TBPN Live - WWDC Reactions, Jobs Up Stocks Down, VC Horror Stories | Will Marshall, Baroness Dambisa Moyo, Samuel Hume, David Kirtley, Pete Florence, Jordan Bramble

Episode Date: June 8, 2026

(01:13) - WWDC Reactions (19:30) - Jobs Up Stocks Down (23:45) - VC Horror Stories (40:40) - Will Marshall, co-founder and CEO of Planet, discusses the company's mission to make global cha...nge visible and actionable through a fleet of over 200 Earth-imaging satellites that capture daily images of the entire landmass at approximately 3-meter resolution. He explains their vertically integrated approach, building custom components for their satellites, and highlights applications such as detecting methane leaks, monitoring deforestation in the Amazon, and assisting in disaster response. Marshall also touches on their diverse clientele, including defense and intelligence sectors, commercial industries like agriculture and energy, and recent capital-raising efforts to secure the company's long-term future. (57:45) - Baroness Dambisa Moyo is a Zambian-born economist, author, and investor who serves as a member of the UK House of Lords and sits on the boards of major corporations like Chevron, Starbucks, and Conde Nast. She discusses the critical role of corporate boards in strategic oversight, CEO selection, and societal engagement, emphasizing the importance of adaptability and partnership with governments, especially in the context of emerging technologies like AI. Moyo also highlights the need for companies to balance risk-taking with long-term sustainability, drawing from her extensive experience on boards of both longstanding and tech-based organizations. (01:27:16) - Samuel Hume, a medical doctor, scientist, and co-founder of Somatic Labs, is dedicated to advancing the frontiers of medicine and science. He discusses the challenges in biotech, particularly the impact of patent cliffs on pharmaceutical companies, and highlights the promising results of the RASolute 302 trial, where the investigational drug daraxonrasib nearly doubled overall survival in patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer. Additionally, Hume introduces Somatic Labs' efforts to expedite drug development by automating systematic reviews using AI, aiming to reduce the process from years to mere hours. (01:43:25) - David Kirtley, co-founder and CEO of Helion Energy, discusses the company's recent $465 million Series G funding round and the development of their seventh-generation fusion system, Polaris, in Washington state. He explains Helion's unique approach to fusion energy, focusing on direct electricity extraction from fusion reactions to achieve high efficiency and scalability. Kirtley also outlines plans to build a 50-megawatt fusion power plant for Microsoft by 2028, emphasizing modular, scalable systems for rapid deployment and global impact. (02:00:51) - Pete Florence, co-founder and CEO of Generalist AI, has an extensive background in robotics and AI, including a PhD from MIT and experience as a Senior Research Scientist at Google DeepMind. In the conversation, he discusses his journey from academia to industry, highlighting his collaborations with co-founders Andy Barry and Andy Zeng, and their collective decision to establish Generalist AI to advance general-purpose robotics. Florence emphasizes the company's focus on developing versatile robotic systems that extend beyond humanoid forms, aiming to address a wide range of applications through scalable AI models and innovative data collection methods. (02:23:26) - Jordan Bramble, CEO and co-founder of Antares Nuclear, discusses the recent successful criticality demonstration of their advanced reactor design, the Mark-0, at Idaho National Laboratory (INL). This milestone, achieved under the U.S. Department of Energy's Reactor Pilot Program, marks the first privately developed advanced reactor to go critical in the U.S. in decades. Bramble emphasizes the significance of this achievement in revitalizing America's nuclear industry and highlights the collaborative efforts with INL and the DOE that facilitated this success. (02:46:22) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions TBPN is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comPublic - https://public.comCisco - https://www.cisco.comConsole - https://www.console.comCrowdStrike - https://www.crowdstrike.comFigma - https://www.figma.comMongoDB - https://www.mongodb.comNYSE - https://www.nyse.comRailway - https://railway.comShopify - https://www.shopify.com/Follow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You're watching TVPN. Today is Monday, June 8th, 2026. We are live from the TVPN Ultramm, the Temple of Technology. We're back in the Forger's of Finance. We're back with the capital of capital. It's so good to be back. It's so good to be back, and it's also so good to tell you about ramp.com. Time is money.
