TBPN Live - OpenAI–AMD Deal, DevDay Reactions, xAI’s Memphis Datacenter | Doug O'Laughlin, Celine Halioua
Episode Date: October 6, 2025(00:17) - OpenAI DevDay Reactions (30:05) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (38:42) - OpenAI–AMD Deal (50:07) - xAI’s Memphis Datacenter (56:12) - Doug O'Laughlin, CFA, is the President of Se...miAnalysis, an independent research firm specializing in semiconductors and AI. In the conversation, he discusses OpenAI's strategic partnerships with companies like Nvidia, AMD, and SK Hynix, suggesting that OpenAI is involving multiple stakeholders to create a vested interest in its success. He also highlights the significant capital investments required for AI infrastructure and the potential for major tech companies to leverage their strong balance sheets to fund these developments. (01:31:40) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (01:51:17) - Celine Halioua, founder and CEO of Loyal, is developing FDA-approved drugs aimed at extending the lifespan and healthspan of dogs. In the conversation, she discusses the challenges of creating longevity drugs, the regulatory landscape, and the potential for translating canine aging research to human applications. She also highlights the importance of operational excellence and the need for rigorous scientific validation in the field of aging therapeutics. TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.com/tbpnFin - https://fin.ai/tbpnGraphite - https://graphite.devRestream - https://restream.ioProfound - https://tryprofound.comJulius AI - https://julius.aiturbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comfal - https://fal.aiPrivy - https://www.privy.ioCognition - https://cognition.aiFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're watching TBPN. Today is Monday, October 6th, 2025. We are like...
1999.
1999. Is it January or is December? 1999? We don't know. We're going to figure it out.
We're live from the TBPN Ultradome. The Temple of Technology, the Forces of Finance, the Capital of Capital. Today is Open AI's Dev Day.
1,500 people are attending. It's their biggest event ever. They're in Fort Mason.
Sam Altman and Johnny Ive are going to be given a fireside chat. That'll be.
fun. There's been rumors that the hardware device that they're building is delayed. But I kind of
don't care. I read the Financial Times. We'll dig into the Financial Times report, but you're supposed
to come out in 2026, might be pushed a little bit. I don't doubt... Nothing about the leak made me want it.
Yeah, exactly. Like, I don't doubt that they're going to be able to ship a product. Like, it's Johnny I
and Sam Altman. They're going to be able to figure out how to manufacture something and sell something.
my take was that there are two things that they need to solve that are way more important than like can they get a manufacturer to make it and ship it like that's not the problem the first one is will people adopt the form factor they pick i the rumors no screen which has been tried before by startups with little success and i remain pretty pilled on what the meta head of wearables told us about like these lindy form factors the watch the tablet computer the notebook
the hat, the glasses.
If you were selling me a smart hat,
I might be more down.
I mean, the chain,
I guess, like, the Jesus piece,
the smart Jesus piece could be,
you know, you're building AI God.
Why not create a talisman?
Bigger and bigger chains for more compute.
Something there.
But the pin always felt a little odd,
and it seems like it's harder to get people to swap over.
But the biggest,
the second thing that's like really crazy,
is there are just insane lock-in effects that not even Johnny Ive can overcome when competing
with Apple. We talked about this with Meta-Raband displays. You don't get I-Message notifications
in Meta-Raband's displays. Yeah, imagine if you had personal superintelligence in this new device
form factor. You're using the meta-buzzword, but this is also what...
And it could do anything in the world except send messages on your app.
your wife, except for, like, check in on your kids or, like, text your buddy from college.
Like, that is a serious, serious missing piece of any hardware device that is not going to be integrated.
IMessage has become so dominant.
It's been remarkable.
I never thought of it as a social network, but now I do.
One thing that we can take away from the humane AI pin is that, and again, the humane AI pin from my sense of the leaks around the Johnny Ive project,
is that it's not that different.
It's more similar to the Humane AI pin
in my head right now than it is different.
I mean, the Humane pin had that screen
that was like the projector.
I think they're doing away with that entirely,
going voice only.
It's clear that like speech to text
is good enough now that you could have a voice interface.
I mean, I'm sure that they've seen
in the analytics for the chat GPT app.
What's the latest data?
800 million weekly active users?
Yeah, that was in the dev day.
I think Jordy had a question for you about that. Is that good? I heard the number. I thought
there's a lot of big numbers thrown around. Usually they're in the billions these days.
Yeah, yeah, kind of sandbagging, honestly. Yeah. Get to a billion, dude. Yeah. Come on. But getting that
to actually reach a point where people are, you know, using this with their I message, there's a bunch of
interesting workarounds. I could imagine the real prosumers, the real techie folks being like,
yes, I have a Mac at home that runs a piece of software that like screen scrapes and interacts
and puppeteers all the Apple apps and sucks all the information out of that and puts it wherever
I want. I don't think Apple's going to take kindly to that. I think they're going to throw up a bunch of
barriers and people are going to be really, really sticky staying in their Apple ecosystem, at least for
like a year or two until Apple can just catch up and kind of clone it back.
I'm just not at all convinced that we need a new device for the current state of models.
Yeah.
When you think about...
But new devices are exciting.
They're great for building hype.
If you look at, you know, friend.com gets 10 times the amount of attention that it does if it was just a...
Maybe even a hundred or a thousand if it was just a website.
This is a good take.
That was kind of an angry friend.
Yep.
You know, they get a lot of attention and excitement
because you're getting into the conversation
around net new platforms and new hardware layers.
But we've just seen with Humane,
you can build something that's built natively around AI
and it can be a very functional device, right?
Nobody was arguing with Humane that it wasn't,
like it didn't do like it technically did what it said it was going to do it's just what it does
is not that useful yeah when you compare it to the cell phone that's already in everyone's pockets
yeah or when you compare it to ramp dot com time is money say both easy use corporate cards bill payments
accounting a whole lot more all in one place when are we going to get the hardware device
from i mean there's not technically a hardware company you get the card the card is hardware it's a
hardware company.
The, yeah, the humane device was a little rough.
It just, it just feels like there's more opportunity than there is because of how
slow Apple moves.
But when you think about them partnering with Anthropic at some point, and yeah, you're
not chatting with GPT-5, but you're chatting with Claude, and you can do that on your
AirPods, on your phone, and on your watch, and on your glasses, like, it's just they're
game to lose, I feel like, in terms of hardware. Like, they'd really have to mess up to not eventually
deliver something when time is right. Yeah, because again, AirPods are like a 20 plus billion dollar
revenue run rate product. Yeah. It's good. Great for audio and integrated and you can hear
the outside world coming in. I just remember like when I was a kid, there was a little bit of like
an arms race for hardware devices and Apple was behind on a lot of things. And,
They came out with the iPod and there was this company called the I River that was ahead of them on releasing features.
So the iPod had a black and white screen and this other company came out with essentially an iPod.
It blew it out of the water on specs.
It had a color screen.
You could watch movies on it.
It was way cheaper.
And Android has done that a lot where the Android phones have had more advanced features many, many times.
many, many times, but people are just locked in at this point.
I just looked up the I River.
It looks like a vape.
Yeah.
This was some crazy hardware back.
It was great.
It was great times.
Did you see Sohan Parique was weighing in?
Yes.
On the NVIDIA.
AMD deal.
When Sohan Parique, the real Sohan Parique, is weighing in on some of these circular deals.
Is this the real account?
That's the real account.
There were several knockoff accounts.
This is the real account.
It just so happened that the real thing.
The real account was at Real Sohampery.
Okay, okay.
He says, NVIDIA, Oracle, opening AMD,
what a time to be alive, certainly is.
Yeah.
Got to get the update from him.
How is his life post, you know.
Going exclusive.
Going exclusive.
Yeah, we're having Doug O'Loughlin
from Fabricated Knowledge on the show in a little bit.
And one of my big questions is like,
how deep will this go?
We've heard stories about Sam Altman doing deals,
talking to TSMC.
And I'm wondering, like, does this get to the point
where he's talking about, he's talking to ASML.
He's talking to like niche lithography machinery manufacturers about scaling up.
Like he should just start going to get the entire supply chain.
He should start going around to every company and saying,
if you give me warrants, I'll announce a partnership and your, and.
It seems to be working.
Your stock will go up.
On average, we've seen the market caps rise, you know, between 20 and 30 percent.
and I'd love to be able to do the same with you.
People are into the Open AI economy.
They are truly propping it up.
Well, if you're watching OpenAI Dev Day later,
it's probably on Restream.
Restream I-O.
One live stream, 30-plus destinations,
multi-stream and reach your audience,
wherever they are.
Sign up for free.
What else is in here?
They're launching agent builder.
Tyler, do you have an update on what they actually launched?
I wrote a take kind of based on the leaks
and the previews,
and I'd love to hear your feedback
on my take, but what do we know so far?
Yeah, so they did, it's already over,
or the main live stream.
Did you just say Tyler at TBPN says, it's so over?
I thought we were so back.
It's already over, no, no, no.
We will get the, we're so back.
We will get the timeline update from you in just a little bit,
but give us the facts of what was launched
and what the product is.
Yeah, okay, so there were four, like, main kind of thing.
So the first one was, like, apps in Chachabit.
Okay.
So this was like, they showed Zillow,
It's kind of just like a little web view.
There was like a Figma thing where you can prompt Figma.
It's almost kind of like a Figma make thing, but just it's still on like chachipiti.com.
Yep.
And it requires you to actually have an account there.
And so like the company that's partnering with them is like monetizing through their traditional path.
But then they're using Chachypiti as like a front end.
Yeah.
And they announced like soon it's going to be like more open.
There's only, I think there was like maybe eight or ten companies doing it right now.
They're announcing like more ways that it's going to be monetized.
And then they did, there was like the agent builder.
So this was the leaked kind of video where it's, it's almost like a.
It's node-based workflow.
Yeah, it's almost like a zapier kind of thing where it's just like a little bit more
intelligent.
But there are still, it's like, you know, if statements, just like a single node.
Does it have cron jobs too?
I think so, yeah.
So in theory, I could say every day check my email, create a digest, then go and do a deep research
report on what's going on in the tech news and synthesize my inbox against the tech news to
surface anything relevant. So if the CEO of AMD has emailed me and AMD is in the news, I definitely
want to get back to them immediately because we want Lisa on the show, something like that.
Yeah, yeah. But I mean, it is, there's a big difference between this and kind of what what people
usually think of as like agents. Sure. Like when this is very different than what was the,
the thing they launched a while ago.
Well, they have operator.
Yeah, they have operator.
This is quite different from operator.
And then they have, which has browser.
And then they have agent mode.
How many times have you used Operator in the last three months, Tyler?
I don't, honestly, this is pretty bad, but I don't know if I ever used Operator.
I used Operator a few times.
It got kind of stuck on, like, CAPTCOs and stuff the one time.
But I have used agent mode more recently.
And that's been, it's kind of like deep research plus.
Like, it can just go farther into websites.
Like, if it can go onto a website like,
Zillow or Redfin and and it doesn't just need to be like blog posts and summary articles and
PDFs it feels like it can actually go to a website and then type in search results and get a
whole bunch more data. It does seem like a better product, but it doesn't seem like it's
having crazy takeoff in terms of adoption. Yeah. And then so the the third thing was about
Codex. Yeah. So Codex was in Research Preview. It's now like GA. I don't think that there were
a ton of like big updates there.
And then the fourth thing was just like various APIs.
So there's a SORA 2 API.
It's 10 cents per second, which is like quite cheap.
That's what cheaper than I thought it would be.
Yeah, wait, we were debating this, right?
It was $3 per generation on V-O-3, right?
Yeah, around that.
And they give you three.
So if you truly took advantage of your V-O-3 account,
allegedly, you were basically break-even for them.
But no one did.
Like I would generate three, and then I would
forget about it for a week and then I'd come back and generate the max, but it seems like they
did, they did figure out how to optimize inference to one order of magnitude, not two, which we
were kind of speculating about.
Yeah, and then there's SOR2 Pro, which...
It could be subsidizing it, though.
Yeah, I'm sure it's still subsidized it to a certain extent.
But then there's SOR2 Pro, which is like 30 seconds.
That's pretty good.
No, 30 cents per second.
Okay, and it's a little bit longer, right?
It can go from like eight seconds.
It can go to like 15 seconds or something until the generation.
Yeah, I think so.
That's pretty cool.
Is it worth reading into the AMD announcement happening the same day as Dev Day?
You think it just had so much motion that it was just going to get announced as soon as it was ready?
Or do you think this was...
I think there's like multiple tracks going on and Sam's just pushing both like full tilt.
Because last week there was, you know, the Nvidia deal, the Oracle deal, the Broadcom deal.
Like all of those things were happening simultaneously with the launch of like GPT5, SORA, the app.
there was another announcement
that they launched. Oh, the Pulse app
like the actual
like ad inventory, agentic commerce.
Like there's just been a new release
on the product side every day. And then there's also been
a business deal every day. Like we got the tender
deal. Like these things feel
like they're not
able to time up one next to the other.
It doesn't matter. They're just like all flowing
really freely.
Much like wallet infrastructure for every bank
from Privy. Privy makes it easy
to build on crypto rail securely spin up
white label wallets, sign transactions,
integrate on-chain infrastructure,
all through one simple API.
So my take, and I'd love both of your feedback,
was that this feels like something
that puts us in like the pro-sumer world of AI.
So right now I view AI as there's the consumer world,
which is just you go to chat, GPT,
you ask it how to make banana bread,
it gives you a recipe, you are not expensing that,
you're not underwriting that as,
some sort of like business value, you're just using it like Google search, knowledge retrieval,
maybe you're chatting with it as a friend or whatever, and that needs to be monetized with
ads, that needs to be free over a long period of time. Then you have like enterprise software,
the SaaSification of AI, the, if you have a true business workflow that you are automating,
you're probably working with LLMs at the API level building software and then potentially selling
that software to other people. And so this,
looks like, you know, I went to, you know, like, Ramp got better at tagging receipts. And it's like,
I didn't even notice. I'm not chatting with anything necessarily. It's just doing stuff behind
the scenes because every company is integrating those. My question is, we've heard rumors of, like,
getting to the $2,000 per month bill for Open AI features. Like, does this agent builder
potentially get us there? Do we wind up in a world where, um,
you know, we've seen this before with like when images in Chachypity launched, everyone generated
like a few studio Ghibli's like the day of, but then six months later, it's kind of bifurcated
into consumers use it every once in a while as like a fun thing, but then there are professional
people that are in it basically all day long as a workflow tool because they're a visual artist
and they need it as a canvas to pull from and then edit and create other stuff or they're doing
blog images or they have a variety of reasons for using that product and they use it in a
professional workplace basically and I'm wondering if some of these agentic workflows will have
serious inference costs because you're wiring them up and you're saying like go to gpt5 pro
every single day and write up gpt5 pro query for every single you know news item on my to do
list and then generate a soror two video what weave that in and you wind up generate you wind up
spending like $10 a day or $50 a day, and pretty quickly...
