TBPN Live - Week in Review | Neuralink Raises $600M at $9B Valuation, Judge Considers Curbs for Google in AI Arms Race, Jensen Huang Shifts Approach to U.S. Politics & More
Episode Date: May 30, 2025TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wa...nder.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(07:48) - Neuralink Raises $600M at $9B Valuation (10:13) - Rillet Raises $25M from Sequoia (12:10) - Judge Considers Curbs for Google in AI Arms Race (25:33) - Ray-Ban Maker EssilorLuxottica to Buy Optegra in Medical AI Push (29:27) - Every VC-backed IPO in the past 12 Months has been a Down Round (34:50) - Jensen Huang Shifting Approach to U.S. Politics (41:01) - VC Funds for Sale at a discount (45:31) - TBPN Reacts to the Timeline
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You're watching DBB and today's Friday, May 30th, 2025. We are live from the TBPN ultra
dome, the temple of technology, the fortress of finance, the capital of capital. It's a
lag show. I am traveling. How are you doing? I'm good. I miss you. Yeah, me too. It's
rough. But so far it's brutal. Sleeping without an eight sleep. It's the punishment worse than death. It's a true torture. It really
is. It's the worst. It's the worst. Anyway, exciting, exciting week. Short week with
the Memorial Day holiday, but I feel like we did a good job making up for the lack
of major tech news, the lack of major announcements from AI companies.
Although WWDC is coming up next week,
which should be interesting.
And that's where I wanted to start
because John Gruber has been writing about Apple
for years, Daring Fireball.
He has a show called Talk Show that he does at WWDC.
And it's very interesting because he was one of the first people to do a talk show that he does at WWC. And it's very interesting because he was one of the first
people to do a talk show and interview show in the Vision
Pro with in VR.
They bring the pro cameras and you can stream it and you can
watch it in the Vision Pro.
He went all in.
He's been writing positively about Apple for a long time.
Of course, a couple months ago, he wrote something is
rotten in the state of Cupertino
talking about the, the,
the difficulties with the rollout of Apple intelligence and they,
uh, they didn't completely rug him,
but they didn't sign up fully. So last year,
uh, the talk show live from WWDC 2024 had Craig Federighi, Greg Jaws and John G Andrea, Apple's
head of machine learning and AI. And this year, he invited them
all and they said, No, we don't want to participate. No way.
Yeah, no way. Which is right. They took it. They took the
rotten post. Yeah, it took it personally. It hurts. And mean I was just reflecting on like what this means obviously we want to invite
We want to you know interview these folks and so I I just kind of had this realization that
truly
Apple intelligence is one of the most underrated products of all totally totally it's and people are critical of it because it's Apple and there
Yeah, they they always achieve perfection.
But I think they did.
I think they did achieve perfection.
It's a product that we use and love daily, right?
Exactly.
When you text me, John, you text me this,
a couple paragraphs, right?
Yeah.
It's a cool idea.
I actually like that Apple botches the summary
because it inspires me to think,
what would John think in this circumstance?
Exactly, exactly. What would John want me to think what would John think in this circumstance? Exactly.
Exactly.
What would John want me to think that he was saying before Apple kind of stepped in?
And so I think you're totally right.
I think Apple Intelligence criminally underrated.
I agree.
I agree.
Honestly, honestly, John, I would take it a step further.
Please.
Just eliminate all original, all the original text of every message and I message and only provide back and forth sort of ping-pong
Summary is kind of like a game of telephone in some way. Yeah, just let Apple intermediate everything because 100%
You know if yeah, and I think I think a lot of people were critical of the gen Moji campaign
But as as someone who sponsored by ad quick, we love out of home campaigns. And I think that that
was also something that with the long arc of history, we'll look back on as
as an iconic campaign. Exactly. It was it was contrarian up there with 1984. I
agree. Um, and and so many of these other, you know, the iPod campaign,
right? So so these type of iconic. imagery. And we spent a lot of time talking
about the Genmoji campaign, right?
And many people would say all attention,
even though we had some critiques,
but all attention is good attention.
And yeah, when you think about it.
I think that's part of the show is like,
yes, you could say we were critiquing,
but a lot of the show is humorous.
And so I would now, my message to Apple is like those critiques,
those were the jokes. This is the serious part.
Yeah. Now I'm serious.
And I'm saying they've never done anything wrong.
Everything's perfect. And I want to let's let's make it happen.
But you know, the funny thing is that I was actually obviously we're
kidding around a little bit, but I was I was reflecting on the fact that
I am actually more bullish on Apple than John Gruber right now because after the state of Cupertino came out, me and you were talking and I was taking the position that like Tim Cook, because of how he handled the supply chain and the tariff stuff, that was actually-
He made it all back in one trade. And so, you know, I think that, yeah, the Apple Intelligence thing, it hasn't gone perfectly, but, but the execution, I mean, it's still massive company and they're
doing great. And I think that there's a world where they land this in a very interesting
way with with partnerships and they open things up. And there's some really, really interesting
outcomes that could happen. So,
yeah, the question is for grubber. How much angrier does he get at Apple as he gets less and less access
right did they they awaken you know a monster yeah yeah you think that you'd
want to you'd want to have him come on and kind of ask the hard questions and
and make your case and win him over you know they have a long-standing
relationship also did you say grubber it's definitely gruber gruber sorry grubber though that's great but yeah talking to he was talking to Ben Thompson and saying
like he's kind of relieved because this was going to be one of the harder interviews because the
expectation would be that he asks like the hard questions right yeah and like he actually pushes
them because he has been a although he's obviously been very it's easy to be pro Apple
over the course of his career because Apple's been on absolute tear and so if you're if you like the correct analysis of Apple at
Every point in the last two decades has been the stocks about to rip and if you just kept saying that you were right again
And again again, it sounded like you were glazing or being showing
But like you were also correct. Yeah people look back and they're like, yeah
Buffett bought Apple when it was already the most valuable public valuable company in the world. Exactly. Exactly. It was a
You know there there were people making that same trade. Yeah, just thinking
Oh, I should just buy the biggest company.
And Buffett was basically making the bet
that it was undervalued at that point massively.
Great.
Well, really quickly, we're gonna do some ads.
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be a lot of fun.
Anyway, let's rip through some news.
I want to give a little update on what did happen this week because there were a bunch
of small stories, nothing really big that became the current thing, but we should rip
through this.
So Elon Musk's Neuralink raised $600 million and $9 billion valuation.
This feels like old news to me.
I don't know if that's just because I've been hearing this through the rumor mill, but I'm
very excited for what they're building.
We talked to Ashley Vance a little bit about Neuralink and the progress, and it's kind
of underrated because the first time it happens, it's like a miracle with that one Neuralink
patient, but there's been a few.
And Ashley Vance has actually gone and interviewed others.
And everything that I've seen is that this project
moves slowly like many, like SpaceX,
where there's regulatory concerns and FDA approvals,
but the foot is not off the gas.
And it just continues to grow.
So excited about it.
The thing that stood out to me here is Neuralink
raised $43 million in November 2023.
The fact that there was an Elon company
with this much potential in the private markets
being valued at $5 billion roughly two years ago
is actually crazy.
Granted, the round was effectively
an additional tranche that had been part of an earlier
FF round, but still, you know, not a bad bet.
Yeah, but just like insane concentration talent.
I mean, we talked to the Teal fellow who
was working at Neuralink, and that's the DNA at that company.
And it's pretty remarkable to see.
