TBPN Live - OpenAI to Remain Non-Profit, OpenAI to Buy Windsurf, Jon Voight's Plan to Fix Hollywood, Kelvin Yu, James Blom, Santi Ruiz, Jacob Kimmel, Fil Aronshtein
Episode Date: May 6, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appFigma - https://www.figma.comEight 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.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(02:55) - OpenAI to Remain Non-Profit (45:57) - OpenAI Reaches Agreement to Buy Windsurf (01:05:28) - Apple Absorbing $900M in Tariff Costs (01:11:19) - Jon Voight's Plan to Fix Hollywood (01:28:01) - Kelvin Yu (01:44:23) - Santi Ruiz (02:01:44) - Fil Aronshtein (02:11:49) - James Blom (02:26:36) - Jacob Kimmel
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You watch the TVN today is Tuesday, May 6th, 2025.
We are live from the temple of technology,
the fortress of finance, the capital of capital.
I love those cards.
What would you say you're doing, Jordy?
I'm keeping my cards close to my chest, John,
because if I don't, our public information will be-
There are actually, it's kind of a rush roulette.
So yeah, one of these cards is actually our live and we are live.
So we can't edit it out or blur it after the fact.
But that's a great opportunity to tell you about ramp.
Time is money. Save both.
You use corporate cards, bill payments, accounting and a whole lot more.
All in one place. Let's go.
Anyway, the cover of the Wall Street Journal.
We have some breaking news from the cover of the Wall Street Journal, we have some breaking news
from the cover of the Wall Street Journal.
OpenAI has abandoned the planned for-profit conversion.
We are devastated.
I'm pissed.
The real story here,
AGI lost the top spot to the Met Gala.
The Met Gala did actually beat.
It's like really, really important $300 billion story.
A couple of people dressed up and had a party in
Costumes ones more important. Yeah, which one's more important. I don't know the Met Gala is important
I believe it's I believe it's very high margin event
I saw that it was
$75,000 to go to the Met Gala and I love that very nice. I think all that money goes to subsidize my opera tickets
Yeah, and I think that otherwise the Met would not be they're not profitable just on my opera tickets. Yeah. And I think that otherwise the Met would not be,
they're not profitable just on the opera tickets,
but that's obviously the most important thing that they do.
So the Gala raises a bunch of money for opera.
And yeah, let us know if you'd like to join us at the opera.
I'm considering putting together a TBPN meetup,
maybe at the Met, maybe at the LA Opera,
maybe at the San Francisco Opera.
We'll have to get everyone together.
It'd be great.
Anyway, I'm super frustrated by this situation.
Great.
Brockman looked fantastic at the Tucks last night.
Oh, yeah. He was at the Met Gala.
His company can't convert to for-profit.
He's hanging out with maybe, I think the Met is a non-profit.
Just a non-profit founder hanging out with another non-profit.
A non-profit organization.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
Yeah, maybe he's getting some tips.
I mean, I we've been very pro for profit conversion. I would like to see the Met convert to for profit.
I want to see PETA convert to for profit. I've said this before, but I think PETA is such an
interesting business case because they obviously know where all the most delicious animals live.
They know what what cuts are the best of those animals.
They know the cooking temperatures and the cooking times.
And so if you were to do a four prop conversion PETA,
you could unlock billions in shareholder value.
And obviously a similar story is unfolding at OpenAI.
But looks like they're taking one step back before,
maybe they take two steps forward.
Who knows?
Anyway, the news we will read through,
OpenAI abandons its plan to convert into a for-profit.
And this was always kind of difficult
to wrap your head around because they were never
going to get rid of the nonprofit.
It was never a full conversion.
The nonprofit would cease to exist
and it would become a for-profit.
It was more like full conversion. The nonprofit would cease to exist and it would become a for-profit. It was more like the for-profit,
the nonprofit continues to exist and fulfill its mission
and just has the most bang or asset
on its balance sheet of all time,
which is a ton of equity in a high growth,
multi-billion dollar consumer tech company,
which is the best thing you could possibly do.
Yeah, and another big question was always that the investors in the for-profit unit were capped at 100x.
Yes.
Which is still kind of a big unanswered question because there has to be certain investors
that are already at 100x.
Yeah.
And are they, should they just sell now?
Yeah, we were joking about like, do you sell your shares and then it re triggers another 100 X or is the individual share?
Like 100 X maxed out like how does that work?
Because yeah, if I buy from like like an employee many employees have probably already 100 X
Yeah, although I don't even think they're subject to that. I think they might be I think the only
Fascinating entity that could figure out what's actually going on and fully understand it, O3.
Maybe not ASI, but I think O3 could do it
if you just really dumped in all of the,
every single.
And yet it seems like O3 is not up to the task
because OvenAI has abandoned the for-profit conversion.
And so you would think they would have put ASI or AGI
on the task, but they came up short.
And I do wonder what this means.
I wonder how temporary this is.
This feels like a bump in the road and we are eventually,
it just feels unfathomable that a billion people
are gonna be daily driving the Chachie BT app,
subscribing for $20.
They're gonna have ads and that thing.
It's gonna be like this,
like generating billions and billions of dollars
of like profit and revenue and cashflow. And it's still going to be in this wonky scenario.
Like at some point, it's just going to become a normal tech company. I would have to imagine
like that just has to happen. But it's going to be a long road. This may be less eventful
than people were expecting. And I would imagine it's less eventful for Sam considering considering he was trying to turn it into a for-profit.
Which would be an eventful thing.
Which would be an eventful thing.
So yes.
Yes.
The event not happening is less eventful.
Overall, I mean, it's an interesting situation
because it seems like all of the main
actual OpenAI stakeholders are on board
with the conversion.
And it's various government.
Well, we're gonna go into that.
There's an article on Microsoft in their position.
Yeah, I guess Microsoft was hanging it up.
Yeah, I mean, there is a question as like,
the non-profits goal is they have a fiduciary duty
to humanity, their goal is not profit maximization.
And so is the non- nonprofit board able to make an argument
that this spin out is good?
Is in service for humanity.
Yeah, I would argue that yes, it is obviously.
I think that for-profit companies have fantastic benefits
to humanity, and I think capitalism is the greatest system
and benefit to humanity in the world.
And so I think every nonprofit should convert to for-profit
if they want to benefit humanity.
But who knows, you know, the internal politics of OpenAI,
the nonprofit, the for-profit, all extremely complex.
So let's go through a little bit of this.
The move could complicate
the company's future fundraising efforts although
They've been able to raise a ton in this weird scenario already
But I think eventually investors will well get tired of soft banks the terms of soft banks original
Yep, deal. Yeah, 30 billion dollar round was contingent on the for-profit conversion now. I believe
What we're seeing is that the investment
will still go forward somehow.
Yep, yep, yep.
Even though the conversion isn't happening.
But certainly it's in the interest.
OpenAI just has so much momentum and traction.
I saw Will Depue shared yesterday that ChatGPT
is the fifth largest site on the internet.
So they can basically effectively raise on any terms that they want just given how
much momentum the business has but as an investor if you're putting in billions
ideally you have a pretty clean structure right especially at this once
you get into that scale yeah it's hard to, this is not, no longer becomes a flyer.
It's like Mazda is leveraging the entire soft bank balance
sheet to make this investment.
And it's like, he's betting the company on it.
So I'm gonna test something out.
We have a handshake deal.
Yeah, wired in the money.
We have a safe and is the safe like really the most
ironclad contract?
Probably not, but it's fine. Cause it's like, one on 10. But this is one on 10 trillion at this point
or 0.5 on it's 5 billion on 500, something like that. Anyway, so OpenAI started to work
on a change to its business structure after CEO Sam Altman's
surprise firing and reinstatement in 2023.
Its big investors, including Microsoft,
watched its temporary ouster from the sidelines,
unable to wield official power over the outcome.
The conversion-
Do you remember that?
That was so wild because it seemed obvious
that Satya had no real hand and in hindsight,
I think we know he wasn't involved with that process.
And so, at that point, what, he had just invested,
I think, $10 billion or something like that.
And so to make that sizeable investment
and then watch the CEO get booted without your involvement.
We should do a historical timeline review
because you can search your ex timeline from those dates
and just see what was your timeline,
all the people you follow, what were they posting?
Because it was a crazy time.
And it really, the consensus was like, oh, it's a zero.
Given the chaos, this is clearly not a functional company.
And everything will break, everything will fall apart.
But the crazy thing is they'd gotten to a place
where it was like, it was even, it was a going concern.
It was a company.
Yeah.
The best content, I think retrospective on that period
is a podcast that Jessica Livingston did with Sam.
Just about that kind of three, four day stretch
and his reaction to it was fascinating.
There's two books coming out about it too.
And I think Sam participated in both of them.
We read one of the excerpts that was in the journal
and I really didn't like some of it
in the sense that it just didn't go deep enough.
And it was just, it really like,
it just was like, oh yeah, like the nonprofit board,
like they ask these questions
and it never went anywhere further to ask like,
okay, were those questions reasonable at all?
Because the whole framing was,
oh, Sam wasn't doing enough about safety.
And like, he let chat GPT out into the wild
and it just wreaked havoc.
It's like, okay, like what has it done?
Other than just like generate a bunch of revenue
and help people do their homework,
prep for business calls.
I don't know.
It's just like, I have not seen the damage.
I still have not seen the damage.
It's interesting.
Habeas Corpus on the AI Doomers.
Helen Toner.
Helen Toner, has she commented at all
on the sycophancy crisis?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like that would be a good angle
if she really has stuck with it.
But who knows?
She might have had a complete change of heart.
Like we don't know.
Like the original position was ridiculous.
It truly was ridiculous.
Anyway, the conversion would have changed
opening eyes business to a public benefit corporation,
which is interesting.
Not just like a vanilla C Corp.
So there's like B-Corp and good corpse
and it's some rig and roll.
I might be totally off here, but to my knowledge,
a public benefit corporation is mostly branding.
It just says it's legally required to consider
the public good and its decisions
alongside its profit-making goals.
Which is so weird because you just naturally
being a public company, like you should need
to consider the public good because if you don't,
you're gonna get bad PR,
that's gonna destroy shareholder value.
They also, so it's basically they're profit focused,
but they also have to have a legally defined
public benefit purpose.
So this is not even the same as the sort of 1%
for humanity type programs where you're sort of legally,
you're basically getting certified that you're gonna give
a certain percentage of your profits.
How about this?
You legally have to have something
that benefits the public.
How about a stock that anyone in the public could buy?
And it goes up.
They benefit their portfolios.
It's not that complicated.
What about a website that you can go to
to get intelligence too cheap to meter?
What about that?
Is that not enough?
Well, these were originally very popular
with the whole sort of sustainability.
Yeah, I know, I get it, I get it.
It just seems like it's a complete end run around
just actually thinking through how a for-profit corporation
works.
Ben & Jerry's is a public benefit corporation,
so they're benefiting humanity with tasty ice cream.
Yes, yeah.
I don't understand it.
It does not make a lot of sense to me.
Patagonia's the most high profile one.
Aren't they even more complex than that?
I thought that they were actually like a co-op.
Well yeah, I'm sure they give a meaningful amount of profits.
It's like the members, or that's REI.
I think REI, if you're a REI member,
you're entitled to votes and dividends
just as a customer, which is kind of interesting.
I don't know.
I mean, that's the beauty of American capitalism.
You can do anything.
You can go and start a co-op and you can say,
we're not gonna have a traditional cap table.
Like we're gonna, we're gonna dividend,
the employees are gonna own 100% of the business.
Like you can do that, that's great.
You usually get smoked, but you can try it.
And so all the communists and stuff can just be like yeah
You can go do communism over in that corner of the of the world. That's fine. Like you're good
Yeah, the shields shared yesterday the open AI
Apparently updated their structure section of their website because there's so many different SPVs and stuff at this point going into open AI
They they create this huge disclaimer on the site
and stuff at this point going into OpenAI, they create this huge disclaimer on the site.
Investing in OpenAI Global LLC is a high risk investment.
Investors could lose their capital contribution
and not see any return.
It would be wise to view any investment in OpenAI Global
in the spirit of a donation with the understanding
that it may be difficult to know what role money
will play in a post-AGI world,
which is hilarious marketing,
combining sort of brand marketing with your legal disclaimer.
The company exists to advance OpenAI's mission of ensuring that safe artificial general intelligence
is developed and benefits all of humanity.
The company's duty to this mission and the principles advanced in the OpenAI ink charter
take precedent over any obligation to generate a profit.
The company may never make a profit,
and then it's just other legalese.
But yeah.
I mean, the way I think this plays out
is the consumer tech company spins out,
becomes a for-profit.
The nonprofit remains extremely well-capitalized,
probably the best-capitalized nonprofit in history,
because it will have something like 30%
of a $300 billion company,
and that will produce cash flow and dividends
and secondary sales and all these different things.
So basically this nonprofit can do whatever they want.
They can hire all of the best researchers
to go do AI safety research.
And then I think at some point,
they're gonna discover something new
and they're gonna spin out another for-profit.
I'm not even kidding about that.
Because when I think about like,
what, like I'm not even kidding about that. Because when I think about like, what,
I'm not very doom-pilled, but I do think
that there's a huge value in AI safety research, for sure.
Just like there is a huge benefit to cyber security research.
Let's not let cyber attacks happen.
Same thing with defense technology.
Let's not let anyone use planes to hurt humans. Let's not let them use guns to use
humans. Let's not let them use AI to hurt humans. I'm these are
all in the same layer of abstraction. And so what happens
when opening non profit becomes really, really good at
preventing AI from attacking humans.
Sell it to the government. Become a defense contractor.
And the US taxpayer will pay for that.
It's almost more interesting to cap the nonprofits.
You know, basically royalty or whatever,
however that sort of transfer of value happens
and just say, hey, you have a billion dollars a year
to do AI safety research forever.
And you can spin out for-profit entities,
but this is your sort of cap budget.
I still just don't understand why we need to do
safety research in the context of a nonprofit.
It's like, I'm an American citizen, I'm a taxpayer,
and I don't want to be turned into a paperclip.
Therefore, take my tax money and bid out a contract to a bunch of different
tech companies to prevent paper clipping, just like you prevent terrorism, you prevent war,
you try and prevent all these things. These are these are massive problems. So they need
to be centralized through the through, you know, a big government project, but they can
still be bid out as programs record from the D.O.D DOD. Like, I think that's the future.
Anyway, I don't know.
You could be onto something, John.
Who knows?
OpenAI said it scrapped the Boulder Plan
after discussions with civic leaders
and the attorneys general of California and Delaware
who would be required to sign off on it.
The company will instead transform
its for-profit subsidiary into a public benefit corporation
that is controlled by the nonprofit parent,
the company said Monday.
And so I wonder what control actually means in this context
because obviously there are, there's the nonprofit,
there's Microsoft, there's investors and there's employees.
And so typically, if you just think about the nonprofit,
the for-profit stakeholders,
you would think there'd be some sort of mix of those,
but it seems like the nonprofit will have increased control.
And then of course, there's the discussion over
who's on the nonprofit board, who has control,
and the nonprofit board has been changing around.
I mean, I'm not actually sure.
You might want to look up who's on the nonprofit board.
So I'm pulling up a graphic right now
from OpenAI's website.
Michael has it.
Basically giving an overview of the entire
kind of corporate structure, which I think
is just helpful to revisit.
But let us know when it's up, Michael.
So the change is a win for Musk and other OpenAI critics who believe that the company
has strayed too far from its founding altruistic mission.
OpenAI's ChachiPT has become lead contender in the global AI race, amassing hundreds of
millions of users.
So here you go.
Is it?
This is the most recent?
This is on OpenAI's website.
Okay, the board of directors.
So you can see it on your screen as well,
but you have the board of directors at the top
that controls OpenAI Inc, which is a public charity,
the OpenAI nonprofit.
That's a nonprofit.
And then that charity owns a holding company
for OpenAI and nonprofit
plus OpenAI employees and investors.
You know what this reads like,
the nonprofit owns the employees.
Like that's technically what this chart says.
It says it owns a holding company for OpenAI nonprofit.
It owns the employees and it also owns the investors.
Which is basically true.
Maybe it's not literal ownage, but it's like in the gaming context, like it also owns the investors. Which is basically true. Maybe it's not literal ownage,
but it's like in the gaming context,
like they completely owned the investors,
like the investors got owned.
Get owned.
Get pwned.
Yeah, get pwned.
And then the employees and investors are coming in
elsewhere. And then they are the majority owner
of the OpenAI Global LLC, which is a cap profit company.
OpenAI Global LLC, which is a cap profit company. OpenAI GP LLC,
I somehow is controlling the holding company
for the opening non-profit.
And then the holding company is the majority owner
of OpenAI Global LLC, which is where the-
This is what people mean when they say
they're too smart to make money in crypto,
too dumb to make money in AI.
Because I don't understand this. I could not make money in this, too dumb to make money in AI. Because I don't understand this.
I could not make money in this market
because of how dumb I am.
I'm literally too stupid to understand this.
No, I mean, I feel like you could write
a book on open AI.
Those are happening.
They're happening.
Just writing a legal case study on open AI
and all the thousands of different decision making decisions that got us to this point, which is fantastic.
And it's kind of funny because you just have Microsoft just on the left, you know, off the org chart basically.
It's like, yeah, we're just going to come into the one thing.
Satya is like, yeah, I just kind of want to own the one.
OpenAI Global LLC.
Yeah, I just want to own the products.
And what does GP stand for in this context? I think to own the one. OpenAI global LLC. I just want to own the products. I don't care about owning the employees.
What does GP stand for in this context?
I think that's the fund.
OpenAI GP LLC.
Wow, we really did our research on this.
No, I mean it's,
there's just so much going on.
And then there's ownership and control.
So OpenAI, so the nonprofit owns,
wholly owns the LLC, which controls the non-profit.
This is so complicated.
How did they come up with this?
It's really so interesting.
It's honestly art.
Musk's, Elon, the journal says the move is a win for Musk.
He runs a rival AI company at Sued OpenAI
over various issues for more than a year.
Musk, as everyone knows, has not been in favor
of the for-profit conversion.
I think specifically takes issue with Altman
getting a meaningful stake in the for-profit.
But Mark Toboroff, Musk's lead counsel
in the lawsuit against open AI says this changes nothing.
The move is a quote unquote cosmetic restructuring
that converts charitable assets into private billions.
The founding mission remains betrayed.
So I don't think this is gonna sort of solve
the legal battle between Musk and OpenAI,
but it's certainly, I think the result here is that
it will allow new investment to kind of move forward,
which feels like the kind of thing that you wouldn't want to get bottlenecked
for too many months.
Yeah, I mean, the public benefit thing seems like
a reasonable end state for this, right?
It's like, you can build a normal business,
you can have investors, you can have dividends
and stock options and stuff.
The dynamic of Musk is a little interesting.
I feel like Elon should either just make his ask very clear.
Hey, I donated millions of dollars,
I think hundreds of millions to the nonprofit.
I don't own a single share in the new for-profit, why? Like, get me on the cap table, get me equity,
like that seems fair.