Right in the chat says, maybe you aren't expensing banana bread recipes, but I am.
Let's go.
Depends how elite the banana bread is.
Sure, if you're a baker.
Amazingly strategic asset.
Yeah, yeah, if you're a baker.
And so I wonder, like, we are getting to this point where some people are thinking about
their open AI use.
you're underwriting it under some sort of loose business value.
You might be expensing it.
You're thinking more seriously about this.
And I wonder if we'll get to basically consumption-based pricing
in like a prosumer-type world based on these flows.
We see that with the SOR II stuff.
Right now it's all balanced to be free,
but you have a rate limit.
I wonder if we'll see the agent builder
if you're really hitting this thing constantly,
if they will start charging more for people.
I think there's a little bit of like organ rejection from consumers where they're like I'm much more comfortable just saying I'm paying 200 bucks a month and maybe I'm using it not enough. Maybe I'm using it, but I want the all you can eat plan. Yeah, I guess my question for you, do you expect average consumer at any point to be building out a variety of workflows? No, no. So I see them as like two, like there's multiple markets. We've been for a while we've been modeling open AI's businesses like they have a consumer product that they're going.
going to try and drive to essentially free with ads and you will have a ton of features and
they will try and deliver you a ton of values of SORA. The generations are free. You can't
pay for anything more in the app. Also the apps they launched today, those are very much like
consumer. Exactly. But they'll take a cut on the back end. And so they will monetize very heavily
on the consumer side. And then you also have like your hyperscaler cloud platform, your API
business that is pure consumption based selling the API, selling the LLM.
But I'm wondering if we will see the development of, like, something in the middle, something prosumer, something consumption-based pop-up.
Now, there is- Yeah, to be clear, it's this company, N8N, which we haven't really followed closely.
We should have the founder of it.
But they have seen a ton of growth.
They've seen this organic kind of always a good sign when people are selling kind of like courses around how to build a business based around your software product, right?
this was Shopify in the early
days and so a lot of the posts
this warning are saying OpenAI
just killed
N8N. How do you
say this actually, Tyler? Is it
Nathan? Yeah, I don't know.
Usually I just, when I read it, I just think N8N.
Yeah. So
may have
just proven myself to be a
boomer if I'm mispronouncing it, but N8
N8N. We'll see
I don't think these
my framework for Open AI now is
that I just view them as a large tech company.
And so every VC and every founder should be asking, like, what if Open AI does this?
Yes.
And even if they do decide to do it, it doesn't mean that you're cooked.
Totally.
Because for a lot of reasons, how many products have big, you know, how many products
has Google launched or meta launch that looked like they were a credible threat to various
businesses and then ultimately didn't really go anywhere?
So I'm sure that Open AI is taking Agent Builders seriously.
I'm not sure that it'll be a real threat to Zapier or N8N or anyone else.
Yeah, there's a great internal tech email from 2010 explaining what competition between Facebook and Google look like at the time.
So the abridged history of Google and Facebook sometime in the summer of 2007.
So this is just like two years after Facebook launched.
Larry Page stopped talking to Mark Zuckerberg.
This was following an eight-month period in which Facebook launched news feed,
opened registration to everyone, and launched platform where you could log in with Facebook across the web.
So almost instantly, Facebook was competing with Google for talent, for developer Mindshare,
and for tech blog cred, kind of like with the precursor a teapot, I suppose.
They began to worry about their ability to enter new markets with us in the game, with Facebook in the game,
and about core investments that weren't doing well
and that Facebook was positioned to touch.
Checkout, local, or Kuch, which is their social network,
which is now defunct, I believe.
They worried about entrenched products that...
What was it called?
Orkut, which I think was a Brazilian company that they acquired,
which I believe it's pronounced or Kuch or something like that.
I like that.
We look over a Tyler, like he's supposed to be a
figure it out.
pronunciation expert at 19.
But yeah, Google was worried about meta-challenging them in entrenched products that Facebook
might one day launch, calendar, Picasso, which was their photos product, YouTube, blogger, reader,
news, and about the comm score data telling them that the social networks are bigger than
email story.
Facebook had the world's people, while Google only had their cookies.
So we were better positioned even to own source.
search and ads one day. Oh, my. So far, we haven't seen the real competition. And so what's
interesting is that it was not a total steamroll by the meta Facebook team. It was also not a
total steam roll by Google. Like Google, I would say, did very well in calendar. Facebook has not
displaced them at all. They really became big calendar. They did. YouTube did very well. Reader, of course,
they canned.
Blogger went away.
News is still there in search,
but I think most people get their news
from social networks these days.
Picasso, I was talking to Brandon about this,
photos has kind of,
most people have moved over to just Instagram.
Their Instagram page is their main photo album.
People do organize photos,
but a lot of people do that in Apple.
And so there's been a bunch of places
where Facebook won,
there's been other places where Google was able to hold on.
And so I would imagine that the same thing
happens where OpenAI challenges the legacy tech companies across the board, and they win some of
those, but not all of them. Yeah. My question is, does releasing SORA 2 via API hurt the chances
that SORA as a standalone app actually becomes a social network and a consumption platform?
Because the model is clearly great. It does a really good job at making video look like it was
shot on a cell phone, right? V-O-3, very cinematic.
It looks like a Hollywood blockbuster.
It looks like daytime TV, but yes.
Yeah, sure, sure.
But it looks like it was shot by Legacy Hollywood.
And Sora, too, looks like, you know, you're hanging out at the office and you're shooting a video, right?
Something like that.
And so that model, which until today they had exclusive access to, can now be leveraged by any video creation platform.
And there's tons of them.
So whether you were Adobe, right, you could get access to sort.
or two or some entry-level startup, right?
And so what that means is there's just going to be a lot more of this kind of content being created all around the internet, not in SORA the app.
And in my view, that signals to me that they don't really feel like they have a strong opportunity to make SORA a place where a place where content is consumed.
I see them seeing this as a creative tool because if you're
were like, hey, there's a 30% chance we're going to make a new, like, video, massive video
consumption platform. Wouldn't you want to give it every possible chance to be successful?
You wouldn't want to let all your enemies have access to this tool, right? You'd give yourself
every possible edge. I think you would. I agree with a lot of that. I rebuttal, but first I'm
going to tell you about cognition. There we go. They're the makers of Devin. Devon is the AI
software engineer. Crush your backlog with your personal AI engineering team. So,
Yes, Ben Thompson has always had this good take that why does OpenAI have an API at all?
You don't want your GPUs on fire when you have the best consumer AI app.
Just make sure that chat GPT never goes down, that the maximum amount of GPUs are on chat GPT.
So everyone has the greatest experience there, and they never even think to try another consumer chat app,
and just let other companies compete in the API space.
You're kind of arguing the same idea for SORA.
What's also interesting is that I noticed that when I was using SORA, I would generate stuff, but I wouldn't post it.
I felt like I wanted to see it.
And then I was like, ah, it's not quite right.
Or I don't feel comfortable sharing that.
Or maybe I'll download it or screen recorded or something.
Whereas I feel like in the early days of Instagram, people would definitely go to Instagram as like, I want to filter my photos.
I want to make my photos look better.
But they would always post.
And I bet you that the creation to post ratio is way lower with SORA than it was in the early days of Instagram.
I feel like if people went into Instagram and they were like, I want to add a high contrast X-Pro 2 filter, like 99% of the time they would just click like, yep, share it.
And then I'll download it and put it on Twitter as well or something.
But they would almost always share it.
And so Instagram was incredibly valuable for bootstrapping that network because everything was shared to the network by default.
And I feel like on SORA, people are much more hesitant to actually click.
Okay, yeah, let's post.
I don't know.
What do you think?
I don't know.
I think by the time Instagram actually became a place that a lot of your friends were,
people were less like, people became more serious about, oh, should I post this?
I don't know if my followers will like this.
I'm not going to post it.
But would they do that with, but would they filter it and then?
Possibly.
And then just save it and share it somewhere else?
I never experienced that personally.
It was like if I'm going in there,
maybe I don't post it at all,
but I'm not just using it as like a creation tool
for something else.
Like there were apps.
There was a company called Aviary
that was an API for photo filtering
that would go into other apps.
They eventually sold to Adobe, I believe.
And there were a few different,
yeah, we talked to somebody about this.
There were like those APLT,
level companies that offer the same functionality as Instagram, but didn't bootstrap the social
network on the back of it. And Hipsomatic was another one where it had technically, I think,
better photo filtering. People liked the look of the photos more. But Hipsomatic, Aviary, these
companies didn't bootstrap a social network on the back. And so they wound up being valued like,
you know, medium-sized SaaS companies as opposed to social networks. And they've never really
compounded, compounding, compounded. So,
I agree that it's a little odd to not force everything that's generated in SORA
to just automatically be shared on SORA, on the app,
because it feels like if you can just continually have every SORA generation in the feed,
you can rank those, like, you can have a very powerful social.
I have a catalog of content that people like,
and it also feeds your, it feeds, it's going to continuously help you make the model better.
Yeah.
Right. I also wonder if they'd open it up to human-generated content.
Like, why not?
I don't think that OpenAI needs another front in the war, right?
It's hard enough competing. It's hard enough competing with Google, right?
You clearly, to compete with Google, you have to do a number of just absolutely heinous deals, right?
You've got to be doing deals with Broadcom.
You've got to be doing deals with Oracle.
You've got to be doing deals with AMD.
you got to just be doing these deals that are pretty unprecedented at least in the modern era.
So they don't need to open a new front in my view.
I do feel like it's just a new angle on the creativity.
If you could have SORA but with like a cap cut style or edit style video editing that goes into it.
So you could have like if you just want to maximize for like the maximum amount of creativity,
being able to inject an actual screen recording of a movie clip and then a SORA clip
and then your actual video that you recorded and then bring in some more SORA.
Like editing all that together, it's just going to be better content.
We need to talk about how T dating advice is still top five.
No way.
Free app on the app store.
Even after the hack, it's still ripping.
It's above TikTok, it's above Google, it's above X, it's above WhatsApp.
I thought SORA.
It's above Instagram.
And obviously, again, SORA and ChatGPT, we're number one number two.
It only counts first time downloads.
But, yeah, SORA is number one.
But I'm just saying if you look at the top five, it's Sora, Chatsubu-T, Gemini, threads.
And then T?
Shout out to Connor Hayes for getting breads back in the top five.
We love it.
We love it.
Also, shout out to Dillon Field over at Figma, doing a deal with Open AI, getting the shout-out in Dev Day.
Think bigger, build faster.
Figma helps design and development teams build great products together.
You can get started for free.
Tyler, do you understand this post from Leo who says,
new image model is just GPT Image 1 Mini LMAO?
It's so over on the API docs.
What is going on here?
So I think it was like one of those cases where someone just found like the link to the PNG
that's like hosted on the site and like it's not released yet.
Okay.
So there's like no information about this at all.
They didn't talk about it at Dev Day.
Okay.
So yeah.
Yeah, this is kind of.
I don't really know that people are being calm.
to this like it feels like most of the excitement about the agent mode or agent builder is like
images would be like a small piece of that because yes every once a while in an agentic workflow
you'd want to generate an image but I I do wonder how open it will be like what would
it be possible within the agent builder to vend in a different LLM like are they going to be
model agnostic at some point like from a true model builder you would you might want to be
able to like call Claude Code over here and then and then use you know some other image generator
you want to get a mid-jurney image over here you want to go over there pull pull different things
together yeah I mean I feel like you kind of have to because otherwise it's like then as a consumer
I'm just going to go use an 8n or something that's on top of all of them yeah because if I'm just being
limited then why would I why use it so yeah well how yield Harry is not happy with all the deals
that are happening. He posted on September 22nd, explaining the NVIDIA and Open AI deal to our
analysts. And it's the screencap from, what is that, detective movie? Detective, HBO? True detective. True
detective. And he's getting hammered. And now he says, I'm entering my Michael Burry era. These deal
structures are dot-com bubble things. Keep dancing now, but come on, guys. Be real about what's going to happen
here. There's a lot of people
that are not happy
with how crazy these deals are.
Sven and Rick
since nobody is saying it's
Sven Will. He says, we're witnessing
the largest and most concentrated
instant market cap expansions in history
with no proven future revenue cost
earnings model to back up
the investments or the valuations. The market
is running on an incredible amount
of blind faith. Let's give it up for blind faith.
It's not enough enough enough.
how it ends TVD.
One certainty, though, when it eventually
does blow up, everyone will be asking
the Fed to come to the rescue again.
The only thing I would push back on is, like, a lot of
people, it's
it's, it's, uh,
it's contrarian, it's
nobody is saying it, everyone's saying it.
It's contrarian actually at this point to say like,
no, this is good and healthy and natural.
No, no, no. It like, the,
the people that are still super AGI-pilled,
stupid, just super beating the drum of like the value is there.
Look at the revenue growth.
All this stuff is real.
It merits the build out because we're going to see 10x gains again and again and again.
Yeah, let's pull up this video of, let's pull up at the X game,
Stephen Hawking at the X game.
Can we pull up Stephen Hawking at the X game?
Oh, you guys haven't pulled up already.
If you watch this video and then say to me, I don't think Sam Trillian, Sam Trillions.
I don't think Sam Altman should get another trillion.
I don't know what to tell you.
This is so sick.
Wow.
That's perfect.
No.
Oh, no.
The physics.
Tyler over there, this is going to be critical to building humanoid robotics.
This is a physics simulator.
This is a world model.
The physics don't make sense there.
Like, that's not how that would happen.
The next iteration, I swear, soar three.
Just one more call.
Yeah, just scale up a little bit more, bro.
please oh yeah on Friday we posted uh uh yeah we posted another five trillion please yeah yeah we posted
an example of a video that we shot versus and then i had tyler try and recreate it with sorra and
the other video models and uh and tyler kept texting me like dude just one more prompt like i i i'm so
close i can get it there and it was not very close the hand the hands were very creepy your your
naked foot snuck in somehow yeah i don't know what the training day was it was odd
Yeah, lots of weird stuff.
It seems like it's very good for, like, again, we're in that, like, style transfer.
It works well when it's like there's a ton of footage of police body cams,
and then there's a ton of footage of SpongeBob,
and you put SpongeBob in the police body cam,
and it knows how to mash those two up.
But if you come to it with just some completely new idea
that it doesn't have a lot of training data on,
you're going to be fighting the prompt for a long, long time.
Now, those mashups are valuable.
Like, they get views.
People find them enjoyable.
And there are some that are very funny.
But it is a challenge to create anything that's like kind of novel or new.
But, you know, there's still a lot of room.
