query? Or what's your kind of mental model there?
Yeah, so I think it's gonna be, I mean, look, I think there's basically like two ways to really have a differentiated edge like in general, right? There's sort of, you know,
there's kind of go deep or go broad. You know, go deep has kind of become a more and more specialized
expert over time and you know, look, there are domains in which that like really matters, you
know, biotech and things like, or you know, by the way, designing AI, you know, working on AI
foundation models, like that stuff really matters the deeper you are the better. So there's, you know,
certain fields where that really matters.
I think for most fields though, now with these new tools,
I would probably bet more on basically people
who are able to be broad, which is to say basically,
can you know something about a lot of different
kind of aspects of life and how the world works?
And then you can use the tool,
you can use the AI to go deep whenever you need to,
but then your job as the human is to basically then, you know, basically cross the domains,
cross the disciplines. And look, you see this if you talk to any of like the great CEOs,
you see, you know, you kind of see this, which is like the really great, great tech CEOs,
they're great product people and they're great salespeople and they're great marketing people
and they're, you know, and they're great legal thinkers and they're great finance people
and they're great with investors and they're great with the press, right? So it's this it's this it's you know, it's this sort of multidisciplinary, you know
kind of approach and being able to cross domains and I you know, and I don't know we'll see we'll see how good you know
We'll see how good the AI gets at that hopefully gets good at that also
But you know that's that in a lot of ways, you know, the entrepreneur has always kind of had the burden
You know for somebody who has to do something serious like they have to be like that at least to some extent
And you know the the best entrepreneurs the future I think will to be like that, at least to some extent. And the best entrepreneurs of the future, I think,
will probably be quite skilled at six or eight things
and then able to cross and combine them.
How do you think about the responsibility
of the venture industry broadly to try to influence
outcomes in the world?
I was sort of laughing less than a month ago.
A lot of investors were clearly shifting capital out of the US
and just yoloing into French bonds and things like that.
Venture capitalists obviously didn't do that, right?
But at the same time, there was a high profile story
of a venture capital firm investing in a Chinese AI
company that we won't mention here.
And it got me thinking around there. If you're operating a hedge fund, you can go invest wherever
you want without a ton of scrutiny. People don't look at that as if you move assets into some
Chinese market. It's less of a... Yeah, it feel like you're you're betting against your own team in the same way
so i'm curious how you think of the the generalized kind of
responsibility of of venture capitalists, uh, even especially as a as the sort of
Aum has scaled dramatically actually been the the arrow of progress. Yeah. Yeah
Yeah, look I the big thing I think I would say is like we always we always thought and
aspired that we were building things that matter and that we're going to have an impact on the
world. And for a long time, you know, we were trying to convince people that we were doing that.
They never quite took us seriously because it's like, you know, it's like, all right, databases,
routers, like, OK, nice, nice guys. I don't even know what those things are. You know, even
personal computers like a thing on my desk, I write letters on it, you know, whatever.
Like, just like tech was never like relevant to politics, really.
You know, and all this I'm talking about like between the modern era, 1950s, call it through
like the 2000s.
And so, you know, and look, you know, generally speaking, like our press coverage was, you
know, generally people were like, wow, startups are exciting.
And you know, when companies succeed, it's great.
And then, you know, in the last 10 or 15 years, questions like yours have started to come up
and then correspondingly, just as you know,
like just enormous amounts of kind of criticism attacks,
kind of indictments of people with all kinds of points
of view on the industry.
I would say in the beginning, that kind of irritated me
because I had gotten used to the environment
where either nobody cared about us
or people just said nice things about us.
What I came to realize is we're the dog that caught the bus.
We actually now are building things that matter.
And so tech now interfaces directly.
When Elon goes into the car market,
like he just, the repercussions of that, to your point,
like on many countries are just gigantic.
And there's a thousand examples like that
that we could give and AI probably being the biggest of all.
And so, look, it worked.
Like the stuff that we do now,
the companies that we do now, the
companies that we fund, they really matter. They really have really big implications for
society and for policy and politics and geopolitics. And so mainly, I think the responsibility
is on us as a firm, as well as our companies. Like we need to go explain ourselves. We need
to go be present in the policy debates. As you know, like we have a huge push now into
policy and politics that I never imagined we would have.
By the way, that's something I got wrong.
I never thought we would have that and then it became very clear that we need that for
this reason.
I just think that's part and parcel of it working.
We're going to have to do that.
Then the geopolitics, the China thing, I think is probably the most intense version of that.
Maybe that's when we got right.
We just never really did anything in China for a bunch of that. You know, I don't maybe that's when we got right. We just never really did anything in China for a bunch of reasons.