Obviously, all the focus is on super long-term brain computer interfaces, but when
you talk to the Neuralink team, they're much more grounded in the immediate effects of
what the technology can do, which is like there are a lot of people who are paraplegic.
It's actually a lot of people that get in pretty horrific accidents, like they're doing
like cliff jumping or skydiving or something
and something goes terribly wrong they break their neck essentially like sever their spinal
cord and then they just cannot access their limbs and but they're alive and they're going
to live out their life and you give them the access to play video games which is the most
beautiful gift you can give someone in my opinion totally and so yeah it's always super
inspiring and I'm sure we should talk to some of the Neuralink folks
at some point.
We should have Owen call in.
What was the name of the Teal fellow who was at Neuralink?
Do you remember?
I don't.
I mean, we interviewed 25 people that day.
Back to back.
But that was one of my favorite moments of the week.
Oh, yeah.
His philosophy of I'm just trying
to get two times cooler over
and over and over.
And you stack a few 2x wins like that back to back,
starting to get pretty cool.
I thought that was an amazing philosophy of life,
and he was just skill-maxing to the absolute.
I mean, also his definition of cool.
I kept expecting it to be like, and then I hit the gym,
and then I learned to race hard. Now's like not cliche at all building a trumpet from first principles
It's extremely cool. It's genuinely cool. Yeah. Yeah, anyone can
Anyone can hit the gym and learn to do a kickflip. But yeah
Build a truck. He'll get to he'll get to that
Those are those are they're down the road for sure down the road
He'll get to that. Those are on the road for sure. Down the road.
Anyway, other fundraising news.
Realit raised $25 million from Sequoia to automate general ledger systems using AI for accounting departments.
Sequoia has been big on this application layer, value accrual in AI in the application layer.
Obviously, they have Harvey.
They're in some of the foundation models, but they're also looking for bets in kind of every vertical SAS category now. So this kind of makes sense
the the the partner at
Sequoia that did the deal said the general ledger is the beating heart of the finance function and so asking a company
To remove it is kind of open heart surgery
So interesting to see how this actually interfaces with some of the other Sequoia
That's because they're in ramp and they're in other companies, but there's certainly more stuff to do inside the enterprise and
there's a bunch of different places. So a $25 million bet makes sense there. What else
is going on? Horizon three AI raised $100 million from any a $750 million valuation.
AI startup, yeah, lots of size gongs this week.
Honestly, a Databricks competitor raised a 50 million dollar Series A from Felicitas
at a 500 million dollar valuation.
There's a bunch of other stuff going on.
Databricks we've talked about the neon deal, but it's becoming more and more finalized
at this point.
There's some venture fund news, enterprise.
There's also Clark,
led by Brad Mendezes.
The first AI agent to build internal enterprise apps,
raised $60 million, which I think we may have covered,
but I wanted to give Brad a shout out
because I wanted to get him on the show this week,
but we didn't end up having the time, but shout wanted to give Brad a shout out because I wanted to get him on the show this week. We didn't end up having the time,
but shout out to Brad and the whole team.
Yep.
So the big news in the technology world
in the Wall Street Journal this week
is this Google lawsuit that's been going on for a while.
Judge considers curbs for Google in AI arms race.
And this is kind of interesting
because this started around Google search monopoly, which
has been well documented.
Obviously, they own like 90% of the search market.
They own Chrome and they're the default on Apple.
And they have that very lucrative deal for Apple where they pay, I think, over $10 billion
to be the default search in Safari.
Isn't it 20 billion?
Yeah, it's a lot.
And it's just pure profit for Apple.
It's pretty awesome.
So lawyers are making closing arguments Friday
and the landmark anti-trust case.
Yeah, it reached 20 billion in 2022.
So it may have ticked off from there.
Let's go.
Saiz Gong, major Saiz Gong.
Every Saiz Gong.
Let's hear it for the Apple shareholders.
Yeah, we love it.
And this is why, this is why you can't critique Apple.
There's just nothing to critique because they're printing.
They're absolutely printing.
I mean, truly they set themselves up
with the perfect platform.
And so whatever happens next, they make money.
Like they didn't need to do the search, it's crazy.
Yeah, they have the $20 billion search deal with Google.
And because of that, they can offer Genmoji for free
out of
the box incredible just incredible consumer surplus that they're able to
you know deliver so u.s. district judge I'm at meta on Friday questioned how far
he should go to limit Google's monopoly in internet search including putting
curbs on how it competes in artificial intelligence but his query came at the
beginning of closing arguments
in the final phase of the Justice Department's
antitrust lawsuit against Google.
The judge questioned how questions underscore
how much rivals such as OpenAI have already changed
how people access information on the internet.
Metta earlier found that Google is a monopolist in search
and that it abused its power to maintain dominance.
But the government's proposals for improving competition
include curbing ability, Google's ability
to promote Gemini, its AI product
that competes with Chachiputti.
I wonder if that's part of the story
around Gemini being hard to find.
There's this constant critique on X
that Google has incredible models, incredible products,
but they're just not distributing
or surfacing them well.
And I wonder if it's less of a product management mistake,
like the product manager made the wrong decision,
or the lawyers came in and said,
hey, I know that the product management best practices
would be to roll this in,
but if you do that, we're at antitrust risk,
so we have to make it harder for you to sign up.
But I mean, this proposal from Judge Metta is is a proposal.
It isn't it wouldn't the strategic thing to do as Google
is to just say like, well, we're going to promote this as much as
we can until we're told we can't write.
No, I so so yeah, I think they would preemptively idea of like the speed limit 60 you go 59.
But I think internally at some of these companies that have been really scarred by antitrust and legal battles, sometimes the legal department says the speed limit 60 product managers.
Everyone's going 45 because we are actively being tailed by a cop.
They don't have their lights on yet
But but they could turn those lights on you know how people like, you know
I start going five under ten under when there's a cop behind them
That's I think that might be a little bit of a dynamic at some of the big tech companies
I think Bill Gates talked about this at Microsoft how
part of the reason why he transitioned out and and
Balmer came in was just he got so tied up at antitrust legislation
and antitrust fights that it became like a soul sucking job.
And he couldn't do the thing that he wanted to do,
which was just like build computers.
And so there's this interesting dynamic
where you could imagine a lawyer saying like,
I'm gonna get fired if we get a massive
lawsuit or something like that. And so to protect this, I'm
okay with us growing a little bit slower. I'm okay with these
new products being and it's because they're not comped on.
Did you deal with the innovators dilemma and find the big next
wave, right? They're comped on how, how bad are things in the
courts right now.
And also if you're a product manager and a lawyer on the team comes to you and says,
legally I'm recommending that we don't do this, it's very hard to push back on that.
It's not the same as the dynamic between a designer and an engineer, where the engineer
might say, oh, this is maybe better from an engineering perspective and it's more of a
discussion.
I feel like when the legal team shows up, it's usually like they are issuing a,
they are dictating what will happen.
And most people are just saying, okay,
well, legal said we have to do it this way,
so we're gonna do it this way.
Yeah.
But I don't know.
The interesting dynamic here is around,
like, the case specifically is not directly shaping
how Google deals with generative AI and their new products,
but it could have knock on effects because they are proposing the for sale of the Chrome
browser and preventing Google from being able to pay Apple to be its default search engine
and requiring it to share data with competitors.