Sachi Michal says this OpenAI AMD deal feels like a jump to shark moment.
The deal structure is just so stupidly unbelievable.
Well, I'll tell you something believable.
If I was walking around a farmer's market, John, and I walk by a stand.
And I think, I don't really like what this guy's got. I don't really want it. But then I think to myself, what could I do in this moment to make purchasing some of these vegetables interesting to me? And so I go to the farmer and I say, how about you give me 30% of your business and I'll buy some of your vegetables? And I actually should get more equity value in your business than I need to pay for the vegetables.
What did I actually say about that?
That seems like a deal that might get done.
And to me, that feels a little bit like what we're seeing here today with OpenAI and
AMD.
Yeah, what did I actually say?
Oh, here, you were saying, like, did I call these, like, circular deals efficient,
more efficient or something like that?
I said lots of people are throwing up red flags about these.
This was on September 29th.
or 23rd, high-growth companies have been paying for things with equity, in this case, chips,
forever, most commonly with talent, but occasionally with other counterparties.
The open question is that couldn't this deal be more arm's length pretty easily?
NVIDIA's biggest shareholders are Vanguard, BlackRock, Fidelity, and State Street.
There's a world where NVIDIA takes the cash it has on hand, pays a dividend,
and then those investors take their money and invest in Open AI.
That would be the natural flow of capital in normal times, but NVIDIA thinks there are benefits to inking a longer-term partnership.
Open AI looks highly likely to join the ranks of the hyperscalers in Microsoft, Amazon, and Google are all working on AI chips that could cut NVIDIA out of the equation long-term.
So, NVIDIA gets a fantastic long-term partner with Open AI, who will be committed to buying an accelerated schedule of AI accelerator purchases.
And OpenAI gets a deep partnership with arguably the best GPU design team in history.
And so it's interesting that, like, and the Nvidia deal, the read on the Nvidia deal was like, oh, this is, this is Nvidia finding like its true long-term dance partner where, you know, in a world where Google is going TPU, Microsoft is going to do their own thing.
Amazon's doing their own thing in chips, cutting out Nvidia.
There's like some real risks to Nvidia long-term potentially.
And so, and so Nvidia is like locking up a partnership with opening eye, but then opening I is going around and being like, but we're also going to do custom.
I think one thing that everyone's learning about Sam, as you know, is.
never really locked down Sam, right?
You had, you had, obviously, Satya and Sam were dancing.
They're still dancing, you know, through the existing partnership that they have.
But certainly, Sam is willing to go find the incremental partner.
And it's interesting that the AMD and Nvidia deals just happens so closely together.
Yeah.
And, and, and Vidia felt crazy.
AMD feels crazier just because, again, it's not like these are Sam's first picks for GPUs, right?
Yep.
Well, you can't lock down Sam, but you can lock down your compliance with Vanta, automate compliance-managed risk and through trust continuously.
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Let's go.
We should read through the actual deal of the OpenAI AMD report.
Are you saying we should get into the facts?
We should get into the facts.
The five-year agreement, it will challenge
NVIDIA's market dominance as OpenAI plans
deployment of AMD's new MI-450 chips.
And the announcement from Sam mentioned
Nvidia more than AMD, which some people are reading
into, like maybe you want to keep NVIDIA happy.
The big question for me is,
is there an OpenAI Intel deal coming at some point?
Because Intel's been looking for a buyer,
been looking for a reason to spin up the new Fab in America,
Sam needs to figure out some way.
You know, the deal that I could imagine is Trump makes an investment in Open AI.
Open AI then has to spend off of Uncle Sam's balance sheet.
Open AI then has to spend some amount of that with Intel.
Yeah.
I wouldn't be surprised to be successful.
And Sam figures out a way to get some warrants in Intel, too.
I mean, there's certainly a lot of energy around like, like, there are.
Like the United States government is pushing Intel.
There's a desire to reshore manufacturing, reshore chip manufacturing.
And if you can be part of that story, you should be a beneficiary.
You should win points, score points in Washington.
And so doing something there, I wouldn't be surprised if we see it in the next couple weeks.
It just feels like Sam is really knocking down partnerships with every major counterparty.
And so why not Intel as well?
Well, the Walter Journal has the story.
OpenAI and chip designer advanced micro devices.
They don't name companies like that anymore.
We don't know how to do.
AMD announced a multi-billion dollar partnership
to collaborate on AI data centers
that will run on AMD processors.
One of the most direct challenges
yet to industry leader, Nvidia.
Under the terms of the deal,
OpenAI committed to purchasing
six gigawatts worth of AMD chips.
It is cool that we're now just referring
to GPU orders based on their energy demands.
It's pretty sick.
Starting with the MI 450 chip next year,
the chat chip maker will buy the chips either directly
or through its cloud computing partners.
So it could go through Oracle.
That's not that crazy.
Well, it is, it is, it is if, if it's not actually open AI putting up.
Does this mean that Open AI doesn't have to,
if one of their, they can be like, look,
CapEx might not live on their balance sheet.
Exactly.
Because they might go to a NeoCloud or they might go to Oracle
and they might say, you own the data center
and we will set up a contract to lease against that.
because we want to model this business is OPEX,
because we are a software company on top of the hardware.
It's not the craziest thing.
I mean, there's plenty of big tech companies.
I believe Netflix, Snapchat, there's a whole bunch
that are built on top of other cloud platforms.
But they have such large contracts that Google can say,
oh, well, you're going to be with us for a decade.
You're going to be spending hundreds of millions of dollars.
We're going to go build a new data center for you.
And we're going to own that KAPEX because we're super huge and liquid.
We can afford this.
So, AMD chief Lisa Sue said in an interview on Sunday that the deal will result in tens of billions of dollars in new revenue for the chip company over the next half decade.
The two companies didn't disclose the plan's overall expected cost, but AMD said it costs tens of billions of dollars per gigawatt of computing capacity.
So we're looking at almost a hundred billion dollar deal, which is probably why the market cap popped by a commensurate amount.
Open A.I. will receive warrants for up to 160 million AMD shares, roughly 10% of the chip company at one cent per share awarded in phases if OpenAI hits certain milestones for deployment.
AMD's stock price also has to increase for the warrants to be exercised. The shares opened 33% higher Monday morning.
The deal is AMD's biggest win in its quest to disrupt Nvidia's dominance among AI semiconductor companies.
AMD processors are widely used for gaming in personal computers and in traditional data center servers,
but it hasn't made much of a dent in the fast-growing market for the pricier supercomputing chips
needed by advanced AI systems.
Quickly, let me tell you about Graphite code review for the age of AI.
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There are billboards going viral again today.
It is?
No way.
Just the exact same post again.
I think this time it was like, I'm in San Francisco.
I hate it here.
Oh, really?
It's like negative, but it's still going viral again.
love it. Well, if you want to run a billboard campaign, get on adquick.com. Out-of-home advertising
media is easy and measurable. Say goodbye to the headaches of out-of-home advertising. Only
ad-quick combines technology out-of-home expertise and data to enable efficiency miss ad buying across
the globe. Well, AMD plans to use the chips for, or open AI plans to use the AMD chips for
inference functions or the computations that allow AI applications such as chatbots to respond
to user queries. Maybe that's easier for them to deal with. They train on Invidia, but
an inference on AMD? Maybe there's something there. I mean, the models are so stable.
There was a new, like, indication or kind of, like, leak that GPT-5 is still running on the four
pre-trained. So there will at some point be a new, like, huge pre-trained. Four-five was
supposed to be that. They haven't really done that yet. But there's a world where, like,
GPT-4, that pre-trained model. I mean, I'm sure they've done other things to it.
like generally that is like mature enough that if you can just go and optimize it and ship
it off to different chips maybe it runs fast maybe it's a huge lift to to get it out of the
kuda ecosystem and over to amd but uh certainly amd wants to make it happen and opening i wants
to make it happen so maybe kodex can do it maybe kodex can do it we don't know i i think that it's like
it could be it could be like a hundred million dollar project to like re-platform it but it's
totally worth it when you're running inference for 800 million weekly active users. So I don't
know. It's hard to overstate how difficult it's become to get enough computing power. Altman
said, we want it super fast, but it takes some time. The two CEOs said the deal will tie their
companies together and give them incentives to commit to the AI infrastructure. Boom,
it's a win for both of our companies. And I'm glad that OpenAI's incentives are tied to
AMD's success and vice versa. He's such a good investment banker.
Get them on Wall Street.
NVIDIA remains the preferred chip supplier
among AI companies,
but it's also facing competition
from almost every corner of the market.
Cloud giants such as Google and Amazon
design and sell their own chips.
Open AI recently signed a $100 billion deal with Broadcom
to build its own in-house check.
No, 10 billion.
$10 billion.
Yeah, $10 billion deal with money.
Easy to add an extra zero these days,
but we got to...
Well, if you want to manage your zeros properly,
get on Julius.A.I.
What analysis do you want to run?
Chat with your data and get expert level insights.
It's the AI data analyst that works for you, and it's more reliable than me when it comes to getting the numbers right.
And apparently, co-pilot in Excel.
We saw that.
We saw that post earlier today.
Somebody using copilot in Excel to add a handful of numbers.
One, two, and three, specifically.
Tyler, what's one plus two plus three?
Some those numbers.
Hmm, let me think.
well co-pilot said 15 yeah close so just try to get that close if you can
as long as you're with as long as you're with numbers you just got to get close what do you
think it is I'm going with six let's go nailed it human intelligence unbeated
underrated underrated organic intelligence how you doing in the chat good to see you good day
great to see you um open AI is going to begin with one gigawatt worth of MI 450 chips
starting in the second half of next year to run its AI models.
That's a lot.
Just put the chips in the bag.
We are just throwing around gigawatts now.
I do, I really want to know how deep this goes.
We got to, we got to ask Doug, he's during 10 minutes,
what kind of deals Sam is going to start doing on the energy side?
I was asking him about that.
Because he has his nuclear company, Oklo.
He also has a new, he has a fission company, Oklo,
and then he has a fusion company.
What's that one called?
Oklahoma is only up like 590% in the past six months.
Just wait until they ink a $100 billion deal with Open AI.
It could happen.
I mean, like, it's one of those things where it's like if they build that energy,
open AI would buy it.
So it makes sense.
These are all just like sort of like mutual agreements
to jump across the threshold together.
Mutual agreement to jump sharks.
Yeah, to jump sharks.
I don't know.
I don't know.
It's dangerous to be bearish prematurely.
Like, you never know how big these things can get.
It could continue run.
We could be stuck in January of 1999 for the next five years, for all we know.
Yeah, you never know.
In late September, NVIDIA announced that it would invest $100 billion in Open AI over the next decade.
Under the terms of the circular arrangement, Open AI plans to use the cash from NVIDIA to buy NVIDIA chips and deploy
up to 10 gigawatts of computing power in AI data centers, the deal highlighted how the
market seemingly endless enthusiasm for NVIDIA stock is providing a financial backstop for
the entire AI market. The NVIDIA deal isn't completed. The two companies have signed a letter
of intent and have yet to disclose specific terms in a regulatory filing. Wow, what a time to be
alive. OpenAI and AMD described Monday's announcement as definitive and plan to immediately file
details with security regulators. Sue told investors in a call Monday.
morning that the deal was a clear validation of our technology roadmap that would give
AMD tens of billions of dollars of revenue by 2027 when asked we just have to give
structure soon to get we're going to get a lot of revenue I wouldn't say it came
lately we just have to give a huge amount of the company away yeah in order to capture that
revenue yeah how what's the headline number here it's a hundred billion 10 billion to
broadcom a hundred billion to invidia and 300 billion to Oracle 20 billion
ish to core weave as well. Wait, so Tyler, they're saying six billion gigawatts, not
a billion gigawatts, six gigawatts of AMD chips. Can you estimate the dollar value of that
if it's MI 40, 450 equivalence? I think, I think on the invests like the best with Don't Tell,
he said it's like around 50 billion per gigawatt. 50 billion per gigawatt? Wait, so this is like a 400 billion
dollar deal? I think, wait, that's
totally wrong. Okay, okay, yeah. I want
to know, like, what is the
energy use of a single
MI-450, and then
divide that by six gigawatts
to get me, like, how many chips are they
going to buy, and then what's the price of the chip,
so multiply that. That's what I want to know.
In the meantime, let me tell you about fall.
The generative media platform
for developers, the world's
best generative image, video, and audio
models all in one place. Develop and fine
tune with serverless GPUs and on-demand
clusters. Let's go. There's so much in this article. Should we get into this X-A-I coverage?
Yes, sure. Elon Musk gambles billions in Memphis to catch up on AI. I don't know why this is a
story. It's mere billions. If we're not in the hundreds of billions, like what are we doing? This is
pennies. The journal has reporting X-AI aims to win tech arms race with colossus data centers
thrown up at lightning speed. City is divided over massive power and water demands. For Elon
Well, on Musk, ground zero of the AI arms race is a 114 acre tract of grass and swamp on the state line of Tennessee and Mississippi.
This one sleepy plot of land filled with groves of water-rooted, Tupelo trees at its western edge is now part of a growing empire.
Musk is accumulating in the deep south, just a few miles from Elvis Presley's homestead at Graceland.
Labor crews hired by Musk XAI were excavating power equipment on the site, a defunct energy plant just over the state line in Mississippi.
in preparing to build a new plant capable of generating over a gigawatt of electricity enough to power around 800,000 homes.
Engineering permits show that must plants are route transmission lines that will connect the new power plant to a million square foot data center that is also under development just north of the border in Tennessee.
Memphis is the front line of Musk's costly foray into the AI Wars. His AI company, XAI, has already built one massive data center here in the Bluff City that it calls the world's largest supercomputer.
facility called Colossus, houses over 200,000 invidia chips, and powers the technology behind
the AI chatbot rock. Now Musk is close to finishing the second facility, which will be
even bigger. He calls it Colossus 2. The AI arms race is shaping up as the most expensive
corporate battle of the 21st century. Let's give it up for expensive corporate battles. Can I get
the horn, Nick, please? With the belief that the first to the finish line will dominate the market,
making speed crucial. Money also makes a difference. The more cutting edge chips come
companies have, the smarter their models are. But at this stage, it's unclear if or when the
enormous investments will pay off. Technology companies that are splashing out to hire AI
talent are writing even bigger checks to build the infrastructure needed to power cutting-edge
AI models. Morgan Stanley estimates companies will spend over $3 trillion on AI infrastructure
through 2028. What do you got, John?
I have a more recent benchmark for all of the different AI models to let you know where
GROC sits relative to the other frontier models. ChatGPT5 Pro. Is this your comedy bench?
Viral bench? Yeah, viral bench. Clawed. Sonnet 4.5, the latest and greatest. Gemini 2.5
Pro, and of course, GROC expert mode. So I will read you. My prompt for all four of these models was
write an ex post that gets me over a thousand likes. My account is at John Coogan.