Starting point is 00:00:18 Say both. These are used corporate cards, bill payments, accounting, and a whole lot more all in one place. Oh, the soundboard with the stinger, with the ad read, chef's kiss. Chef's kiss. WWDC, also chef's kiss, long overdue, two years, two WCCs ago, we were talking about Apple intelligence, and it's all finally coming together. The package is finally being delivered. I think the response has been really good. Some of the guys on the team have been watching WWC already. We have a bunch of folks calling in to discuss WWC throughout the week, but let's give you the high level first. Go through some of the immediate reactions, and of course we'll be covering that throughout this week. So Apple's annual worldwide developers conference started. today and it runs through Friday. Tim Cook just kicked it off with an opening keynote. The theme for this
Starting point is 00:01:06 year's conference is all systems glow. All systems glow. Interesting. Anyway, we're finally getting answers about what the next version of Siri will look like. I think expectations expectations are in a weird place. They're high.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Everyone's expecting like this next version of iOS, which is what they're demoing. That's the main thing of the software version. This isn't an iPhone. event. This isn't a hardware event. This is WWDC about the software. Everyone's expecting that the software will go through an actual transformation and the next version of Apple software will be good and people will be talking about how good it is because they will deliver on a bunch of things. At the same time, expectations aren't so high like going into Apple Vision Pro where people are expecting a breakthrough
Starting point is 00:01:52 that's no one, no other company has ever done before. All people are asking for is implement the best practices from chat chbti jemini claude like the stuff we know and love even grok has like nicely interfaced into x where like people say hey grok is this real and it just pulls it up for you i find myself on tweets just going oh yeah like i don't want to copy this text out and into another llm app i'm happy just asking grok real quick for an extra detail or one more fact google search overuse like there's been a lot of a i diffusion into products that's been good even ramp like ramp has like chat interface where you can just say like, hey, how much do we actually spend on Amazon last month and it'll just pull it up for you? And it's not like this revolutionary ASI-I-I thing. I think it's just like,
Starting point is 00:02:38 nice tool. I think they did a good job just letting the hype build or the interest build organically, right? You rewind a year or two ago. They were running billboards for Apple intelligence, for GenMogy, all this stuff. So really setting themselves up for failure. So that stuff was overhyped. And I think this And they were a part of a, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, they were, like, are we goaded? Yeah, but it seems like they have the right partnerships and the, and the right, like, product strategy at this point. People are familiar with these tools. So just putting them in different places seems reasonable. Models are good now. So make them available at the click of a
Starting point is 00:03:17 button. Ideally, the Siri button, which has been completely nerfed for the last two years. Actually, more than that, because Siri has, has never really seen the adoption or lost. product love that many other products have seen. And users will be happy. So Google AI search overviews are a good example. It proved that rolling out LLMs, rolling out LLM responses and LLM generated text, it can be nerve-wracking, but it's not rocket science.
Starting point is 00:03:45 Like you spit the text out where people expect the answer. There will be funny viral hallucinations. Like right now, even with all the crazy Google I.O. news, amazing 3.5, 3.5. foundation models, like they're doing really good stuff. Deep Minds, really good, great team. Like you still say disregard and instead of just giving you the definition, it says like, okay, got it. I won't, I won't do that anymore. And it gets confused. So there will be those like viral like jockey. Wow, it failed. It flopped. That's going to happen to Apple. And that's not
Starting point is 00:04:17 what Apple likes to deal with. Not at all. But I don't think any of that will show up in the user metrics. I think that, you know, churn and usage will be unaffected from the viral moment of like, oh, Apple, like the Apple text summaries, they're hilarious and they often hallucinate and get things wrong. You still keep them on, though? I left them on. I don't mind them. And I think a lot of times they're sort of useful, and they're always delightful because they're funny because they're so, like, hallucinatory. But your PR team will have many heart attacks, though, because you're not in the world of dementia. deterministic outputs anymore.
Starting point is 00:04:55 So that's going to be a big cultural shift for Apple, I think, in this non-deterministic stochastic AI era. But I think that they can get through it just by running best practices that have been established for a year or two years in the rest of the AI world. The other big questions that everyone's asking around, Ben Thompson's circling around this, open ecosystems. So will Apple lean into the open claw Mac mini boom at all?
Starting point is 00:05:20 That would be interesting to see, say, you know, in the next version of the software that goes on the Mac Mini, hey, we're going to embrace OpenClawe're going to embrace AI agents, we're going to do things that make those tools more effective in our ecosystem. You already know and love the hardware. You're buying it nonstop, it's out of stock, but we could do more to lean into that community, or we could do less.