And now this is obviously bad for a number of reasons, but, um,
the interesting thing in the context of AI is that they like all the data that
goes into Chrome and Google search from these extra search,
it's not just about running more ads. Obviously it is obviously if they're paying
Apple 20 billion,
they're probably making 40 billion in ads off of those searches or something like
that. Right. But that's also really, 20 billion, they're probably making 40 billion in ads off of those searches or something like that, right?
But that's also really, really valuable data that they're going to be using to train the
next generation of Gemini.
And so if they lose a little bit of that edge in the flywheel to something like chat GPT,
where people are going back and forth, and the data flywheel is spinning up faster at
open AI, that could actually put them at a place
where the data is compounding slower.
And so they're not able to stay on that Pareto frontier
of the best model at every single price
that they've been so happy with.
The interesting thing to me is,
have you heard the story of how Google originally
built the algorithm for auto complete?
This is interesting by the way.
Yeah.
I don't think this would be the case for our audience, but Safari apparently has 90% of
the browser market share on iPhone.
I imagine a lot of people listening have Chrome installed and prefer that, but...
I use Safari on iPhone.
Safari guy.
Yeah, I use Safari.
It just feels like it's the default.
I've tried to use Chrome, and the iPhone
keeps pumping me back.
Oh, do you want to open this in Safari?
And I've noticed that with the cookies,
if you're logged in in Safari and then you're on the X app
and you open a link, will open a safari web view
It doesn't open a chrome web view and so the safari web view
It's like an iOS code module if you're logged in in safari
That will log that will stay logged in even in when even when you're in the safari web view inside of Instagram or inside of X
And so that extra benefit is enough for me
to use a second browser, even though on my desktop
I use Chrome.
And I'm losing that connection.
It's like I want the mobile experience
to be really cohesive.
So I don't know if that's just like boomer mode,
but it seems to be working for me.
We need a boomer sound effect.
So anyways, going back, you said the Justice Department, which
brought the case
against Google in 2020, has proposed forcing the sale of its Chrome browser, preventing
Google from being able to pay Apple to be its default search engine. The department
says the uncommonly harsh remedies are supported by legal standard created when the US government
tried to break up Microsoft over 20 years ago. All three of the DOJ's major remedies
are aimed at helping generative AI providers take
share from Google, says Paul Gallant, a policy analyst
for TD Cowan.
The government hasn't met the standard of proof
for obtaining such drastic remedies, Google's lawyer,
John Schmitt-Lean, argued Friday.
The Justice Department didn't prove
that Google's exclusive contracts with device makers such as Apple were the primary cause of
Maintaining its monopoly. Mm-hmm. Yeah
Gotta be happy if you're or if you're Sam or
Arvin from perplexity right now given that the DOJ is explicitly stating we are trying to help generative AI
Providers take care from Google. Yeah. Yeah, make sense the DOJ is explicitly stating we are trying to help generative AI providers take
share from Google.
Yeah, yeah, it makes sense. Uh, the, the, the data flywheel is interesting.
I got to tell the story of the, uh, the original Google auto complete algorithm.
They were, this was prior to transformer based language models and,
but they needed a way to auto complete on Google search as you type,
it fills it in.
And what they found to be the most effective data set was let's say you're
searching for something like, uh,
how to take the train from SFO to San Francisco and you type it incorrectly.
You misspell San Francisco or you misspell SFO or something.
What they found is the best way to generate a massive data set of auto completions is just look at when someone types one thing and then't understand the query, you'll typically the
human will go and correct the query and be like, Oh, I misspelled San Francisco. I need
to spell it correctly. I will go spell it correctly. And but how do you send that signal
to Google that that the what is the correct way to spell San Francisco or what is the
correct search term? Whether what is the right way to phrase this question? Well, they were
able to create this massive data set just by looking at like one query a
query B and then and then just telling you are you sure you don't want to just
do the next query immediately so it's the same kind of predictive text but at
you when you're at Google scale that has incredible value and you can imagine
that having a big data flywheel potential at Google as they scale up generative AI.
So anyways, Judge Meta said he expects
to issue a ruling in August.
Google, which has roughly 90% market share of online searches,
proposed a narrower set of remedies
that would modify its exclusive agreements with Apple,
as well as Mozilla and Android, to allow for more competition.
It has said it would appeal the judges ruling
Sounds like whatever whichever way it shakes out
Yeah, there's so there's so many different things going on
Here's the interesting thing to Google's already paying Samsung and Motorola to pre-install Gemini on devices
which is interesting so
potentially
You know counterpoint to what you were saying earlier around
wanting to be if the speed limit 60 stay at 45.
Basically being like, the speed limit is 60 here, but it's 80 over here.
Let's go 80. Yeah, I'm surprised they even have to pay them
because Samsung and Motorola build off of Android.
So you would think it would just come pre-installed
as like a default Android app.
But I'm sure that there's a debate
because Samsung probably has their own foundation model
and could auction that off.
And so it's kind of up for debate.
But that certainly wasn't the case
with like the other stock features of Android.
And there's, so now with the new ones,
they got to figure out the deal. But yeah,
there's so many interesting things going on with Google with like absolute
dominance and video generation, absolute dominance on, on YouTube.
Like the YouTube model just seems like stronger than ever and compounding
and compounding and like not going anywhere.
And like just the absolute best business model and then some weakness in search
which is obviously huge on
Well, the funny thing is you could imagine, the absolute best business model, and then some weakness in search, which is obviously huge on overall earnings.
Well, the funny thing is you could imagine
search is getting more competitive naturally, right?
As people use LLMs to do things
that they would traditionally use a regular search engine for.
And you can imagine two years from now
at the Department of Justice taking this massive victory lap
of being like, you know,
we created competition in this market.
We did our job.
And it ultimately was just from the creation of new technology
that Google itself has played a big role in creating.
So I'm much more in favor of letting the best technology win
and the best teams win.
And it's unclear to me right now
if there really needs to be any meaningful intervention.
Well, if you have the best technology,
you need the best design tool, go to figma.com,
think bigger, build faster.
Figma helps design and development teams
build great products together.
Go to figma.com.
If not, I've been seeing a bunch of people
starting to use Figma
make and realizing how powerful it is.
Take hold.
I will try to pull.
I have the post in here somewhere.
Yeah, we'll get to it later.
But it's very cool to see.
Yeah, and Angela Leuse is H-O-L-Y-S-H-I-T,
which we will not say on the show friendly. Uh,
just got into, just got access to figma, make beta on our team account. And I'm totally
mind blown. These are mocks that we one shot prompted and it's interactive buttons, tabs,
prototype works and all the react code is there to copy and paste into an application.
That's very exciting. Congratulations to the team.
Very, very cool that they're getting this out into the world.
Anyway, other deals that are going on.
The Ray-Ban Maker, how do you pronounce this?
Eslur, I just know it as Luxotica.
Luxotica.
Luxotica.
I didn't know, I never had seen Eslur.
Eslur, Luxotica is buying Optegra in a medical AI push.
So Luxottica partnered with Zuck on the Meta Ray Bands.
And they're getting more into AI and smart glasses.
Interesting to see.
So Optegra operates iHospitals in the UK, Czech Republic,
Poland, Slovakia, and the Netherlands.
So interesting.
You think of Luxottica as a consumer product company,
but this is a very different kind of business to integrate.
Yeah, it's such a different approach to the Meta Ray Bands.
Like the reason it made so much sense for Luxottica
to partner with Meta on the Meta Ray Bands
because it's a fashion item.
Like you put it on your face and-
Meta doesn't need to recreate an iconic silhouette.
It's really, really hard.