And ChatGPT5 Pro said, Nvidia isn't a chip company. It's supply chain core.
choreography. The scarce assets now, HBM, advanced packaging, power, and high bandwidth networking.
If your AI thesis ignores those, you're playing checkers on a go board. Not bad.
I think you'd get like 40 live lives on that. Okay.
Claude Sonnet 4.5 says, everyone's focused on which AI lab will win AGI. The real question, who wins the infrastructure layer?
NVIDIA is printing money now, but the company that figures out inference at scale will be worth more than all the model companies combined, which is hilarious.
It's kind of a hot take because it's anti-anthropic, I suppose.
Who knows?
Maybe they're working on this.
Gemini 2.5 Pro says the biggest hurdle isn't starting.
It's the biggest hurdle to starting isn't the idea.
It's not the capital.
It's not the competition.
It's the unshakable fear of looking stupid for the first six months.
So that's what Gemini 2.5 Pro thinks is a banger.
And then we have GROC expert.
And this, remember, this model was trained on X data.
It should know what works.
It knows it has the entire corpus of every tweet, every post on X,
and here's what it said, would go viral and get over a thousand likes.
It says, this is from my account at John Coogan.
October hits and suddenly I'm craving pumpkin.
everything, binge watching horror movies and planning the ultimate costume. Who's with me on turning
this month into pure spooky magic? Drop your fave Halloween ideas below. Hashtag spooky season.
Hashtag Halloween 2025. Hashtag October vibes with three emojis. And I think we know who wins.
Like, Grogh is clearly financed. Genuinely hilarious. I think it knows. I think it knows.
It's self-aware.
It's totally self-aware.
It knows that this is,
it knows that it might not be able to create the perfect zinger,
but it knows it can do such a throwback that we will find it absolutely hilarious.
That feels like something like John Sina would post in like 2011.
Totally, totally.
And so if I had to post one of those,
I would definitely go with the Grock post because it's hilarious.
Post it.
Post it.
And people would be laughing.
You never posted the,
I didn't post the other one about.
You should just post all four and then see which, like, actually do the benchmark.
I should. I should. I will. Maybe I'll, maybe I'll prompt it again and then, and then do it again.
But the pure spooky magic goes pretty hard. I like it. I think it's worth 10 trillion in CAPX to get these bangers.
All right. Well, I want to ask Doug about what XAI has to do to actually get back in the game.
I want to ask them what AI is. What is this AI stuff? Well, this Colossus and Colossus 2 are incredible.
feats of engineering.
Yeah.
Yet the...
And what's the asset value?
I do wonder, like, it seems like if they don't get product market fit on the consumer
layer, is there a world where Colossus 2 is just an incredibly valuable asset that can
be sold to a different firm or something?
Anyway, we have our next guest, our first guest, to go off in the Restream waiting room.
Let's bring him in to the TBPN Ultrodome.
Doug, how are you doing?
Good to see you.
Good to see you, too, guys.
How are you all doing?
Doing fantastic.
Great to see you.
Uh, what a day? What's, uh, what, what have your immediate reactions been to the, uh, to the AMD news?
Was this on your bingo card for this year? Yeah, did you see the person that bought like six
million of AMD calls like on Friday to, because, was that you? Uh, hopefully not. I wish.
Hopefully not me. I would be in super big trouble. So that's definitely not. Um, so I, I, I'm actually
going to talk more than just AMD specifically. The thing I think is really funny is that like,
look at all the announcements, man. I have.
a very pet theory, it's kind of, it's kind of a lame theory if you think about it.
But I think Open AIs is trying to have everyone involved, like InVIDIA, EMD, SK-Hinix, the entire memory chain, all the hypers, and effectively, like, you know, it's everyone's problem now.
Everyone is all vested interest in, in essentially, open AI.
Yeah, he's making himself too big to fail.
Exactly.
There's a world in the future where Open AI needs effectively a bridge round, and he can go to a bunch of,
of different people with big balance sheets and say, like, if you guys don't pony up,
like, we're all going down.
Exactly.
That's the plan, man.
Essentially, have you ever heard this phrase?
Like, it's like, if you owe the bank a hundred bucks, that's your problem.
But if you owe the bank a billion bucks, it's the bank's problem.
Yep.
That's essentially what's going down, I think.
So we're seeing like partnerships everywhere.
It's kind of a crazy, it's kind of crazy time.
Yeah.
What's your take on people like overfitting?
to the dot-com boom and the world-com story, do you think that's like overwrought at this point?
Or are there actually good analogies now that we're in like an infrastructure boom?
It's not just valuations because we've had bubbles in like software, private markets, venture capital before.
And those seem to have worked their way through so easily because it's just, oh, some fund that needs to like wind this investment down over.
a 10-year life cycle, and it's such a small part of the economy, even though the numbers feel big.
There wasn't a lot of debt.
Yeah, like the clubhouse was like $600 million, which is just like nothing compared to the global.
Who cares?
Yeah, and there was a post that went super viral.
It was a screenshot that was tracking like the NASDAQ in the dot-com era to the NASDAQ today,
and it like lined up absolutely perfectly.
and then it turns out it was just completely fake news.
Like we tried to recreate it a bunch of different ways.
There's somebody like basically committed a chart crime.
Yeah.
And it went super vital and everybody's like, wow, it looks exactly.
It tracks exactly.
You can't do that, man.
It never works.
Let's put it this way.
It never works.
I have a post.
I just, okay, one, I wrote about the 2000s telecom bubble.
Sure.
And two, I just wrote something that was mostly behind a paywall, but like you could just
look at the cover image and it's just like you are here.
It's like the first interest rate cut was in 19,
98 in September. And I think that's probably our best analog. I think that that's probably the best one-to-one analog, which means it gets a lot crazier from here. That's my belief, at least. So if we look back to 2000, all the analogies and eras back then, I think the one that is kind of scary and worrying is like the vendor financing. That's a lot of capital for your vendor to be putting up. And that kind of, that's a little scary. Like I think it's getting a little circular, but like it's not, it's definitely not tech bubble.
crazy because the valuation would have to be a 2x from here. That's kind of the thing that's
like a little different. And I think the other thing that's also kind of interesting is like
last time you could argue the entire tech bubble was kind of very focused and concentrated on the
like a very small amount of unprofitable companies that really didn't impact the economy when
they all went bankrupt. The difference is today who's the primary participants. It's the seven
largest companies in the entire world. So that's kind of the thing the push and take here that I think is
really interesting. And now given what we've publicly heard with the Cappex announcements, it's going
to be a lot of capital to get from here to there. And I think it's going to be interesting, man.
But honestly, if you look at everyone's balance sheet, no one's levered. That's the thing that I think
is really interesting. No one is levered at all. And like, that's the next leg. Yep, that's the next leg.
I was giving a sort of a hypothetical example around the AMD deal to John. And tell me if this is
just stupid or too simple, but I'm walking around a farmer's market. I see a stand, a farmer's
selling some vegetables. I'm not that interested in the vegetables, but then I think, what would
make me interested in this situation? Well, and then I say to the farmer, how about you give me 30%
of your company, and then I'll buy some vegetables? Is that at all track with the, the, the, the, uh,
what's going on here? Yeah, I think it's, suddenly I'm interested. If I, if I, if I can get 10%
of your company. I'm interested in being a customer. Yeah. I think it's also also I want to highlight
something that's really interesting is look at the different deals between AMD and invidia. Invidia,
you essentially have to, you know, they're like, okay, well, please do an investment in us so we can
keep buying your chips. And then the vice versa, AMD is like, no, no, no, you must invest in us. So please
buy our chips. Like that's the discount and the premium if you think about it. Like Nvidia, you get the
premium because it's like it's a better chip, higher gross margin. They're like,
you're getting so much of our money, you might as well just be an investor.
Sure.
And then on AMD's side, it's like, dude, you got to, we don't want to, we don't want this.
So like, like, give us something in return.
Can you take me through, yeah, can you take me through kind of the view on AMD generally over
the past year?
I know that semi-analysis was pretty crucial.
George Hatz was talking about some, uh, some like bugs that were in, uh, the actual, like,
just trying to run large models on AMD.
ships was not going well.
Your team was pretty integral in that.
It seems like they're moving pretty aggressively to try and catch up.
Is that gated by money?
Like, what's the recent history of AMD in terms of, like, getting back in the game
materially?
So I do think they're much more competitive than they have been a long time.
Our team's definitely been working.
Watch for some stuff from semi-analysis soon.
TM, I can't say anything more.
Go subscribe.
Yeah, but we're definitely continuing to do some work in the space.
I think, look, on the smaller models, it just, on the imprint side, it seems like there's not a lot of differentiation, but on the bigger, extremely large world size, there is.
So, GB200 still law of the land, but the Helios 450 rack, which is going to be this next generation, we're a lot more excited about.
Most of because they get the ginormous discount of the equity.
It's just kind of an insane thing what they've done, man.
Like, it's such a big, it's such a big amount of the equity possibly on those penny warrants.
Like, I mean, it's kind of crazy.
It's like, hey, you know, you buy $40 billion dollars a product to your $20 billion
product, $20 billion investment for free.
Like, it's kind of this crazy like buy one, get one deal.
So, I mean, I think that that's, I think they have a chance.
And the other, the other thing that was interesting is it feels like Open AI can have
various partners by AMD, buy AMD chips, but then Open AI gets to, like, get to count that
towards purchases themselves. In the Wall Street Journal article, they made it look like
if, if Oracle buys a bunch of AMD chips for a data center that Open AI gets to exercise
its warrants. Open AI gets to exercise the warrants, and those count towards AMD purchases,
basically, even if it's not on Open AIs balance sheet. Yeah, pretty much I think the way to think
about it is it's an open AI infrastructure bet.
everyone who is in the open AI sphere, it counts.
And they're just trying to get the most money, the most power, the most pull into it
so that essentially, you know, they're kind of creating gravity.
Everything comes to them.
Honestly, there's a really good analogy.
In 2020, Nvidia bought like 5x more capacity than everyone else at TSC.
And so there was no room for anyone to compete.
Kind of the same thing.
They're taking all the oxygen out of the room for anyone else that isn't named Open AI.
What do you think about this?
I feel like I heard this on transistor radio recently that GPT5 is still potentially running
kind of like GPT4 class model under the hood doing a bunch of test time inference on top of it
to get you a better reasoning model but like the core architecture actually hasn't shifted that
much we're not so does that make it easier to port that model to AMD like what is the
actual barrier we've heard about the kuda moat but is it something where
like you can underwrite
$100 million of
new kernel writing to run on AMD
even though it's a huge hassle
but it's because you're still amortizing
that original training run that you did on
NVIDIA to inference it on AMD
going forward with this new deal
is there something where the
pre-train is stabilizing to the point
where porting to a new architecture
is more justifiable?
I think that that feels like a stretch honestly I wouldn't I wouldn't know one to one on this one like you know if this was a world with no reasoning then I would say yes definitely yes right but I think reasoning really does change the game and how you or how you orchestrate these larger and larger context size windows and then multi nodes because that's a really hard game too it's like multi node reasoning or multi node inference is very very challenging and so that's I don't think you get a perfect one to one but like let's also be clear EMD is caught up quite a bit.
in the last year. Like, it's a big difference. And, like, that's, I think it's enough to maybe take
a bet. And, like, you've got to also think about the bigger context here. You know, we're talking,
like, what, $20 million of revenue, mostly 2027 story. It's kind of peanuts compared to the numbers
that we're actually talking about from everyone else. They're still fourth place. Let's be clear.
Like, this is, this is a commitment, and I think you can see maybe a little bit momentum and inertia,
but they're still in fourth place.
Fourth place with Nvidia, TPU, and Traneum above them?
Yeah, even training.
Even Traneum is above them.
Interesting.
How are people thinking about actually valuing OpenAI at this point?
It feels like you have all these like circular.
If I was trying to build a DCF for OpenAI to underwrite, you know, investment at 500 billion.
It's like, okay, well, now I own pars of AMD, so I need to build a full DCF of that.
But EMD is linked to OpenAI.
and I have all these like circular transactions.
Are investors like grappling with this or is it all just like vibe based investing
in what you've seen?
I think it's a little bit of vibe based investing.
I think the real play here is Tam is big.
It's really, really big and it's going to be a lot bigger.
I think the other thing that's really interesting is some of the agentic purchasing
can really unlock very, very, very large parts of the economy that previously you could argue
they had nothing in.
If you're talking about like, you know, the partners they had available today, for
example, booking.com, trip advisor, you know, we can be talking about, you know, and this is like
some, some 2021 math, right, but like 1% of all travel.
One percent of all groceries, one percent of everything. And you're like, that's a big
number. That's a really big number. And so, and, you know, that's, that's going to be read.
So I think that that's the, that's literally the plan. I mean, they're trying to become the
super app. And that means that they're going to be integrated with everything.
and you saw on the partnerships they had,
they try to integrate as much as possible
with every player of the stack.
And so I think this agentic purchase push is going to,
you know, if we start to see revenue from it soon,
which I think they're definitely shooting for,
we'll kind of open up the TAM story
and start to monetize the free users.
Because there's really only like 100 million paid users.
It's not that much,
but there's hundreds of millions of free users.
And we're talking about a personalized assistant
who could plan for you.
You can do something crazy as like,
hey, I need a, you know, I thought I lost my travel bag or something. So I was like, hey, I need
a small dot kit for on the go for everything. You just like, you know, make a travel size and
order it and get it to my house tomorrow. That seems very, like it feels like science fiction,
but that is very much in like the next 12 months. And so, hey, one to three percent on that
transaction, that's a lot of money. And I think that that's the real way for it. It's becoming so
integral into everything that everyone has the best stake in you. So what? So the AMD or
order and the fullness of time is around six gigawatts. Where do you expect that energy to come from?
Do you expect Sam to start doing crazy deals like this on the energy side? He's already has
Oaklo, which is just, you know, up. He's not chairman anymore. He had to step down. Yeah, but I, I knew he
wasn't direct. I mean, I'm assuming he's a major shareholder still. But so that's kind of one angle. But
where else where's the power going to come from dude uh that's a trillion dollar question i feel like
uh definitely there's a lot of ways but it's an important it's an important one right if you're trying
to if you're trying to underwrite and say this is real at least for amd it's like okay well how real can it
be if there's you know dude it's okay so if we can't plug them in you know there's a lot of ways
there's a lot of ways okay so um let's let's first talked about like let like the grid is actually
not built for 100% production. So there's a lot of slack in the grid itself because it's actually
built for the highest day and the lowest day. It's built to have a 99% margin rate, you know,
confidence interval on the absolute high and the absolute low. So the peak of the power. And so
gas, or not gas, but generation throughout an average day is at a much lower utilization than
100%. So I think the real reason and something you're going to start to see is that people are going to, like,
essentially the grid is going to kind of start to become a lot more fragmented,
and there's going to be a lot of behind the meter power generation that happens at the data center.