I think a lot of people would be like, oh yeah,
like then you're not just like, you know,
going around suing, like, clujing up,
like something that's working, you're just like,
yeah, like I was early here, I'm early,
I'm like, you know, the Eduardo Saverin of this thing,
like I was like around, like give me, you know, comp me, like pay me, you know, the Eduardo Savarin of this thing. Like I was like around, like give me, you know,
comp me, like pay me, you know?
It's totally reasonable ask on that front.
And the other side is like,
Elon hasn't started another nonprofit.
Because if he's really worried,
if he really does believe that like the stated preference
is, hey, like there needs to be an AI nonprofit.
Like, this is essential.
And my problem is that the nonprofit is becoming for-profit.
And that's against what my beliefs are and how the world works and how we're going to prevent AI doom.
It's like, well, you're the richest man in the world.
Go start a nonprofit, right?
And so instead, with the XAI, I totally think it's fair to start XAI and compete in the for-profit race and just go do that.
That's great. And there's tons of benefits to X and compete in the for-profit race and just go do that. That's great.
And there's tons of benefits to X and to Tesla
and tons of stuff we've talked about.
But where's the next nonprofit?
We should be competing on both sides, right?
Yeah.
What are you reading now?
I put the chart into 03.
Okay.
And I said, can you explain this like I'm five?
It took it very literally because it's funny.
So the board of directors is the quote unquote, the grownups in charge.
They're like teachers who make the playground rules
so everyone plays nicely.
The OpenAI nonprofit is the caring parent club.
This is a special club that cares more about doing good
than making money.
The teachers tell this club what to do.
Okay.
Okay.
The big toy box is the holding company.
The big toy box.
The carrying club owns a big toy box.
Inside it, it keeps everyone's toys
and lets workers, employees, and friends
put their toys in too so they can all share.
The helper grown up, OpenAI GP. This is a small helper that the Caring Club owns.
Its job is to help look after the toy box and the money making shop. Next item. The
money making shop with a lid. This is can earn money but it has a lid that stops it from getting too greedy.
Its profits are capped. The big toy box is the shop's main owner so most of the shop's pennies still serve it.
The box owns the shop? Does that make any sense? So most of the shop's pennies still serve the caring club's mission.
Okay.
Microsoft's tiny slice.
Microsoft's is like a friendly neighbor
who gets a small slice of the shop's pennies,
but it doesn't run the shop.
Okay.
So anyways.
That's pretty straightforward.
Still confused.
Still a little confused, but hopefully.
I can imagine a five-year-old would be even more confused.
But thanks for the metaphor.
It's good. Good effort though.
Good effort.
When it became clear that it was going to need more money
than its founders thought,
OpenAI created a limited liability company subsidiary
that would allow it to take investment
from big tech companies such as Microsoft.
Those investors' returns would be capped at 100 times
what they put in and could fall to zero
if the nonprofit board deemed it was necessary
to support its mission.
High risk, high reward.
Yeah, I always found it kind of beautiful
that AGI, the fate of AI is like if you want to
unleash the ASI future, you must be hyper capitalist.
You must raise $100 billion. you can't just be the monk no capitalist
revolution yep it really is like the march of techno capital is what gets you
to a GI it's fascinating hyper commercial scale yeah exactly a lot of
people were thinking like no maybe it's just some some brilliant algorithm
thought in like the independent you know so one person thinks of it, E equals MC squared,
could come up with it and it unleashes this AI revolution.
But no, you actually need to coordinate
all of humanity.
You need to make money.
It has to be profit.
It has to be profit driven.
It's fascinating.
In the new structure proposed Monday,
the capped profit LLC would be replaced
by a public benefit corporation.
I like to hear that we're moving from LLC to corporation.
When would serve, which would serve both a public mission
and investors in a note to employees Monday, Altman said.
Hopefully that eliminates the weirdness around the capped,
the whole cap profit dynamic.
I never liked that.
I don't know how.
I don't like capping profits, not a fan.
It makes it much more difficult to underwrite if you can only get a hundred X. Yeah, right. Yeah
But hundred X's don't get masa is it possible bad in the morning. Has anyone done like some sort of synthetic levered SPV?
That's like a hundred X long
Open AI something there
Open AI. Something there.
Especially if you put it on change.
You can get 10,000 X returned.
If you're 100 X long.
The more complicated the structure,
the more complicated the financial products
you can build on top.
I feel like Wall Street and the hedge fund guys
really aren't aware of the opportunity here.
That we gotta bring finance to San Francisco.
Yeah.
We gotta save San Francisco.
Save it.
Anyway, Altman said public benefit corporations
have become typical for AI companies
such as its rivals Anthropic and Musk's XAI.
Oh, interesting, I didn't know XAI
was a public benefit corporation, that's cool.
OpenAI board chairman Brett Taylor
said during Monday's press conference that the new structure
would be simpler and allow employees, investors, and the nonprofit to own parts of the public
benefit corporation.
That's all the different stakeholders that are already looking for a slice.
He declined to say how large of a stake the nonprofit would have in the public benefit
corporation.
The potential size is being studied by independent financial advisors. Altman says he expects the moves to result in
the nonprofit being one of the largest and best capitalized charities in the world. Very cool.
And it means we can start deploying capital from the nonprofit very soon, which we're thrilled to
do. We've got a long list of things that we think will be very impactful. And I do think that's like
an under-told story right now, just what the nonprofit will wind up doing.
There's a ton of interesting things
that they can do in AI research.
I still actually think that they're gonna discover something
and then wanna commercialize it again,
because that's just the nature of putting a bunch of,
I mean, you're basically just taking
like top researchers and just being like, go do whatever.
Of course they're gonna discover valuable things.
The question there is just wouldn't open AI just,
the public benefit corporation just have kind of effectively
a rofer on novel IP and product opportunities.
I don't think the structures
are gonna be like that at all.
I'm not saying actually legally,
but would they not?
So I think this is like the weird dynamic
where now there are two open AIs
that you can go work for if you're an AI.
If you wanna work for the product company,
the high growth, studying churn and product
and how do you actually commercialize this,
how do you make this an amazing company,
the next Facebook, the next Google,
you go to work for the public benefit corporation, you're working on chat, GPT, agents next Facebook, the next Google, you go to work for the public benefit corporation.
You're working on chat GBT agents, operator, deep research, you're having a great time.
You're the next early Facebook employee basically.
But if you really don't care about that and you want to work at the nonprofit, you want
to work on AI safety, you want to work on foundational research, you head over to the
nonprofit and all of a sudden your job on a day-to-day basis is much less pressure driven
You don't have the same KPIs. You're just doing research
But what happens when you put a bunch of?
Insanely intelligent people together and give them no constraints to just do whatever they want
They're gonna come up with something creative like they did before
Okay, but I just don't know a single person that works at the nonprofit technically
What really do you know?
No, but once they're capitalized,
they will start scaling that staff.
But their mission won't be,
the mandate for those folks won't be,
won't be go build products, go implement GPT-45
and some tool, let's figure out coding,
let's figure out agents, let's figure out booking.
It's gonna be something much more abstract
and foundational, but you put those people
with a ton of resources and you let them turn them loose,
like they're gonna discover cool things
that will probably be commercializable.
Anyway, we'll see how it unfolds.
Maybe that's not what happens, but I don't know.
Anyway.
Yeah, did you already share this,
but Altman says it means we can start deploying capital. What does that mean?
Yeah, it's a yeah deploying capital into research that the nonprofit spits out. What will that look like?
Well, yeah exactly like yeah, there's gonna be stuff that's just like policy papers. Maybe those aren't commercializable
There's gonna be stuff. That's just like a critique of how LLMs are being implemented across the world, right?
There's gonna be stuff that's not commercializable, but if they start touching research like they're gonna they're gonna create value
It's just I would still go I would still expect yeah Altman to be looking over and be like hey
You know we could get that to a billion of air
You want and we'll give you a cut
Yeah, I just feel like it's gonna be complex like yeah Like, let's say in the nonprofit, they're like,
hey yeah, we actually found a new algorithm.
It's like amazing in booking flights.
Like never makes a mistake.
All this, just like no.
We did the meme.
We did the meme.
We did the.
No, this was supposed to be the for-profit.
Why did this happen in the nonprofit?
And there's just some brilliant researcher
over in the nonprofit being like,
yeah, I was just looking for the most elegant algorithm possible and then I scaled it up and now it just does
everything.
He's like, wait, I'm goaded?
Anyways, we're all rooting for open AI.
We love for-profit corporations and if you're looking to invest in for-profit corporations,
head over to public.com.
Investing for those who take it seriously.
They've got multi-asset investing, industry-leading yields, trusted by millions. Go to public.com investing for those who take it seriously They got multi-asset investing industry leading yields trusted by millions go to public.com
I was hoping they you know they say they have multi-asset investing
I'd love to be able to buy a slice of a nonprofit
Multi-asset investing invest in a nonprofit so that when the for-profit conversion happens you cash in because that's what nonprofits to me
Are really about cashing it well Microsoft, Microsoft owns part of OpenAI.
That's a way to get exposure, legitimately.
And they own like a significant chunk.
For a while I was thinking about like another lens to view.
You gotta buy some of Teams though too.
Yeah, no, no, there is an interesting investment thesis
for the Mag-7, which is basically like,
if you want exposure to self-driving cars,
virtual reality, artificial intelligence,
autonomous delivery, like what should you buy?
You could go around and buy slices of startups that may or may not work, or you could buy
Google which owns Waymo, Facebook which owns Reality Labs and Oculus, you could own Microsoft
which owns OpenAI, you could own Amazon, which is probably gonna figure out delivery.
Tesla, Humanoids, right?
Like the Mag-7 have pretty good exposure
to the next trends as you list them out.
Of course, they're not pure plays
and they're not gonna, and it's hard for them
to do 1000X, but it's not a crazy idea
to just go and buy Mag-7 if you're looking
to index on the next wave of the 20-year tech trends.
Who knows?
Some of those might be disruptive though.
Some of them might get rocked.
But so far, looking pretty good.
Anyway, the information dove deeper.
They say Elon Musk might have won the battle over OpenAI's future, but who's to say Sam
Altman isn't going to win the war?
Today's announcement by the ChatGPT creator that it was abandoning plans to move its for-profit
arm out from under control of the nonprofit
conceding to Musk's legal efforts to stop the restructuring
could end up cementing Altman's power at OpenAI.
After all, OpenAI will remain a company
whose controlling shareholder is the nonprofit.
So whoever controls the nonprofit controls OpenAI.
The information writes,
OpenAI's existing board will decide who sits
on the nonprofit's board in the future.
Is this like a one hand washes the other scenario?
What's going on here?
Well, the key thing to note here is that it's,
and this article shares,
it's reasonable to assume that Altman has a lot of sway
with the existing board,
which is very different from the one that fired him
in November 2023. So they already did the work to effectively turn it over
and align it with the for or the public benefit.
There's 10 members, including Altman on the current board,
which will appoint the nonprofit board.
So, makes my head spin.
It's hard to imagine that as OpenAI
gradually added new members to the board,
Altman let anyone antipathetic to his ambitions join.
The only potential wrinkle in Altman's effective control
of OpenAI going forward is whether state regulators
get a say in nonprofits administration, barring that.
He appears to be well-prepared.
Remember, this was the real reason
that it seems they halted the conversion
is because Delaware and California
were seemingly not too excited about what was happening.
Who is the current board?
Adam, is Adam on there?
Okay, yeah, so Brett Taylor, who's the chair,
Adam DeAngelo, Sue Desmond-Hellman,
haven't heard of her, need to dig in there,
Zico Coulter, retired U.S. Army General Paul Nakasone,
Adebayo Onglesi, Nicole Sigelman, Fiji Simo,
who's from Instacart, Larry Summers,
as well as our CEO Sam Altman.
Seems like a pretty good crew.
It's fun.
So OpenAI is governed by the board
of the OpenAI nonprofit currently comprised.
So it seems like there's some switch here.
This is all very confusing.
Anyway, let's get some venture capitalists on that board.
Yeah.
Jeff Lewis.
The devoid of that Jeff Lewis would be great.
I want Thrive Capital on there, Massa on there.
All of them.
Good people.
You know, Softbank actually, fantastic board governance.
You know, people talk a lot of trash about Softbank
for a variety of reasons.
When they come into a company,
they run it like a public company.
It's like compensation committee, conflicts committee,
like the board meetings are full day events,
like very well organized,
because they take that stuff very seriously.
They're professionals.
Professionals.
High risk, risk on professionals.
Extremely risky, but professionals,
which we respect here.
At least one OpenAI investor seems satisfied
with the outcome and told us that it's the best outcome,
given the parameters that exist right now,
especially because of the scrutiny and pressure
that came with Elon Musk's lawsuit
opposing the restructuring.
The investor added that even as they awaited
the potential IPO in OpenAI's future,
large secondaries, which OpenAI has already done,
could be another way for stakeholders to cash out.
Keeping control in the hands of the nonprofit board
is significant.
The restructuring endeavor began because the nonprofit
board's goal to make AI for the benefit of humanity
may or may not conflict one day with shareholders' desire for hundreds of billions of dollars in profit.
You might remember that when OpenAI announced the restructuring four months ago,
the board, which oversees OpenAI's nonprofit, said they couldn't adequately consider the interests of investors
who were pumping tens of billions of dollars into the for-profits subsidiary that runs ChatGPT.
Imagine you're an LP in one of the funds
that has deployed billions,
and you send a little Saturday afternoon email
being like, hey, by the way,
what do we actually own of OpenAI?
And then you as an investor have to try to untangle
this web.
They had a name for it.
It wasn't, for a while it wasn't,
it was like credits or something or like fun coupons.
It wasn't shares, it wasn't stock.
It was units, units.
That's what they were calling it, absolute units.
That's an terminology standard with LLCs.
Absolute units.
Absolute units, absolute dogs. Yeah, no, no, it makes sense.
Anyway, I'm sure they have to plan all these secondaries, plan all of these, all these share
sales, and what are they using to plan? Well, I don't know if they're, I doubt they're using
linear for corporate governance, but I bet you they're using Linear for purpose-built,
planning, and product building.
Linear is a system for modern software development,
streamline issues, projects, and product roadmaps.
You guys know already that we use Linear
for running the show,
and we are very grateful to have them as a sponsor.
We are also gonna be live in person tomorrow in SF
with Kari from Linear and a bunch of other people.
So very excited for that.
Well, there is more news.
We'll stay on OpenAI for a little bit.
There's so many stories around this.
So Microsoft, we'll go to the Microsoft angle.
Sheeran Gafare says,
Microsoft has not yet agreed
to OpenAI's restructuring plans
and is a key holdout
negotiations needed to get the restructure deal done
along with approval from state AG offices,
still being decided how much equity Microsoft gets.
Such a wild dynamic.
Microsoft has invested $13.75 billion in the startup
and they remain the biggest holdout among investors
as the chat GPT maker tries to restructure
according to several people familiar with the matter.
Now that 13.75 billion,
was that cash that ever transferred and was wired
or were those credits or did they transfer
and then go right back to Azure?
Like I'm very interested in the anatomy of that deal.
I hope that someone digs into this more
and actually asks for the structure because.
Yeah, I mean, I think it was, I know it was both.
The question is what is the actual ratio?
Yeah, and how does, I guess, how does Microsoft feel
about how much they invested?
Do they feel like, hey, we're owed 13.75 billion
at this valuation, at the last valuation,
a new valuation, a post dilution valuation?
Or are they like, yeah, it was really only like
five billion in total cost because we gave you credits
at like a two to one ratio, right?
Yeah, I mean, the thing here that's apparent
is it's non-standard for a $3.2 trillion company
to invest $13 billion in another company
that then is restructuring,
and it's unclear how much the $3.2 trillion company
is even going to own of the underlying investment.
Haven't seen this, at least in my lifetime.
Yeah, for sure.
There really has never been a tech company.
It's funny they kind of have to just get around the table
and decide, OK, how much is Satya going to get?
You know, how much does Sam get?
Right, because a part of this, I think
Sam needs to get some personal exposure,
because if you check back to the Senate hearings,
at that point in time, he had nothing then he got a bunch yeah it does seem like
they're gonna make a movie out of this but it might be more complicated than
the big short or might be like a four-hour documentary it's just gonna be
Margot Robbie in the bathtub for six hours explaining how all these different
entities interact because it's more complicated than mortgage backed
securities and credit default swaps combined.
It's gonna make the 08 financial crisis
look like two plus two.
It's like, by comparison, this is so much more complex.
Anyway, Microsoft is still actively negotiating details.
Microsoft not commenting.
They said in a statement, OpenAI said,
"'We continue to work closely with Microsoft
and look forward to finalizing the details
of this recapitalization in the near future.
I mean, the good news is like,
Microsoft and OpenAI are pretty well aligned
on like what they do best.
Like OpenAI clearly is fantastic
at consumer product development,
breaking through with the Ghibli moment,
with deep research, like all this.
And then in terms of the API,
it's great to vend that through to Azure.
And that's the relationship,
and it seems like it's a really fruitful one.
And it's okay for them not to dominate on the Azure side
or take some sort of, like not really build that out.
It doesn't seem like they're,
no one would say, oh,
they're just gonna be a consumer tech company.
They'll only be worth three trillion. It's fine if they just become
just Google or just Facebook, right? That's a pretty good
outcome.
Or just eat some percentage of search volume.
Yeah, seriously. Microsoft isn't the only party that OpenAI
needs buy-in from. They're fighting with the Attorneys
General of California and Delaware. OpenAI needs to do a fair market valuation on the nonprofit stake in the future for profit entity and is asking state AGs for input
So how much are we worth? So this is kind of like a 409 a situation or like a
83 be like
Let's let's figure out what the with the base valuation is, but that can be so wild.
I mean, imagine you're an attorney's general.
Trying to value open AI.
It's like on one hand,
you may have created a machine god.
That's worth infinity.
That's worth infinity.
On the other hand, you're burning
five, $10 billion a year.
And the world is just man is actively trying to bury you.
And Sam Alment stops fundraising, running to the ground.
So it's either infinity or zero.
One of the two.
It's so funny, I'm using 03.
And I asked how much cash has Microsoft invested in OpenAI?
And it's basically stuck in a doom loop of searching the web
and then trying to understand it.
And then just looping back to searching the web.
It's been going for about five minutes now.
Wow.
So we'll see.
Just 03, not even deep research?
Yeah.
Just 03, it's just five minutes into this,
figuring this out.
Well, I just want a pretty specific answer.
This is humanity's last exam.
Yeah, how much money?
Makes sense of open AI. If you can do that, you've passed the real last exam. Yeah, how much money? Makes sense of OpenAI.
If you can do that, you've passed the realtering test.
AGI is here.
So Microsoft's approval will be key.
Only OpenAI insiders, Microsoft and other early investors,
currently have a direct say in approving the restructure
according to two people.
As a result, only that group gets to weigh in
on the restructuring plan, the people said.
But among investors, OpenAI is currently
only negotiating with Microsoft.
Microsoft has a unique relationship
compared with other investors
because of its licensing and revenue sharing.
And they also had that AGI clause for a while,
but I don't know where that went.
Anyway, I'm sure Microsoft, OpenAI,
they all got to manage risk.
They got to automate compliance.
They got to get on Vanta.
And they gotta prove trust continuously.
Vanta's trust management platform takes the manual work
out of your security and compliance process
and replaces it with continuous automation,
whether you're pursuing your first framework
or managing a complex program.