You know, and you know, look, by the way,
we'll see, you know, this is a fluid
situation and you guys have been publicly
reported that there are, you know, talks
underway with China. So the relationship
with China could be better or worse, you
know, in six months.
That's what everyone wants. Yeah.
Yeah. Everyone wants like cooperation
in general.
Yeah. Like, look, it's possible.
Look, I mean, I'll get that.
I'll give you my favorite. Here's my
favorite story. So in 20s, I think it's possible. Look, I mean I'll get that way. I'll give you my favorite news Here's my favorite story. So
In 20s, I think was like 2011
the at the time the Obama administration was trying to
Reestablish was trying to
Reestablish a relationship with Russia and this there was a famous moment where the Secretary of State who was this this this this woman
Name Hillary Clinton. I don't know whatever happened to her. I hear rumors that she then went on. I don't know did something in politics, but
She was the secretary of state and there's this famous photo where she was on stage with Sergey Lavrov
Who was the foreign minister of Russia her counterpart and she brought like a big plastic red button?
Which was the reset button right to reset you know warm relations with Russia, and then and then what happened was medvedev
Reset the reset air horn yeah
Exactly, and then medvedev who was the Russian if he was Putin number two, actually came to Silicon Valley and the secretary of
state's office called all around to Silicon Valley saying, please you guys roll out the
red carpet to Russia.
They're our new friends.
Do everything with them.
Do whatever they want.
Please go invest in Russian companies.
Russia's building this new Silicon Valley.
See what you can do to support them.
And so it was just like a love fest. And then, you know, fast forward
four years later, and, you know, Putin became, you know, bootler, as they say, and, you know,
just, you know, and then, you know, Russia gate, like everything that followed. And so,
like I would just say part of being citizens, I think, is, you know, we're just going to have
to navigate through shifting geopolitics. Our view, and I'm quite honestly, like our view is
just we're going to put ourselves squarely on the side of the United States.
We don't have to say our foreign policy is a firm,
is the United States foreign policy?
If they don't want us to do things in China, they don't.
By the way, if they come to us
and they say we should do more,
we'll look at it at that point.
But we're trying to be good citizens among everything else.
Yeah, makes sense.
Talk about the evolution of the A16Z brand.
You guys came out with a new logo and website
And as always you're good at getting the attention of the internet
I was a time of this yeah, we talked about on this show. We liked it
Yeah, I think it's something that's different and and will age very well
But I wasn't exactly sure like what are you trying to say with it? What are the references and even what was the process?
Like, did you pick the color?
I don't know.
Or even that conversation.
I want to know more about the brand.
Yeah. So first of all, you know,
I know we got some Twitter controversy on it and I just,
I just want to thank Kanye West for drowning that out entirely.
Yeah.
Like I don't think we're at the moment.
So yeah, so that so that worked out well. Um,
Anyway
Yeah, look so it's art we have this incredible designer Greg Truesdell he's got he's got a team they did a fantastic job
I worked I did I worked closely with them on it. I have no design skills, but I provided a lot of input
You know
I think the big thing about it is what is intended to sort of reflect is like an
embrace of what I think is a broad set of cultural changes that are happening right
now that frankly you guys are a part of as well, which is this.
What I would describe is that, I don't know, 15 year era of, I don't know, like cultural
almost shrinkage, everything getting, you see in the design world, it's like everything
getting like ultra clean, minimalistic,
and culturally, everybody getting very cautious
and careful about what they say,
with all this kind of censorship and speech control,
and then this whole thing of everybody needs to feel bad
about everything all the time,
and everybody needs to feel bad about the country,
and bad about their ancestors, and bad about this,
and bad about, everybody's just miserable all the time.
I just think that whole thing got kind of,
I don't know, you might call it neopyrtonism or something.
Totally.
Like that thing kind of crested in, I don't know,
2021 or 2022.
And basically in the last three years,
I think there's this renewed sense of energy, enthusiasm,
ambition, achievement, dynamism.
But again, it's like literally, yeah, we should have nuclear energy. Yeah, we should have rockets going to Mars
You know, yeah, we should like we should we should have these things
And you know that it's good to succeed. It's good to build businesses. It's good
It's good to make make new things in the world, you know, and yeah, we should have the thousand
You know yard tall, you know shining colossus on Alcatraz Island. Yeah. Yeah, I was gonna
I was gonna ask my only request is like make it real, you know?
Like make it the statue of Liberty of the West Coast.
Yeah, I'm imagining a massive instantiation
of that coin in the office and maybe physical versions.
Not the coin, like the figure.
Oh yeah, the actual figure, true, yeah.