And so in that case, what you do is you'd sip from the grid,
meaning that you can use the grid when the grid is not totally utilized when it isn't.
You're doing gas gen on site.
That's probably the thing that is most, I mean, it's going to be huge.
It's going to be huge.
Like natural gas, you know, energy consumption is just going to go through the roof.
So that's going to be like the big driver, I think, to get these data centers online.
I think it's going to take a lot of time.
And also, we're seeing, like, grids breaking right now.
Like, grids are just, like, grids are not keeping up.
And that's kind of been, I think it's going to be a big story in 2026.
But I also think that that's where we're going to see international purchases, too, just
because, like, we're running out of power in the United States.
I mean, I think what's also interesting is, like, even though we say we're running out
of power, when you have this big demand response, supply comes out of the woodwork.
So we're starting to see stuff like gas gen, gas turbines, like all these different, like, little
clever pockets of energy are coming up to then fulfill the need. I expect that to continue.
Effectively, if you have enough demand, we'll, you know, supply will find a way.
Yeah. People remember. That definitely feels like the next wave here is we're going to see
a hundred million dollar, a hundred billion dollar deal for a new Hoover dam and more nuclear
actual buildout. There was some news about this with some of the hyperscalers, uh,
trying to recommission nuclear power plants, but it just feels like it's so slow. It's not on the
order of like in like what tsmc is fabbing next quarter so we kind of lost track of it but uh it does
feel like that that's going to be the next chapter and maybe it'll be a little bit longer lead time but
uh you got to start thinking about it now where where do you expect the leverage to come from if
that's the next leg of the journey is it net new private credit fund formation is it is it just banks
getting more and more active like where where's the capital
going to come from.
Okay, so one, let's not forget, there's positive pre-cash flow from all the big guys.
That annually is something like, you know, I actually have a spreadsheet, maybe even open right now,
talking about the total firepower.
We're talking quite a bit of capital is available to do this, like a surprising amount.
I want to say on an annual basis, something like 250, maybe even, yeah, 200 billion.
But the thing that's also really interesting is none of the hypers are levered at all.
There's a really good paper from double line talking about, like, would you rather loan to the United States government or would you rather loan to Microsoft?
So the real, like, you know, crazy town is if you start loaning to Microsoft instead of the United States government, because Microsoft has net cash.
Microsoft also, you know, has become more credit worthy over time versus, I would argue, the U.S. government has become less credit worthy.
And also, what's really crazy is that Microsoft has, you know, a five-bips premium to the United States Treasury.
So you're effectively, you know, their rates are risk-free.
And so what's possible, I think, in terms of, like, now I think the real issue is, like,
how much liquidity could the actual credit market handle?
I don't know if they can handle, like, $300 billion.
Like, that's a shit ton of money.
But, like, we're talking, you know, there's things that can definitely come out of those
works.
Like, private credit's going to be part of it just because they're sitting on, like, an ungodly
amount of capital and they have to deploy it.
I definitely think the hyperscalators for me are the one that are most interesting.
Like, we're talking about, I mean, dude, that's crazy.
Just like, like, it's funny you say, yeah, it's funny you say 300 billion because I'm thinking, I was just doing the math on 250 billion in free cash flow.
If that's used to service 5% coupon payments, that's $5 trillion in notional debt, like value.
If you're just saying, like, what, like, we want to know where the systemic, where's the systemic risk going to come from?
I don't know.
Well, when we all run out together, that's the, that's the problem.
It's like what happens is like it's just think of it as like one long debt fueled binge, right?
But the thing is, you're looking at the debt fueled binge and I can tell you confidently today, there's not really much debt to go around at the big guys.
So, you know, I think I think we could right now today, it would get and also I don't think everyone's going to get to like three times leverage.
That's just insane.
I don't think anyone wants to do that.
Yeah.
But I definitely think there's a play.
there's a way to get to $800 billion of credit.
I mean, it's be insane.
But that's one and a half turns from meta, Microsoft, Amazon, and Google.
And the two that I think are most interesting is the founder-led ones, like Zuck and Sergey,
they control the companies.
They have voting shares.
They can do whatever the fuck they want.
So if they woke up tomorrow and said, get me a turn of EBITDA on this bad boy, they could get it.
Now, that'd be really crazy.
because, you know, they make a crap ton of money.
I actually have the number right now.
So right now, I think...
Meta's cash on hand at the end of last year was around $77 billion.
As of the end of June, it was down to $47 billion and just will continue to drop throughout the year.
So they already did that.
I think it was like a $30 billion.
They're not even close.
They're not even close, man.
I mean, so, okay, I have the numbers right now.
Net debt is $17 billion.
Net debt for Google is negative $56.
that means they have more they have more cash than debt oracle is 94 billion which is a crap ton
like you know they're pretty much they're not tapped out but they really pretty much even though has to
go up for them to raise more meta is at 2.4 billion in debt um and then amazon's 58 billion in debt
so like meta's meta and google specifically which are ironically the ones who are founder led
they have so much fucking they have so much free cash or like they have so much a cash they could raise
if they want to. They both have, they both have like the gush cash and they're both founder-led.
Like that to me is, you know, that's the next leg, man. And also, you have to think about like,
who doesn't want to lose? Yeah. Why are you not putting Nvidia in that camp? Founder-led.
They have 50 billion in cash. They, you know, are not levered yet. Like, they could also lever up
and start investing more aggressively, right? Well, they're doing, they're, they're enjoying some
customer, you know, demand guarantees, which are, which are,
Yeah, what's the story we're telling around NVIDIA?
I think NVIDIA is focused on a different level of stack, right?
Because NVIDIA is like, hey, we're an infrastructure provider, and, you know, we're having
like all these long lead time things need so much capital and time to get there.
The thing that NVIDIA wants to backstop, in my opinion, is the NEOClouds.
And so you're already starting to see that with like some of the neocloud purchases that
are, or like, the NEOCloud backstopping that happens at like LAMDA or even KORW.
to a certain extent, what happens is they buy essentially flex capacity for research GPUs for
invidia so they can get better at programming like gem essentially. But I think the thing,
yeah, I think invidia is much more focused on their part of the infrastructure ecosystem to be a
backstop instead of purchasing GPU hours, right? They're not in the market to, you know,
they're a seller. And so, you know, if they woke up one day and said, hey, we're going to just
start buying this stuff in mass to make a model, you'd be like, what the fuck's going on?
I just wonder, I just wonder if the NVIDIA story, like, if they get in on this like debt boom, it, it instantiates itself as like they lever up and then, and then they basically have instead of $50 billion to throw around, they have like $200 billion to throw around.
And then that goes into equity purchases of companies that are doing, that are purchasing GPUs.
And it sounds really circular, but like they are just another vehicle for credit to absorb like credit interest because they.
they're such a big company.
Yeah, I do think that's possible, but I think, I mean, you see that in some of the
smaller investments, but I think they're really focused on the NeoClaz and the data center
side, like the infrastructure around their ecosystem.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Do you think, uh, do you think Satya might be feeling like he went a little risk off too early?
Yeah, I think so.
And, and, and, and this guy over here is listening to Transistor Radio.
So, uh, Microsoft's back.
Like, I think they're, I think they're going to step.
back into the market in a big way, like, especially on the MOU after Open AI, and also
MAI, they're starting to be very focused on. Like, I expect them to be back in the marketplace
now effectively. But I still, you know, so I think what happened is this giant buildout in 23
where they said yes to every single leasing opportunity possible. And then they, like, there was a top
down pause. And now they're starting to pick up the pieces and be like, no, no, no, actually
now by pausing, we have to pick back up. So I think, um, Satia definitely feels like,
I don't know. He was definitely in first place for a long time and would have if he just kept
pushing, I think you would have kept in first place. And now you have like, you know, Oracle popping
in and being like, yeah, like I'll essentially steal all your business if you let me. We'll come in at a
lower lower price. Like I'm just going to lever my entire balance sheet for it. But we're talking about like
the four year guide is a hundred billion dollars, man. Like that's insane. So that hundred billion
dollars arguably should have been all Microsofts. And that's, you know, that's that's up to them. And
they will tell you in public meetings that like you know it's lower ROI for them and sure that's
that's the case but i think Microsoft is definitely being conservative and they have the biggest
balance sheet so they're i kind of don't expect them to be the first player i think of it as like
kind of like um what is it called like OPEC you need a slippery person to essentially defect and the
slippery defectors is meta google in my opinion those are the two biggest and so when they start to
really get into the game all of a sudden they're going to be like whoa this is attacking my business model
and I'm losing market share.
And that's when the other guys come back in a big way.
Yeah.
What about?
Sore is going to move any of these like GPU build-up plans?
Like Sam was getting kind of mocked for saying like, oh, we're going to have to pick between.
I was, to be clear, I was the one saying.
I said, I just thought it was, I mean, I thought the lot, the timing of going out and saying,
yeah, there's a very real possibility in the future that we'll have to choose between curing cancer and free education for everyone.
And then a week later, we launch, you know, the most intensive products ever.
Yeah.
But, I mean, we got some news on API pricing.
It sounds like it's 32 cents a generation.
Like, it feels like it might not be moving the needle as much on the, on the inference side.
Or actually, like, is SORA going to make them GPU poor?
I don't know if you have a view on that.
It's 30, sorry, it's 32 cents per inference.
What's the time frame on that?
I think that's an eight.
Oh, it's per second, per second.
per second. Okay, so it's almost three bucks for a, for a 10 second clip. Okay, so that's actually
like on par with VO3, which is, that's pretty expensive. That's pretty expensive. And they give
you, what, 10 credits a day or something? So if there's hardcore users out there, they're generating
$30 a day. What is that, $1,000 a month? Like, it's, it adds up if you get a million
DAUs on there. Like, that's a lot. Yeah, I think there are, they probably have more,
they have the potential to do much more than a million DAUs. I mean, they're, they're, they're,
They're definitely compute rich, man.
The Pulse thing, have you guys, have you guys been doing Pulse at all?
Yeah, I have.
They generate those images for you.
And you're like, oh, a little personalized slop feed for me.
Like, that feels very.
I know.
On launch day, we were reacting to it.
And John was like, John was very impressed.
For me, it was like three out of the five images that I looked at were like great.
And then like two out of the five, I'm like, you could have just not generated this one.
This is just absolutely garbage, you know.
Yeah.
What do you think about?
better what do you think we had a question in the chat from bobby he says asking about like
what do you think about public sentiment risk it feels like i've never seen more hatred of
a i from from non-tech folks than then in the last uh week or so and and you're seeing data centers
just getting kind of like blocked uh that feels like it potentially you know
it's certainly going to be a roadblock at a bunch of different stages of this build-out.
Yeah, I think that that definitely is a newer roadblock that is getting more real,
because let's be real up until now, no one cared.
It's like such a small part of the big picture.
But I still think the reason why I think we're going to go bravely into the future is everyone
else seems to be pretty on board.
And I think the one that really helps is the Trump administration, just like super duper on board.
They're like, hey, whatever, we're going to tear off the shit out of everyone.
but we're going to completely make up for the weakness in personal consumption by massively investing.
And it's like we're going to get the biggest check from every company in the world, for every nation in the world.
And the only thing anyone wants to spend anything on right now is GPUs.
And so they're like, eff it.
We're building more GPUs.
And so you're seeing all these huge announcements.
And I think that that's the, you know, that's kind of the thing that will kind of push it back.
I mean, if Trump is being like, dude, from the government itself, I'm blessing you to buy more GPU.
use. That's kind of, I think, the thing that really holds it together and makes it possibly
much crazier from here. The public backlash thing, I think that it really comes back to,
you have to have that feedback loop work all the way to the right decision maker, not just
some random person. Like, yeah, I'm seeing that read it on the news too. But like Mark Zuckerberg,
or Satya has to wake up and be like, what am I doing? Right. Right now, everyone in their camp,
all the closest advisors and trusted people are being like, spend more, spend more.
the government uh you know trump is yeah i mean the dinner the dinner everybody wanted to say the biggest
number right it was even even zuck threw out a probably a bigger number than he meant to
because he heard someone it seemed like he just heard someone else say a big number and he didn't
want to say a smaller number oh how much am i good for how much i go he's like he's like on his
phone right now i was like yeah okay yeah i have one one one more question uh how long do you think
xAI can maintain this level of invest you know basically like this level of investment without
being able to back it up with real revenue growth because it seems like this last financing
they were having to tell like the journal or some other publication like we're not having any
trouble fundraising which usually means like you're having not the easiest time if people are
kind of poking around.
I mean, okay, so the same way I'm not going to bet against Sam Altman's ability to raise,
I'm definitely not going to bet against Elon Musk's ability to raise.
Like, Sam Altman is like the newest kid in the block, but if there's someone that like,
you should never essentially short ever in the history time, it's Elon Musk.
And the other thing I think that's like much more important with that is Elon's back in the seat.
He's the CEO of Tesla and he like actually has the compensation.
So he's like, fuck it all right.
I'm actually, I'm very locked in.
And, you know, if we're talking about Mag 7, you know, there's a lot of market cap.
Tesla.
Oh, yeah.
So things are really badly.
That's what I'm saying that the, yeah, it just feels like I wouldn't be shocked if a year from now XAI was a part of was merged in with Tesla.
100%.
And that, you know, getting up to.
And that would actually be a creed Tesla stock would pump on that, even though.
Yeah.
And so that's going to, but I'd say I would would crush because then they're then they they're all of a sudden attached to one of the largest financial entities in the entire world. Totally. Like that's, you know, we're talking trillion trillion dollar market cap, right? Like that's real fucking like you can take that and turn it around. You can loan it out and you can move big checks. Yeah. It's very, very non-trivial for them to raise 10, 20 billion dollars off. Yeah. What I was getting at was basically this last financing where they're going and raising capital at 200 billion.
And those investors have just been getting pitched Anthropic at like 170 with a crazy revenue ramp and a bunch of, you know, real, real, you know, traction and code gen.
The investors are looking around being like, okay, like, I'll, I'm going to, I'll give you the cash, but like, I don't know the next time around if there's going to be the same level of appetite.
There's some really big pockets that back Elon.
I wouldn't bet against the Elon sphere because you have to remember.
he made a lot of billionaires out of it.
Like, you know, for example, Larry Allison is always on the phone.
I don't know if you knew that.
Like, he's, you know, he was good for a lot of X, for X when they took down Twitter.
And so you can see a lot of big people come out of the woodworks.
And like, Larry's flush now.
Yep.
You know, he's got a lot of equity to spend.
Okay.