I can't imagine anything more complex
than doing compliance at open AI and
Yeah, if you're working much any company, it's very painful start to finish support for 35 different compliance frameworks
Sock to HIPAA you name it head over to Vanta head over there. Tell them the technology brothers sent you fantastic. Anyway
founder windsurf posted big announcement tomorrow.
As if the biggest announcement wasn't going and doing a podcast with a double,
you know, double collar on. Yeah and so the open AI agreement to buy startup
Windsurf for three billion is finalized. It's been reported in Bloomberg. We need
a massive size gone. Katie Roof has the story over at Bloomberg.
Size gone.
OpenAE has agreed to buy Windsurf,
an artificial intelligence coding tool,
formerly known as Codium, for about three billion,
according to people familiar with the matter,
marking the Chachi PT maker's largest acquisition to date.
The deal has not yet closed, said the people
who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Both companies declined comment,
although the founders out there tweeting
and wearing two polos.
The acquisition could help OpenAI take on rising competition
in the market for AI-driven coding assistance,
systems capable of tasks like writing code
based on natural language prompting.
Bloomberg News previously reported
that the two companies were in discussions.
Windsurf, formerly called ExaFunction Inc,
has recently been in talks with investors,
including Kleiner Perkins, General Catalyst,
to raise a $3 billion valuation.
Last year, they were valued at 1.25 by General Catalyst
and OpenAI came over and scooped them up.
So I have a little bit of a history deep dive
if you wanna go through this, for to break break down windsurf how they wound up there. So
2021
Ages ago in the AI race, but you know a real over at the true overnight success
You know starting a company 2021. Yeah, they could have gone into crypto. They decided to go in and my
They decided to go into AI. So their MIT friends
They decided to go into AI. So their MIT friends,
Varn Mohan X neuro autonomy infrastructure lead
and Douglas Chen who had worked at Meta and Oculus
as an engineer incorporated Exa function Inc in California
to abstract the way the challenges
of managing accelerated hardware like GPUs.
Like a GP, they're basically a GPU wrapper.
It's funny like wrapper is in their DNA.
Yeah, so basically what they were doing,
I actually have a post up from Bruno from X,
and at the time, Exifunction customers connect
to the company's managed service
or deploy Exifunction software in a Kubernetes cluster,
the technology dynamically allocated resources,
moving computation onto cost-effective hardware,
such as Spot instances
when available.
And so anyways, pretty wild to see.
Yeah, so you can get cooked if you're on AWS
and you're just using like the reserved instances.
And so sometimes if there's specifically, you know,
cloud hardware that's underutilized,
the price falls in the Spot market.
And so you want to dynamically move over there.
So they're using this like server sideside virtualization to do that but it really
is a GPU wrapper yeah but it's funny because Kubernetes is also supposed to
do don't stop wrapping yeah but they wrapped they wrapped the wrapper so they
raised a three million dollar seed from green oaks to build this I have a
another post up from shy who highlighted, Shy Goldman, he highlighted that the round was three million
on 23 million pre.
Wow, pretty good on the dilution front.
Yeah, not bad.
Watch out, Sotheby's, these founders are gonna be
bidding against a lot of you folks.
Yeah, VC's creating their own competition at Sotheby's.
Seriously, yeah, this is dangerous.
Of course they went on to do many more rounds,
including some that we'll get to.
Yeah, so a year later, April 28th, 2022, Series A,
Exifunction emerged from stealth
with a $25 million Series A.
It says Green Oaks and Founders Fund.
Is this really a FF company?
I never knew that if that's the case,
but I know Lee Marie was in,
and so maybe that got kind of confused. I don't know who knows
It's a bold claim to and they had a bold claim to be the reference infrastructure for service
Serverless deep learning and so they're going deeper into AI specifically
Promising customers faster inference and lower bills by multiplexing workloads across thousands of GPUs. So there's a lot of idle GPUs out there
and they're going to find and allocate
your inference workloads to the lowest ones.
This is a famous story from Mid Journey,
which was like getting started around this time.
Mid Journey, obviously very inference,
very inference heavy in the sense that you generate an image
and it generates four of these images
and they diffuse very slowly and you're getting
these little streaming updates while the images
kind of depixelate.
But famously mid-journey because it's not,
it doesn't matter that it's low latency
because it takes a minute and so it doesn't matter
if it takes a full second to stream you the final image.
They would render those images on servers across the world
because no one's watching Netflix in 3 a.m. in Taipei
or whatever, so they would have a server farm.
Well, John, here a few people are.
Yeah, so I should share.
But you get the idea.
The American servers were used
for the international audience and vice versa,
and so this idea of load balancing is a tale as old as time,
but clearly there was a market here
and so they raised their $25 million Series A.
Early pilot customers in autonomous vehicle
envisioned startups reported five to 10x
hardware utilization gains,
but Mohan worried the business world would become,
the business would become a commodity
once every model looks the same.
Interesting.
So they make a decision to pivot in mid 2022.
Watching GitHub co pilots debut, the founders concluded that their application layer AI
not infrastructure would capture real world value.
They chose to pivot betting that their low latency serving engine could run an AI code
assistant cheaper than anyone else.
Fascinating. So like in the it at this time like the meme was don't build a
wrapper the value accrues to like the hardware layer like go deeper and
instead they're saying hey we're actually set up really well to serve a
fantastic AI code assistant and cost competition is going to be very
important even though we've been in this era of like freeze VC money and people are paying a ton of money for everything, but having that margin
and that optimization really makes sense.
And it seems like that's increasingly the way you break through is like the deep seek.
It's like the optimization on the inference optimization on the hardware, like the economic
gravity of these projects really does matter.
So in December 6th of 2022,
Kodium launches on Hacker News,
on Hacker News, Mohan announced,
we just released Kodium to open up access of generative AI
to all developers for free.
Tried it in the browser, the extension shipped for VS Code,
JetBrains, Vim, and more.
Trained only on permissively licensed public code
and promising to stay free forever for individuals.
Very cool.
So, Speed wins fans in early 2023.
They're getting up and running.
Kleiner Perkins leads a $65 million Series B
at a $500 million valuation.
And the response on Hacker News is very good.
Folks are saying that it's noticeably faster
than Copilot, an edge credited
to ExaFunctions GPU scheduler.
And so, I mean, this was the time
when everything was scaling up.
And like, I mean, even ChatGPD at the time would be like,
well, I'm cooked.
The GPUs are melting.
I'm cooked.
I mean, I'm sure you saw this at the Studio Ghibli moment.
There'd be tons of times when it would just be like, failed.
Broke connection.
Or just come up with an excuse not to do the work.
Lazy.
Lazy.
And so, by mid-year, Kodium had grown organically
to tens of thousands of daily users
without a dollar of marketing spend, super viral,
especially in tech Twitter and X.
Kleiner Perkins leads that Series B,
joined by Greenoaks and General Catalyst.
Kleiner Perkins' partner, Lee-Marie Braswell,
called Kodium a secure, personalized productivity
multiplier deployable on-prem or in the cloud.
We're gonna have LM on, she's great.
I worked with her for a couple months at Founders Fund.
And then she got poached over to KP.
Very dramatic.
Poached alert.
Yeah.
So they hit 300,000 developers in just 15 months.
Venturebeat reports that Kodium already wrote 44%
of new commits for over 300,000 developers
and dozens of Fortune 500 teams.
So the CEO at this time gave a quote to TechCrunch saying,
even though we've barely made a dent in the B money,
this lets us ramp R&D and make larger strategic bets.
You love it. Just bets. So just scaling.
So they add self-hosted and air gap deployments,
which is pretty cool.
Sock2, Type2 compliance,
post-generation license filtering features
that one cautious customer is like Anderil, Zillow, and Dell.
And so yeah, if you need to be in a,
I think we've been talking about this
with like some of the llama instances going into the
DoD.
At a certain point, you can't just be calling out to some random server all the time.
It has to run locally.
And so having that optimization background makes a ton of sense.
They become a unicorn in 2024, just what, six months ago?
August 29, 2024.
They do their Series C. TechWrench breaks the news.
$150 million Series C
led by General Catalyst, valuing them at 1.25 billion.
Total funding hit 243 million.
GC's Quentin Clark praised the customer follow ethos
and multi-IDE coverage.
They're at 700,000 users then,
a thousand enterprises.
Scales is wild.
Crazy.
And they were the leading independent rival
to GitHub Copilot this time.
To signal a bigger vision, the company rebrands the product
and domain as Windsurf, which is interesting.
Yeah, this happened in November of 2024
and that's where, so it felt like Windsurf
kind of came out of nowhere,
but we're now like three rebrands into this.
Like it goes from Exa function,
which you might've heard of and then Codium,
which I think I'd heard of a little bit.
And now Windsurf came out and then it was like
the big launch and everyone's talking about Windsurf
being so great.
A new AI native IDE bundled inline completions,
whole repo search and cascade and autonomous agent
that plans multi-step fixes and starts working
before you ask aimed at keeping devs 10 steps ahead.
Wind surf is beautiful name.
It is.
Wind surfing kind of fell off.
You should be a thing.
It's moved on to what's the new one?
Kiteboarding.
Kiteboarding.
Maybe that's the next AI company.
Yeah.
One editor, unlimited superpowers,
marketing touted windsurf tab,
a command pallet that surfaces context aware snippets,
test docs and deployment from a single keynote,
keystroke, heralding the IDE wars of 2025.
We will never forget those.
They hit 40 million ARR.
I mean, we're still in the midst of them.
I mean, obviously the other news out of the last 24 hours
is that Cursor's raising 900 on 9 billion.
9 billion.
That was initially rumored to be closer to 10, but has a bunch of big names in it too.
So the IDE wars will continue.
The show will go on.
Yeah.
And yeah, I don't think Windsurf is not going to back down in terms of their ambitions.
I am interested to see if they just sort of continue the Windsurf brand or it's just rolled into
chat GPT completely.
But also interesting that they have this freemium funnel
converting to $12 to $60 per seat enterprise contracts.
Like even doing per seat here instead of consumption
is very interesting because that doesn't necessarily,
like you have, at least in the short term,
like real variable costs.
Like you could sell in a bunch of seats
and if you have some power user
who's just sitting there hitting tab every two seconds,
like they could burn through a lot of inference cost.
But I guess that they're just really comfortable
dealing with their infrastructure scaling.
Yeah, and to be clear, I don't think any of their investors
at any point over the last two years
was really saying, hey, you could focus.
You should really focus on margins,
just because it was clear that inference costs were dropping
off a cliff during that entire period.
Yeah, yeah, I mean, we've certainly
seen that with the new 03 models.
And it seems like something that's very, very solvable
in the midterm as you bake the models down,
distill them, optimize them, all those things.
So certainly something you don't need to worry about.
It's just interesting that they're betting
on this per seat model.
I wonder if that will stay
because you could imagine that the margins could be the same
and you could still do it on a consumption basis.
Like AWS is mostly consumption based, not seat based.
Yeah, it's one of those things at some point
if companies are hiring less engineers
but doing significantly more engineering work,
you would want to effectively be an index
on engineering labor, AI-led.
It's like number of lines of code changed
is what you want to be comped on,
or just raw inference cost, right?
Just pay me 10x what it costs to inference this thing.
I don't know.
So there's some funding rumors.
We talked about this.
Kleiner Perkins is thinking about doing another deal,
but they get this acquisition agreement for three billion.
Observers called it a distribution grab,
owning Windsurf, Hands Open AI,
direct channel to millions of programmers
and keeps a prime asset away from Anthic Microsoft's GitHub and cursor before the
sale windsurfing cursor or neck and neck in the agentic ID space one analyst
quipped begun the ID we wars have as cursor sought a $900 million round to
stay independent.
Mohan credits weekly five hour walk in talks with his co founder for
intellectual honesty,
the habit that enabled a radical pivot
from infra to app.
What competitors?
Well-meant, Minitis method.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
Probably putting up 30,000 steps a day at that pace.
It's great.
So they still own the proprietary LLMs
on GPU virtualization layer.
It owns end-to-end, allowing sub to 100-millisecond
suggestions and cost structure cheap enough
to keep the individual tier free
Company filters that GPL and other restrictive licenses blah blah blah anyway
Pretty fun pretty fun really good outcome for everyone involved just a couple years billions of dollars created in value
I mean, it's interesting it
For It's, for, again, this comes back to this kind of question
for all these platform investors
around needing a lot of Windsurf in a single fund
to return a fund, even potentially a 1X, right?
So.
I do wonder if Windsurf will get rolled into OpenAI
and Shatch-E-PT in any any meaningful way because like just from a product perspective open AI has been
kind of bifurcating the
apps a little bit so
The latest studio Ghibli moment happened via images and chat GPT the previous
Images project they worked on Dolly and Dolly 2, those were separate URLs,
so separate apps.
They eventually brought some of that into ChatGPT,
but Sora is still its own domain,
it's its own editor basically,
because you wanna be able to adjust the timing
on certain cuts and add music,
and kind of a non-linear editor
just makes more sense for video editing.
Certainly you don't want to be writing code
just in the ChatGPT app, but they have a bajillion users,
probably makes sense to bring,
to leverage that distribution one way or another.
My bet as of right now is Windsurf by OpenAI,
not OpenAI code.
Yeah, not like, oh, a new button where I could click
deep research or I could click Windsurf
and if I click Windsurf it just builds me an app.
I don't know, I think that might be cool.
It's already writing code pretty frequently.
When you ask it to crunch some numbers,
it'll go and crunch the numbers down.
And tool use seems to be really important,
so I could imagine some of the stuff getting ported back but it
does seem like Windsurf just by itself is its own great product you know it's
popular and so they will continue to do that. Anyway we were tracking this on
Polymarket sponsor of the show and Polymarket had will OpenAI acquire
Windsurf before August shot to 99% it was at like 60% yesterday right yeah I think the big question was just trying
to understand how yeah if this actually was a rumor it was at 80% a week ago and
then somebody bet big no and cratered and then it just steadily ticked back up until yesterday.
Yeah so yesterday when we talked about it on the show that was May 5th and it was like noon it was
at 67% and we said that the double polo told the story. Yeah and the double polo was evidence that
the deal was going through that you wouldn't throw on the double polo if the deal with Sam
Altman was going south. And we were correct.
And there were a couple posts about this later in the show.
We'll maybe dig through them.
But anyway, cool to see that Polymarket predicted it
and was edge positive right up until the final confirmation.
I still think it's interesting because like,
yes, they have an agreement,
but there's so many things that could fall through posts.
So 99% maybe feels even a little bit too high now. I don't agreement, but there's so many things that could fall through post so 99%
Maybe feels even a little bit too high now. I don't know but yeah, who knows
Go and express your own view on on polymarket. Check it out. Oh, it's so funny
Varun it is hilarious. So 34 minutes ago after we started the show last night
He posted big announcement tomorrow and everybody's just saying like, congrats, like this is amazing.
And the big announcement is, Windsor wave eight.
It's so big, we're doing it over three days.
Today we have a bunch of updates that make Windsor
the best product for teams.
Windsor can now automatically review your code,
use internal knowledge sources, share a conversation,
and deploy apps internally and more.
So anyways, I guess.
I think this is great.
I think if you are getting acquired, that's that it is weighty and it is important, but
no, no, no.
Focus on the focus on the company, focus on the product, focus on the customers.
Like jobs not finished.
Like, yes, you have new shareholders.
Then you're in you're aligned with a new team.
You have more resources, but continue to grow that. Continue to grow.
Yeah, it's so interesting,
because now Bloomberg and a bunch of other media outlets
have said OpenAI reaches agreement to buy startup Windsurf,
but we haven't seen anything from the Windsurf team.
Or Sand. You would think that they would put out
an official statement. Or anything, yeah.
Yeah, so Dakesh Gupta said, so the windsurf guy
wore a double polo on the YC podcast, which
was last worn by the OpenAI guy when
he was working on his first startup in the early 2000s,
signaling that the rumors of acquisition are in fact true.
And it's like the guy yelling in the girl's ear.
And Spore says, so this was correct, lol.
It actually did happen.
Anyway, should we go through Apple's iPhone woes?
The prices are going up, they're getting hit by tariffs.
Apple won't be able to avoid price hikes for long.
The iPhone maker is absorbing $900 million
in tariff costs this quarter,
but the hit to profit margins could still get worse.
So Apple's latest earning report shows the company
is choosing to eat the additional costs
and not raise the prices.
But Raymond Jane's analyst says,
looking ahead, our base case for Apple is to raise prices,
which should help offset the tariff impact to an extent.
Now, Apple hasn't raised prices in a while,
even in the head of inflation,
even in the face of COVID stuff.
So I think they have some room to raise the prices,
but they are getting expensive.
Once you break the thousand dollar point,
price point people, psychologically it's different.
It feels more like a laptop.
At the same time, spend more time on your phone
than your laptop, right?
So I mean, I'd rather have a $4,000 phone
and a $900 laptop, honestly.
Laptop can just kind of do whatever.
I went to the little Apple store to buy this laptop.
I was like, just give me the stock one. amazing that you know a device that you can be so dependent on
Still cost less than a thousand dollars use it more than your car like if it was $30,000
I think people would still buy it. Yeah, you know, of course
There's like pricing dynamics of like, you know, will the iPhone stay competitive because it can't be 10x than an Android people will switch
blue bubbles probably not worth that much but
But but in terms of like the value that's created in your life by your phone like it's it's up there
Yeah up there with the best of them. Yeah, the tariff impact so far is actually pretty slight in Apple's earnings call
Tim Cook said the company expects 900 million in additional costs.
That would add less than 2% to what Wall Street
was projecting for Apple's cost of sales.
And so, yeah, the cost of sales is in the, what,
50 billion range to make all those iPhones,
if it goes up by.9 billion, not that big of a deal.
But few believe Apple's tariff.
Tim's like, we're gonna eat it for now,
and then next quarter, we're gonna raise prices,
and hopefully people forget.
Yeah, given the prospect of tariffs,
of Trump's sectoral tariffs, we think it is prudent
to at least double the 900 million hit to COGS
for a few quarters beyond June,
says one of the researchers covering Apple.
Concern about Apple's margins in coming periods
helped drive the stock down nearly 4%
following its earnings report.
The stock lost a further 3% on Monday
after the information reported
that the new ultra-thin iPhone Apple
is planning to launch later this year
will include compromises such as shorter battery life.
Interesting, I didn't realize they were going thinner.
That's kind of a cool story.
I might do that, I don't know. I never run out of I would I would
I'm not gonna go far to say I'm not I'm not gonna go as far as to say I would stand in line
You know an ultra thin iPhone
But I would hurry to get one so you so you would be okay with shorter battery life. Yes
I think so too. Well, cuz the battery's always good in the bigger six months. Yeah, but can you imagine so it's gonna be a thinner phone?
But the camera bump will probably be like three times longer. It's a telescope
Imagine imagine a little telescope people are like, yeah the camera lenses keep breaking off because they're so they protrude so much
ridiculous something anyway
Uh, there's a chart here about the iPhone prices.
They went up almost to a thousand and they've been down for the last couple of years, hovering
around 900.
Can't really go too far.
Anyway, Apple shed more than 350 billion in market cap since President Trump's announcement
of new tariffs on April 2nd.
Most other mega cap stocks have since recovered from their post tariff losses.