Yeah, we need a monument.
You know, she has a name, she has a name.
She has a name, well no, what's the name?
She has a name, Technomedes.
Technomedes, I love it. Technomedes. That's fantastic a name. She's name. Well, no, what's the name? Yes a name techno meaties techno
Fantastic amazing. That's great. All right. Well techno meaties
Buy a plot of land somewhere visible from the Golden Gate and just you know build it a mile high please mile high
Thank you so much for joining this is thank you for coming you for coming on. Really enjoyed it. Have fun with the team and the LPs.
Cheers.
We'll talk to you soon.
Bye.
Fantastic.
Let's give it up for Mark Andresen.
Absolutely dog.
Fantastic allocator, size lord, all of the above.
People love to yap online, but you talk to the team
and it's hard not to be giga bullish. For sure. there will never be enough venture capital. We didn't even get to that
But we'll save that for Ben. Yeah, that's for Ben. Anyway, should we do some timeline? Should we get out of here?
What do you think injury?
Well, John, I'd like to talk to you about figma. Okay. Tell me about sigma is the tool to design and build products
It's a tool that we use everybody knows that already
Yeah, I've been a DA you for my entire career at this point
And we are very lucky to have them as a sponsor and a partner on the show
Crazy story by the way from David George earlier. Oh, yeah talking about how
Dylan came to him during the middle. That is so funny. You wanna invest?
Yeah, we've been talking about this for a while.
Yeah, same price.
We've been discussing the price, right?
That price.
But I mean, that was a fantastic time to actually invest.
Yeah, the NBA had basically just shut off.
Yeah.
And that was when, how about now?
How about now?
Put your money where your mouth is.
That's why Dylan's one of the best to ever do.
But I really appreciated getting a snapshot
of everybody at the firm.
It's such a massive organization.
Like Eric said, 600 million, or sorry, 600 people.
Not 600 million.
Sorry, we're an hour, hour four of the show.
Yeah. Anyways, what else we got, hour four of the show. Yeah.
Anyways, what else is in the news? Um, Tigers kind of out of the game. They led 47 series a's in 2022. This is from Aaron Harris.
Tiger hasn't led a series a since June, 2023,
although we saw that they are changing their strategy and they're doing pretty
well in their open AI investments. So we'll see how the overall fund performs,
but they were, you remember back in 2022,
they were going crazy.
They would meet a founder, term sheet, same day,
on the call, they would give you a decision.
It was actually really nice,
because you just take the meeting
and you know exactly where you stood by the end of the call.
But obviously a shifting strategy for Tiger
and the crossover funds, a lot of them step back.
All I want is for them is for open AI to,
to hit that one T mark.
And then Tiger says, you know what?
We actually were onto something there.
There we go.
It was the best of times.
It doesn't even, it felt like they were doing
more than 47 series A's, but that was 2022.
Well, that's just the series A's.
Well, yeah.
They were doing B's and C's.
They were doing everything's and C's.
They were doing everything really fast.
But also 2022 was, there was really only like four
or five months where things were really ripping
and then things became obvious
that things were getting a little dicey.
Yeah, yeah.
Inter-trades went up.
No board seats, moved very fast.
That Walmart capital is Ev Rand handle that client of Perkins
refers to refers to refer to it as Ryan Peterson says a gentleman is never rude
except on purpose and Paul Graham chimes in to say the original version a
gentleman is someone who is never unintentionally rude makes a stronger
claim it's defining the term instead of just telling us one thing that's true of
them I like this because it's it's essentially a coinage.
So instead of saying a gentleman is never rude on purpose, say a gentleman is someone who's never unintentionally rude,
define a gentleman. It's kind of re-coining the phrase. So you take a word that everyone knows, you know,
an entrepreneur is someone who never accepts a down round
who always pre always announces a preempted round who always always gets preempted. Yeah,
a generation they go out to raise. They still get preempted. Yeah, it's great. Pack. He's
talking about Harry's. They just launched a new razor. They've been in the business
for so long. These Harry's guys. You had a good take here.
So it's a very polished ad.
It is honestly a fantastic ad that's like half vibrial,
half comedy.
The founders are in there.
I thought it was a fantastic ad, and I learned that, hey,
they launched a new razor.
It's kind of like Four Blades has a pivot,
so it's a more modern design.
Apparently, that was under patent.
The patent expired, so they were able to enter that market and they already own a German razor
factory. Do you know the story of Harry's? They, they,
their seed round was like a hundred million dollars and they bought a razor
factory because the whole industry was very monopolistic. Yeah. And,
um, but they're,
they're positioning themselves as like we're going up against big razor,
which is true. Like Gillette is a huge, huge company.