Yeah, iconic silhouette for sure.
And Meta, I mean, the Quest looks okay,
but it has not reached anywhere near the kind
of final form factor that the iPod had or the iPhone had, like the silhouette, as you mentioned.
And so to jump into, and it's on your face,
so it's not even something that's like,
oh yeah, it's a little bit of an awkward device,
like it looks like a wallet, but I put up with it
because I'm only using it when I pull it out.
It's like, no, these are gonna be on your face all the time.
They need to look good.
And the Ray-Bans are so iconic.
It made a ton of sense. And they're able to draft off of Ray-Bans marketing and brand.
And they have ASAP Rocky.
Is there a creative director?
There's real momentum there.
They don't need to reinvent fashion
while they try to create a new technology platform.
Yeah, yeah.
But it's a little bit different when you're
talking about medical AI, where I think
you would think that a branded product would be a little bit less important. But I guess
Optegra operates a network of over 70 eye hospitals and diagnostic facilities across the UK,
Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, and the Netherlands. Its offering comprises
ophthalmic treatments and effective vision correction
procedures supported by artificial intelligence
in the pre and post op phases.
The transaction details were not.
You wanna know something interesting?
So, since doing the show,
my eyesight has actually gotten better.
Really?
And I think it's because we spend a lot of time
looking at screens, which probably isn't good,
but typically it's screens that are, far screens that are guests on that are far away.
So my vision is actually getting better.
That's hilarious.
Narrative violation.
But I didn't even realize you could.
I thought your eyes only got worse.
I didn't realize you could get your eyes better.
Are you just going to the gym for your eyes, basically?
Yeah, you can effectively work out your eyes.
I guess that makes sense.
A lot of people get into routines
where they're either looking at their phone computer and there's not a lot of like you know intensive exercise at
other sort of consistent ranges. I think. Yeah. Yeah. Interesting. Anyway report from
the information says every VC backed IPO in the past 12 months has been a down round.
A silence. Yep. This moment of silence is brought to you by ad quick out of home, out of home advertising
is measurable.
Anyways, back to the news.
But but there's an interesting wrinkle here.
So there's some good data in this article by Corey Weinberg in the information.
And there's also some good news, which we'll get to.
So when banking app chime goes public next month, it will mark the eighth straight
venture capital backed IPO in the last 12 months that has been valued less than it was in private
fundraising rounds. Chime was valued at $25 billion in 2021, but its bankers have been discussing
pricing and shares at roughly an $11 billion valuation. That's a pretty significant down
round, less than more than 50% off. Startup valuations are far lower than several years ago.
So a lot of these companies, they
raised big rounds during the Zerp era.
Now they've got to get out, got to get liquidity.
And so they're willing to take a little bit of a haircut
in trade for actually being able to do some distributions.
Because even though the most recent backer might
be taking a little bit of a haircut,
a lot of the early backers are still like, well, yeah,
I invested at $10 million.
I'm happy with an $11 billion. Yes. An example is like founders are
happy. The employees are happy for runner. Did the seed round. They probably invested
in a bunch of other rounds. Yeah. But their entry is so low that I imagine they're going
to do fine. Totally. If it gets priced at 11. Kirsten Green's on the minus list for
that specific deal. Yep.
Among others, but yeah.
Many investors are facing losses
when companies go public at lower valuations.
Yes, but like again, these are later stage investors
that might, where even the LPs might have the assumption
that they'll hold a little bit longer.
And that's what this article gets into.
So quickly, let's go through some of the IPOs
that have gone out and where they're pricing.
So Chime was 69 bucks a share in 2021 upcoming. We know that it's about down. It's down about 50% circle
Last private round is it was at $42 the IPO is predicted to be at $26. So down 38%
Hinge health went from 77 in September of 2022 to 32 down 59%.
That's a pretty steep haircut. MNTN,
which was actually fair a little bit better, just down 30% from peak.
Yeah.
He's a little crazy that 66% core weave down 15% all over.
I feel like core weave has lifted a service Titan down 16% tempest down 35%.
has lifted. Service tightened down 16%, Tempus down 35%. Now there are a couple, Ibotta and Rubrik did pop after the IPO or at least price higher than the
previous round. So let's hear it for Rubrik and Ibotta. But what's interesting
is that the information shares some data on companies that went public at
discounts to the last fundraising tended to perform strongly in the public markets. And so Reddit went out at a lower
valuation than their previous private market round, but then they went up 221% since IPO.
Same thing with CoreWeave went out at a slight haircut to the last private valuation and is now up 164%.
MNTN is also up 63%, service tightened up 59%,
Tempus up 47%, Hinge Health up 22%, eToro up 19%.
And so it's not all bad news and there might be
some sort of narrative where, you know,
there's been this story of the Zerp era
that the private markets went crazy,
that the valuations
were super, super high, like crazy revenue multiples.
And so you go out to the market, you talk to your banker and you could do your IPO roadshow
and you say, hey, look, we're taking our medicine.
We are going out at a price that is a discount to our last private valuation, but we've grown
so much.
It's been three years.
The business was sound.
These businesses weren't broads.
They weren't bankrupt. They weren't
like no users. They were just a little hotly valued for a while.
And they say, Hey, retail or whoever's buying in the IPO,
we're giving you a discount to what the investors paid in the
last round. And then that sets them up for an actually like new
new new resets the valuation gets them into a like a like a
liquid position where they can
actually grow and build up earnings beat earnings a couple times and then go on an absolute tear
a generational run potentially run yeah it's good it's good we uh a you know having a number of
of ipos uh end up you know you, you want the retail or institutions coming in
to not get hosed every single time.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, totally.
So.
And if you, yeah, I mean, that was the other story
of the ZERP was that like there were a lot of SPACs
that went out, that went way down.
And so it's almost better to go out at a discount
and then build back up, especially if there's a hold period,
lockups for various investors,
like you wanna be growing in the public markets,
you don't just wanna get out a super high evaluation.
There's an example, a company that went out
in December 11th of 2020, Airbnb,
is actually, if you just bought the day that it went out,
you'd be down 8% after five years.
So again, priced very efficiently, it did pop, but then it's just
been effectively flat to down since then.
Yeah. Well, if you're thinking about taking your company public anytime soon, you got
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Another big read in the information about Jensen Wong. He used to delegate politics
until Trump's return. We've been talking about Jensen going. He used to delegate politics until Trump's return.
We've been talking about Jensen going on an absolute tear,
going to all these different conferences.
This picture is pretty much everyone.
This picture is absolutely wild.
He's been relying on biologo visits
and a budding relationship with President Donald Trump
to reopen a path to China, which demands his attention to.
So big, big questions about how Nvidia
can maintain some position in China while obviously
there is a decoupling going on.
Yeah, it's interesting to see.
I was too fixated on this image,
which is iconic, albeit a bit silly.
Yeah, since the start of this year,
Nvidia CEO, Jensen Huang, has been thrust
into an unexpected new role, chief lobbyist for his company, forcing him to carry its hopes, suggestions,
and pleas directly to President Donald Trump.
Many of Huang's conversations with Trump have happened at Mar-a-Lago, Trump's residence
in Private Club in South Florida, and Huang has made far more visits there than have been
publicly reported, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter indeed
these yeah I don't know I don't even know how to say that but the next line
is interesting and video executive to remark on Wong's absence from the company
we see a lot less of Jensen he's been traveling to Florida a lot but I mean this
is what we this is what we were commenting on even a few weeks ago of just, I mean, this guy's conference schedule alone,
ignore the lobbying is, you know, feels like a couple of weeks, sometimes more.