The company has been making moves to offset the hit from tariffs. April 2nd, most other mega cap stocks have since recovered from their post tariff losses.
Company's been making moves to offset the hit from tariffs.
Cook said Thursday that most of the devices shipping
to the US will come from India and Vietnam.
They're getting out, especially as it looks to enhance
the iPhone with new cutting edge designs,
such as a thinner body or bendable screen
that pose more complicated manufacturing challenges.
Yeah, they gotta spice it up.
They gotta do something different.
I feel like there's, you know, people have the Mac,
the iPad, the phone, throw something else in the watch,
you know, just give me something in between.
I was thinking about trying to carry it.
Yeah, probably market has,
will Apple release a new product line in 2025 at 24%
and will Apple release a foldable iPhone in 2025 at 7%
but a bendable iPhone is not on the list yet.
Even if it's worse.
The bendable device is so.
I just want something fresh, I'm bored.
I don't care.
Just give me something.
Just give me something, yeah, exactly.
Anyway.
The bendable iPhone is really funny
because you can imagine people just putting it
in their back pocket and then it's just sort of
folding around.
Yeah, I mean, I think bendable means foldable
in this context, but I don't know.
I was thinking more like bendable, like a stick.
If you try to actually fold the stick,
you're gonna break it.
I'm just bored, I want something new.
I was hoping they'd do a TV.
I still like the Apple Vision Pro.
I'm excited for the next one.
How about a backpack that operates as a desktop computer,
that operates as a desktop computer
and an extra large mobile phone. You know what I was talking about?
Something like if you could get,
make just the largest mobile phone on earth.
There's all this boom.
There's all this boom.
Because you can put it on your back.
There's all this boom about humanoid robots.
I was posting about this on May the 4th, my birthday,
Star Wars Day, may the 4th be with you. May the 4th, I was posting about this on May the 4th my birthday Star Wars day may the fourth be with you
May the fourth I was saying we should make our to D2 birthday on the show
Everybody's gonna be like what the heck you didn't yeah, you know for your birthday. We did we did
I'm Friday and Thursday
Exact date. Yeah, true. We're kind of left. But but making a
Making an r2d2 seems trivial at this
point, right? It's like a bunch of car batteries, the battery
technology is definitely there. The LLMs are there, you throw a
starlink on that thing, or a bunch of cell signals, like a
bunch of cell phones in there, you're gonna have great
connectivity, it's gonna be able to follow you around the wheels
exist, like all the tech is there to build R2D2. That would
be a great product for Apple.
Just $10,000 and it just follows you around
and tells you the weather.
And it was like, oh, you wanted me to play this?
You wanted me to play you too?
I still don't have a good AI, but I don't know.
Something like that would be fun and different.
R2D2.
R2D2.
Put it on the roadmap.
Anyway, I hope that-
Next time we can get press passes to an Apple event,
we'll-
We'll stay at a Wander.
We'll build Tim aside and we'll say,
hey look, R2D2, make it happen.
Yeah, for sure.
We got the fortress balance sheet.
If we go to the NBDC, we'll be staying in Cupertino
and we'll be in a Wander.
That's right.
We'll be finding our happy place.
Find your happy place.
Find your happy place. Find your happy place.
Book of Wander is just on a tear.
It's actually insane.
It is.
Every single day.
They're in the conversation.
They're greatest of all time, you mean?
Yes, of course.
Back conversation, right.
Book of Wander with inspiring views,
hotel-grade amenities, dreamy beds, top-tier cleaning,
and 24-7 concierge service.
It's a vacation home, but better.
Anyway, you were telling me about this,
the bringing Hollywood back to America, this whole thing.
John Voight has a plan, which is, isn't John Voight
Angeli and Jolie's dad?
That's right.
Really?
Yep.
I have no idea, because I've never seen any movies.
You haven't.
So actor John Voight presented his plan
to boost US jobs in the entertainment industry
to President Donald Trump over the weekend,
laying out a proposal that included federal incentives
for US theater owners to upgrade their facilities.
Let's go.
Universal basic.
Is that gonna fix the issues?
I mean, judging by the commentary
that I hear from people in Hollywood,
the issues are around how much regulation there is
and the costs associated with said regulation
in making movies in Southern California
and revitalizing theaters and making the bathroom.
And the lack of technology podcasts in Hollywood.
Okay.
It's nowhere near enough.
That's another short.
That's another short.
That's why it's falling apart.
They're not indexed to tank.
But the idea that,
I'll give them a chance
to kind of get into this,
but the idea that just fixing the bathrooms
and old theaters is not necessarily going to revitalize,
the domestic entertainment industry.
Yeah, it's a tough model when you have.
But nice bathrooms, I like nice bathrooms.
I mean, you think about when Hollywood was in its heyday
and you didn't have all, like you couldn't watch anything in HD.
You had a TV with three channels on it
and it was 12 inches and it was crackly.
If you wanted to see something actually big and beautiful
with good sound, you had to go to the theater.
Now you can just buy a home theater
with a projector for two grand
and you can also just scroll YouTube and tik-tok and streaming
And your phone all day and there's unlimited content
it's impossible to keep up with it and so the excuses to go to the to the movie theater are getting less and less you really
Gotta have a federal incentive for taking your boys out to the movies
Guys, the guys movie night really will Guys movie night really will be the thing
that brings Hollywood back for sure.
Yeah, you've been leading the charge here.
I have, I have.
Highly recommend it.
Just text everyone who's in your town.
Get 20 tickets on Fandango that you can always refund
the ones if people don't show up.
Send out the text message to everyone,
hey, we're going to this Jason Statham movie next Friday.
Are you in, are you out?
Be there.
Be there, and then just, you know,
Venmo everyone at the end and you're all good.
Have a fun time.
But other than that, if it's not like an event,
it's really hard to justify going.
Totally.
Anyway, this is, John Voight was appointed
a special ambassador to Hollywood by Trump in January
I feel like showbiz I feel like these special ambassadorships are just like up for grabs
Yeah, could we become special ambassadors to technology podcasts? We really should be like yeah
Make it happen. So Voight was appointed in January and he's detailed the plan along with his manager, Stephen Paul and Scott Carroll, the president of Paul's company to Trump at Mar-a-Lago.
The proposals include changes to the tax code
to encourage investment in US films
and job training initiatives, according to Carroll.
The incentives for cinemas, if approved,
could help buoy theater chains,
such as AMC Entertainment Holdings,
Cinemark Holdings, and Marcus Corp.
that have struggled since the pandemic
with films being released online sooner than in the past.
They're basically saying,
we're gonna bail out the theaters,
which have been struggling
because of something that we're not addressing.
Like, you know.
Oh, just like competition.
Films are being released online sooner.
People are happy to just watch them at home
Everybody has a massive HD TV. Yep, and there's just and I would argue that films are just not
You know often often, you know the last few years films have been good enough to
Warrant going to a theater when you could just want to bring back film to America
Here's an idea give Jason Carman $300 million to remake The Terminator,
starring Sam Sulek.
Today, today.
If you do that, it will generate $5 billion
in ticket sales.
I think that's very possible.
It's entirely possible.
So anyways, filmmakers who co-produce pictures
with foreign companies would be allowed to obtain credits
for their US spending for quote unquote badquote bad actors who take all their production
Overseas there would be a tariff that equated with the incentives they were getting from the foreign countries Carol said in an interview
Here's another idea
Trade war in Hollywood the president loves the entertainment business and this country and he will make help us make Hollywood great again
Yes, I recently watched almost famous famous I'm trying to learn about journalism
Almost famous is a story about a young boy who goes on the road to write a profile about an up-and-coming
Rock band for Rolling Stone, and it's a Bill Dungsman. It's a coming-of-age tale
So he he learns and he grows and he experiences all the vicissitudes of life on the road with this
With this rock band, learns
the good and the bad and writes this fantastic profile, eventually gets them on the cover,
spoiler alert.
I think we need a almost famous style movie about Ashley Vance going on the road to write
the first big profile of Elon Musk becoming a man, becoming a real, real tale of his journey on the road.
A true, an elite journo.
Yeah, a Bill Dungsman, a coming of age tale
about Ashley Vance doing technology journalism.
This is the next thing after we've made some movies
about tech, we haven't made enough movies
about technology journalism.
This could be big, this could be very, very big.
A movie maybe directed by- Executive produced
by Julia Black. Yes. Get her in.
But mainly it needs to be the story of Ashley Vance.
Yeah. Telling the story of Elon Musk.
Elon Musk is actually Vance. Exactly.
Yeah, exactly. Trump posted on social media Sunday evening that he would impose 100%
tariffs on all films produced overseas.
The comments sent shares of US entertainment companies
tumbling on Monday as investors tried to discern
what types of films.
Because the issue is it's the US entertainment companies
that have been paying to produce films overseas.
As investors tried to discern what types of films
would be subject to tariffs and how the leavees
would affect the profitability of producers.
In a press briefing on Monday, Trump said he planned to meet with entertainment
industry executives to discuss his plan.
I want to make sure they're happy with it because we're all about jobs, the
president said. California Senator Ben Allen said he would he was given a heads
up about Voight's plan last week.
He said he would support a tariff, but that should be
crafted to encourage U.S.
productions, not harm foreign films.
I understand why the president was moved to want
to take some drastic action, Allen said.
We have been facing so much damage as a result of
other jurisdictions throwing all sorts of incentives
at productions to pull movie production that really
ought to be happening here in the United States and
that ought to be happening in LA.
And again, what I hear is just the dynamic,
the logistical complexity of producing a film in LA.
Why are you laughing?
Because I have another idea to save Hollywood.
Michael Bay directing the Ramp movie, the Ramp movie.
The Ramp movie.
So it's like the evil.
Switch your business to ramp.com.
Yes, the evil receipt personified like Transformers.
Yeah, the corporate receipt malaise
has fallen upon the American economy
and only Eric Gleiman played by Vin Diesel
can revive the American economy
by streamlining your a corporate cards?
Godzilla sized receipt. Yes stamp meeting. Maybe we go Chris Hemsworth for Eric and Vin Diesel can play Kareem. Yeah I think that's a good pairing. That's right
We need some AI generated movies to like kind of really sell this to Hollywood, but we'll get Michael Bay in there
It'll be high stakes
It'll make these time to tap in Bay. Yeah, yeah, it'll make it'll make the social network look like a snoozefest
Yeah, it's gonna be great. Okay, you're on to something
Anyways, we should have somebody on that actively has tried to make movies in LA. Yeah over the last
He's making a really cool movie. I don't know if it's public yet, but it seems sounds awesome
Well, he's been making movies for a while. So I'm sure you're not leaking anything too. Yeah significant
But yeah, we should have him on I'm very interested to hear the actual
updated details on why if you're an American film producer you decide we're gonna go to Portugal or we're gonna go to London or
Wherever to actually make this just because the costs to do it locally are so high. So I think that the local politicians,
state, county level need to take some responsibility as well
because I don't think you can just say,
oh, federal government, it's time to step in and make movies
a part of the trade war.
Yeah, it's like-
It was almost more important.
We saw that with like LA versus Atlanta.
Yeah.
It's like kind of a domestic issue almost.
I mean, Toronto's in there.
Totally.
But Toronto is not, this is not like some like
massive global geopolitical conflict.
A lot of the people I know in entertainment
have been spending a ton of time in Atlanta.
Like for years now.
Really?
Yeah.
Just generally, right?
Yeah, I'm not even, I'm not joking.
I can't tell if you're joking.
I'm not joking.
Yeah, no, no, no.
If you're actually working to produce.
No, that's a big thing. Yeah, you see it at the end of movies.. I'm not joking. I'm like, if you're actually working to produce.
You see it at the end of movies,
it's like the peach and it's like made in Atlanta
because the folks in Atlanta were just like,
let's build that business here.
And so they gave a bunch of incentives.
Baby Driver was filmed there, there's a bunch of movies.
Yeah, I mean, it's economic war on the state level,
which is interesting, which is totally fine.
That's the way the states are supposed to work.
It's just like Hollywood was mismanaged
and just played the game wrong, basically.
And it was like, oh, we're so cool and powerful
and Lindy, we'll never lose this,
so we don't need to play the game of tax incentives.
When in fact, no, no, they did.
People would just leave.
They didn't really have the loyalty
that clearly the Hollywood policymakers
and lawmakers
like thought that they would.
Yeah.
Very rough.
And yeah, yeah.
Rough for, you know, I think it was Rob Lowe
who was talking about it, how he's always,
he always has to go to like Toronto
and he doesn't like it because he's away from his family.
Yeah, Toronto is the other one.
Probably away from his bed,
probably away from his eight sleep.
Go to eightsleep.com.
What's new in Pod 4 Ultra?
Well, Pod 4 Ultra has all the signature features
you love about the Pod, plus new groundbreaking updates.
Big out of five year warranty, 30 night risk free trial,
free returns and free shipping.
Let's go.
We are incredibly back.
Oh yeah, I wonder how I did.
I feel like I slept a ton last night.
I'm feeling good, finally back in it
from the previous weekend and travel and whatnot. Let Let's see Tuesday. I got a 93. How'd you do?
87 87
You said it was impossible you said it couldn't be done. Okay
To be clear a little asterix for the for this
Sick, I did have food poisoning
Skill issue and What happened? for the sleep record. Oh, I'm sick, I'm sick. I did have food poisoning on Sunday. I had food poisoning, oh, skill issue.
And.
What happened?
I, yeah, I'm good, I'm moving through this.
I'm gonna be rock solid this week,
except going to SF tomorrow,
but I think I'll be on my eight sleep every night,
which is good.
Cool.
Awesome, I don't know if we have time for this next story.
We do have time for an AdQuick ad.
Of course.
Out of home advertising made easy and measurable.
Say goodbye to the headaches of out of home advertising
only AdQuick combines technology,
out of home expertise and data to enable efficiency
as in ad buying across the globe.
Out of adquick.com.
Size gone.
Size gone.
One of our best yet.
That is the best.
We definitely gotta talk about Code 2.
AdQuick is coming out with an AI product
and we were in a cameo in the video.
Can't wait.
They're launching AdQuick Co-Pilot
to help you more efficiently buy ads out of home.
Yeah, I mean there was a lot of stuff with AdQuick
like if you actually go through the process,
like they will pull up the map,
they'll pull up all their tools,
they'll provide like kind of an idea and report,
and there's no reason why that shouldn't be
a little bit more self-serve.
Even if you do wind up working with an AdQuick
representative directly,
there's no reason why you shouldn't be able
to just like investigate their whole database
via an LLM, like it's very obvious.
Anyway, let's do one or two posts
and then we'll bring in our first guest.
We have a great one.
Evan McCann says, with so many people going no alcohol,
there is a lot of alpha in drinking again.
You love it.
I thought this was hilarious.
I saw it earlier and I laughed.
Contrarian.
Yeah, it seems like alcohol fell off,
but at the same time, it's just so Lindy
There's an opportunity to bond with other people that love alcohol. Yeah, so
It's just it used to be so common to drink alcohol that you wouldn't have a meeting and somebody else says
You want to have a drink and you say yes, and it's like oh we now have some common ground
We got to send now you can do my room it's like oh we now have some common ground We gotta send this to Andrew Huberman. He's gonna be
You can find some common ground
Furious
No it's funny I've just gotten to a point where I stopped enjoying alcohol
I went from drinking maybe having a drink one day a week on average to realize to going down to
Probably once every One bottle of once every time you double.
That's right. That most of the drinks I've had this year were on the show. Yeah, it needs to be
tied to celebrations because then you just start grinding harder and harder and harder for. Yeah,
but I think the alcohol decision, like you shouldn't let the timeline decide whether or not you like
drinking alcohol because some people can have a few drinks and their body can process it and handle it well.
For me, it's not for me.
That's okay.
That's better when they're drinking.
Yeah, the Balmer Peak.
I've been, yeah, I've been very pro alcohol
as a performance enhancing drug for sales reps.
Yeah, the Power Lunch, methodology.
Yeah, the Power Lunch.
You got a John Kugin power.
You gotta loosen up.
Yeah. Have a couple of martinis with a client. Yep. You got a John Coogan power. Loosen up. Yeah.
Have a couple of martinis with a client.
Yep.
Ink a deal.
Ink a deal.
This is how business used to be done.
It's coming back.
Yep.
Coming back.
Coming back.
Anyway, Corey Levy was over at Y Combinator, game respects
game.
Very, very funny picture.
He of course runs Z Fellows, direct competitor
to Y Combinator in many
ways. Corey's running around the valley signing deals before companies get to YC sometimes.
Yeah, but I'm sure Corey's generally excited when companies he backs end up joining YC.
Yeah, this is one of those things where they are competitors, but the nature of competition
is that sometimes, when you see two competitors
take a picture together, do some sort of collab,
it's like they either hate each other
or they love each other.
I feel like a lot of people experience this,
where you could be competitors,
but if you understand your business at a deeper level
than everyone else on the outside,
you can wind up having
a beautiful partnership and friendship
with someone who is ostensibly a rival
because you actually see the world in a more nuanced way
than someone just on the outside being like,
oh, you guys are just capital and you guys just invest.
They actually probably view their businesses
very, very differently and very complimentary.
Totally.
Yeah, I think ZFellows had an interesting wedge
and has just consistently found great founders.
Oftentimes, I think even before they have an idea,
which is not the same model as YC,
even though YC will in small instances.
Even though they are somewhat in the same world.
The way I would say it is the ZFellows of ZFellows
is ZFellows and the YC of YC is YC.
Yes, yes.
And those things can overlap.
Totally, with an X.
Yeah.
XYZ.
XYZ.
Well, we have our guests ready in the waiting room.
Let's bring them in.
They're both in the waiting room.
So do you think it's...
I wanted to bring in Kelvin first.
I will text Santi and tell him to give us 15 minutes.
We'll go back to back.
I think that's probably what's best.
Let me text them and let's bring Kelvin in.
And oh, FYI, Kelvin is with FAI.
We are going to do Kelvin first,
then Santi. are going to do Kelvin first,
then then Santi, Santi at 12.
35.
Cool, we are good for that. Let's bring in Kelvin whenever he gets a chance
and let's update his lower third.
The Chiron is ever evolving,
all part of our mission to bring media to Hollywood.
I like that stinger.
That's very Michael Bay.
It's not, there's something about the Ashton Hall one
that just hits so much harder.
Yeah, it's just so much better.
It's so much better.
It's night and day.
It's night and day. It's night and day.
Anyway.
If you have any sound effects you want us to add to the soundboard,
reach out to Ben.
Yes.
He's a soundboard maestro.
Yeah, we really got to get on TikTok, Instagram, whatever.
Wherever these sound effects are coming from,
we need to bring them into the show because the soundboard has been
a delightful upgrade.
And we have our first guest of the show. Welcome to
the stream. Kelvin, how you doing? Boom, gentlemen, gonna
see you guys. What's going on? Great to have you. Yeah, yeah,
we're big fans of soundboard. Expect the unexpected during
this interview. Probably be the the loudest most interruption
riddled podcast you ever do. But it's fun.
Can you anyway, can you give us a little bit of a
backstory on you and specifically the announcement today,
some of the work you've published and kind of just give us
the high level overview.
100%, some Kelvin, kind of pro-typical
Silicon Valley tech bro.