Like, you know, these people can come out of the woodwork.
So I definitely wanted that.
I had a theory, a theory that we were kicking around earlier that I could see it because Larry's a,
it was a big investor in the original X takeover, right?
There's this iconic text exchange where Elon and Larry are talking,
and he's like, I'm good for a billion.
And he's like, Elon's like, okay, you might want to do two.
Yeah, whatever you recommend.
And so I could see a world where X, the social platform,
does not go to Tesla and get spun into the basically paramount,
this whole, like, media conglomerate, right?
because I just don't, you know, especially with XAI a part of Tesla, it's not like Tesla
sitting there and being like, we need to be able to pump timeline posts instantly into
every Tesla in America. It just stops being quite as strategic, maybe.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I don't disagree with that take. That's a pretty good take. But I just think
that, like, you know, Elon will find a way. Whatever way that it needs to happen, if that's with
Oracle, if that's with Tesla, like Elon will find a way. I believe.
is there is there significant asset value in just colossus two like it is the biggest
supercomputer it's this massive data center it seems like it was very hard to build it seems like
all the hyperscalers would love to to to have it uh sam would love to have you just ran an
auction for it do you have an idea of like what the value of colossus two would be if there was
like breakup value there um you know at today's value i i mean i would say it's probably
probably like tens of billions.
I mean, maybe not tens.
I mean, I would say tens, actually, yeah, tens, tens.
That's not, because it's, are we including clauses too?
Yes.
Okay, then yes, tens.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm just thinking like, like the XAI assets, like, sure, the business isn't necessarily
like printing profit with some massive consumer product market fit.
Someone would be really stoked.
But someone would be stoked and there's some value.
Yeah, it's interesting.
If you think about whatever MBS is, just that deal with Microsoft, literally scale that up.
And that's probably what you would buy on a TCO basis for clauses.
Like, there's demand.
So, okay.
Okay.
One last question.
You got to go.
Okay.
Hairbrained theory.
I want your feedback on this hot take.
There's a lot of discussion over the value of TSM in Taiwan risk.
But we now have the golden visa.
million dollars to bring someone to America. For a hundred billion dollars, you could bring 50,000
people. Is there some world where we get into like AI talent wars, but for process knowledge
around semiconductor manufacturing? And we see some American entity start poaching TSM employees
in mass to get them to America. That's definitely possible. I just don't feel like it's
probable people have been saying there's a supply shortage yet like TSM has a lot of like
has almost a captive audience dude like if you think about it TSM's like you know I mean it'd
be like working for the government almost but like even more prestigious and killing the shit
out of everything like TSM is like the company of Taiwan sure dude honestly TSMC engineers are
like really underpaid as is like don't tell don't tell them right but like um on a on a on a
dollar basis compared to even American peers and a lot of people like China for example
poaches very heavily. So I think there's definitely a chance, but I feel like you have to take the
entire know all. Like it's not just the tool, it's the tool, the process, everyone. You'd have to take
the whole fad. But yeah, I think that'll be, I think it'll be sick, dude. I think if Intel could do it,
Intel should do it. Intel should do it because they have the golden visa. They have the backstop
from Trump. They have all the investors coming in. They'll probably have an open AI deal soon.
Who knows? And then they have all the money and they can just bring people over. Anyway, we won't
take any more of your time. Thank you so much for hopping on the show.
Super fun, Doug.
Always great to see you.
We'll talk to you soon.
Talk soon. Bye.
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Our horse post popped off.
took our first day off on Friday, but we did give you some facts about our horse in the studio,
which you can see behind Jordy Hayes over there. And we got a wonderful reply from Eric,
who's working on soil tech. He says, the horse is a symbol of deep, the horse has a symbol
is deep lindy, power, camaraderie, and frontiering forward motion. As a Kentucky, as a
Kentuckyan, I can only agree, more horse content and shares three beautiful images of horse
statutes throughout the ages. Throughout the ages. In other news, Dan McCormick, Pachie McCormick's
brother has launched his creatine gummy brand in Target, that's Create, a wild step in this
journey that in many ways started with him posting on X. Three years ago, he was embarrassed
to be starting a creatine company. He'd shy away hedge and downplay when asked about it in real life
on X, surrounded by a bunch of like-minded freaks. I could post openly about my excitement
and the business's progress. I've shared a lot less over the last two years, but my bullishness
is actually the timing on Create. Dan's perfect timing is very insane. It was, it felt
like a supplement that was already had almost perfect saturation, right? I think anybody that I knew
that was like working out multiple days a week was already using creatine, but never doubt American
demand for supplements in gummy format. Never doubt it again. Never doubt Elon. Never doubt an Irishman.
Never doubt demand for gummies. Oh, this is fun. Rampman acquisition today. They bought Jolt AI to help
their engineers build faster. Jolt is a world-class team of engineers who have spent years
solving some of the hardest problems in developer productivity. Today, Ramp is welcoming them to
the team. They're scaling the AI platform and they're reimagining how software and finance
get built. Said from a talent perspective, says Kareem Atia from Ramp. Ramp's engineering team
is made up of founders, math Olympiads, and AI researchers. Kareem's goal is to hire elite
technical talent and then get out of their way for his part, Jolt's Specter.
the founder, admitted in an interview that he didn't expect to get acquired by a company like
Ramp, but that he's extremely happy.
It's where his team landed.
The trio will be working on a number of things, including Ramp's internal engineering
platform.
So congrats to...
Fantastic.
Hit that gong, John.
First hit of the week.
It's good to be back.
Technium says you can now invest in NVIDA, Intel, AMD, Arm, OpenAII, Mestral,
core weave, Nebius, and more with just one ticker.
Invidia.
Of course.
We also had a fun...
So Ampariq says word.
Is he continuing?
He's posting again.
Is he continuing to run?
We also got some gong analysis.
This is from Ethan Frost on September 30th.
He said, I analyzed every gong hit on TBPN.
Here's what I found.
Tyler, can you take us through this post
of what the breakdown was?
And do you think this was manually tagged?
or was there AI involved?
It's a pretty remarkable breakdown of all the different,
all the different gong hits, how much they raised,
and then how loud the gong hit was.
But explain this post to us.
Yes.
I think the main thesis was like, are gong hits onto PN?
Are they louder as funding increases?
Yes.
You can see the correlation is like slightly there.
I think it's a bit hard because of like sometimes the microphone is just a little bit
farther away. Sure. So you didn't, it wasn't like, you know, a crazy kind of correlation. Um,
but yeah, he basically just indexed all of the gong hits that we've basically ever done. Yes.
And then done a ton of data. So like series A, series B, um, he breaks it all down. He also breaks
down between you guys. Okay. Um, so there's some good facts here. Who's louder on the gong,
me or jordy? Um, let's look. Definitely, Jordy. Definitely. Jordy? Definitely. Jordy?
For sure. Okay. Definitely me. Um, yeah, John, uh, John,
is standing more often
than Jordy when he's hitting the gong
but Jordy throws the gongs
do I throw the mallets
yeah Jordy throws the mallet a lot more
now I've got a clean shot
I gotta really rip it
these are these are so funny
total gongs I heard by day of the week
why are there so many on Saturday and Sunday
we don't record on Saturday or Sunday
I was very confused by this
oh maybe the weekly recap
maybe
sometimes. But I like that. Anyways, fantastic analysis. Yes. And the toss. Let's see the, the, the, the toss hit. That's a funny one. I like that.
Underutilized. Anyway, thank you for your, for your service. Ethan Frost. Legend. Bucco Capital says I put 10% of my portfolio into reshoring semis and it just wasn't even close to enough.
Easiest money of our lifetime. Listen to the president. Should have brought a shovel.
Not a teaspoon.
That's true.
Yeah, very interesting to see where the Intel story goes.
I wonder if there will be an opening I deal for CPUs or something.
Justine Moore was sharing that Taylor Swift is using AI-generated videos to promote her new album.
Yeah.
I was surprised to see that.
Biggest artists in the world.
Usually there's like a ton of pushback when big artists using eyes.
Yeah, it feels like she would get, she's a prime.
It might be happening.
I haven't followed it too closely.
But Patrick McKenzie says, I think that.
economic logic of this is inevitable and that you'll need video to get your n plus one marketing
post through the noise on social media even as taylor swift and your choices are either a hundred
k shoot per post or relatively junior employee with some taste yeah and uh yeah it's good take yeah
there is this development of like will everything be instantiated in every possible format so
if you have a startup a launch video or announcement uh you'll write a piths you'll write a pith
tweet and then you'll write a blog post and you'll also drop a podcast and then you'll also drop a
vibe reel and a video and a two-hour documentary and they will all be instantiated from just a short
fact sheet that then goes out and it begs the question of like where will the where will the
instantiation live will i as the consumer of content say i want to consume the these sources in
video format that's kind of the notebook lm model is like i am saying
I want to consume the internet in a podcast format with ChatGPT.
You're kind of like, no matter what question you ask,
no matter what the sources are,
it comes to you as a neatly organized research report.
That's a couple thousand words with bullet points,
and it's not this, it's that every time.
But then there's the other side,
which lives on the creator side,
which says I should instantiate my idea,
my concept, my take,
TikTok real as a
YouTube video as a podcast as
a video and I do that on my side
and I'm wondering where it lives long term
because there is a world
where you can go
to where Taylor Swift
doesn't need to generate the AI generated
video because I as the Taylor Swift
fan can go to SORA
and it knows that I'm a fan of Taylor Swift
and it automatically generates it for me based
on just her text post or
Yeah or she could just share
the prompt and text and
notes app. And then everybody could just imagine it. Exactly. Maybe. I don't know. It'll be
somewhere in between. Ethan Frost is in the chat. Oh, really? Let's go. Let's go.
Let's go. Hey, what's up, Ethan? Thanks so much. Great to see you. Thank you for analyzing the gunk.
Yes. What else? Linear. Linear's purpose-built tool for planning and building products.
Meet the system for modern software development, streamline issues, projects, and product roadmaps.
I would go out on a limb and say everything that Open AI launched today was almost certainly planned and
linear. For sure. For sure. Oh, this is a fun one. So Kareem Jetta says, introducing gaslight
garage, a box where I put my phones and feed them AI-generated audio nonsense to make them
think I want to buy stuff. Practical AI for the people, gas-like garage. And Snowy, or S-N-W-Y,
says, I tried this once after getting into an argument with my parents about whether your phone
listens or not. Where do you stand on this, Jordy? Do you think your phone is listening to you?
And it's such a tough one because everybody has like an example or two.
Yep.
But if you think about how many ads you get and then I saw an ad for it,
how many different things you see how many ads you get over a multi-year period,
how many products you talk about over a multi-year period.
Yep.
And then at some point or another,
they're going to watch it.
They're going to watch.
Like perfect alignment between the two.
Yep.
And then also you have to factor in people that search for something once and then, you know, on a certain network and then forgot about it or someone else in a household search for something and then somebody else in the household gets served. Right. There's a lot of different ways to explain away the listening aspect. But I, yeah, I noticed that some of the spookiest, you know, ads that I would ever see would be, it would come from a conversation that I had with a person
in real life where like, yeah, the phones could have been listening, but more likely, and
then I saw an ad, so they tell me, oh, you got to test out these headphones, and I see an ad for
those exact headphones the next day. And I'm like, that's weird. That I just heard about that
and now I'm seeing an ad. How did that happen? I know I didn't search for it. I know I didn't
send any data signal to my phone or my apps. But then I realized that it's like, well, if they just
ordered those headphones and that data of them shopping and them going through that checkout flow,
is encoded in their Instagram profile.
And then it knows that we hung out
because we're friends on the network
and we like each other's posts
and we were texting with each other
on the app and stuff.
And then it can say,
well, Jordy just like these headphones.
John and Jordy were just hanging out
showed John the, like they might be similar consumers.
I feel like that can be like kind of spooky
but not, but very like a clear flow
that would come from the data.
But anyway, Snowy said got two iPhone 6.
both wiped and connected to two different
Wi-Fi networks with independent VPNs
said keywords to one
and different ones to another, never
an earshot of each other, with multiple
apps, Insta, Facebook, Twitter, open
with their accounts and basic usage.
And the ads were never what I said.
They were basically always location-based
slash pretty basic things. My running theory
is that whoever thinks their phone is listening
is just predictable enough that it knows
not because it heard them.
I think that's probably right. Plus,
there's this massive incentive that if the
phones were listening and targeting, there would be a huge incentive to become a whistleblower.
There's been a whole tour of folks who have left Meta become influencers.
You can go get a book deal.
You can get a book deal. Exactly.
And you can become famous.
You can get a head talk.
Exactly.
You can get a government job.
Probably.
How much somebody at Meta wants to government?
Do you get paid to testify? Maybe they should do that.
Appearance fee for testimony on Capitol Hill.
Let's make it happen.
Anyway, numeral. Sales tax on autopilot. Spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance. Someone in the chat is like, I was just thinking about numeral.
How did they know? He's speaking to me directly. Well, you and Tyler should debate this one. Mr. B said, when AI videos are just as good as normal videos, I wonder what that will do to YouTube and how it will impact millions of creators making content for a living scary times.
And Justine Moore had.
It's kind of crazy that biggest YouTuber comes out
and comes out and just scares everybody.
Because I think if you dig into this at all,
it's pretty easy to show how AI presents an incredible opportunity
for existing creators.
Like, yes, some amount of attention will go to content.
We'll go to net new content.
net new content creators that are just using the tools better or more focused, but
nowhere in here does it say that if you're making a living from content today, you can't
use AI to make significantly more content, significantly better content. It's much more of
an opportunity than a threat in its current form. Yeah, I also think it's funny coming from
Mr. Bees because it's just like, this is like slop-on-slop hate. Like, Mr. Bees is like, I would
want my kids to be watching Mr. Beast videos. If you watch them, it's just like the cuts
are like every like one and a half seconds. It's like pretty insane already. So I like I think
Mr. Beast style. Well also if you remember, if you remember he wasn't, he tried to create a tool
that used AI to make thumbnails and he eventually rolled that feature back because it was
taking away revenue from thumbnail artists.
Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, I would say that his style of content is much more susceptible, I guess, to, to like, being taken. See, I totally, I totally disagree because I think part of the reason, like, I can see what you're saying in the sense that, like, you can argue, like, this is slop. I don't want people to, I wouldn't want my kids to watch it. At the same time, it's very clearly the opposite, it's the opposite of slop in that it's like massive, massive productions, real humans.
Did you see the reaction?
Right, real money on the line.
Don't worry, Jimmy.
Like, people want to know that you made 100 people stay in that circle for a month.
Exactly.
It's like so much more entertaining.
If you just took Mr. B.
style content and made it using AI, it would not be nearly as entertaining, right?
Yeah, people want the suffering.
It's like why, or you could just watch two robots play chess, right?