Yeah. And it makes sense because like,
like as we saw with how Tim Cook handled the tariff situation with Apple,
even if there is going to be a decoupling,
having insight into how that will unfold and what the speed limit will be in one
month, in six months, in 12 months. Like we know Jensen's going to go one under,
but what is the speed limit going to be?
So you don't get caught with buying a car that goes 200 miles an hour and the
speed and the speed limit 65.
So I'm sure it's top of mind for him.
But it also seems like there's the flip side of this.
Like this story is being told from the perspective
of the bare case of China going wrong for Nvidia.
But there's also the flip side, which is Trump is clearly
reopening relationships with new countries, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar potentially,
and those are new markets as the diffusion rule gets phased
out and those are major, major drivers of GPU buying.
And if there's a star gate in every new country
that Trump visits and opens up diplomatic relations with,
rolls out some trade deal.
Another $50 billion for Jensen.
That's hugely incremental to engage the government.
Yeah, the other thing is Jensen is continuing to embrace,
and Nvidia are continuing to embrace China.
I mean, they're setting up new, they're
investing more in this facility in Shanghai,
more into on the ground R&D. So it doesn't feel like,
well, Jensen is having to sort of massage the relationship with the White House.
He's not pulling back from China
in any meaningful way that I can see.
Yeah, I mean, what's interesting is like,
we were talking to Aaron Ginn about this idea
of standardizing on the American AI stack.
And we were only talking about the jump ball countries.
It's like Saudi Arabia is gonna want GPUs.
Those are either gonna be from Huawei,
Ascend chips or Nvidia.
There's really no one else in the conversation.
They're either gonna be running Lama or OpenAI code
or DeepSeek and Manus. What's interesting is like, they're either going to be running llama or open AI code or deep seek and
manas. Right. Yeah. Um, what's interesting is like,
is there a world where standardizing on the American AI stack in China is the
right move? That's a very controversial thing to say, or even explore.
I think, uh, I probably default against it,
say or even explore, I think, uh, I probably default against it,
but I wonder if there's some sort of,
some sort of good ending there where,
where keeping China rely reliant on American technology is actually better than them developing their own tech tree,
like out competing, out competing competing Huawei in a free market could work.
I'm like 1% on that, but I wanna hear from other people.
Yeah, I mean, Jensen is finessing the situation.
I'm looking right now at the Polymarket largest company
end of 2025, and Nvidia is actually in the lead right now
at a 37% chance with Microsoft at a 36% chance.
Wow. So, people believe in the leather jacket man.
Anyway, let's take a quick second to tell you about Linear. Linear is a purpose-built tool for planning and building products.
Meet the system for modern software development streamlining issues projects
and product roadmaps go to linear app John asked me this week if we could also
use linear to plan and track our workouts we're gonna do this we're gonna
do this I didn't ask you for I told you what's gonna happen but you know using you know bodybuilding is you know potentially I'm sure linear would say you know that's not a core focus for small market small market but you know I think we can show them that that bodybuilding is you know potentially you know an entirely new opportunity.
Yeah, it's the next big tam expander for them, especially when you think about how linear has agents, you can have an agent constantly going out there finding the next trend in
science based lifting, figuring out exactly what workouts you should be doing, building
that into your linear plan.
Then you show up to the show up to the gym, just open your linear app, start checking
off the issues.
Oh, put in a ticket.
Oh, my delts aren't 3D?
My traps aren't in my head?
OK.
Kari's going to text us and be like, guys, guys,
I know it's funny, but please don't tell the market
that we're getting into bodybuilding.
But we can use it.
It's an open-ended tool.
And we're going to push it to the limits.
Yeah.
Other news and the information, Funds are for sale at a
discount. We were talking about this a little bit. 2025 was
supposed to be a year of cash windfall for venture capital
backers as coming up going public finally made the leap. We
were tracking some big deca corns that had hired CFOs that
had previously taken companies public. The IPO window
was supposed to be opening up, the market was ripping, then we had the tariffs news and the
IPO window kind of shut a little bit, now it's opening again, but there's still more demand than
ever for liquidity and so it looks like some funds are trying to sell. The taco meme is really putting
And so in the taco looks like some funds are trying to sell the taco meme is really putting
You know putting us in a precarious position that the Trump always chickens out
Whoever whichever journalist asked asked Trump about that to his face, you know potentially could be responsible for if
another freeze in the IPO markets, but
Hopefully not.
So. So the information writes, that hasn't happened
with roller coaster stock market
delaying many anticipated IPOs.
LPs and VC funds have been finding new ways
to cash out of their stakes in private tech firms.
Some are selling their ownership of VC funds.
The VC funds in turn have been putting
their own startup stakes up for sale.
That means ownership of hot startups like Stripe and Databricks are sometimes up for
grabs.
The takeaway, Nokia pension plans to sell, Nokia pension plan sells VC fund stakes, Lee
Fixell's family office sells dozens of early stage fund stakes, buyers hunt for fund stakes
at steep discounts.
And so this is kind of like a macro version of what Jeremy Kofan is doing right instead of targeting a single company
Targeting the actual fund stake and we also heard a little bit about maybe there would be pressure on
some of the some of the
educational higher ed LPs like if they're under pressure
Like nonprofit for-profit conversion like Harvard is kind of going to war with the Trump administration.
Would that lead to them needing to pull back from VC?
We haven't really heard that or seen that,
but it would be interesting to see these changing hands.
And I wonder what the final holder will be.
You could see someone creating kind of a roll-ups back,
or you could see someone creating a new fund,
but these ideas of a continuation
vehicles are not entirely new.
Yeah, I mean, it's totally normal and healthy for people
that hold certain assets to be willing to sell them
at a discount to what they believe the future value
or the terminal value of them will be.
And I don't think this is necessarily a bad thing.
It just historically wasn't as common in venture
because it wasn't as mature of an asset class
and there was faster timelines to liquidity.
But to me, all of this is normal.
It would be more concerning if, you know,
I'm sure there's funds out there that,
or LPs that would love to sell stakes in funds
that don't, where there's no actual ultimate buyer.
But if you're in quality funds,
there's always gonna be some ultimate value
for the LP stake.
And so it's just good to see.
Yeah, I wanna talk to someone who's running a company
that has a material stake from VCF And so it's just good to see. Yeah, I want to talk to someone who's running a company
that has a material stake from VC fund
from an early vintage that's well beyond
the 10 to 12 year hold period.
Because I remember talking to a founder
who had sold a number of businesses
and he was very successful in kind of telling me
this nightmare scenario where you raise
in 2010, your company's doing fine, but you're not IPOing, and then the venture fund that
you raised from needs to distribute shares.
And so all of a sudden you wind up with like 500 different individuals or LPs on your cap
table because the shares have been distributed.
And then you have to go public or that
Changes the way your your you're seen by the SEC and I've never heard of that actually happening
It's always just been this hypothetical nightmare scenario
But I wonder if there is something real to it if there was ever a real problem or if it was instantly solved by roll-up
Vehicles and kind of continuation vehicles or something like that, but I'd love to dig into that more. I don't know if you ever run into that.
Yeah, I mean, that's one solution. They can always sit in a single entity.
But yeah, anyway, let's go through some timeline.