Dropped out of Princeton, moved out to the Bay Area,
was a founding engineer at two companies. And then a few years ago, just started reading about
industrial policy and the history of technological progress in the States and recognized that we're
in the moment of intense technical industrial decline and that this was in large part facilitated
by bad policy choices. And so in the movement to DC, got to meet people like Santi and we released this playbook after six months of long, hard work. And it's a
recognition of the fact that tech industrial decline is a policy choice and that we are
in a moment where with the rise of China, with the stagnating industrial base. There are intense changes
that need to be made to the existing system. And these this playbook has 27 very concrete ideas for
how to change things across the industrial base across that national security apparatus
and in the ways the government funds frontier innovation. Cool. I want to go into the playbook,
but first give us a lay of the land. FAI, IFP, what are these organizations, what are their goals, how are they funded,
their nonprofits, can you break all that down and then we'll go into the actual playbook?
100%. So there's four institutions involved in this project.
FAI, IFP, American Compass, and NIA. A lot of acronyms here.
So FAI is the foundation for American innovation. The center right tech
policy think tank focused on tech policy, emerging technologies, industrial policy.
IFP is a nonpartisan think tank focused on a lot of similar topics. Also around,
particularly around meta science and energy as well. And then American Compass is more of a new right economic intake.
They do a lot of other stuff beyond just industrial policies, family policy, workforce policy,
et cetera.
And then NIA is the new American Industrial Alliance focused on a new trade group started
by a bunch of really sharp builders focused on bringing the best
of Silicon Valley industrialists to Washington, D.C.
So this project is kind of a merger of all these different circles of the new conservative
folks all the way to your Silicon Valley builders.
Got it.
So we talked to Catherine Boyle yesterday about American dynamism broadly.
We've talked to Chris Power about Hadrian and building manufacturing in the
United States,
and role and some of these themes,
but what are some of the more concrete steps that you're advocating for
on the road to reindustrialization, techno industrialization?
What does that actually mean?
Yeah. So this was born out of a kind of growing bipartisan consensus over the past two administrations
that something like something's deep need to change.
And the Biden administration really took a pillar approach where they looked at things
like chips, energy, manufacturing and past really large scale subsidy programs that were
have been like unseen in generations.
And the Trump administration has recognized that there's all these systemic
barriers to industrialization beyond just subsidies,
things like trade policy, non non-trade barriers.
And so where we wanted to get into the conversation is there is recognizing
that there is in all these different critical industries, whether it's critical minerals or hypersonic missiles,
all the way to biotech manufacturing,
there are unique industry nuances
that prevent more things being built faster and cheaper.
And so the goal with this playbook
was to really channel this newfound energy on both
sides of the aisle in advancing these issues and elevate folks who could write up very
specific policy proposals along these lines to advance specific areas.
So the way we categorize the playbook is we have a three section, industrial power, national
security and frontier innovation. And we have senior domain
experts right on each individual piece of this pie with proposals spanning from developing
hypersonics testing infrastructure to demand side support for critical minerals production
to how does the Navy improve its ship, streamline its design of ships. There's all these really
wonky things
that this playbook gets into in each of these specific categories.
Yeah, do you have a like an overarching theory around tariff policy versus
subsidization of American industrialization versus kind of the Doge
stuff which is like do more with
less efficiency driven.
These three pillars seem very different, very, they're typically advocated by, uh,
very different political groups.
We're kind of seeing all three happen right now.
Um, do you think that all three of those are equal tools in the tool chest or,
um, are you advocating for leaning one way or the other?
Yeah, this is what we're most proudest of for this playbook is that it is a synthesis of all
these ideas and it's a recognition that for all these deeply, deeply important questions,
you just need an all of the above approach. There is no one silver bullet. The things that
are required to restore American shipbuilding
are going to be slightly different than things required to, uh, do a more broad base re-industrialization
movement. But it's a recognition that, uh, all for all these different topics, uh, there's
all these things from regulatory fixes to, uh, state capacity fixes, subsidies that are
all critically important. On shipbuilding, can you give us a concrete example of what the playbook looks like?
Because I feel like shipbuilding is pretty, you can kind of wrap your hands around it.
Like it's a pretty simple thing to understand.
We make a certain amount of ships we want to make more.
But what are all the steps that lead to actually increasing shipbuilding capacity?
Yeah, so shipbuilding in America is
Dire in the dire need of fix we produce
China produces 230 times more ship ton is the United States
This is due to a lot of factors everything from
Constantly changing requirements from the Navy to a lack of workforce, to a lack
of automation in our 50 yards compared to other countries.
And so the particular proposal that Brian Potter and Austin Bernan both for our playbook
was around streamlining the way the Navy actually designs its requirements for ships and the
way that Navy actually goes about planning the design of certain naval vessels. And it
gets pretty into the weeds on those topics. And really this is not a comprehensive plan
to restore American shipbuilding, but more of a specific deep dive into one particular
underrated aspect of the problem that policymakers may not realize. And so there's a great bill
out there called the Ships Act,
which gets into a bit of more of a broad-based plan.
And so the goal with this particular proposal was
how do we compliment the existing discourse
with things that are more,
it'd been one of the wheeze
that people aren't paying attention to.
Can you talk about some historical precedent
where America was maybe behind in certain areas and managed to turn it around.
Like, basically, like, obviously, you lay out a bunch of very kind of proactive solutions for
a variety of these issues. But I think it'd be helpful to understand at what points throughout
history, maybe we recognize that big, big changes were needed from an industrial
policy standpoint and we actually effectively made those changes.
Yeah, the Cold War is the best example of this, right?
You had a space race where the US public and our intelligence agencies were shocked when
Russia launched Sputnik. It was really a, it's really hard to just fully articulate
how deep this shocked the American psyche
and how fast we got our shit together.
In a matter of less than a decade,
we directed 400,000 people, 20,000 companies
and 4.4% of the overall federal budget
towards the Apollo missions.
And we went from being laggards in engine technology,
missile technology, space technology
to laying, getting to the moon first.
And so-
Is that part of the challenge though now?
Is that we don't have sort of a stunning visual
of industrial decline.
It's sort of this sort of slower, insidious sort of process
that's been happening that we feel in different ways,
but it doesn't strike fear into the hearts of Americans
in the way that Sputnik did.
That's 100% a challenge.
You know, there's some people who don't believe
America will really get serious
until there's a Taiwan scenario.
But you know, there's been instances of the,
there's been flashpoints over the past few years,
Ukraine, COVID, October 7th,
where people have realized actually like
the lack of a robust defense supply chain,
the lack of the ability to make basic things
like medical masks are problems that affect us today.
And so that's where the work you guys are
doing is so important. That's where the work of these three think tanks and other folks like
Catherine Boyle, making the whole American Dynamism movement. The more we talk about these things,
the more I think people will recognize the seriousness by which we need to take these issues.
Did you ever explore the idea of, I don't know exactly how this would get implemented, but some sort
of incentive for American investors to focus on reindustrialization.
We were kicking around this idea of the carried interest tax was kind of up in the air.
Maybe that would hurt private equity firms and venture capital firms.
But what if carried interest, that deduction didn't exist for investing outside
of America but if you invest in America all of a sudden you get a much more favorable
tax treatment something along those lines or even just anything like we've seen the
American Dynamism movement take hold in the venture community but we haven't heard nearly
as much on the private equity side that seems like the private equity firms are still just kind of dollars and cents maxing.
But what, do you think there's any moves that could
kind of lead to more just decentralized American capital
driving re-industrialization?
No, that's such a fantastic question.
There are so many levers, it'll take a long time
to go through all of them, but Julius
Klein of American Fair wrote a great piece for us on that very question of how do you
get large-scale capital institutions to invest in industrial finance.
There's also Sam Hannon wrote a piece on utilizing the SBA's authorities to incentivize investing
in small, medium-sized manufacturers.
One of the greatest strengths of America is that we have the world's strongest entrepreneurial
base.
We have folks like Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, and we also have a state that is capable of
doing a lot of things, right?
Tesla being a great, Tesla and SpaceX being the prime examples of what can happen
when you combine effective industrial policy,
effective tools of statecraft
with amazing entrepreneurs who are building the future.
Yeah, interesting.
Yeah, I'm curious, as you guys were putting this together,
what kind of announcements or policies
maybe sort of shifted your priorities?
Because over the last, call it six weeks,
there's been a lot of announcements.
On Sunday, we had 100% tariffs on-
The 3D chessboard has been flipped.
Yeah, we're just flipping the board constantly.
But no, I'm curious, was there anything that you were
wanting to write about or include in here,
but you felt like already had enough momentum
or kind of coverage from existing policies?
Yeah, to get the Trump administration credit,
like we had a few things written up
around defense procurement reform, energy reform,
where they put out some EOs and we were like,
oh man, we got to, we'd add some more things.
It's been a very fast moving administration.
But you know, with, you brought up liberation day,
like the way that we view tariffs and it like every,
every each of these four think tank partners
have their own opinions,
but we're all in agreement that tariffs alone
are not enough, right?
These are, it's a stick,
but if you actually want to be serious about doing
the very specific things like critical mineral production or shipbuilding or whatever, there's
a whole host of unique tools you need to apply to that particular problem. So that's really
what this playbook is trying to provide.
Are there any lessons that you think America can learn from how China does industrial policy. We've seen, you know, what, 50 years of investing
in semiconductors over in China
in the midst of never really being on the leading edge there.
But now, pretty important.
Yeah, even around planning, right?
So they plan in these sort of five-year cycles, right?
You know, let's make a five-year plan
and another five-year plan,
and they just sort of compound on top of each other.
I know we're adversaries,
but like, what can America learn from China
on the industrial policy front?
Yeah, that's a fantastic question.
And I mean, to your point,
there's been a lot of waste over there, right?
You have all these state-backed private equity firms
that kind of are just black holes for capital.
I mean, they use a bunch of slave labor,
which helps drive down industrial costs. Yeah, it's a, yeah, I mean, they use a bunch of slave labor, which helps drive down industrial costs.
Yeah, it's a, yeah, they do a lot of things that are really effective.
Like, you know, I think a lot of narratives around, oh, China is just a copycat or China
is just like using distilled models to produce beefseek.
It's a lot of cope.
I mean, you know, they're leading in electric vehicles.
BYD is an absolute beast. Drones, critical minerals, these are real advantages.
And the number one thing I think is just we should be taking things as seriously as they
are. Like Chinese leaders routinely come out, not just Xi Jinping and the top level CCP
brass, but even like the CIA equivalent in China and their like internal think tanks,
they're constantly producing essays
and giving speeches on how the foundation for world power
is industrial power and technological power.
They view this as, they view the lack of technology
as the reason they suffered the essentially humiliation.
And so they are deeply serious in throwing their entire state behind
developing the future of all these different
emerging technologies.
So, you know, the thing that we can learn
is just the degree of seriousness
by which the political class is taking.
That's a really good answer.
Yeah, thank you.
Yeah, well, we'll move on
and we'll let you get back to your day,
but thank you so much for hopping on.
This is really interesting. Yeah, I'm we'll move on and we'll let you get back to your day, but thank you so much for hopping on. This is really interesting.
Yeah, I'm excited to fully read the report myself
and yeah, looking forward to having you back on
in the near future.
Yeah, yeah, we'll talk to you soon.
Sir, cheers.
Thanks so much.
And next up, we're continuing our deep dive
into the tech-to-industrialist play policy playbook.
If you haven't had a chance to go see it, it's all over X today.
And it's rebuilding.tech. Rebuilding.tech. What a good deal.
www.rebuilding.tech. Yeah. So Santi Ruiz is joining and he can share the
techno industrial industrial policy playbook. Is the United States still the
world's leading techno industrial power? the answer is no longer obvious and that should worry us let's
bring him in to have him break it down
welcome to the dramatic entrance what's going on how you doing good I'm good
guys thanks for having me long time listener first time caller yeah yeah
great to have you on here yeah we got a little bit of an overview of how the little
What think tanks cinematic universe came together in the infinity?
Came together. Yeah, the infinity stones of ventures of thinking of thinking
But but so let's just dump into it
What what what what?
I know that there's a number of policies, but which one do you think is the most relevant today?
There's a lot of things in the news around tariffs.
TikTok is still in the news, but it's kind of faded.
If there's just one takeaway that you want to dive into
first, where should we go?
Totally, let me get to that in one second.
I just want to say, Kelvin did not flog the hard copy
of this thing.
Oh, yeah, we gotta get that going.
But it's really nice.
Like, I got ahold of it yesterday.
I'm like really feeling I was on this.
So yeah, we'll put up the drop shipping link soon.
Yeah, we love the printed word.
We're big fans of the Wall Street Journal.
We love books.
We love everything printed.
And the playbooks should be in print. I mean, it's it's you know, it's more
deserving. Just air just dump it out of a 130 all over Washington.
Yeah. Right. Right. Right now. You know, while we're talking, a couple of my
colleagues are doing hand deliveries to every congressional office. So we're
doing amazing trying to do trying to do that.
That's great.
Yeah, so let's go into some of the top topics
in the report and what we should be focused on
first and foremost.
Totally, so Calvin pushed on this project
and the way he broke it down,
which I thought was really useful
was basically you've got like
your national security recommendations,
which are what they sound like,
a lot of the defense acquisition stuff, a
lot of like, making it easier to do hypersonic testing, for instance, the US like really
defense specific stuff, then there's like a broader, you know, industrial based section
called industrial power. That's, you know, critical minerals, it's like small business
administration to make it easier for small manufacturers to get going. The chunk that
we really owned IFP and again, for context, I'm at the Institute for Progress,
we're a non-partisan think tank.
We focus on largely kind of the innovation policy side of things.
So our section was like frontier science and technology.
So not all those submissions are by us, but a lot of it, we source most of those submissions.
And a lot of that stuff is just how do we get more out of the marginal dollar that goes
to R&D in the US, whether that's a federal dollar or R&D through the NIH or the NSF or
the Department of Energy.
In a lot of those places, we think there's some really actionable stuff where you just
want more bang for your buck.
Whether or not, agnostic of whether you should be cutting NIH funding by
30%, or whatever, I happen to think you shouldn't. But like,
agnostic of that conversation, we think there's still a lot of
ways you can get more juice for the squeeze. So a lot of the
stuff that we were really championing in that section was,
for instance, one of my favorites is my colleague,
Caleb Watney, who's got a piece about x labs for science
funding, got a new proposal that basically the way
that NIH and the NSF and to a certain extent, DOE are set up,
it's really easy for them to give money to universities and
academies and really hard for them to give money to other
kinds of institutions, even if those other institutions might
be better at the kinds of basic research or the really kind of
hardware intensive high, you know,
basically high capex research that you might need for certain manufacturing fields or science
and tech fields.
There's, Caleb gets into it pretty well, but it's basically existing authority that
all of these agencies can use to just start setting up another kind of grant structure.
There's no statutory techs needed, no EO needed.
They can go do it right now.
And you can basically, you know, whether it's the Arc Institute, cool biomedical stuff that's
frontier where there's some of the best stuff that's not happening, just at Johns Hopkins
or just at these academic institutions.
So that's one example.
I could go all day, but like there's a lot of stuff that we really try to be as actionable
as possible.
Most of this stuff either needs small statutory tweaks or the president or the executive
branch can say let's do it right now or it's already kind of firmly in agency authority and
it's just culturally or for whatever reason it's hard for them to get going. Yeah we were talking
to Deleon about this last week this weird dynamic where arguably the greatest new innovation in
science and technology came from OpenAI's non- arm, which is now spinning out this for profit and
Everyone's gonna make a ton of money off of it is is the open AI I guess like what lessons are
The the think tanks on this project or even just what you're seeing in Washington
What lessons are they taking away from that experience?
Washington, what lessons are they taking away from that experience?
Obviously, it's very different than doing
basic research on the human brain, for example.
But at the same time, you know, the government didn't really fund the transformer that happened at Google.
They didn't really fund the development
of the initial large language model that happened at OpenAI.
And yet, like the research did get done.
And so is that coloring how policymakers are thinking about allocating funding
towards research and development in kind of the modern era?
I definitely think it is.
And I think you've got like a really live debate right now in like, if you want to
talk about the meta science fields, right?
People who want to do more science on science, figure out how you get them
with bank three bucks basically.
We, at IP, this is one of our, is one of our five verticals and the five areas that we work on.
And you definitely get people across the spectrum, people who think, I've heard people say, all
federal R&D is down the drain.
I don't think that's true.
I think there's good evidence that it's not.
But you get people in this space who think you have to overturn the apple cart completely.
I think the things that most people agree on is increasingly you're seeing institutions
that are not universities being much better
at leveraging AI, and I think that's
like a pretty straightforward argument.
You're seeing non-profits set up often
by folks on the West Coast who wanna be able
to leverage a lot of capital.
They have a lot of capital.
They don't have a lot of the other institutional ties,
but you can build kind of new
institutions, and you're not constrained by the tenure or,
you know, whatever, and if you can affiliate with, say, a
Stanford, then you get the grad student pipeline. And so you
still get a lot of the great talent from the academic system.
I think you've seen, you know, focused research organizations
or FROs, where the idea is, hey, we're going to spin up for like
five years, tackle one basic research problem, we're going to see if we can just crack this. We're going to be a nonprofit
because we're not going to commoditize ever. It's just like, it's too fundamental, but
it's either a basic research thing that we think is upstream of some like whole field
that other people will be able to tackle, or it's we're going to build tooling. We're
going to build like an open source, like map of the brain at a level that hasn't been done
before. And we're never going to make any money on it. So there's no reason to do it
as a for-profit company. And we're going to move at a pace that you't been done before. And we're never gonna make any money on it, so there's no reason to do it as a for-profit company.
And we're gonna move at a pace
that you can never do at the Academy.
So we're gonna try and build the institution
to solve the kind of problem,
instead of starting at your institution
and saying, how far can we take this institution?
And I think that instinct,
like you wanna just solve the specific problems
and build an institution that's built to solve that,
rather than try and pick up whatever you have
and squeeze it in
Yeah, I think you're seeing a lot of that in Washington right now
Can you talk a little bit about the replication crisis is that front and center? What?
What is the replication crisis in your mind and and is there actually a plan to solve it?
Is it something we should even be trying to solve?
Yeah, we've got a great
trying to solve? Yeah, we've got a great recommendation in here from our good friend Stuart Buck, where he basically pushes us to get more serious at the federal level, you know, investing
replication. I think it's a really plausible idea. It's funny you ask that my first on-campus
job over the, you know, I think my freshman summer was working at a place called the Center
for Practical Wisdom, which was like a psych research lab. And about halfway through that job, I kind of realized.
It's a great name, but I think I kind of had to come to Jesus
nowhere.
I realized this research is not going to hold up.
Like two years from now, this is going to be poked full of holes.
What am I doing here?
Narrator, it was not practical.
It was, you know, I still think you can probably study wisdom
and maybe not with these small end studies
about how people appreciate paintings.
It was really bad.
I tend to think that the replication crisis stuff
is more of an issue for the soft sciences,
for the social sciences.
I think a lot of the hard tech
that you really wanna push on,
you can get a yes or no, and replication's a lot easier.