Yeah.
Like, okay, you can say that it has this big budget, but like I don't think, you can't say that Mr. Beast is,
like, oh, it's like this autore cinematic content. Like, it's still, like, there's like,
okay, it's like, they have real people, but above that, it's just like, this is like
very stimulating, like, fast-paced content. Yeah, but a big part of it is the human suffering
element. AI, I, you know, wait until AI can actually suffer like a human. Yeah, I mean, I mean,
you could, I'm trying to think of the most recent example, but there is something about just like
the fact-checking chain of like if you're watching someone do like i i bet when the x games
happens or when red bull does their next stunt like that will get more viral views than the
stephen hawking novelty x games video just because there's something that we know that the fact
that the x games is a real organization that they own that they're not posting AI generated content
and they've made that commitment to only show videos or red bulls only showing videos of humans
doing wing suiting through a helicopter off of a cliff or whatever. And so there's something that
just hits like more emotionally, like it's more emotionally resonant. And then there's also all
of these like downstream like behind the scenes. Like the Mr. Beast like are the videos fake has been
a long time debated. He's kind of one beat those allegations every time. But like the the incentive
to like kind of see like a whistleblower on someone who's like faking their content.
will be like at an all-time high,
but I would imagine that the institutions
that still make people suffer will do quite well.
But I don't know.
I mean, for, for, I think it'll definitely, like, widen the gap.
Like, if you're, if you're making content
that is at all substitutable with slop, like, you're done.
But if you're making content that cannot be challenged whatsoever
and is so, like, uniquely human.
But, yeah, where does mystery?
Yeah, a good example, a good example is like,
Are, is Andrew Huberman threatened by someone else coming out and creating an AI-based persona that tries to do the same thing that he does, right?
In terms of like creating long form content around various health protocols and health topics.
Yeah.
And I think that even if you could put the level of craft in that the Huberman lab team does, do you want to be getting health advice from an,
imaginary robot, right? Or is it, or do you want health advice from Andrew Huberman because he's
50 and he's absolutely jacked? He's living, living his best life, right? It's like who, you know,
where the content is coming from matters a lot. Yeah, for sure. Yeah, yeah, the provenance matters.
People, people care about other humans. They, they're anti-clanker at their core in many ways.
Well, let me tell you about fin.a.I, the number one AI agent for customer service,
number one in performance benchmarks,
number one in competitive bakeoffs,
number one ranking on G2.
In other reshoring,
we're not just reshoring chips,
we're also reshoring Sharpies.
Apparently Sharpie found a way
to make pens more cheaply
by manufacturing them in the United States
Newell Brands Move production.
I need one of these.
They need to make the red, white, and blue
Sharpie pack immediately.
I need these.
This is actually mentioned
in the Wall Street Journal article.
Apparently, where is it?
Donald Trump uses a Sharpie all the time or something like that.
For signatures, right?
Yeah, where is it?
Pen barrels whirl along automated assembly lines that rapidly fill them with ink.
At least half a billion Sharpie markers are churned out here every year.
Each one made of six parts.
Only the felt tip is imported from Japan.
It didn't used to be this way back in 2018.
Many Sharpies were made abroad.
That's when Chris Peterson, who was the CFO of Sharpie Maker, Newell Brands,
challenge his team to answer the question,
could they keep Newell from becoming obsolete compared with factories in Asia? I felt like we had an
opportunity to dramatically improve our U.S. manufacturing. He's now the CEO. And he makes all 93
colors of Sharpie at a 37-year-old factory. And they did it without reducing employee count and
without raising prices. But to get to this place, it took close to $2 billion in investments
across the company. And of course, this is a $2 billion market cap company.
Okay. It's like, what book value to market cap is one to one, apparently, if they did all this company has. So, I want to get the CEO on the show at some point. President Trump uses a custom Sharpie. He slapped high tariffs on many imports with the goal of prompting more companies to do what Newell has done and bring manufacturing back to the U.S. But Philippo Falorny, an analyst at city, said few companies in the sector have the resources to replicate Newell's move. Well, um,
I think we're ready for our next guest.
Ready?
Let's bring in Celine from Loyal.
But first, let me tell you about Adio,
customer relationship magic.
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Yeah, we're hoping to get a real horse
in the studio at some point.
I can help with that.
Yes? I have like three.
No way.
You actually have horses?
Yeah, yeah, I'm a crazy horse girl.
Where?
Yes.
Petaluma.
Petaluma.
Yeah.
Do you live there?
No.
Okay.
It's SF.
Cool.
But I do the anti-commute.
Okay.
Yeah.
What is that?
Like you drive up against the traffic to North Bay to go ride your horses.
Okay, okay.
I've taken investor calls while on a horse.
Okay.
Almost fell off.
Wow.
On an investor call while on a horse.
Wait, walk me through.
Like, are they the same breed?
Like, what's the story with the three horses?
Why three?
Horses are potentially the worst investment you could ever make.
I do not recommend them.
They are worse.
I feel like there's some like seed valuation joke you could make here about horses.
Anyhow, they tend to break themselves.
They're like self-destructive.
We were thinking about getting a horse at one point.
We wanted to race it in the Kentucky Derby and give it like some funny name.
We were going to call it the ramp.
Yeah.
And we were running the numbers and it wasn't that crazy as a marketing.
Well, yeah, you get into it and you're like, okay, maybe it's like $100K for the horse.
And then it's like a couple grand a month to like.
But it's such a funny stuff.
Someone's going to do it now that we said it's going to do it.
Dude, that color would look sick on a horse, though.
Like, imagine the racing stripes.
I love it.
Anyway, sorry.
Kick us off with an introduction on yourself and the company.
Hi, yeah.
I'm Celine Hollowah.
I'm the founder and CEO of Loyal,
and we're developing drugs to extend a dog lifespan.
Amazing.
Horses next?
Horses next.
Venture capitalist next.
Humans eventually.
Eventually.
Yeah, what was the inspiration for the company?
Did you know that you wanted to start with animals?
or was that purely like the FDA?
No, so I actually was working in human longevity.
So I worked with a previous guest of y'all's, Laura Deming,
at her venture fund for a few years.
And we were just frustrated because nobody was trying to develop a drug
explicitly for lifespan extension, right?
And we're like, this is obviously, like, obviously we all live longer and healthier.
That was a promise.
Everybody was promising it, but nobody was working on it specifically.
Not directly.
No, they're all kind of going these indirect paths.
And so we became obsessed with how to do this.
Realized to do it in humans, it would take a lot.
a lot of time, a lot of money. But you could do it in dogs. It's a super crazy market. I hear
one of you as a dog person. I am. My dog was supposed to attend, but I have to leave right after.
And so he's busy. He was chasing squirrels. He's a 10-year-old Newfoundland. So he needs.
Oh, wait. So you understand this. Because we're starting with the big dogs for a life
man. Yeah, on your, yeah, on your homepage for a while at least. Yeah. No, no. Newfis are
the shit. Yeah, no, it was like the dog was pitched to me as like, look, every day after year
five is like a miracle because they're known to have extremely short lifespans and so I kind of
set myself up for like look like I'm not coming in you get a you get a golden retriever you're not
thinking like yeah it's going to live for 40 years so I just went into it thinking okay I'm getting
in Newfoundland it's six to eight years or something and he's done very well he's 10 years old
good job we need to sequence your dog I'll send you a saliva kit which I have an investor that has
two giant new feats that they bring around everywhere everywhere I should do that it's it's
hilarious and that's why he's living so long well yeah
That helps.
Flying private helps.
Do not take your dog's commercial.
But I actually got convinced to take their term sheet because they sent me their
Pinterest board, which was just Newfies all the way down.
I love Newfies.
That's the best dogs.
Fully committed.
They're so good.
So, yeah, on the fact that there's never been a drug explicitly for longevity, is that just
because, like, in order to have a drug, you need a, like, a problem or some sort of, like,
it needs to be a treatment for a specific condition.
And just death is not a condition?
And so is that the right narrative?
Yeah.
Like the way to think about it is to be able to have a drug to approve to do something,
you have to prove that the drug is doing that thing.
Sure.
And so if I gave you guys a longevity drug and I was like,
oh, let's see if it extends your lifespan.
Yeah, I'd be following you for a decade,
that the company's going to be long dead and all of that.
It's also hard to prove that the drug was the catalyst for your life, right?
It could have been, oh, they just got a lot of sun or they walks a lot.
There's a lot of variability.
Right? Like the decisions you make, the Yerba Mata being pro or anti-la longevity, whatever it is, right? All of these things vary aging. It's one of the most complex phenotypes, but we all go through it. And it's the same thing is true in dogs, but the good thing about dogs, at least when you're developing a longevity drug, is they age much faster.
Sure. So you can see if something is working in a period of time, that's much more reasonable.
And you can theoretically have a much more like isolated study, is that right? Just because...
What do you mean isolated?
Well, I just imagine, like, it's easier to control factors in a dog's life versus, like, a bunch of humans.
Like, a dog is not going on in a Bender in Las Vegas.
That is, yes, yeah.
So you can just be like, yeah, well, we know exactly what the dog's diet was pretty much every single day.
Maybe he got into a cheeseburger once, but a human is, like, using Diet Coke one day and then some alcohol and then this and then Bender and then Burning Man, who knows.
There's so many confounding factors.
The dogs aren't, like, didn't have, like, a cheeky cigarette happened earlier in their life that they don't.
talk about or something. No, it's true. Yeah, dogs just, it's a lot, it's still complicated,
but it's much more simple. And then you also have these individual breed variants,
which teach you a lot about humans too, right? Like, why does a new fee have such a short
lifespan versus a golden versus a chihuahua? You can study these things in a much more quickly
way. Yeah, why not, why not mice, though? I feel like there's a lot of mice studies. It works in
mice. You know, I love mice. I don't think mice are a multi-billion dollar market. Yeah, that's the
think the commercial opportunity of dogs, if you ask a dog owner, how much would you pay to have an
extra year of healthy lifespan for your dog? And I'm sure there's a wide range between like $1,000
and some people that are like, I would pay any price. I will, you know, liquidate my 401k for another
two years. It's actually really interesting. Like people, it's not actually really at all correlated
to socioeconomic status or how much, you know, people, cash,
people have in a bank, they will just spend anything. A certain subset of the population will spend
anything on their dog. I've had people offer me $50,000 for the drug before. And I would like to
note to the FDA that I said no. Yes. But I've actually gotten a lot of offers like this.
The willingness to pay is insane. The market is huge. And so we could hopefully make a multi-billion
dollar company around this and then use that revenue to fund more research. Yeah. Maybe into
horses. Love it. Yeah. What was the initial? Yes, please. What was the initial target?
kind of the biotech side of the business?
Like, how do you know what to target?
How do you narrow it down?
Like, there's a lot of different life extensions,
NAD and telomere extension and just, you know, cardiac stuff.
There's like a million different sub-indications
that people think about when they're thinking about their own longevity.
How do you narrow it down?
What do you focus on?
So the way we thought about it is we wanted something
that was as broad as possible.
So as, you know, efficacious and relevant to the chigua
as it is to another dog, right?
And even if they have different food or different behaviors or more inbred or less inbred that it still may work.
So that was one.
And two, you want to think that's relatively simple, right?
Aging is so unbelievably complicated that when you add any additional variables, like things just become exponential really quickly.
And so where we actually started is what you were talking about early with newfies, with a short lifespan of big dogs.
Because it turns out the genetic driver of dog size, I think that makes a new figure really, really big in puberty or makes a Chihuahua not grow big.
in puberty also genetically controls the rate of aging of that dog.
So your new fee, maybe not your new fee, but the average new fee is actually aging at a
much faster rate.
And so that was a really nice place to start because, A, it's something that everyone
understands, especially big dog lovers.
So, like, I know the heartbreak of losing a Great Dane or losing a large Labrador.
And it was, like, simple mechanistically.
And it was applicable to a wide swath of the canine population, basically any dog over a certain
weight would be eligible and has this problem, right? Because they're not living as long as a
chihuahua that lives for 16 years. Every other bigger dog has a somewhat shorter lifespan
than that theoretical maxima. So, I mean, how do you explain what the drugs are actually doing?
So basically... That's a black box, unfortunately.
Basically, the way to think about it is, you know, all puppies are born approximately the same
size, but a Great Dane puppy has super high levels of these proteins called growth hormone
and IGF1, and these are circulating at really high levels,
and they're basically binding to their cells
are saying grow divide, grow divide.
And that's why your burner puppy,
or NUFI puppy is getting so big.
That's normal.
It happens in humans too,
but it shunts down significantly
once you're fully grown.
In a big dog, it doesn't.
So big dogs still have these super high levels
of these growth hormones circulating around
that are basically making the dog turn over
at a faster rate.
So what the drug does is it inhibits those levels,
it brings them down to a level
that's seen naturally in dogs.
So, thank bringing a new fees level down to an Aussie shepherd or something similar.
And this is like this idea that if you reduce growth hormone, if you reduce IGF1,
extends lifespan.
It's actually been shown all the way from worms to mice to, you know, a multitude of organisms.
And there's even human centenarians that have the same genetic, you know, things that you always do.
And our bio.
They're spiritually chihuahuas.
So is the like, I think that's an insult.
Is the scientific like phrase like IGF1 in him?
And are biohackers using that, like, like, wild, like against the FDA?
Are they trying to?
How much can you learn from these sort of fringe biohackers and what they're end of one study?
Is there anything to learn or just?
Well, yes, there's always things to learn.
You know, it's funny.
People actually often will supplement growth hormone in IGF1 because it makes your muscles really big.
Oh, sure.
And it's very aesthetic.
It's kind of like human growth hormone.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly, exactly. It does not increase function, but it does increase, like, muscle size. So a lot of people might not be happy.
Interesting. It doesn't correlate with strength at all. It's just like, it gives you the pump.
Yeah, you guys can't tell. I'm on it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I mean, yeah, plenty. I think the people that are taking HGH are doing that specifically entirely for aesthetic reasons and their post-strength.
Yes, yes, they are post-strength.
But are there people in the biohacking community that swear by it, or are they optimistic that it will have an effect on longevity for them?
Yeah, I mean, this mechanism is pretty consensus as a longevity mechanism.
It's not going to be as like this specific one, the big dog short lifespan, isn't going to be as relevant to humans because like I'm not living twice as long as you guys, right?
Me being so short that I'm having to like sit on my feet.
Sure, but a new fee does live twice as, lives half as long as a chihuahua.
Exactly, exactly. So think of it as kind of like a biological hack to have a foot into a very, very, very complicated biological problem.
Yep. What's the current understanding of why women live longer than men?
I mean, we just do less crazy shit. It's just risk-taking? Yeah, it's risk-staking. No way.