Sarah Guo is highlighting some possible topics for the AI engineer keynote,
which I think we'll be covering next week. I thought it was an interesting overview of what
is the what the hot topics are in AI right now,
because we've moved past kind of the AGI doom scenario,
and we're getting into like the next era of discussions,
and we've been talking a lot about these.
We're kind of putting together an informal AI day next Thursday,
trying to book more people around AI that day,
but we will be having an official TBPN AI day soon
that we will announce.
But here are some interesting possible topics.
AI native UX, not chat skins,
vertical AI surge, healthcare pharma,
we're certainly seeing that at Sequoia,
multimodal frontier video, 3D audio,
obviously VO3 driving a lot of that,
retrieval and long-term memory.
I saw a funny take that somebody was like,
we've switched from retrieval and long-term memory. I saw a funny take that somebody was like, we've switched from retrieval augmented generation to
agents and the person was like, no, like you're
still augmenting the retrieval with text. It's the same
buzzword, but it's like you gave it a new buzzword and there's
a lot of this buzzword recycling going on. Synthetic data flywheels, obviously
super important robotics as we talked to Rob Taves about yesterday a lot of this buzzword recycling going on.
Synthetic data flywheels, obviously super important
robotics as we talked to Rob Taves about yesterday.
We'll be interesting to see if there are hard caps on how far
synthetic data takes you in different scenarios. agents that seem super promising but don't quite get there but at the same time we've seen major breakthroughs with deep research is I think the first real
breakthrough agent. What's your take on it? I had a funny experience last night I had as I was going to
bed I turned on my Matic robot. Oh yeah. I was telling it to mop and vacuum and mop
and I turned it on and and it was like 17 hours remaining
because it needed to like basically vacuum the whole house and then like
figure out which areas to mop. I was like this thing is just gonna run all
night I was like honestly I feel I'm sorry I feel like I should pay you or
something Matic it's kind of weird that you're doing all this work.
And then I actually woke up in the middle of the night
to the noise that was outside my bedroom.
And I was like, OK, I'm actually.
And then I actually went and turned it off.
But it was interesting to think we've
had people on the show talking about this concept of 10 minute
AGI right now, where you can have an agent do
an incredible amount of work for 10 minutes, but getting to this point where you can give an agent do an incredible amount of work for 10 minutes, but getting to this point
where you can give an agent a task
and then have it be so robust that it can just
operate autonomously for hours and hours and hours and hours
and even days.
And I think that's where things are
going to get really exciting on the purely digital side.
Yeah, I saw that video that the team sent of the Matic robot
cleaning our studio.
And I was very proud.
It was handling the cables pretty well.
I was surprised by that.
Usually we throw them off.
You think that the cables would defeat it, but no way.
Yeah.
Cell scale digital twins in programmable biology.
Excited to hear more about this.
It still seems a little bit early from the folks we're talking to but obviously exciting and
the the
Jacob from new limit. I had a pretty solid
Yeah case for for some of this stuff and and sort of their edge on the data side. Yeah
Compute geopolitics world models. We're having someone next Thursday talking
about world models.
And Fei-Fei Li is also working on world models,
which is very interesting.
And then RL environments that actually generalize.
All cool stuff.
And you know what else is cool?
NumeralHQ.com, sales tax on autopilot.
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Benchmarks here today.
We just had somebody send us a cold email earlier.
I didn't get quite a chance to look at it,
but they included, they said, they typed a sentence
and then said benchmark series A.
Really?
That's amazing.
I love it.
Good way to signal that they actually listened to the show.
We got a post here from Maddie Pally.
I threw this in this morning.
In 30 years, I'll probably be up to some boomer stuff,
like, no son of mine is marrying an LLM.
Marriage is between two humans only.
And my kids will be like, OMG, dad, you're so robophobic.
17K.
Crazy real, for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah, no I
It's funny that even even
Think the kids that are being born today. Well very likely have conversations like this which is
Absolutely wild yeah, I like this homies in the chat will be dropping nice AIGF no robo ridiculous.
Anyway, speaking of other robo,
robo nonsense, Mike Solana says we were supposed
to have flying cars and his recent calls
is just robo callers getting spam.
It's like six calls in the span of five minutes.
It's so brutal.
Brutal.
There is a service. I don't know if I should directly plug them. It's so brutal. I there is a there is a
service I don't I don't know if I should directly plug them no
more robo. There's a couple apps that you can get that you can
install and there's also the iOS functionality to reduce if you
go into like the phone app, you can you can tell it like, hey,
I like really want to screen calls. And then also I think I
have my phone and do not disturb all the time. and you can only get through to me and actually like ring
the phone. If you're in my contacts list, otherwise you have to text me first.
And so like there's a whole bunch of things that you need to do to kind of
prevent this from being annoying, but it's still just like ridiculous. My,
my take was we really need to come up with a, uh,
a new phone number system that's like a crypto address, like a hash,
because there's only what, like 10 billion phone numbers.
And so you can just robocall them all, and it's not that expensive to do
if every call is one cent or whatever. You can just call every
human and just test them all, and I'll test every number.
But if you had this really complex hash where there's now
like quintillion possible phone numbers, it's like, yeah,
it's probably going to be hard to remember.
But once I give you my number, you're
going to be able to call me.
And people are going to be able to randomly guess
my phone number.
So I don't know.
We need something because it's bad.
What's your take?
We need something. Yeah, I just don't pick up the phone because it's bad. What's your take? I need something.
Yeah, I just don't pick up the phone. Unless it's somebody I want to talk to.
And then I pick up as fast as I can.
This ad went pretty viral from
Zoran, Mom Donnie.
He's running for mayor of New York.
And he's got a bold pitch.
Freezing the rent.
Price controls.
Price controls.
You love it.
I saw somebody compare this to somebody running
for student body president or whatever
and they're just like free lunch.
Free lunch for everybody.
I know people say there's no free lunch
but we're doing free lunch.
If I'm elected, free lunch.
Yeah, yeah, so tech was pretty against this.
Patrick Collison posted just a really quick
screenshot of chat. GPT. It says AI is getting pretty good. He says, uh, does rent control tend to
help or hurt cities? Summarize your answer in one objective, pithy and blunt 280 character assessment.
Uh, and the responses rent control is a short-term shield for incumbent tenants and a long-term
poison for cities.
Caps freeze rents for the lucky few
but choke new construction, shrink supply,
jack up market rents, misallocate housing,
and shift costs onto everyone else.
Good politics, bad economics.
And so this is kind of the general consensus
that rent controls are bad.
I wanted to offer some bull case for this.
So first off, people are saying, oh, prices are going to go up, there won't be any new construction, housing prices are going to go up. But if price controls really spread, and then there's a kind of cultural revolution type like mass famine and and the population declines by like 90% because everyone's dying, well, then there might be so much housing that the price of housing falls for the remaining that made it through the family
The original cap prices fall. Yeah, exactly. And so
Counter intuitively it could be an interesting way to drop prices if you're okay with everyone dying of famine
Yeah, so Ron just might be thinking in decades while exactly, you know thinking more immediately exactly and then I like is
the other bull case is
If you hate New York, and you're pro
California pro la like we're we're pro Hollywood
I don't really care about New York City
So I might be donating a ton of money to this guy to try and destroy New York City so that everyone all the best
People in New York have to move to Hollywood and hang out with me
Yeah, I wouldn't be surprised if you have SFVC's in New York, VCs sort of,
you know, yeah, basically funding the the the politician that they think is most
gonna damage that startup market to try to get themselves a little edge.