Starting point is 00:05:42 We could say, hey, we're going to shut it down. We're worried about privacy. These are the two tensions that they're going to have to deal with. Will there be a pivot around vibe coding apps in the iOS app store? You asked John Gruber from Daring Fireball this when he joined the show on May 29th. Fantastic interview. Had a ton of fun with the Grubinator. But it's a big question.
Starting point is 00:06:01 And it's something that Apple is maybe they don't really have to respond yet. They're pretty quiet when things happen. They usually go and solve the problem. Oh, they really don't want to talk about it. Yeah, but eventually they start. Like, they didn't want to talk about climate change, but then they did a bunch of things to get to like net zero. and eco-friendly buildings and solar panels on the roof and stuff.
Starting point is 00:06:25 And then once they did, they were really noisy about it because they were like, we are carbon neutral or we will be by a certain day. And I think once they figure out how to make money on it, then they'll start. Which they should. Which, yeah, I fully, I will say, I fully support. Exactly. So there's other questions. Will native iOS apps from other AI labs have more access to iPhone functionality?
Starting point is 00:06:48 What's the pathway for chat, GPT, interfacing, God, Gemini, if you're using those apps, how many hooks are there? Will they be able to siphon in your text messages? If you click, yeah, I want to share my text messages, my I message with my app of choice, or will you need to say yes every single time, which will be a huge burden to having that integration happen? There's a lot of social media apps that say, hey, we want access to your whole camera role. All of it forever. And that's somewhat intimidating.
Starting point is 00:07:21 You get a number of different options. You can say, I want temporary access. Just take this photo. You can't see my whole library. Now, people trust many people. Maybe they just don't know, but they feel like they trust a lot of these maps. So they just take the whole camera roll. Sort of a crazy thing to do that they can just download your entire camera roll if you press that button.
Starting point is 00:07:40 But people have. And so what will the AI version of that be? And how deep will it be and how much will it build on top of the Siri app intense functionality versus other APIs that are deeper in the iOS ecosystem. So lots to dig into and I excited to talk to some guests. There's one last thing, which is we, I mean, we talked about how Apple doesn't want to address eco stuff until it's like, okay, we got it solved. And I'm wondering if in the coming years there's going to be pressure for some sort of
Starting point is 00:08:12 response on the whole like phones are reducing the fertility rate stats, because I don't know if you saw, but there was another research. paper that was posted, and Derek Thompson basically zoomed out and said that I wasn't convinced, and now he is convinced that it's like up to 30% of the reason for the recent decline below two. And I don't know where you said on. Below the replacement rate? Below the replacement rate. Not good if you're a fan of humanity and having a high population.
Starting point is 00:08:42 But that is something that you could see bubbling up to being something that big tech companies, social media companies, device manufacturers have to answer to when they're in like free form podcast basically. But you know that these companies are not going to want to address that as opposed to the AI CEOs that are like, oh, you want to talk about killing everyone? Absolutely. I'd love to talk about that for an hour. The PM of Denmark or what country was saying, it's time to return.
Starting point is 00:09:10 I'd rather my kid smoke. No, she specifically said I would rather let my kids smoke cigarettes than use an iPhone, which is crazy. But I don't know. maybe there's something there. Maybe the cure for cancer is right around the corner, but the cure for brain rod is not. It's possible.
Starting point is 00:09:25 Yeah, and it's such a different debate because, like, clearly a single drag on a heater is no good, right? You're ingesting poison. Yeah. A single look at a screen, right, is not what is, you know, reducing the fertility rate. So, anyways. It's interesting.
Starting point is 00:09:47 I don't know. I do wonder if how that pressure would bubble up. Like the way we have dealt as a society in America with those big questions before, before the era where every AI lab CEO goes on podcast and just talks about everything constantly, was in the hearings. So like a social media addiction trial or there is a privacy, you know, hearing on Capitol Hill and the senators all ask the, they bring in the leaders, from all the different companies, and they say,
Starting point is 00:10:19 we've heard that there's this problem, and we want you to answer our questions directly, and it's streamed on C-SPAN, and you can see that. And so, you know, that's where the famous Senator We Sell Ads quote comes from, from Mark Zuckerberg, and you could imagine that if there was an administration and a group of senators that were worried about the birth rate thing, and they believe that the phones were related,
Starting point is 00:10:42 they could bring in device manufacturer, social media executives, and actually ask them about that. Do you have data on this? So millions of people build software on top of the iPhone designed to addict people to capture as much of their attention as possible. The Wall Street Journal app for me. My screen time on the Wall Street Journal is through the roof. It's crazy.