I also think there's a lot of basically regulations or like encouraging of gating of science the federal government does if you loosen that you can make it easier for people
To try and replicate stuff and to basically crush bad science quicker
What you really want is just faster turnaround cycles like you're no matter what in a thriving scientific ecosystem
I think you're gonna get a lot of kind of crap
You know
The question is like how quickly does that stuff get flushed out of the pipeline by good replication or by incentives that make it easier? If there's a bunch of great scientists
out there, you're still going to get random stuff that doesn't replicate, but you just want to kill
it early and have strong incentives for that killing to happen. How do you think about timelines
for all of these issues? One of the potential disadvantages of our democratic system is
potential turnover every four years or two years in leadership. And we were talking with
Kevin about China's ability to do a bunch of consecutive five-year plans that are building
on each other's. So across the board, how do you make sure
that these kind of policy recommendations can really,
outside of getting immediate changes implemented,
have sort of longevity because in many of these,
we're not gonna fix shipbuilding in the next three years.
We're not gonna set up, it's gonna be hard to set up a meaningful amount of special compute zones in a few years,
right? So maybe talk to the strategy around on for you guys in terms of making sure there's
like really these become kind of organic movements in Washington.
Totally. There's a few different pieces.
I think one is going a lot of technology podcasts.
No, I would say like at the top level, like you just have to sell this to the Democratic
public to the Democratic public.
And, you know, what Kelvin mentioned about, like, you don't have the Sputnik case, you know,
short of a Taiwan invasion.
There's not one single thing that's going to wake up the American people to this,
where they weren't on before.
I think you're just going to have to sell.
You're just going to have to keep making this argument.
I tend to be pretty bullish on the American people's perceptiveness about this stuff, but
you just do have to go sell.
A lot of the recommendations in here are around shortening timelines for stuff.
There's a lot of things I think you can do to just make that kind of change in administration,
democratic accountability problem easier by just saying like for any
given thing that you work on, can you make it last, you know, two administrations instead
of three? Like, and what are the kind of technocratic things that are standing in the way of that?
Like, what are the actual regulatory things that make you take four and a half years to
get, you know, your initial need to permit for permit for infrastructure. And I think that's like a
real issue here, right? On a long enough timeline, anything is going to get vetoed. If you have veto points throughout the process, the longer the timeline is, doesn't matter what it is, someone's
going to kill it. And so I think you have to have an affirmative democratic case for like, look,
people voted for this, we're going to do it and it's going to be done. And we're not going to let
somebody 15 years from now kill it. And then there's a lot of stuff in here
that I think is bipartisan, where it's wonky, it's
technocratic, you know, there's not like, huge rifts on critical
mineral production, you know, it's not huge rifts on like the
Small Business Administration should be really effective. But
you need to exercise political will to do it. And so some of
it is just like really fine grained technocratic stuff that we think like, you have agreement, but you just need to exercise political will to do it. And so some of it is just like really fine grained technocratic stuff that we think like
you have agreement but you just need to push and you need a really clear action plan for
how to do it.
It's not enough to just say like, hey, shipbuilding should be better.
You need to be able to lay out like you hear two things you could do tomorrow and prove
it and see.
Yeah, I mean, staying on shipbuilding.
What does the vibe feel like around advanced uh, advanced manufacturing, automation, humanoid robots.
Let's not worry about the workforce at all versus, um,
let's go into re-skilling up-skilling. Let's bring,
let's bring back the idea that you can have a beautiful
American dream career in an industry like shipbuilding.
Yeah. Thanks to our friends at American Compass, you know, I'm
an IFP, Kelvin's an FAI, American Compass is kind of the
third part of this, but they spend a lot of time thinking
about workforce skilling and redevelopment. So there's a lot
of stuff in the industrial power section here about like, what do
you actually do? What's worked? Because there's, you know, it's
easy to say, okay, workforce retraining, but like, it's not
an easy problem. There's lots of failures there. So what
do you actually what we actually know about how to do that? I
think everybody on this, on this team, like the Venn diagram is
there's not gonna be as many manufacturing jobs five years
from now as there were at a peak of American manufacturing, even
if we improve output, I think, you know, your listeners will know this, that you're gonna have to
lean on automation pretty heavily to kind of get close to
competing with China. At the same time, I think there's
absolutely room to say like, if you if you re industrialize and
automate, that's gonna be a lot of jobs there. So I think the
question is just like, on what scale is that is that, you know,
a World War Two level mobilization, I don't think
anybody here is pushing for that.
That more than half of all able bodied men
should be working in the factory.
But I think there's absolutely room to push that
even without looking at those kinds of orders of magnitude.
They should be in a warehouse in El Segundo, honestly.
Maybe not. Everybody, yeah.
Making it rain.
What topic in the playbook do you think
is gonna get the least attention this year that will get the most attention, let's say, in five years?
Is there a specific area?
Because right now it feels like a big part of this is around, you know, is all encompassing around kind of industrial policy.
But, you know, we were in Washington last week and there was, it was very bipartisan event around re-industrialization.
So it seems like everybody is, not everybody,
but it feels like there's a general alignment there
and a lot of attention there,
but of these kind of subtopics,
where do you think is being kind of like underrated
or under discussed?
Yeah, I think probably in the discourse
there's a couple I would point to.
One is just nobody wants to talk
or think about pandemics anymore.
There's just like no energy to like relitigate COVID
or to kind of think ahead and plan.
I think it's one of these weird lessons of COVID
is like Operation Warp Speed is a massive success
in a lot of ways.
We learn a lot about like, what should we do to prevent future pandemics
or to minimize them.
And then just nobody has any energy left to talk about that.
So I think there's some really good ideas here
on like pathogen sequencing.
And I think there is real movement in DC on like all purpose,
like viral vaccines.
And a couple of colleagues put together
some really good work here,
but it's just like nobody wants to talk about that right now.
I think that's like, you know to talk about that right now. I think
that's like, you know, and I get it, to be honest. And the other
one is, you know, the high skilled immigration fight is
going to keep happening, you know, throughout, you know, over
the course of this admin, I think you've got different parts
of the coalition, you know, in the admin to have very different
views on this, obviously, even among the orgs that put this
together, we don't all agree on everything
on immigration. But there's a proposal in here that I really
like this basically, DOD could be much better tracking like who
are the top scientists, maybe the top 1000 scientists out
there who would like to have stateside, and just like, keep
it keep it tight, you know, this doesn't have to be lumped in
with the O one or the other just kind of general like high level talent. But if you have like a specific
list of here the people we would love to poach from China, and then just like make it extremely
easy for that specific list of 1000 or 2000 people to if they ever want to come over here,
you know, either got the kind of golden ticket path. And I think there's you know, if you
think that science is like long tail that the the really the rock star
Scientists the best founders the best rnd people are just a few orders of magnitude better than some pretty good people
This is not a kind of crazy idea. I think like let's you know poaching the highest highest value people would have an outside impact
Awesome. Well, uh, we're we're we're staying on shipbuilding. Um, but thank you so much for copy
This is great to have you come back on again soon. Yeah, we'll have to talk more soon.
Yeah, congrats on the launch.
Thanks, all.
See you. Cheers.
Bye.
And we got Bill from Dirac coming in the studio.
I want a sound effect.
For Phil.
Phil.
The man I once called.
A child.
I didn't call him a child you called him a baby
Now you referred to him as a five-year-old you say he was toddler. No, it was very we're going too far going too far
We've all had I won't say it. I made a big mistake mistakes. I've also mispronounced
Oh tons of now we're boys, but now he's here in Washington last third time
There he is. Yes, gentlemen, how is it going?
Welcome to the stream, Mel.
Oh, it's great to see you.
It's been ages.
I haven't talked to you on stream in three days.
It's terrible.
Yeah, I'm so glad to be back.
You're back in New York?
Yes, I'm in New York in the Empire State Building.
Capital of the Empire.
Capital of the Empire. Capital of the Empire.
I love it.
Okay, quick intro, explain like five,
what the company does, and then the announcement today.
Absolutely, so we're Dirac.
We have some software that automatically generates
assembly instructions for manufacturers.
We like to say it's all about context
and where production planning.
That's not the, you know, five-year-old
wouldn't really get that part.
Lego instructions for ships.
Yeah. Imagine Ikea assembly instructions,
but for planes, cars, engines, and now boats.
And that's what we're gonna talk about today.
Okay. So what happened?
Boats.
So we're talking about yachts, right?
Potentially transitioning Alcatraz to a yacht harbor.
Super yachts.
Tax haven, yacht harbor.
No, sorry. Go on, go on.
All about yachts, specifically yachts
that can launch projectiles.
There we go.
You got it, okay.
The best kind.
Yes, so unfortunately, shipbuilding for a while
in the US has been slowly slipping.
We at Dirac have decided to partner
with a company called Fairlead,
who is a captain of maritime production
in the United States.
They're based out of Norfolk, Virginia.
They're sort of the Norfolk shipyards.
They run the place.
They work with all sorts of different clients.
They're a massive shipbuilder.
We're talking submarines.
We're talking destroyers.
We're talking carriers.
Fairlead has selected Dirac to basically modernize
a lot of their production planning and infrastructure. So it's really, really excited to work with them. They are super tech forward. Funny enough,
they actually launched their own venture fund earlier today. It's a great timing for them.
And we're excited to announce this partnership. This looks like us basically getting into the
forward deployed engineer game. We're going to have a guy deploy down there, modernize a lot of
their infrastructure and deploy the latest and greatest RAC technologies to their production plane.
So if we...
Yeah.
Yeah.
So break down the massive onion that is the layers of building an actual ship on Fairly.com.
I see they have an aircraft carrier, but it seems like they build systems that go into
the aircraft carrier. So are seems like they build systems that go into the aircraft carrier
So are they like a are they under a prime contractor?
Do they work for Lockheed Northrup or someone else or so hunting taking you is that right?
Yes, so I got you know in the interest of preserving fairly its confidentiality
So I will I will say exactly which crimes have many, many, many prime contracts that they
put systems directly onto. I can tell you the biggest shipbuilders and maritime producers
that are primes are Hunter D'Engle's, Bollinger, General Dynamics, Electric Boat. These are
potentially the types of companies that hypothetically fairly should be working with.
And so yes, they support... And then What are they actually building on the ship?
I see some systems, variable speed drives,
switch boards, control systems.
Can you concretize this and break it down
in more simple to understand?
Is it the steering wheel that they're building?
What are they doing?
So basically, when you get a boat,
you're saying it's time to ship, right?
We're gonna make a boat, which is a, you know.
A ship builder makes a hull, right?
They make this, they start to make the hull,
they start to make various systems within that ship,
but really they're making like a shell.
What then happens is a integrator needs to come in
and actually soup it up
with the latest and greatest technologies.
They need to integrate software,
they need to build in the control panels,
they need to build in all the infrastructure and weapons platforms,
and then go on that boat.
So it's different as an industry in the way that you produce
than automotive, than aerospace and defense,
than a variety of other industries.
But when you look down at the types of things they make,
these are sub-assemblies that you can see on any type of platform out there.
So that's shipbuilding as an industry,
if we were talking about it relative to other industries.
They build, obviously, the largest systems on the planet,
because those are basically boats.
If you look at automotive as an industry,
automotive is fairly modern.
You have automated facilities.
Automotive is fairly modern.
Aerospace and defense as an industry
is probably around 20 years behind automotive.
And then shipbuilding is probably 30 or 40 years
behind them.
So CAD as an example of a metric or the CAD adoption,
like 3D modeling adoption as a metric for how advanced
the industry is.
We're talking automotive, everything is CAD'd up.
Aerospace and defense, the majority of things at this point over
the past 15, 20 years have been catted up in digital representation.
In shipbuilding, these guys are largely on paper processes, and they
make some of the most advanced pieces of technology that come out of
an engineering department, but they're still looking at 2D drawings.
They're still basically drafting
pieces of paper, and that is what we're getting
maritime off of.
Dirac is leading the charge, captaining that ship.
What does that design and production workflow look like
from a prime to a fair lead to the actual
manufacturing engineers
that are making individual parts.
And I imagine oftentimes the initial designs or the specs,
I'm sure that Fairlead and Fairlead's engineers
realize at different points like,
hey, this worked in a CAD file,
but it doesn't actually work in practice. we need to re-engineer it.
What does that kind of collaboration process look like
on a general level without going into detail
on Fairlead's specific process?
It looks a lot like a lot of plane tickets bought
to Virginia.
A lot of folks flying from DC to,
from Norfolk to DC, from Boston, all over the place,
from, you know, to California. It is very difficult for these folks to communicate
technical designs digitally right now. And it is because it is all on paper. And so it looks like
a very angry phone call down to, you know, the, down to the docs and say, hey, we got that,
you know, system that you guys shipped.
This thing don't fit.
What's going on?
So that's, it's an unfortunately very frequent occurrence.
If you look at the average delivery date for a submarine,
on average, submarines are three years late.
So it is really, really bad.
Cause the barrel that everyone in maritime
is staring down at is the year of 2027.
It's a big year that the Navy, that the Army,
that everybody in the US military is focused on
because that is the year that we think,
you know, some crazy stuff's gonna happen with China.
And so, you know, they're thinking,
okay, it's 2025, we need submarines yesterday.
You know, the annual production rate
for submarines in the United States
is one and a half submarines a year. China makes more than 10 a month. And so, you know,
that is a terrifying number because the, as you were kind of asking about
red alert, I mean that, that is staggeringly bad.
That's terrible. Can you give me a little overview of the executive order restoring America's maritime dominance? What's in there? What does it mean for shipbuilders? You, America broadly? And yeah, and doesn't make you more optimistic about that problem?
If the current administration is taking it extraordinarily seriously that we need to upgrade the modern American
shipbuilder, these are things that are named,
like that statistic that I mentioned.
Statistics like this are named specifically
in the executive order.
And they're basically calling out the shipbuilding industry,
saying, if you are 15% I forgot the explicit number,
but if you are late by a certain percentage on your contract,
you will be fine.
You are subject to losing your prime contract.
Like it is not okay to ship late anymore.
You know, unfortunately not too many Jira tickets
flying around ship building,
but they ought to use something like that at least.
When it is a staggering problem,
at least the EO is taking it seriously.
Yeah, yeah, that makes a ton of sense.
Well, thank you so much for hopping on.
Do you have anything else, Jordy?
No, this was great. We are gonna hop over to talk to Fairlead, the other side of this deal, and
get Jim's take over at Fairlead. Put the screws to him.
We're gonna pitch Fairlead on leading a hundred million on one billion posts into Dirac.
So wish us luck. Good luck. Well, thank you guys. I will catch you later. We'll talk to you later
I see it by Cheers and let's bring in Jim here the other side of this
We don't talk company that a lot of people know about private. It's been in business since the 80s
but
Fascinating to hear from a true
Industry insider who actually works on building these ships. I think you know, we've seen in Silicon Valley a lot of companies kind of
nibbling around the edges.
There's some, you know, a bunch of ship building companies
that are building smaller systems or more swarm based
systems, not really focused on the exquisite systems.
Well, Fairlead is the company that actually works on the big
ships, which we need to keep making.
Even as the landscape of the battlefield changes,
they do ship repair, maritime manufacturing,
privately held, veteran owned, controlled by its founder.
They're still in founder mode.
You'll love to hear it, Jerry Miller.
And they have a new venture fund.
They do.
I'll have to ask about that.
It was founded by a former US Navy surface warfare officer
and longtime Hamptons Road ship repair entrepreneur
owns the company through closely held Miller Group in 2014 he rebranded his previous Miller
IMG field operations as Fairlead integrated and has remained chief executive officer and
majority shareholder ever since. In 2019 former General Motors CEO Dan Ackerson bought a small
equity stake and serves as a minority owner and strategic advisor but no outside corporation
holds a controlling interest. Anyway is is Jim available? Let's bring him
into the studio. Welcome to the show, Jim. Nice to meet you.
Thanks, that was fantastic. Yeah, appreciate and privileged.
Yeah, we're really excited to have you here. Would you mind introducing yourself and a
little bit about the company? I gave a little bit of an overview, but I'd love to hear it
from you.
Certainly James Blum, I run corporate development on behalf of Jerry Miller and Fred Pasquin, the president.
He's running Fair League and we rebranded into,
we've now turned it into Fair League
and we have Fair League Ventures,
which we announced earlier today
and very privileged to also partner with the RAC
and that announcement is coming out any moment as I understand from Phil and the team. And at Fair Elite we're
very privileged systems engineering, ship building, ship repair, and then we work on
many different advanced energy challenges that the Navy has experienced and wants to
integrate and adapt and apply.
And we're very fortunate to do what is known
as commercial off the shelf integrations
and then harden those integrations
from the world's leading industrial manufacturers
and integrate them into Navy platforms.
I'm very fortunate to support the Navy
and work on a number of different key initiatives
across the maritime industrial base.
We're part of the Submarine Industrial Base,
and we're fortunate to work on some very important problems
around Columbia and the Virginia class.
And then we do a lot of modular shipbuilding
around aircraft carriers and all the latest designs that
are coming out and applying a lot of different autonomous
capability to our aircraft carrier fleet.
And then we're working very closely in the destroyer class
as a platform and working on applying a lot of next generation energy capabilities so that they
can be integrated for lasers and hypersonics. And then lastly, we worked very closely across the
USV space, really applying very, very hardened military industrial systems engineering and critical engineering
capabilities where you're really classifying
a new set of software defined infrastructure that's
being cascaded and fused across all the different platforms.
So they're more intelligent, more capable,
and move faster and address a different lethality
capability that we faced in the past.
And now we're upgrading and ready for maritime dominance
under the executive order that our president
just announced.
And then obviously with the office of shipbuilding
coming in, shipbuilding and ship repair,
restoring our maritime dominance is something
that we're privileged to support the community around it.
So we're really augmenting, accelerating what I would call that next generation
of hardening and that capability of engineering that is critical from a quality,
control and speed perspective.
And so that's what we're doing at Fairlead.
And that's why we created a venture arm and we actually launched it and announced it today.
And we're backing emerging managers who are leading in autonomy and AI and applying autonomy and AI machine learning,
some of the most important weapon systems for our country,
and as well as to afford us that capability and deterrence
and all the key theaters that are responsible
for addressing, so.
That's very cool.
Very nice to be here on the show.
Yeah, thanks.
Yeah, so is the new fund,
would you call it a fund of funds
or you're investing in managers
or in direct investments or what's the focus?
Yeah, the two latter.
So we're really focused on backing
the best emerging managers in the space
and the best founders and entrepreneurs in the space.
And that's what Phil from Dirac is an amazing example of.
And we're just really, really fortunate
to bring that kind of model-based manufacturing
into shipbuilding now.
And one of the key areas in the country,
which is Norfolk and Hampton Roads and Virginia Beach,
and then Portsmouth.
How is one of the, you know, Phil is extremely eloquent
and brought up a bunch of interesting data points
on the 15 minutes he was on before this,
one of which was the United States,
what we make one submarine a year at this point.
Takes about 18 months.
18 months he said, China makes around 10 a month.
How does Fairlead think about helping close
that gap over time?
Well, we believe that the key is workforce development
and capacity planning.
And these systems are very exquisite
and they require extraordinary amount
of testing and certification.
And when you wanna apply next generation technology,
you really have to have all those processes in place.
So we're fairly just sought out
from a strategic planning perspective.
We've really as a brand and under Jerry Miller
and his leadership and Fred Pasquin,
the entire company is dedicated to quality
and to speed at scale.