I like this guy Nikita Beer I saw in the comments on Zoran's post saying that you know he he said that housing should be free you capitalist pig
That's true, and so didn't go far enough yet didn't his own
Really got mugged by Nikita. Yes, Ron and and and the silence from from Zoran on Nikita's response
Has been deafening to say the least.
Yeah.
Anyway, so silly.
Anyway, we got to tell you about public.com investing
for those who take it seriously, multi-asset investing,
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Let's go to Deleon.
He says, as a private pilot,
my favorite part of this season of the rehearsal
is that while it's an objectively a hilarious show, Nathan Fielder is also pointing out an
incredibly critical pilot training issue that seems to be a regular
contributing case to crashes, cause to crashes, including the DCA crash and
Kristoff asked him what the pilot training issue was and Deleon said first
officers not being comfortable with pushing back against a captain they
think is making a mistake. I think this is funny because I was watching the show
the first couple episodes I haven't finished it but the like he identifies
this and he's like half joking half serious but telling just like no it is
real it's real and so it's this interesting way where I actually could
see this comedy show having an effect on FAA
regulation and actually increasing safety.
He's doing good for the world through his comedy.
It's amazing.
It is.
Everybody should go and watch it.
It is some of the most entertaining, probably
the best show I've seen this year. Yeah, I was watching a little bit of the original first season of Nathan for You last night
and I was crying laughing about when he goes into that interview and he has the comedian
telling him what to say and he's like, oh yeah, like my mom passed away and the guy
asks him like how and he just says like in the war.
He's like, in what what war like the Iraq war he's like what are what what branch of the
service was she in and then he has to say he was his mom was fighting for the
Iraqis Saddam's army it's just like absolutely I went back and watch I don't
remember what season or episode it was, but there was
the bit where he's helping, he's giving advice to a woman who has a pet shop, who wants to
increase business.
So he goes and helps and he basically gives the advice to the woman that, you know, what's
the right moment to try to get in front of a future pet owner or somebody that's about
to, you know, buy a new pet.
And his idea is to go to a pet cemetery
and get the biggest possible tombstone.
And so he works out a deal with the owner
of the pet cemetery where he basically gets the guy
to agree that for like $1,000, like one time payment,
he can erect like, you know,
like six foot by four foot
You know tombstone, and so it's just like this pet cemetery
It's like we're sorry for your loss like this tombstone is brought to you by you know what?
Very very on brand for us pro pro advertising for sure yeah, that's great
Yeah, it's a classic show. Go go go watch all
of the other show.
Now that we're talking about it,
Mountain Head releases,
I believe on Saturday around
5 p.m.
It's by Jesse Armstrong, who
obviously created Succession.
Mountain Head is
seems to be based on the all in
podcasts loosely,
but it's a group of billionaire
friends get together against the backdrop of a rolling international crisis
so I'm looking forward to
I'm looking forward to watching this over the weekend sounds amazing. Let's go to this post from Kevin Kwok
He says when exactly did the flip happen that all announcements have to be videos that flipped really fast
What do you think it was the it was us? Did we do it? Can we take a victory lap? I
Mean we've been doing video announcements for four years already
Yeah, we we use he's heavily in 2021, but I also feel like they were popular then
I also still think there's incredible alpha and just creating an amazing text post you can get the same
It doesn't give you the level of like depth to like really deliver brand. I think in the same way that a video does
But I honestly think a extremely well-written text post
Assuming you can even there's potentially a hack to just include a lot of M dashes
So you get a bunch of comments from people being like,
you use Chess GPT for this.
And then that will actually boost the posts
and the algorithm.
So there's potentially alpha and plain text,
write it yourself, but make it look like
it was fully AI generated.
But these things flip back and forth.
I definitely see videos now where I'm like,
okay, this is based on like the 2023 launch
meta.
Yeah.
And yeah, I'm excited to see what comes down the line.
Yeah, I think the new meta that that like that comedy video from that YC company, just
saw a deal That was fantastic. But that one that was really good was from Zipline,
where it didn't have the same like hard tech, insane, like
free bird, kind of like vibe real with American flags. It was
this like, sun drenched, high saturation, it felt like it was out of a Linklater film.
And it was just this beautiful pastoral illustration
of what life could be with Zipline.
And I thought it was really beautiful.
Yeah, I think where I would like to see video goes is go
are if you don't have any, if you're not trying
to make people feel something,
just explain really clearly what you're doing in a text post.
Don't try to make this like, vibrial.
If you're trying to entertain, inspire, et cetera,
like if that really is your goal,
then video can be the right form factor.
And we saw that with that sort of humorous video
from the YC Company.
And then there was another company called Spawn
that went super viral a while back
for basically saying that they took the team
and just lived in Europe for a few months.
And that was one where I couldn't really quite tell
if they were being serious or joking.
And that's part of maybe what made it go so viral.
And then you have the Cluelet.
Where you can go make half a million dollars a year
making videos, at Cluelet.
So great opportunity.
Potentially clickbait, who knows if that's real,
but certainly entertaining.
I think the question of the Vibreel is,
it worked for us early on because we were trying
to create a brand
specifically. And I think a lot of companies, they obviously,
like a brand is important to every company. But like,
I would say like most B2B SaaS companies are not necessarily brand led or they're
not exclusively brands versus if you are building a fashion or media or,
or nutrition company or something that has
like badge value that like expressing the brand and building the brand world. We have
this example of like, of like, you know, you know, it's a brand when you can immediately
say like, what is the car associated with that brand? The classic example is like, if
Nike built a hotel, you would know exactly what that hotel would look like.
It would have posters of Michael Jordan on the wall.
The gym would be insane.
Like you could buy the shoes there.
It would feel Nike branded.
Now if Hilton made a shoe, you'd be like, what does that mean?
And so Hilton 100s.
But like, does Hilton really need a brand as big as Nike or as clearly defined as Nike and so for it's kind of like
If you're if you're building a product that's not necessarily needs to be brand-led forever
You don't necessarily need to ape into let's do a brand
Vibrial to really tell people what our brand is if it's gonna be just like I'm just a software company and the value prop is
What the value prop is? Yeah, totally
Anyway, nothing has a clear value prop than 8 Sleep.
I've been missing mine while I'm on the road.
It's pain, but you can get yours at 8sleep.com.
They have a five year warranty, 30 night risk free trial,
free returns, free shipping.
How did you sleep last night, Jordy?
I was...
Historic numbers?
Historic numbers, eight hours, 18 minutes.
What?
99. Huge. Huge. Congratulations. Historic numbers historic numbers eight hours 18 minutes. What 99 huge huge
Congratulations. Yeah, that was despite being moderately interrupted because I let my Matic work too hard overnight. I did that to myself. Oh
Well, well we have a we have a post from ad quick then we'll give you an ad read for ad quick ad quick
They have a new ad quickick co-pilot.
You can generate AI ideas for your out of home campaigns.
Yeah, so what's interesting about this to me
is AdQuick obviously has a, you know,
you can go into their application
and figure out how you basically build a campaign
off of that, but a lot of my experience with out of home
is like you want it to be conversational.
It's like, okay, here's the general areas
where we wanna be.
What inventory is available these dates?
Okay, what does that inventory actually look like?
What are some examples?
And so you can build a campaign
in a sort of conversational way,
which makes a lot of sense.
So go check it out,
even if you're not ready to run a campaign,
it's a good idea to get a sense of what these will actually
look like, what budgets will look like,
and all that kind of thing.
Yeah, and just strategically, this is like the classic
AI cherry on top business.