Starting point is 00:11:02 It's crazy, John. But Apple can kind of sit back and just saying like, we're not trying to make the device addictive. We're trying to make it simple, easy to use. It's a utility. And truthfully, like Apple, I think all of the native apps, None of them are brain-rottie or addictive. They're very much like, this is the Maps app.
Starting point is 00:11:19 It helps you get there. Close it when you're done. And our business relationships is done. Just say you're not addicted to the calculator app. Yeah. They have so. But in general, their business model is not really aligned with like screen time necessarily. Although it is in the broader sense because if you're using this thing all the time,
Starting point is 00:11:37 you're like, uh, 2000 bucks, I use it 40 hours a week. You know, I can underwrite it like, you know, people buy an expensive bed. and they're like, I spend half my life on it or whatever, you know? Yeah, I always did think it was funny that there never ended up being the, you know, the $20,000 phone, which there would be a pretty big market for. A lot of it's just the technology. Like, $20,000 gets you like 5% more battery life because, like, you need a $10 trillion manufacturing facility to actually deliver any bump there. It's not like 10x the price gets you 10x the performance or 10x the, like you can't put a GB 200. in here. You can't put a Tesla battery in here. It just doesn't work. Anyway, let's go to some
Starting point is 00:12:19 reactions from WWDC, but first I'm going to tell you about console. Console builds AI agents that automate 70% of ITHR and finance support, giving employees instant resolution for access requests and password resets. So, Vives on Apple. iPhone. Yeah. I'm going to update your software tonight while you sleep. Next morning. iPhone says, I couldn't do it, bro. Just didn't feel right. Vive was off. This is something that I didn't know was so common, but I think everyone's been in this position, which is like a funny thing. I think it doesn't do with how much the battery is charged. But lots of low-hanging fruit, hopefully resolved in WBC.
Starting point is 00:12:56 I did see a whole bunch of stats about just little performance gains, 30% faster opening of the lock screen, 30% faster on opening this app and just little optimizations that I think will go a lot further when we talk to Mark German, he talks about how, like, the AI features are too abstract. People want battery life, cameras, beautiful screens, fast. Like, they want the basics most of the time. And so I think this is time to chop. It would be funny if they effectively threw up a model card. And they're comparing it's like, it's fine.
Starting point is 00:13:31 It's actually two percent. It's two percent better on. That's sort of what they do. You know the bento box, right? The bento box with like how many cameras, megapixels, flops, and how powerful the GPU is, how many cores are over here, how much storage it has. Like that graphic is their model card. We were riffed on this earlier.
Starting point is 00:13:51 Like when a product ceases to be sold on brand and is instead sold on performance, that's usually margin compression. Usually margin compression, like you comp it to cars. Like if you're purely buying on like range and price and speed and horsepower and seating arrangements, that feels much more commoditized than you got to have a Ferrari because it's a Ferrari. Don't ask about the specs. And I think for the luce, this is the first time that people were talking about like, oh,
Starting point is 00:14:20 zero to 60 and 2.5 for that price isn't actually that. It's like, that's not the conversation you should be having about Ferrari. You should just be like, it's a Ferrari. Stop next question. Like, do you want one or not, right? Yeah. Anyway, speaking of Mark German, hilarious post from Sam Henry Gold here. of course, in jest, but they put up an Apple press release in the newsroom. Apple announces the death of
Starting point is 00:14:44 Mark German. It is done. It is done. Apple today announced the completion of Operation One More Thing, a multi-year initiative to permanently end the unauthorized disclosure of Apple's pre-release product information by Bloomberg intelligence reporter Mark German. German, who had for 16 consecutive years obtained and published accurate details about Apple's products before their announcement has been neutralized. Operation one more thing was completed on schedule, on budget, and without complication. They're not that aggressive towards Mark German, but he is probably a thorn on their side. And here he is. He has a live blog up, live blog for WWDC. Go check it out at Bloomberg.com. Eric Sufer is leaning in. Why is he leaning in? Because Mark German says
Starting point is 00:15:24 something about WDBC says, in addition to the focus on AI, Siri, and major quality and performance improvements across the operating systems, I'd expect two other focal points to Today, privacy and safety features, I imagine Sufort is leaning in because privacy, safety features, not great for ad monetization. Usually you're hiding more information. Tyler, what's been your reaction generally? Take me through whatever. Yes.