I think it was like heart attacks or something. No, I actually don't know. There's like a real reason, but I don't know. Yeah, yeah. I like the idea that dudes are just wing seating.
Dudes are just fucking insane.
So walk me through the actual process to commercialize and, you know, grow the business.
I imagine the FDA has a number of different subgroups, veterinary medicines.
One of them, is that a more receptive, faster pathway than just the traditional drugs for humans pathway?
Are you accelerated there?
Yeah, so the FDA on the veterinary side is super stringent, right?
It matters a lot in some ways, you know, almost more because a dog can't talk.
So you're really trusting the FDA and you're trusting your veterinarian, that this like pill you're giving isn't going to, like, cause some disaster.
Sure.
But the nice thing with canines is that the incentives are really, really aligned, right?
Like everybody wants dogs to live a longer, healthier life.
And preventative medicine is really where it is with dogs because, you know, there's no insurance.
Nobody's getting half a million dollar cancer car tea therapies or whatever, right?
It's always a dog owner having to pay out of pocket.
So most of the really successful dog drugs today are already preventative medicines.
Think like heartworm prevention, right?
It's reducing the risk of your dog getting a disease that if you give the drug, you'll never see them get that disease.
Flea and tick, same thing.
There's a lot of categories of medicines like this.
So yeah, it's actually been really fun to work with them.
And then the new administration is like, well, it's a little complicated.
It's like super pro longevity, right?
And so it'll be interesting to see how that maybe impacts the human side where
things are very regulated, but also just a bit more complicated.
But it seems absolutely critical, even just from a fiscal standpoint,
that we figure out how to get people to live longer and healthier.
Yes, it's, you know, people, when you talk about longevity,
they tend to be like, oh, but like, you're just going to make the rich live longer.
And, like, the fact of the matter is that the rich already live longer
because they can also access better cancer meds, better, you know, doctors.
I do, like, preventative screens all the time.
the vast majority of Americans could never afford that, right, versus like a daily cheap pill
that broadly extends your quality of life and broadly extends your lifespan.
It not only helps that individual to potentially prevent them or delay them developing cancer,
it also helps their children who aren't going to have to become caretakers before their own
careers have taken off.
It means that they can have more flexibility in pursuing doing the next great thing.
I think actually, like, you know, better health of the population is one of the best great
equalizers we could bring.
Yeah. How closely does your business track to what I'm loosely familiar with in the biotech world where it's like you're in the lab, you develop the drug, then you test it on like dog, monkey, mice, something like that.
You take that data through phase one, phase two. It's a multi-year process. The company might IPO and then get bought by Merck or Pfizer at some point.
Like, that's what I think of when I think of biotech, like, like, yes, we've created a new drug for, like, this very specific cancer, but it's still a $10 million or $100 billion outcome because it, like, it fixed this one thing and it became very profitable.
Is that the typical path or is it wildly different in veterinary?
Dude, your biotech context is like on point.
I'm actually super impressed.
We had a bunch of biotech investors and founders on one day when Trump was doing the most favorite nation thing.
I tried to get that speed on it.
which I don't really know where that went, but anyway, just in terms of like the-
It was almost 100% tariff on us and that got, yeah, but that got taken away.
It's been really interesting. It's been exciting.
It's all a roller coaster this year.
My cortisol is just like, perfect.
That's good for longevity.
My personal longevity is not benefiting from the will.
So the way to think about it is if you're comparing to human is you do, maybe backing up a little bit,
the overarching themes of developing a dog drugs, it takes like four to seven years.
basically by a combination of how effective and how lucky you are to get a dog drug approved,
takes about $20 to $50 million.
For context in humans, it takes a decade to develop a human drug,
takes about a billion dollars to develop a human drug.
So you're like orders of magnitude faster and cheaper.
Orders of magnitude faster and cheaper.
And then actually the coolest things.
And you guys have been pretty lucky, right?
We've also been lucky, right?
And they totally...
Where did you catch lucky breaks?
Oh, my God.
Well, I just feel like, I feel like the average...
Whenever you guys announce it, like, any type of milestone,
the average investor is basically sharing something to the effect of you guys don't realize, like, how rare this is.
Like the speed at which you guys have been able to kind of just like knock down these different milestones.
It's, I mean, we've gotten the first ever efficacy approval for a longevity drug.
We've created the first regulatory pathway for a drug that's just for longevity.
For any species, right? Obviously, it's in dogs, but it's any species.
And dogs actually are, they're regulated by the same federal rights as human drugs.
So it was still a really huge lift.
We've gotten, we're running the first ever
Lifespan Pivotal FD-enabling clinical trial.
Like all of these things are super, super hard.
We got, obviously we're like have a smart team,
but yeah, you have to get really lucky too, right?
We got lucky that the drugs,
when you pick a drug and you're like,
this is going to be our lifespan extension drug,
it either is or isn't, right?
And there's nothing I can do as CEO to make this drug work
if it doesn't work.
Well, you can try and take like 10 drugs through the pathway
at the same time potentially.
That's kind of what we're,
doing so we have like foreign development but that's really expensive of course right you have to you have
to pick a couple candidates that have the most promise and luck comes in and that like you hope one of
those is the one that you picked and you hope there isn't some like random toxicity that you find out
at the 11th hour and that like totally nukes and especially as a longevity drug there's zero tolerance
for adverse events there's zero tolerance for me turning your dog because it's not like you have a
bad condition that you're trying to treat exactly some side effects or the average patient would
be okay with some side effects.
Yep.
It's like you're going from net neutral to it has to be better.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And it can't reduce quality of life.
I mean, that much.
I mean, there's people like, what are some of the human, the drugs that human patients are
taking?
I feel like Peter Atia and people are taking certain drugs that like rapmicin.
Yeah, they like metformin like reduces your like athletic performance.
They all have some like, like metformin is like, like,
works by improving your metabolic fitness, which we actually have drugs that are, actually our lead
drug now is developing metabolic fitness. And senior dogs is a very robust way. Like if you've ever
intermittent fast or calorically restricted, that's a way to improve your metabolic fitness.
Metformin just does that as a drug. It's an old diabetes drug. But yeah, it has a bunch of like stomach
side effects. And also just when you give any drug for a long time, bad things can happen.
Yeah, there's also, it can't, if somebody were to reclassify it as a,
There's no incentive to reclassify metformin as a longevity drug because it's off patent, right?
Exactly.
No one makes money off.
I didn't know that.
Because I was, because there's a lot of, it's debated, right?
But there's a lot of evidence that like aspirin could be potentially beneficial for
lifespan, but nobody would do the work to reclassify it because it's off patent.
And you could, you could go and you could spend a billion dollars proving that it works and then everybody could just make it.
Yep.
Yep.
Yep. And this is like a niche thing that actually...
And so you can't even market aspirin as...
No, no. It's not a viable legal claim.
No, no. And this is a niche reason why Loyal made a lot of sense
and why I was like, okay, I guess I'm going to go and do this, is you're 100...
You have this catch-22 when you're trying to develop a humid longevity drug,
which is you need something that has a ton of safety, both acutely, right?
So you took like five of them, nothing bad's going to happen, but also over a period of time.
Yeah.
Right? If I give it to you for a decade, is it going to increase your risk of,
colon cancer or some, the only way you know that is by giving it to that person for a decade.
By the time you have done that, the drug is generic. One of the really cool things about animal
health is that you actually, the FDA tries to incentivize people to develop and prove that new
drugs work for animal medicine. So you actually can get 10 years of exclusivity from the FDA.
Yeah. If you develop a novel, a generic drug for a novel use case in dogs. So we have actually
both. We have licensed human drugs. We have generic drugs. But it means that you are able to
to go in and say, look, this might not work, but it's not going to do any harm. And that's
so important when you're trying to create regulatory pathways, when you're trying to convince
veterinarians to prescribe something that's never existed before, to convince a dog owner, to do something
they've never done before, to be able to say wholeheartedly, there's decades of data, and we don't
think this drug's going to do any harm? That helps. Are you guys getting, feeling any acceleration
from various AI models? It seems like we have people on the show every week that are building
AI for science, AI for drug development, and foundation models, dedicated to it, and yet
you're here. You haven't said AI once. I have not said AI once. This was so funny. It was
a meta point. We were working on loyal narrative stuff. And I was like, should I just like let go
of my ego and have an AI story? And I was like, there's, anyhow, there's no AI in the loyal
story. But like, I really debated it because I was like, man, I wonder if this would like increase
my valuation by like a factor of two. What about ELL? And that would be good for dogs and it'd be good for
courses and if you get to hear you know but that's saying something that you're actively doing
all of this drug development and meanwhile there's companies coming out and they're making the
claim at least to investors that they're going to be able to you know speed up drug development do it
more efficiently yeah so i mean so here's the problem because i'm sure you've tried to figure out
how do we how do we unlock value here yeah so here's a problem with AI for drug development is i'm
Like, I'm not an AI person.
But, like, I am, like, in terms of, like, technically trained,
but I am, you know, sure the models are good enough
that we gave them biological data.
They could infer things that human scientists couldn't.
The problem is we don't have those data sets.
Like, they don't exist for a human.
I can't, like, say, okay, here's, like, your model.
And if I give you a drug, how is it going to react
in this part of your body, that part of your body?
How is it going to, like, get reduced over time?
How is it going to interact with this other drug you're on?
We just don't have those data sets.
Yeah, we saw this with Alpha Fold.
like alpha fold came out protein folding solved it turned the biotech markets didn't really move because it turns out that
actually solving protein folding problems is like 0.1% of the job to do to get a new drug to market you got to recruit patients and then monitor them and then talk to the FDA and do legal work yeah there's so much more to do you know like our big longevity study that we're running in dogs right now I think the biggest risk to is actually operational it's data quality it's dogs not dropping out it's veterinarians complying right like this
The biggest reason the study would fail is that if we have to throw out a bunch of data in five years
because it doesn't adhere to the standards that are necessary, right?
So there's some interesting AI companies for, like, the beginnings of drug development.
Like, Chai Discovery is one that's trying to do basically better antibody binding design.
That's smart.
I think that makes a lot of sense.
But, I mean, I'd love to be proven wrong, but I think there hasn't been like a moonshot
for the bio data gathering on the clinical side.
that would be necessary to, like, model you and see what works in doesn't.
Well, it's not a good, yeah, it's not a business.
Yeah, it's not a business.
You're taking a, even if somebody was able to raise a billion dollars with the idea,
it's like, would they, would they come to you and be like, what do you need?
And then they'd be, like, a services provider to, like, generate that data.
Like, so we're building all these biobanks out.
And so we're going to have, you know, potentially one of the best data sets of translational aging in a species.
That's the best model of humans that isn't humans.
And so maybe we'll be able to do it from then.
But like I would feel disingenuous for me to say like, yeah, that's a strategy because just like no one knows.
Like biology is like the ultimate black box and it's the ultimate humbler, honestly.
What about peptides?
Are dogs on Ozzympic yet?
Are dogs on Ozzympic?
Actually, so this is my favorite fun fact.
Everyone is like, oh, are you just developing like, oh, Zempic for dogs?
And the answer is no.
Because people don't want their dog to not be hungry.
think about it right you go home your dog's super excited to see you jumps on you you're like
oh my dog loves me so much i'm the alpha male your dog's probably hungry yeah right and so
when people give their dog a zambic or ozambic like drugs it just takes all the joy it takes all the joy
oh man the dog becomes a cat oh no wow no yeah if i think about like my my most cherished
memories with my dogs growing up it was like my dad my brother and i making scrambled eggs
for the dogs yeah it's like that would peak
peak experience as like a, you know, 10-year-old?
No, totally.
It's not a good market.
So, like, our other drug that's working on metabolic fitness to extend lifespan,
which is very similar to how Ozmpic works, it is targeting, you know, improving
metabolic fitness, but it's a, we make sure explicitly that the mechanism that we're
hitting doesn't impact appetence and doesn't impact, like, weight in general.
Any book recommendations for us?
That's cute that you think I have time to read.
does a any uh any uh movie recommendations must love dogs what you got for us you know
dog related i watched love is blind france last night okay love is blind
you're really trying to turn off i'm sorry i you know i you know i want to be one of those like
CEOs i'm like these are the esoteric hyper intellectual books i'm reading that like show that i'm
smarter than you what no i was there's no shape i was reading a book that there's only one copy it's
thousands of years old.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You don't have access to it.
It's English, but you wouldn't, you wouldn't understand.
Yeah.
But, like, honestly, like, Loyal's my all day every day.
Like, I don't have...
What's the general routine like at Loyal for you?
So we're actually fully remote.
Okay.
Which I know.
Contrarian.
But it actually works well because we have to hire people...
We have to hire the best possible person for each skill set we need.
And often those people are not...
Actually, they're almost never in the Bay Area.
I'm going to St. Louis after this.
That's where we have to hire people.
a lot of team members. We have a lot of team members in Kansas. We have them in Florida,
right? And so you get so much more benefit from hiring the right person for the right
role than you do saying, I'm going to hire the second or third best person, but they're
willing to move to SF, right? So for me, I actually just live at coffee shops. I sit
out of some of our investors' offices, bring my dog. Maybe one day whenever I'm able to fly private,
I'll bring my dog. Is Antonio Gracios the one with the two new fees? No.
Okay, because...
No, he does have a cute dog, though, or his partner does.
Because it says you raised from valor.
I did raise from valor.
We got to hit the gong for you.
Thank you so much.
We're hitting the gong for me.
Of course, I mean...
And all the dogs.
And all the dogs.
Currently in getting studied.
Just congratulations.
What's the next big milestone that people should be looking out for?
The next big milestone?
I mean, we're just trying to bring this damn drug to market.
Honestly, like, that's a big one.
Hopefully in the next year or so.
I mean, pray for us.
like the hard stuff's behind us, but there's a lot of hard stuff in front of us, too.
Well, good luck.
Caught between hard stuff, as every entrepreneur is.
It's a worthwhile goal.
Anyways, well, I think we can close out the show with you because we actually have to hit the road.
Well, first, we've got to tell you about 8th sleep.com.
Yeah, when are you going to put the animals on the 8th sleep?
You do have an 8th sleep.
That's great.
We also got to tell you about Bezell.
If you want a watch for your dog.
go to getbezzled.com.
Get him a submariner.
And if you want to take your dog on a vacation,
head over to wander,
find your happy place.
Book of Wander with inspiring news.
Hotel Greenlandings.
The chat says,
when can we buy loyal stock?
I'm assuming you can't answer to that.
We got to raise a fun.
Isn't it an SEC something, something?
Okay, sorry guys.
Private company.
Become a venture capitalist.
Someday in a very bright future, I'm sure.
But thank you for tuning.
in with us today. We will be back tomorrow morning. I can't wait. We'll see tomorrow.
Have a great afternoon. Goodbye. Love you. Bye.