And so for us, we sought out a company that was doing exactly what Phil and Pete and Jared
and Trevor were building.
And Build OS for us was the software that was going to help us really accelerate that
schedule and address that schedule risk you were just talking about.
And so yes, the Navy and all of its partners across the defense primes, across the Navy,
all of them, shall I say the heritage primes
and the new Neo primes, everyone has to actually help,
General Dynamics and Electric Boat,
move faster, as fast as they can.
And they're an extraordinary company
with extraordinary leadership.
But there's a lot of technology and complexity
that has to be integrated.
And then quite frankly, from a shipbuilding perspective,
that production schedule is very challenging.
And so getting it to a position
where it can introduce effectively two to three more subs
over the next five years.
So instead of deploying and introducing one new submarine
or two in a year to up to three to four,
that's going to take a very, very, very heavy lift from the ecosystem and fairly just part of that
ecosystem. And we think with the Iraq and that modernization and that single source of truth that
they bring will help a firm like ours cascade and accelerate that entire industrial defense supply chain base
around the Columbia and Virginia class submarine
manufacturing process.
And we think we should be able to advance it
rather significantly, but what we're talking about
is really moving in production schedules
from 2035 and 2030 into 2028 and 2027.
And so that's a very hard lift for the Navy,
for its defense primes.
And we're certainly with Iraq gonna impact that schedule.
And we think we can have a major impact,
not just on the acquisition in delivery side,
but also the sustainment side,
which is a really important part of actually,
if you look at how all wars are won,
they're won through sustainment in their supply chain.
And we're really excited about that at Fairlead.
It really, reducing and mitigating a lot of that risk
across the suppliers and across the defense industrial base
supporting the great submarine industrial base
that we have in our country and that leadership.
I'm sure a lot of founders of new defense tech companies
would love to do a deal with you
or sell into a company like
Fairlead. Can you walk us through what it takes for a young company to prove that they
would be the right choice for a partnership with a more established company like yourself?
What's the conversation like? What are the KPIs? What are the things that you need to
do to de-risk taking a chance on a new and growing company?
Sure, it's such a great question
Sinclair they believe in a center of excellence
so from our perspective the leadership team and their engineering and
I'll just say all across product all across engineering, and the founders have to be committed
to addressing the ecosystem.
So what that means is literally actively
having the forward deployed engineers
be there to build up that new system of record
with their own solution engineers and architects.
But they literally will advance training
for that workforce development, that workforce education, and then scaling
that over a 36 to 48 month timeframe.
So as a result, that means that the founders and their founding investors have to have
patient capital and capital from what I would call remarkable venture firms and growth equity
firms.
And then they have to have a deep capital base
because this is a very,
these are three to five year sprints.
And the goal is to move at scale
and then your training and upskilling
and then really attracting extraordinary engineers,
the best builders in our country
to actually a new space for them, which is maritime
and this maritime industrial base for Maritime dominance. That requires a heavy lift on an earlier stage firm.
So what I would say is almost series B and series C firms in general are a better fit, unless of
course they have leadership that is extraordinary and deep like Dirac is and is a great example of
extraordinary and deep like Dirac is and is a great example of significant expertise in the maritime industrial base, significant understanding of how electric boat and general
dynamics actually works as a company. And then having that knowledge and then being
able to scale that knowledge, build that into a software system, which is a platform that
we can integrate all of our shipbuilding
and our systems engineering
and a lot of the product development that we do,
and then applying a lot of autonomy and AI stack into that
from a work assembly perspective,
from a modularity perspective,
that's a heavy lift for most companies.
Dirac had all of the above,
and then they had extraordinary founding investors behind them
from a seed perspective.
And then they have a broad ecosystem support
across what I would call the venture capital stack.
And that capital investment partnership
that they have cascading across the country,
both on the East Coast and the West Coast, meant for Fairlead,
they had mitigated all the risk for us,
as well as the maturity of their software.
And then their commitment to build a center of excellence in Norfolk, around that entire
community where the Navy has a very significant amount of its fleet and manufacturing base.
So those were the key requirements. And I would say that they also have the technology roadmap
that we thought was absolutely core and critical to us. And we'd been seeking that out for the last
nine months under Fred Pasquin and Hal Barsch and Hal really leads that for Fairlead.
And he was extraordinarily impressed with the presentation by Jared and Phil.
And just to give you a sense of how fast we move, we moved from meeting them to actually
executing a purchase order and agreement and a commitment to getting trained and scaling
this Fairlead in under three and a half weeks. That's how fast we move at speed and scale.
So for any founder out there who believes
that they have the next piece of the core tech stack
that will unlock capacity, scale and autonomy
and manufacturing for our country,
yeah, we move much faster than most industrial enterprises.
And that's why we have a venture arm that we launched
because we wanted to back that with capital
in addition to being a great customer and a great partner.
That's very cool.
How is Fairlead thinking about opportunities
to support various primes on smaller autonomous systems?
It's obviously very different, you know, manufacturing
process to make, you know, a thousand of something versus, you know, one or two of something.
And I know it's top of mind for you guys.
Yeah, so well said. We began this journey back in 2015 really trying to back as many
new founders who were really early in that smaller autonomous
stack. And so we're just been very fortunate to back a number of new and traditional players in
the USC space. And we really started really on the system engineering and systems integration side.
And we have found now that we're really, we've been very lucky that the Navy has
been so supportive of us that we're now working with many of the other brands who are out there
who are well published, doing an incredible job raising capital, doing an incredible job pioneering
in what I would call smaller hybrid fleets and introducing new port capabilities, terminal
capabilities, the full value
chain.
And so we're just really privileged to work with what
I would say the new entrance to the space,
as well as the Heritage players.
And what we're fortunate to say is
we're working with almost all of them.
And we really take it from a software and systems
engineering perspective.
And what we're really trying to do
is harden the navigation systems,
harden the autonomous systems from cyber attacks,
building out mission modules and payloads to support them.
So as you know, many of these remarkable firms
with remarkable capital are really building out
these new vessels, which are we need and are fantastic,
but actually integrating that from a payload and cargo
and high value, high consequence cargo perspective,
that's actually an extraordinary, shall we say,
level of systems integration that's needed.
We just feel like we're just a natural partner.
And the majority of the industry has selected Fairlead.
So we look at everybody as a partner.
And we're really looking at their timeline
to accelerate production so they can field
and get tested and certified and introduced into theater.
And so that we can address that schedule risk
that our president and our new secretary of the Navy
is very, very adamant about reaching.
And so we just feel that we're very lucky
to be in that position to have the resources,
the assets, the real estate, the resources, the assets, the real estate,
the capital, the leadership, the expertise.
And quite frankly, we're now actually a prime ourselves.
So it's been very, very fortunate.
Yeah, thank you.
Well, James, if you've ever, if you ever want us to come podcast on a submarine, let us
know.
We're here.
Gentlemen, we'll introduce you to all the right people.
We're very honored.
Well, congrats on the launch of the new fund and the right people. We're here to be privileged. Great.
Well, thank you so much for helping us.
Congrats on the launch of the new fund
and the partnership, and it's great to chat with you guys.
Thanks for all the contacts.
Yeah, we'll talk to you soon.
Have a great one.
Thanks so much, take care, guys.
Cheers.
And next up, we have Jacob from New Limit
talking about Life Extension.
Can you live forever or are we trapped in this mortal coil?
We will get to the bottom of it.
But I mean, New Limit's a fantastic company.
Brian Armstrong has been working on it for a while, brought in a fantastic team and they've
been doing a bunch of stuff.
So Jacob, welcome to the stream.
Thank you so much for joining.
Could we start with a quick introduction on yourself and the company just for those who
don't know?
Yeah, absolutely.
Thank you all for having us today.
So my name is Jacob Kimmel, one of the co-founders and president of new
limit. So new limits working on a new type of medicine to try and extend human
health span, by which we mean we want everyone to have more happy, healthy
years in their lives than they do today.
And we're doing that using a technology called epigenetic reprogramming, which
we're happy to unpack if it's of interest.
Absolutely.
Let's unpack it.
Okay.
Let's unpack it.
So I think it's an interest. Absolutely. Let's unpack it. Let's unpack it. Okay, let's unpack it. So I think it's an interest to all of our human audience. There might be some AI agents listening
that are not so much the Android audience. The AI audience could also benefit if there are any who
are currently tuned in. So all the cells in your body, they've all got the same DNA code, which is
both kind of trivial. You probably learned that in like third grade biology class, but it also
presents a wonderful question, which is then,
well, how do your eyeball and your kidney and your tongue
all do different things?
They have the same code base.
It turns out on top of your DNA and some of the proteins
your DNA wraps around, there are these chemical modifications
called epigenetic marks.
I think of these kind of like the control flow in software,
where not every line of your code base
runs every time a user hits your application service.
You use some pieces of the code base
sometimes and others other times.
And so your genome is the same way.
Some cells express some genes from your genome, others express a different set, and that's
how they do different jobs.
It turns out as you age, all of those epigenetic marks get, for lack of a better technical
term, messed up.
And so your cells stop using the right genes at the right time, they use the wrong genes
at the wrong time, and then they degrade in function.
And that actually precipitates a number of the diseases and pathologies that arise with age including things that we don't even traditionally
define as disease but that you or I would certainly like to remedy about our experience if we could.
Is the plan here kind of traditional FDA biotech? I'm thinking like some research, then some mice,
then dog or monkey, then human trials, then phase one, phase two, phase three, maybe your public company at some point, or is there some sort of Silicon
Valley twist or different approach that you're taking?
Yeah, so all of the downstream steps are pretty much what you just laid out. Ultimately, in
order to get a medicine into humans, we have to first do no harm, demonstrate that the
medicine has some reasonable chance of actually helping a person, and then definitely isn't
going to harm anybody when you put it into them.
So we do need to do animal trials.
We then eventually need to go into the clinic.
I think the Silicon Valley twist here is that the problem we're trying to solve with how
to basically rewrite these epigenetic marks back to the state you had when you were young
really wouldn't have been tractable even 10 years ago without basically two technologies.
One of those is something called single cell genomics.
So we can actually take a cell out
and sequence all of the different RNAs in that cell,
basically telling you which parts of the genome it's using.
And then the second, which I'm sure your listeners
are intimately familiar with is AI.
There are more ways we could try and rewrite this epigenome
than we'll ever be able to test in the lab.
It doesn't matter how clever you are.
The number here is about 10 to the 16,
which is a stupidly large scientific notation number
to put it in context.
That's like 10,000 Milky ways worth of stars.
You just can't test all of those things.
And so by building AI models,
we're able to actually prioritize
which of those potential reprogramming medicines
we even go bother to test in the lab.
And that helps us get to these discoveries much faster.
I really don't believe this company
would have been a good idea prior to the advent
of really those two key technologies. And so we're trying to parallelize as much as
we can early on. So that by the time we get to that traditional drug discovery process,
we have a lot more conviction around the molecules we're moving forward than you might otherwise.
Can you talk about the different kind of milestones that you sort of that have been important
to you and important to your to
your partners to get to this point. It's it's you know, much different than SAS where maybe
you have you get funded with an idea and a deck like every, you know, company does. And
then you get to maybe 2 million of ARR you do a series a 10 million you do a series B.
I imagine the milestones have been much different here,
but I'm sure you guys hold yourself to a pretty extreme,
you know, standard around, you know,
continuously de-risking the opportunity
and getting more and more convicted.
But I'm curious what those have been to date.
Yeah, absolutely.
Oh, lovely, you laid that out.
One of the challenges with our technology
and biotech in particular is the milestones are not quite as legible as revenue for quite a while.
You know, famously some of the largest companies in the space took quite a while to even get
to revenue positive.
And the reason these bets still make sense is that once they do have revenue, you really
start printing it.
There are more drugs making a billion dollars in revenue today than I believe there are
software companies.
So it's truly amazing to recognize like a single product is transformational.
So all of these hard bets make sense,
even if there is a challenge
in making them legible along the way.
So for us, really there were a few key milestones.
When we started out and built the company,
all of this was effectively an idea.
There was an existence proof where we knew it was possible
to reset the epigenomes and old cell back to a younger state,
but that existence proof was something that in the field,
we often call a tool compound.
It tells you that the biology is tractable, but it's not a medicine you can put in people.
It basically works, but it's not safe.
And so we had to first build all of the technology that would even let us run these experiments
in the first place, just to give you a sense of scale.
Before New Limit, people had really only tried 19 different ways to do this sort of epigenetic
reprogramming intervention, make an old cell look young.
16 of those I had done in my old lab with my own hands.
Really this was just a gold mine that not many people were digging in.
It's just like me there with a tiny little plastic shovel.
And so at New Limit now we've tested about 14,000 of the different ways to reprogram
cells.
So we like to say it's six or 700X depending on if you let me round up or not.
And we had to build all the molecular tools to even let us run those experiments.
That's sort of step one.
Step two is we then have to demonstrate that actually,
even though I'm really proud of the fact
that we can run 14,000 experiments,
it's way smaller than 10 to the 16.
We can build AI models that are sufficient
to actually prioritize which of those experiments
are worthwhile.
If you imagine that there's some gold out there,
but there's just way more places to dig,
then we can really exhaustively search through.
We need a way to find where those spots are.
So we were able to demonstrate that now.
We think we have the most performant models in the field,
really thanks to just the scale of data we've generated.
We have hundreds of X more than anyone else does
to train these types of tools.
And then one of the final pieces,
and this was the last unlock,
that actually came a lot faster than we thought it would,
is we demonstrated in the biotech communities known as a preclinical proof of concept, in
layman's terms, we've built some molecules that are actually drug-like. So you can actually
hold these in your hand, you can hold a tube of a potential reprogramming medicine, put
that into an animal model of a disease, and rescue the function of that diseased animal.
We can do this both with human cells. In our case, we're able to take old liver cells
from old people and restore them back to a youthful function
so they can regenerate and repair a tissue
the same way young ones do.
And then likewise, we can put these molecules
into animal models.
And one of the diseases we're going after
is alcohol-related liver disease.
It's some damage that accumulates from alcohol exposure
over the course of your life.
Not only can we make those cells regenerate better,
but we can also just make them much more resilient to alcohol.
It turns out that as your hepatocytes,
the cells in your liver age,
they become much more vulnerable to alcohol when you drink.
That's an experiment that I've run in my own life,
and so I believe the data even without
having to replicate it as many times as we have.
We're able to really improve the protection they have against
that type of damage in a way that we think will really benefit patients.
To our knowledge,
that's the first time anyone's really made a reprogramming medicine you can
hold in your hand, but demonstrates efficacy,
something you could imagine carrying forward to the clinic.
Can you talk about the series B, $130 million? I'm, uh,
I want to know about the round, but then I also want to know about what do,
what's the use of funds look like because you're doing a lot with data is,
are you going to spend $100 million
in some sort of large H100 cluster
to crunch all these numbers?
Are we at that scale yet?
Or is it just R&D salaries for engineers, scientists?
Are there legal folks putting together FDA applications?
Is it a bunch of money on lab mice and monkeys?
What is the shape of the business right now?
Yeah, absolutely. So everything you noted is some expense.
Thankfully our compute budget quite isn't a hundred million dollars yet,
though I hope we're generating enough data to get there soon.
Jensen can donate some GPUs if he's feeling so kind.
He's serious about living to 50.
Yeah. I mean, it's in his own interest.
He wants to be running NVIDIA for the next 40 years. Why not?
It's true. So yeah, the breakdown is basically the main costs are R&D. So we have a couple,
we have three different therapeutic programs. Our most advanced program I told you a little
bit about is focused on restoring function in the liver. We hope that can treat some
advanced liver diseases and eventually treat everyone whose liver ages. You know, you probably
have a little bit less energy than you did when you were 21. I certainly do as well. And that turns out that as we age, over half the population starts to suffer from something
called metabolic syndrome. Basically your rates of heart attack, diabetes, obesity, all shoot up.
We see this in our own lives with people we know. We don't necessarily have the language for it
normally. And we think those medicines can treat a very broad swath of patients. We also have
programs in immunology, trying to restore youthful functioning of your immune system, and more
recently, vasculature, trying to basically useful functioning in your immune system and more recently vasculature,
trying to basically fix your kidneys
and other portions of your body that degenerate
when you can't really move blood around
the way you did when you were younger.
So that's a large fraction to spend.
And then another big fraction of use of proceeds
is really to take these molecules to the clinic.
As you start to do experiments in humans,
things get very expensive very quickly.
It turns out even just manufacturing
the molecules that you need to go take into a clinical trial has to be done in a really
controlled way. You're also just making very large masses of this stuff and it's very expensive
to do. And so because of that, you know, we try and really upfront de-risk everything
before we get to the clinic, but we still have to reserve a fair amount of the dry powder
to make sure we can do right by the patients we're going to treat, produce the drug in
a sufficient quantity, run a sufficiently sophisticated trial to really gain evidence that
it's working. Can you talk about the pressure of working on technology that so many people are
effectively betting on and in some ways feel is inevitable? I feel like if you ever have a
conversation with a loved one, you know, a parent, you know, you're talking with let's say a parent
They'll be like, you know, maybe a young person is thinking on a 30-year time horizon and the parent is thinking
Well, I don't you know, I don't know if I'll be around then and then the the the you know
Younger younger person says oh well by that point like we'll have life
You know, I just feel like there's a conversation something that comes up constantly that people like maybe maybe it's you know maybe it's
misguided but I feel like there's a general sense of inevitability with
these types of technologies but when you guys are actually doing the research and
and fighting these you know fighting to make this possible.
I imagine that at times, you know,
maybe in the fullness of time,
you feel like it's inevitable,
but it's certainly not, you know, pre-programmed, right?
It's something, it's knowledge that needs to be earned.
But it's a much different level of pressure than,
you know, somebody raising $130 billion for a SaaS company
where if it fails, there'll be another note-taking app
that just sort of like takes the place
and we'll still be able to organize words
on digital documents.
Maybe for your note-taking app, Jordy,
my note-taking app is gonna be entirely unique
and irreplaceable.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I love the way you set this up.
It is something we think a lot about,
which is the responsibility we have as we're trying
to work on these tools.
I think in biotech, you don't get many opportunities to take really audacious bets like this.
The science we're working on is earlier stage than you typically start a biotech on.
There's more inherent tech risk here than many companies are willing to underwrite.
And so because we do have one of the unique opportunities to take a shot on goal at potentially a thousand X outcome, a medicine that everyone would benefit from over a certain
age, we feel really a burden to make sure we're using that opportunity responsibly. And so I do
think there's some amount of stress in it, but I think it's mostly positive in that I feel like
often we're presented with challenges where if we shrink the scope of the ambition a little bit,
we can make our lives a lot easier. Well, certainly we can get to the clinic faster if we're comfortable
just having a medicine that maybe doesn't apply to as many people or doesn't work quite as well.
And having that burden to say, no, we've got one of the few rare opportunities in the industry
stewarding this capital, working with these generational investors to be able to try and
take a shot where really we are optimizing for the scale of the outcome rather than just the
marginal basis point
on probability of success,
which I think is something that biotech has maybe forgotten
over the past decade or so.
We've really optimized on probability of success,
but forgotten the other half of the EV equation.