Starting point is 00:15:50 I've been watching the last stream, it's still going on, so there's still releasing stuff. But I would say just on that point, they've been like every single time. Have you been studying? I was studying. Like every time they talk about a new feature with AI, they always say like, this is on a private cloud. This is like not public. This is like extremely secure. So they're really pushing on that point. I think. What is private cloud mean? I don't know. They're talking about like their own foundation models, I think. So they're trying to emphasize that. So it seems like they have
Starting point is 00:16:19 they said the word Gemini. I don't know if they said it, but it was on screen. So so it's, it seems like they have the ability with their deal with Gemini to basically white label, fine tune, mid-train, do whatever they need to, and then resell that with their own branding. That's a great deal. My question is, like, who's inferencing that? Because there's a billion iPhone users, and if they're all pushing the Siri button all day long, and they're anywhere near the frontier, that's a significant amount of inference. And has Apple built some sort of secret data center that can serve that?
Starting point is 00:16:58 Are they saying private cloud and really it's like a corner of GCP? Like, is it a bunch of Mac minis wire together? Like, what did they do to actually build that private cloud? Because even if they did it, even if they did it and didn't show up in the CAPEX numbers, didn't show up in any of the SEC filings, like it would show up in the emissions data and the ESG numbers because unless they have some crazy solar nuclear power, facility, where's that inference coming from?
Starting point is 00:17:31 I imagine some of it can be done on device. That's excited. Jonah says on device. Can it all be done on device? Tyler. I don't know. Groxon says they brought up rate limits and a subscription plan. Huh.
Starting point is 00:17:46 Okay. Yeah. I'll look for that. I mean, you don't have rate limits or subscription plan if it's on device because why would you? And then also, you would never say private cloud if you're doing it on device. You would just say it's on device. Of course it's private.
Starting point is 00:18:00 So private cloud. Cloud means not on device. It's in the cloud. And so obviously Apple has a lot of data centers. They have a lot of cloud capacity across their productivity suite. Where are the photos stored in iPhones? Like obviously those are stored in the cloud. They have a lot of storage.
Starting point is 00:18:19 Like everyone gets two terabytes when they get a phone. So they clearly have a lot of data center capacity. And they've done a lot to make that ESG compliant. But I'm very curious. about where that goes over time. Anyway, we should move on to the news from Friday. The stocks are already back up. But first, I'm going to tell you about CrowdStrike. Your business is AI. Their business is securing it. CrowdStrike secures AI and stops breaches. So. One more thing. Oh, sure. Apparently. One more thing, eh? One more thing. We got one more take from
Starting point is 00:18:51 Jordan about Apple. Jane says Apple concedes on liquid glass design. compromising for usability and shares a couple screenshots here. And so... Wait, so they're going deeper in liquid glass or pulling back from it? I saw the new Apple Maps icon and it looked pretty good. It had a little feature of liquid glass in there. I thought it looked cool as a design element. I did hear people complaining about the new Mac operating system being like too bright
Starting point is 00:19:24 or too dark or something, like some contrast issue. I haven't noticed it, but it was something I saw people complaining about. Anyway, Friday. Friday was a big day in the market. We were off, but the news kept moving. So we're covering it today. The Labor Department reported that the U.S. added a seasonally adjusted 172,000 jobs, and that the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3%.
Starting point is 00:19:48 So on the cover of the Wall Street Journal, U.S. hiring gathers steam, third straight monthly increase, slight decrease from the previous month, which was slight down from the previous month, but still in adding territory in the hundreds of thousands. So the bubble popped. The bubble popped. Friday was the worst day for the NASDAQ in more than a year, 4.2% down. It's over, but good news is that today we're back. We're up 1.5% now.
Starting point is 00:20:16 It's officially 2003. People ask what year it is. Reinflating. It's no, no, it's not reinflating. We're building back. The bubble popped. It's 2003 now. It's not 99.
Starting point is 00:20:25 It's not 2000. It's 2003. We're well past the bubble popping. Got it. So, but actually, quick explanation of what happened. So the U.S. labor market is really picking up 172,000 seasonally adjusted jobs added in May. Third month in a row. Decent amount.