They're not pivoting to AI, they're just giving people
a different way to interface with their proprietary
data set, right?
Because this is something that you can't just go to chat GPT for because they have
So home advertising made easy and measurable good ad quick comm say goodbye to the headaches about home advertising
We need we got a massive size gong. Yep for Michael Dell
One of the greatest ever do it in q1 we received
12.1 billion dollars in AI orders surpassing the total shipments for all of fiscal year 2025
and leaving us with a backlog of $14.4 billion.
If John, if you were here, I'd be hitting the size gong,
but I'm just hitting it in the air here.
Pretty amazing, interesting story.
I didn't realize that Michael Dell was back in the,
is he back in the weeds?
Oh, he's CEO.
I didn't, how did I not realize that he was still CEO?
He'll take private, go public again.
He's been an absolute tear.
Wow, wow, dark horse, dark horse.
It's so cool on his LinkedIn.
It says, Chairman and CEO of Dell Technologies, 41 years, dark horse. It's so cool on his LinkedIn.
It says, chairman and CEO of Dell Technologies, 41 years, four months.
It started when he was like 18 or something, 19.
So good.
So incredible, incredible.
Anyways, congrats to the Dell team on the milestone.
Congrats, yeah, and makes sense.
I mean, they don't fabricate GPUs,
they're not in the energy side, but obviously they're building large racks Yeah, and makes sense.
in the AI boom, it's a company that you haven't heard about for a while, but networking gear is obviously
extremely important in AI context
as you're networking together all these data centers.
And so Cisco's also a beneficiary of the AI boom.
So diving in, revisiting these companies
that are so historically significant is fascinating.
There's a great Founders episode on Michael Dell
that you should go check out if you wanna hear
about Michael Dell's approach to entrepreneurship.
So check that out.
I don't know if we can sing.
I think singing over Zoom just doesn't work.
So we're just going to have to say, wander.
Find your happy place.
Book a wander with inspiring views,
hotel-grade amenities, dreamy beds, top-tier cleaning,
24-7 concierge service.
It's a vacation home, but better folks.
And we'll be back on Monday with a song, a full rendition.
We have to go hit the track with John Andrew, too. Oh want to see I want to see how he performs Laguna Seca
You think dog? He's an absolute dog. I think he keeps his
track cars in
Texas if I remember correctly, but anyways that will be a great story when the time comes
Under in Texas go visit him race him
We got a post from Chris
How he's Chris Pike Pike Pike Pike
He has a new post he dropped the end of software on May 31st
2024 yep, he's got a new post called the dawn of infinite code, and I mean he's plays X on
Different I was about to say he's the link and he
Still does numbers so he has a new article the dawn of infinite code all started off says Sam Mateo
2005 three founders add an upload button to their video hosting website in an office that smells faintly of pepperoni
Everywhere 2025 a person types an idea presses enter in a network of agent agents compiles tests and executes in the end of software I pause the zoo seemed immaterial this was the harbinger of doom for the
media industry but that was a point it proved that content had become too cheap
to meter now the dam has broken with code prompts produce prototypes that
once required a team in a sprint as transformative as broadcasting from your bedroom was
Anyone can now ship their ideas and you know what?
immediately comes to mind is we have
Somebody visiting us at the studio today that built an entire app based on TBPN yesterday
Randomly had the idea
And sent it to us this morning. I think it's at TBPNguests.com.
Yeah, that's right.
TBPNguests.com is an amazing, cool-looking website
that ranks every single guest that we've had,
including gives you timestamps and breaks down the topics
that it covers.
So very cool. this was built yesterday,
extremely impressive and probably wouldn't have been
possible to build something as cool and beautiful
this quickly.
It would take a lot longer for sure.
So anyways, continuing Chris Pike's post,
he says, web 2.0 gave everyone a single verb upload
and it vaporized newsrooms everywhere.
AI gives us a new one, Describe,
and the 500-person single-feature company goes poof.
The work shifts from syntax to intent.
Instead of writing software line by line,
we define what it should and let models handle the show.
And what about distribution?
Don't software companies have robust sales
and marketing teams?
Yes, as newspapers with paper routes and circulation numbers
when free competes with free for distribution, paid distribution loses badly.
At first, these models will rely on a set of default environments and stacks determined by a legacy training set.
But defaults change as options multiply the decision of where and how code runs will be handled by algorithms.
We already accept this logic elsewhere.
TikTok decides what we watch.
Spotify decides what we hear.
The system is opaque.
The results are good.
So we scroll.
When the flood of code arrives,
we won't ask for explanations.
We'll reward speed.
Convenience will outrank transparency.
The systems that earn our trust through responsiveness
will hold the power once reserved for operating systems. As cost curves come down, we chase scarcity up the
stack. It starts with compute, still mostly centralized, but already seeping to the edge
as local models take up residence on laptops and phones. Above that lies context, the habits,
preferences and history that let a model anticipate us better than any public corpus ever could and
Finally trust credibility earned over time determines whether an agent has the right to choose on our behalf
Once we arrive at full trust active choice becomes a burden
Do you want to continue?
After 2010 have never opened a newspaper so they may never open applications
have never opened a newspaper, so they may never open applications. History shows the vessel always fades once the payload can flow without it. Newspapers yielded to websites,
CDs to streaming. Software in its current circumscribed form is the next container on
the chopping block when logic can be summoned and stitched together on demand. The container
evaporates and only capability remains.
That's the real end of software, not the death of code,
but the moment the container dissolves,
utility unboxed everywhere and all at once,
and all at once infinite capability, infinite code.
And very interesting.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a fun narrative.
I wonder where, if there will be, there's a fun narrative.
There's a big question about discovery. How will people discover these VibeCoded apps?
Distribution seems to be king. We saw that with Levels.io.
He was able to VibeCode. He had a very different outcome from the random VibeCoder who wants to share a link on X
unless you're Chris Pike apparently and you're not shadow banned from posting links.
Good links will break through, of course.
And of course you can always do a viral video that announces your website and pitches it
and then gets people to go there even if they have to open up a new tab.
But distribution will be king, important like the the value of actually Coming up with unique ideas and that creates value even if the instantiation of that value happens very quickly via vibe coding. Yep
Anyway, let's tell you about bezel go to get bezel comm your bezel concierge is available now to source you any watch on
The planet seriously any watch
Check it out, and I want to close out with this post from Guillermo Rao, the founder of Versal, who's been on the show.
The only durable moat in technology
is relentless execution.
And we got Molly O'Shea in the comments,
or violent execution.
I like that.
But this relates to the previous Chris Pike post, right?
That as the barriers to entry come down,
the winner is the one who executes relentlessly, right?
And we see this all over the place.
And I would put an image in people's minds,
relentless execution is like a golden retriever
chasing a tennis ball, right?
That's a good metaphor.
No matter what is in their way,
no matter what gets in their path
or presents challenges to getting that tennis ball
they're going to relentlessly charge at it until they get it and bring it back to you and
That is kind of like I think the right framework to be to approach life with right?
Golden retriever is not, you know rabid
Foaming at the mouth, you know being you know a poor sport. They're just you know, joyful, you know, rabid foaming at the mouth, you know, being, you know, a poor sport.
They're just, you know, joyful, you know, relentlessly chasing that tennis ball.
And so I hope everybody brings that energy to the rest of their work week.
I agree. I agree. Go have a golden retriever weekend, everyone.
This has been a fantastic show. Thanks for tuning in.
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