If you multiply even a high probability
by a low potential value,
your outcomes aren't generating as much
as you'd hoped for anyway.
So it is something that's always front of mind for us.
Makes sense.
Yeah, makes sense.
How do you think about the potential impact
of improving the function of the kidney by 10%
could have some additional externality in the body
that could actually have a really meaningful...
So how do you think about kind of complex systems
and sort of unintentional impacts of certain sort of effects
of the type of drugs that you guys will develop over time?
Yeah, it's a great question.
It's something like,
we don't have a super rigorous framework for this
because these questions are very difficult
to answer quantitatively.
I guess in short, we like to treat those sorts
of knock-on benefits as pure upside.
So before we launch into a program,
we need to convince ourselves that just making one type
of cell in your body younger is actually gonna benefit you.
And that might sound kind of obvious,
like sure, I definitely want younger cells.
But if you then step back and realize your body's hundreds
of complex cell types, they're all interacting,
well, maybe one really solid link
and an otherwise pretty busted rusted chain
isn't actually all that useful.
So we try and find examples where
if we're able to demonstrate that storing function
in just that one cell type helps individuals,
helps especially helps humans,
then we can get conviction around starting a program.
And then everything in terms of the knock-on systems benefit, maybe if you had a healthier
liver or a healthy kidney, we'll see benefits elsewhere in your physiology that maybe we
haven't even directly measured yet.
We just treat as upside potential for the long term.
Yeah, I have a little lightning round.
I want your reaction to three kind of biotech projects or technologies and I want to know if they're
all relevant to the work that you're doing, if you're learning anything from them or just
the overall impact on health and just general biotech community.
Ozempic, CRISPR and AlphaFold.
So I'd love to start I guess with Ozempic.
It feels like, you know, it's not necessarily life extension, but in terms of health span could be very good. But how have you been
processing the story of GLP ones? And are there any learnings
from GLP ones that you've been able to kind of port back or
update your philosophy or strategy at new limit?
Absolutely. I think you're entirely right in saying these
are some of the first health span medicines. I don't do we
actually have a couple already. This isn't like a totally crazy idea.
There's another type of medicine called statins.
They're a bit older.
One brand name one's called Lipitor,
you've probably heard of.
And between statins and GLP-1s now,
I think it's quite plausible if you do some napkin math,
we're adding several healthy years
to the median American's life,
which very few other medicines can claim.
If you look at the rest of therapeutics development
over the past decade and add up, how many years could you, I, Jordy, maybe expect from these benefits?
It's actually quite small. I think one of the things we've internalized is that the scale of
the opportunity really does matter. The difference between the GLT-1s and many other drugs is that
the access of biology they're targeting actually is dysfunctional in a huge swath of the population,
at least 30% of Americans, probably more,
depending on exactly how you define that.
And when you strike those really high value opportunities,
I think exactly as you alluded to,
you start to see knock on benefits,
maybe you didn't even plan for initially.
GLP-1s are now showing benefits in cardiovascular diseases.
There's early data in neuro
that I don't think anyone quite understands,
but does seem to be reasonably consistent.
And so trying to keep your mind up and-
That's the gambling stuff specifically?
Like the addiction and gambling stuff you're referring to?
No, no, so there's actually even neurodegeneration.
So there's some early trials that folks on GLIP-1s
are having lower, sort of slower disease progression
for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
Oh wow, that's huge.
And as of my understanding right now,
it's like basically no one knows how that works.
But you're starting to see results like that pop up
just because these drugs are out into
such a broad swath of the population.
We're running these experiments
without even necessarily intending to.
I think really we've just tried to
internalize the scope of the opportunity really matters.
Then also the strategy they took to get
the GLIP-1s into the market is one we're trying to emulate. They didn't start by trying to dose the GLIP-1s into a huge population.
You start with a small patient pool that you know will benefit a huge amount. So in the case of GLIP-1s,
certain type of diabetics, eventually you expand to the obese, eventually you expand to other
indications from there. As we're really trying to mirror that stepwise with our programs, where
maybe as an example, we're starting an alcohol- related liver disease for our metabolism drug, but that's the beginning.
We don't intend it as the destination.
And we've tried to plan this in such a way that with steadily increasing quantums of
capital, you can unlock larger and larger opportunities rather than just trying to shoot
for the home run right off the bat.
Do you want to stay on Zempik before we move on to CRISPR and Alpha Fold?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
I want to get your take on CRISPR
Obviously it was extremely hot technology about a decade ago
Is that at all relevant to what you're doing or have you learned anything from?
The story of CRISPR and how that was ultimately commercialized and baked into the rest of the biotech community
Yeah, absolutely. Maybe two things. I think the impact of CRISPR is somehow both over and under hyped in different places. It's maybe over hyped a bit in terms of direct
application to therapeutics. I think if you go out and look at sort of how the panoply
of different CRISPR companies are doing, there are a few really stellar examples like Beam
Therapeutics that we really admire who have managed to make compelling medicines and others
have struggled. And so maybe there's a bit of hype there, but it's really undervalued
on the research side. So we've used a lot of CRISPR tools on the discovery end to be able to ask questions
at the level of very basic discovery experiments. What happens when I turn this gene on or off?
And maybe we're not going to take those CRISPR tools and trying to actually put them in a person
as the medicine itself, but they certainly help us accelerate the discovery of other therapies.
And so I think it may be the lesson to draw out of that is like when we have breakthrough
technologies, often people rush to what is the most direct application therapeutically,
but under value sort of the knock on benefits of that technology underlying and accelerating a
lot of trends that are already at play. And then similarly, Alpha Fold, massive breakthrough in
terms of AI and bio didn't really move the biotech markets when it when
the news broke and my interpretation of that was that maybe protein folding as a cost center
for biotech development was actually not that much of a cost driver in the sense that it's
mostly just farmed out to grad students maybe.
But I'm sure there's things where you look at that and you think this is going to this is on the path to
Really really powerful AI and bio working together
But are you using alpha fold or anything like it or do are you learning anything from it and overall?
Do I have a right understanding about the impact of alpha fold on biotechnology broadly?
Yeah, I think you've hit the nail on the head with the direct impact
You know, I think solving protein folding the nail on the head with the direct impact. You know,
I think solving protein folding itself, like actually taking a sequence, predicting a structure
hasn't been rate limiting for drug discovery in the traditional sense. It is painful to get
structures, but usually we work on few enough molecules that getting the structure is not
really what slows you down for most traditional therapeutics. That said, I do think it demonstrates
we're able to learn much more powerful representations of biology than others thought possible. And so maybe by
analogy to CRISPR, the direct application is predicting structure is itself really going to
solve therapeutic development? No, probably not. Is learning the language of life in a way that we
can actually work with tractably going to accelerate everyone in the ecosystem? Absolutely, yes.
And so to your question of, are we using something similar?
We definitely do.
So one of the tools that we've built, the models we've built,
they try and take in some notion of the genes we're
manipulating, transcription factors.
You need to learn an embedding, just like an embedding
in natural language processing we're all familiar with
that you can get from LLMs, and then predict
what will happen to a cell's age as a result.
And it turns out some of the best embeddings we found
are from these protein language models
that really are often deriving from that basic premise
of the alpha fold-like tools.
And so I don't think if you see the alpha fold announcement,
you'd ever intuit, oh, solving protein folding
is going to make it easier to find reprogramming drugs
that make old liver cells act young.
But it turns out that that underlying substrata
of learning these representations
actually does accelerate a whole bunch of science
you don't expect.
And so I think often the headline is a little overhyped,
but the subtext is underhyped and probably more important.
That's an awesome framework.
How much does the biotech industry broadly pay attention
to biohacking and citizen science?
I know you can't read too much into what one ex account
is experimenting with on any given day,
whether it be Cialis or sleeping nine hours a day.
But the other one that was interesting recently
was the guy, I think it was last Friday,
he let hundreds of snakes bite him over time.
And so I feel like there is alpha in citizen science, but there's also 99.9% noise.
You got to take it with a granite cell.
Yeah, and it's also not, you know, they're not running scaled studies.
Yeah, you got to take it with a spoonful of Cobra venom.
You guys are legends.
I wish I had the opportunity to shake his hand,
because he's definitely underappreciated.
So writ large, I think the pharma and biotech ecosystem
are actually fairly receptive to using the results of citizen
science, because it's so hard to get data in humans.
That even if the data you're collecting in a human
is confounded in some way, yes, this person
didn't do a perfect controlled trial, et cetera.
It can still be better than having no data at all.
So I think the two qualifications on this,
and maybe the examples you gave, are good ones.
One is when you've got a very small trial,
like a single person, but you've got a huge effect size,
like this guy who's immune to basically every snake bite.
That is such crazy outlier biology
that I think that wakes people up to, OK,
there's something to learn here.
And the other is when you actually have this replicated, maybe unintentionally. So a good
example I think you alluded to earlier is the glip lungs and sort of alcohol use, where
this wasn't something that the companies were exploring, Eli Lilly or Novo. It's something
that started getting reported anecdotally from patients. Hey, I just don't want to drink
anymore. And so the amount of drinking I've done has gone down a lot. And so that was
in a way a type of citizen science,
people recording, reporting on their own behavior.
And now those are actually going through clinical trials
in a more formal process.
And so in the industry,
people call this reverse translation.
It often has a lot of fancy words dressed up on it.
But the basic idea being that the place we can learn
the most biology in humans is in humans,
and we should try and treat every piece of data we have preciously. I think most people would appreciate. There's probably not as
much active work trying to collect this sort of citizen science data as there could be,
but I think there are a few strong examples where it's really changed drug discovery.
No, this was fantastic. I really enjoyed the conversation.
I do want to let you kind of give an overview of the company. Like I imagine you're hiring. What type of roles are you hiring for?
What's next on the agenda for new limit?
Yeah, absolutely. So over the next few years,
part of the use of proceeds here is actually to take these prototype medicines
we have today and move those into the clinic,
actually take them to patients for the first time.
And so we're hiring across the board really for drug developers and therapeutic
area leaders to help run some of our therapeutic programs for scientists who are skilled in functional genomics.
And on the computational side, we have a growing ML team. And for those sorts of individuals who
might be excited about AI and bio, the care that we can offer is we have some very differentiated
data. We have the largest data set of this kind by hundreds of fold. You really need to get to
this scale before you can train meaningful models.
And we think Newham is one of the few places you can go
and expend your valuable talents,
where the predictions of your models
are actually gonna get tested in a real laboratory
fairly soon.
So you've got real contact with the universe.
You're not too far from the metal.
So we'd love to be in touch with anyone
who's interested in any of those verticals.
Amazing.
Well, thank you so much for taking the time.
Thank you for doing this work.
Thank you for saving my life in the future.
Because we're already making, you know,
our sons are about, you know, under five
and we're making succession plans with them
in about 30 years, they'll be taking over the microphones.
But if we could get another, you know,
30 years at a new limit, that would be ideal.
The world needs parallelized technology
brothers podcast.
It's required.
So we'll try and do our best to make that happen.
Thanks, Al.
It was a really great interview.
Great talking, Jacob.
Congrats to you and the team.
We'll talk to you later.
Thank you so much.
Bye.
Let's run through some posts and get out of here.
Thank you to Brian Via, who went ahead and started a list
for following everyone
that has ever been on TBPN.
I thought this was really cool.
Working through the TBPN feed slowly
to add all the guests they've ever had.
He said, give me a few days so you can go follow this list.
We'll quote post it.
But we were thinking about doing this
and he's just doing it for us.
So thank you.
Citizen journalism there.
Citizen journalism.
Podcasting. Citizen journalism. Journalism. We think of ourselves as corporate podcasters, but corporate media, but it takes a village
And thank you Brian very cool. I'm gonna go follow the list also Eric Dungan says
I swear TVPN has me wearing a nice watch and buying DuPont registry at the airport
If I start wearing a suit and they won it's great cracking open the and he's got the wedding ring on
You know his family man. You love to see there we go. I can't clock what watch that is, but it looks fantastic
Eric's a day one fan. I see great having you as a technology brother
And it's nice to have a have a watch on it looks great and do punt registry of a big fan
I follow them on X pretty much every day. I'm always tagging my friends in it. This is a good option for you
Yeah, yeah. Anyway, we saw Greg Brockman at the Met Gala, which we talked about. This was a fun one
Brex had just launched a podcast with the with the CEO of deal and I feel like they must have recorded this
Before all the drama and then they just decided to release it once things that kind of cooled down
But anyway, I invited Alex from deal on the show he got back to me
said he can't come on right now obviously things are a little chaotic
but we would love to have him there's a bunch of interesting questions I want to
know about the business I also want to know about the drama and it's a live show
so we won't edit you Alex if you come on the show we can't you can you can deliver
whatever message you want always Always interested. Yeah, this
was certainly a comeback story. Certainly a dramatic way to
launch a podcast. It is a crazy Episode One. Yeah, like a via
all the people like this is this is who people want to hear
about. I wouldn't be surprised if this is a really, really
popular episode. Yeah. Although it seems like it's more focused
on the run rate, scale the employees the business but
hadn't really heard much from Alex before all the all the drama but
Interested to hear about him now, you know
Yeah
anyway
Schweda says never underestimate the power of one good tweet Rorke's founders were
$15,000 in credit card debt been there and sleeping on a friend's mattress when Matt's post went viral 15 minutes later Austin already wired 100k by the end of
the day they close 350k
2.8 million dollar seed round led by a 16z
Crazy and Matt says my jaw dropped Rourke lets you create entire iOS apps just by describing them zero code required
This changes everything for app development Rourke blows bolt out of the water and yes
I invested immediately after trying it.
Watch this, it's crazy.
What a great viral market entry.
I mean, this really does seem like just part
of the standard playbook of launching a seed stage company
at this point is like figure out a way to go viral
and just fill up that first batch of customers to test on.
Might not be a sustainable growth mechanism.
But it's almost getting to the point where
if people will judge you as a founder, CEO,
if you can't nail a sales call, right?
It's extremely bearish.
Totally.
Even if you're not,
every founder should figure out how to sell the product,
right? Yep, 100%.
Because you have to sell employees, partners, investors,
the list goes on.
Being able to manufacture virality,
just figuring out how to go viral,
is getting to the point where it's going to be required
in the same way that just being able to nail
a sales call is, right?
Yeah.
So.
100%.
Well, speaking of that watch we saw earlier,
if you're looking for a new watch,
you wanna join the ranks of our listeners
with fantastic watches,
head over to getbezel.com.
Your bezel concierge is available now
to source any watch on the planet.
Seriously, any watch.
Head over there.
Keon, a Nucleus Genomics friend of the show,
is over at the Ramp office,
another friend of the show doing a little collab. All Ramp employees can use their wellness benefit
to get the world's most advanced DNA health test. He'll be at Ramp's office for lunch.
Love how he's just setting up a little stand.
He's just selling to Ramp employees. I love it. A pretty nicely designed little partnership.
I thought that was cool. So congrats to him on that Michael Dempsey says, okay
maybe the best venture swag of all time from hootie are and
I it has a badge here that says what hash show
Capital fund LP. What do you think of this? You're you're the merch guy. You have put together some fantastic drops
I like I think it's pretty cool like the pockets. I think it's a different look you get a lot of t-shirts and
You know t-shirts are great, but you know in the fabric out. This is fabric fabric very nice something a little different
It's got some weight to it didn't Bain Capital get in trouble for doing the car heart
And it was like a little bit too larpy stored and stolen dollar this feels like it evokes like the workman
You could you could do some work in this, but it's not trying to be like perfectly aligned with another
You know a cohort of individuals, and so it's just kind of its own thing. I thought it was cool
So congrats to those and we'll close with this post from Paula over at X AI says who recently joined X. Yeah
Congratulations Paula rambles
So who's building the app at the intersection of AI and astrology? I actually told Sean
the app at the intersection of AI and astrology, I actually told Sean, over at my first million when I went on over a year ago,
that this was a prime area for LLMS, because there's something
called the Barnum effect. Yes, PT Barnum. So the Barnum effect is
essentially, there are a set of phrases that you can say to
someone that sound hyper specific, but in fact apply to everyone.
So an example would be like,
you have a complicated relationship with your family.
Sounds like I know you, but really everyone kind of has
a complicated relationship with their family
in some one way or another.
Or you think you're meant for more.
Sounds really specific, but really everyone thinks
that they could do more, you know,
everyone has these aspirations.
What's your astrological sign John
Mataurus bull okay I'm a little mark three my yeah business partner is a
Taurus how should I communicate how should I backstab him today but yes I
think that I think that astrology and AI go hand in hand in the sense that you with him today. We'll let Oth to do a little work here.
I think that astrology and AI go hand in hand in the sense that you can download this app
and with only knowing a little bit, you can start producing really tailored responses
that feel very specific to the individual.
Create this.
And even if you're just regurgitating generic life coaching advice, coaching advice everyone needs to hear you got this, you know, you can do it
Your astrological sign says that it's fortune cookie, you know, yeah, I mean the thing here is I think there's an opportunity to build a thin
Relatively thin wrapper on top of whatever your preferred model is. Yep. I
believe that many people will just use their preferred
LLM for a lot of this stuff.
Right?
Like I just asked 03.
You might not need to go get a separate app,
but at the same time, if you design the app
with the right aesthetics, right functionality,
you do the right customer acquisition on Facebook, and then you get in the app with the right aesthetics, right functionality, you do the right customer acquisition
on Facebook and then you get in the app,
purchase a subscription, like it could be its own thing.
I think a lot of the astrology apps
that have raised venture have actually done very well.
So here's my dues for communication with John today,
what to do.
Open with appreciation.
Hey, John, I think you did a really great job
on the podcast today.
Everything from the prep to your zingers
to your interview questions were fantastic.
But we gotta talk after the show.
Because, okay.
No, no, no.
Present concrete, tangible data.
You know, John, the number of times you said
hit the soundboard, you know, it meant a lot to me.
So thank you for that.
You're welcome, Jordy.
Frame ideas as we projects.
You know, John, the prep you did for the show today,
I think we did a great job.
Common.
And again, I think this is like the challenge here
is this is like probably very general advice.
But it can all work out if you're into,
who knows if you're into astrology, go check it out.
Go let us know.
It's funny, it says here no rush deadlines,
but you're actually very good with deadlines.
I love deadlines.
Oh, we have to go live in 30 minutes
and we don't have prep?
Done.
Done.
No problem.
Done.
You're the kid who waits until the last 30 minutes
to do his homework.
Always do your homework same day in the hallway
before you go into the class.
Anyway, thank you to Ramp Polymarket,
Public Numeral, AdQuick, 8 Sleep, Wander, Bezel, Linear, Figma, and Vanta
for recording the team.
The incredible partners of TBPN, more than sponsors.
And we're gonna be up in San Francisco
with the Figma team tomorrow at config.
Config.
Config.
Config.
Config.
Config.
Config.
Config.
We're excited to be up in the bay tomorrow.
If you're an SF. He's mispronouncing in the bay tomorrow if you're an
SF. If you're if you're at config, let us know. Seriously,
hit us up. We'd love to have you on talk about design. Talk
about figma. Talk about vibe code and vibe designing. We're
gonna do it all. Anyway, at all. Thank you for watching.
Fantastic show. We will see you tomorrow. Have a great rest of
your day. Can't wait. Bye. See you.