Starting point is 00:20:42 A lot of health care stuff. For the World Cup? Yes. And a lot of travel and workers related to the World Cup stuff that's going on. Tourism. So this is terrible news for all those black-pilled AI leaders that have been. and preying, manifesting job losses, despite their Herculean efforts, they can't get the unemployment rate to go up at all. It's crazy.
Starting point is 00:21:03 They've been saying 10%, 20%, 50%, 100% of all jobs are going away. Good luck. Yeah, you're going to have to work harder because the U.S. economy is undefeated and the American worker is undefeated as evidenced by this latest jobs report. The AI job apocalypse is canceled at least for the month of May. We will see where things go. Of course, of course. But it is good news. We want hiring.
Starting point is 00:21:27 We want jobs to be abundant in our society. And so in general, it's good news. I believe the jobs report. I don't think the numbers are going to be massively revised down. I think that they're generally accurate and track with the ADP numbers and a lot of other numbers. So I think the jobs are really being added. They're not in all the most critical industries. There's a lot of nuance there.
Starting point is 00:21:51 How long will it go on? But in general, the economy is helpful. But inflation is rising. The closing of the Strait of Hermuz has spiked the cost of gas and overall prices have been increasing more quickly than the Fed would like for some time, even before the Strait of Hermuz, inflation was running a little hot. Yeah, well above the 2% target for basically as long as I've been an adult. Yeah. And so this makes the likelihood of a rate cut more unlikely. In fact, it looks like we might be in rate hike territory soon, which is of course not going to be.
Starting point is 00:22:23 for tech companies that have earning forecasts that stretch out into the next decade. So the silver lining in high rates, if you want some copium, is that at least the Fed has something useful in the tool chest in case the economy does slow down, you know, like we're running hot, we have high rates, at least there's room to cut to 3%, 2%, 1%, 0 if the market's selling off, if the unemployment rate's going up, you have something in the tank, whereas in During COVID, like the rates were already so low. There was a lot of unemployment all of a sudden. And it was just like stimulus, spend a bunch of money, you know, sent mail everyone
Starting point is 00:23:02 a check. There wasn't that much that the Fed could do. Yeah, there was a time that we couldn't imagine this level of speculation in the markets at something like where rates are right now, right? Yeah. People that were sort of born in the ZERP era. Yeah, yeah, yeah. With all the speculation right now is by itself an argument to raise rates.
Starting point is 00:23:23 Yeah, yeah, yeah, totally. Well, yeah, once the rates spiked off of like, like that 3% jump, like the end of ZERP, it was like, okay, like there will never be froth again, certainly. Certainly like tech stocks will never see meteor arises. A friend of mine Blake made bumper stickers that just said, please God, just one more bubble. And God delivered. Okay, so the other story, VC horror stories. This was kicked out by Greg Eisenberg.
Starting point is 00:23:52 I didn't realize that he was the one that started this whole thing and kicked the hornets nest and everyone came out of the woodwork with their VC horror stories. So he said he had a big discussion about founders' bad experience with venture capital and a number of high profile firms VCs caught strays. Mercor, CEO, Brendan Foody, detailed what he calls the Sequoia scam, which is something interesting we should actually dig into. Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince accused Vinod Kossela of offering to invest in his series C only if he would fire a few of the people at the pitch meeting who had just left the room momentarily to go to the bathroom. See, there was a separate, so Greg Eisenberg, I was really crossing wires here because Greg Eisenberg is the one who says, he says, I was once pitching in a boardroom at a top three VC firm for a $15 million series A.
Starting point is 00:24:42 That's pretty easy to narrow down. But anyway, he says 12 people in the meeting, one of the GPs fully fell asleep because some of the top, like, you know, FF doesn't have 12 GPs. And they don't really do partner meetings like this for $15 million series A. So even if you put them in the top three, you can't catch a stray here. Anyway, one of the GPs fully fell asleep, out cold for 30 plus minutes. Nobody acknowledged it. Everyone kept going.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Then separately, Matthew Prince. Okay. Founder or an operator falls asleep in the office because they're so tired because they're grinding so hard. And they're a hero. Yeah. This is what Paki said. When Elon falls asleep in the factory, it's nobody. deal. But when a VC falls asleep, it's the end of the world.