But also, I think that they tried to sell themselves
to Big Razor at some point.
And so there's a question here in my mind of like,
can they really say that they're a little tech still?
Can they really say that they're a little Razor
once you bend the knee?
And at what point do you just claim,
we're now Big Razor?
Exactly.
I think Harry's is so lindy at this point.
And extract all the earnings.
It's over a decade old.
You're part of Big Razor.
I'm putting you in the Big Razor bucket.
Anyway, Sean Frank had a good post.
Talked to a founder today.
Her business was worth more than Ridge,
growing 100% year over year.
I asked a personal question, how much money do you have?
Oh, basically none.
Business is huge, growing fast,
only ever raised a small amount,
but no cash for salaries, no cash for dividends,
no secondaries. I think this is really stressful
She's top 1% of 1% of outcomes on paper worth hundreds of millions still has to rent an apartment
Rush to your first million liquid even if even if you have to grow slower
Even if you have to take a lower valuation to get secondaries money doesn't make you happy
But it certainly reduces the level of stress. So interesting take good What else is here? Oh we got to cover the 747s. The 747-8
and Boeing business jet BBJ, VVIP aircraft. Here's a comprehensive list of
these planes. People think 747s are around. People think private jets are around. Really the overlap of private jets that are at this scale is quite,
quite small. And so Qatar has three Kuwait has one Oman has one Brunei has
one Morocco has one Turkey has one Saudi has one Egypt has one in the U S has
technically has two for air force ones and that's it.
And so first shame on all of the tech elite
for not stepping into the 747 BBJ game.
We're gonna get a lot of.
What, Spiegel's?
He's a 737.
737.
The other one that we saw which will go unnamed recently?
That was also a 757.
So 747 is the biggest, the most expensive.
The truly elite.
The truly elite, two stories in many configurations.
Absolutely massive plane, very expensive,
and it's of course the plane that is being rumored
to have been delivered to Trump as a gift,
and there's a lot of debate over that.
But I mean, I say America needs more 747s,
BBJs for sure, that's essential.
This Packy post kind of relates to what Mark was
talking about everything is technology is breaking down 2025 venture backed
exits over 1 billion dollars and you're gonna have to hit the size gong
multiple times for this because we got whiz at 32 billion, core weave at 23
billion, ampere at 6.5 billion, Deliveroo it's 3.9 billion, windsurf at 3
billion, Deribit at 2.9, Moveworks at 2.9, Scorpion at 2 billion deribit at 2.9 move works at 2.9 scorpion at 3.5 poppy at 1.7
Ninja trader at 1.5 hidden road at 1.3 and 7 rooms at 1.2
So an absolute stacked year of liquidity above the 1 billion dollar mark for tech companies
Everything is technology. Thanks for highlighting it Paki. You'll love to see it. The data's from PitchBook,
and he's bringing it down for you.
Oh, I like this post from Signal,
and then we'll get out of here.
You should be able to trade employees
like sports teams trade players.
Would be hilarious.
Today, OpenAI traded two mid-level engineers
for a researcher and a veteran UX manager.
There should be a trade deadline every year.
I love that.
Okay, I love Signal,
but I basically posted this exact same thing like six months ago.
You remember that?
Also equally, equally viral.
So I think I, uh, I think I must have, um,
he's trading your post for one of his posts and he's running it up again.
So, you know, we love to see it. I love to play the hits.
If you're not going to play him, he's going to play them. I love to see it.
Anyway, uh, the last piece of news from semi analysis over the past 30 days the tech leads responsible for rock em
Pi torch have submitted 14 PRS. That's that's AMD's
Implementation of pi torch that runs on AMD graphics cards that have been behind
Versus Nvidia pi torch tech leads have submitted 22 pull requests
And so AMD is finally catching up to Nvidia
Just like the LLM maintainers
We are working on internal in for in for pipeline to track the quantity and quality of PRS for
Nvidia and AMD to gain additional insights stay tuned and so Dylan Patel from selling from semi analysis
Fantastic analyst obviously, but he's coming on the show in a few weeks.
We'll have to ask him about the race
between AMD and Nvidia, but it feels like it's heating up.
And I love a horse race in tech.
So.
Love a horse race, John.
So stay tuned, we'll see you tomorrow.
We have a massive show for you.
And we're gonna be in a new studio soon.
So please leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts,
Spotify.
Oh yeah, our board of directors said
if we don't ask you to leave.
You have to do it. You have to do it.
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Thank you for tuning in today.
We love doing this show.
And we hope you have a wonderful evening.
We'll talk to you later.
Cheers.
Bye.