Starting point is 00:25:26 We're aware of some static in the Ultram. Yeah. I think we got a new, new mic line, but well, I'll try not to touch it and we'll see what happens. But so there's lots of chatter about the VC horror stories. Certainly, certainly a discussion worth having. You know, you gotta keep them in check. But Silicon Valley has always been so high growth in positive sum that relatively good behavior is usually the equilibrium. It's pretty rare that you get a really a really bad VC. Because even when a startup fails, investors can't write off the founder entirely because they might start the next generational company. And so they might wind up giving on a non-VC friendly sort of aqua-hire because they're like and help or like
Starting point is 00:26:10 help them land a paycheck somewhere, get a job, serve as a good reference. Maybe even fund the next product and the next company because they're just like, this is an iterated game. And and we don't want to have you on our bad side forever. Now, that doesn't mean, don't, like, they can't pass. And so there's basically this wide gap that I'm seeing in these discussions where there's VC pitch horror stories and then VC board horror stories. And I have much less sympathy for the former. Like, I don't really care about VC pitch horror stories all that much.
Starting point is 00:26:42 Because you can just pass. Because a lot of founders will have 50 meetings for financing. Yeah. You would expect at least a couple to just be terrible, right? The person didn't know who you were, didn't read the materials ahead of time, was rude. And you might want that person. Didn't show up. Didn't show up.
Starting point is 00:27:00 You might want a checked out VC who's just going to let you cook. And they're like, yeah, I see this purely financially. My team crunched the numbers. I'm in. But like, don't count on me to value ad. Like, I'm not going to be in the weeds with you every day. And then there's a different, there's a different VC who's like, I'm going to be in the office. I'm going to be your back office.
Starting point is 00:27:18 BCs will not even tell you, oh, I'm going to be grinding for you every day. I'm going to be helping you get all your key hires. They'll just tell you. They'll just tell the truth. One of my favorite VCs in the world just says, like, I give you money, and then I will help you raise more money. And that's the only thing I'm going to do. And that's fine.
Starting point is 00:27:34 And I'm going to be your friend. We'll get dinner now and then. But that's what you can expect for me. And that's exactly what he gives founders. And so everyone is like, this guy's great. Yeah. And then there's other firms that say, we'll help you with go to market. And they will.
Starting point is 00:27:47 there's other people that say we will help you with marketing and they don't and you just want to be transparent and accurate there. And so like as a founder, your job is to sell equity from time to time. Your job is to find buyers for that equity investors. Some companies actually only do that. That's true. They don't actually get it. They don't actually get it.
Starting point is 00:28:06 So your job is to find investors who want to purchase that equity with cash VCs. You need to reference check them beforehand. Make sure they're fit through, think through their competitive investments, keep them entertained and awake during the pitch. VCs shouldn't be disrespectful, like literally falling asleep is. But this is far from the worst thing that regularly happens in the course of growing a business. Yeah. And it's just interesting because, one, a bad VC pitch meeting, like you said, really doesn't matter. I don't remember any of them.
Starting point is 00:28:34 I'm sure they've happened. No company has died because a VC was like rude to them. No, no. It doesn't matter. And it also happens with customers, right? Totally. Sometimes a customer will just, oh, sorry, I didn't see the Zoom link. no show the call, right? You're not like all customers or, you know, or like a candidate will be like,
Starting point is 00:28:53 hey, I like took another role. Yeah. Right. And you're like, that doesn't mean the person's evil. It means like they're making the right decision. You win some and lose them. So I have a tip. I have a tip for all the entrepreneurs in the audience who are pitching VCs, particularly sleepy VCs. You got to analogize your business to an air horn. So you go to the VCs, the partnership, and you say, like this air horn here, do we have any, you have an air horn. Like this air horn here. Tyler, grab the air horn. With one simple button press.
Starting point is 00:29:23 You can do it. You can do it over there. Okay. So like this air horn. Everyone at home. Cover your ears. My business is like this air horn. Venture capitalists.
Starting point is 00:29:32 Don't put it in the mic. My business is like this air horn. One simple press. I'll amplify your business 100 X. Everyone's going to be paying attention. Because at any moment you might push this button and let out the loud. noise so they're not going to be falling asleep and if you and if they do you give them a little bit of this so loud it's really so loud so you got to bring the air horn to the VC pitch meeting you
Starting point is 00:29:58 got to fire it off every once a while if you can see some sleeves some droopy eyes let them know my business it's like an air horn I could push it at any time 10x your business 10x the revenues John was being an absolute menace this morning with the air horn. My customers love it. Yeah, the air horn, you can go get on. You think I might press it. See, you're not falling asleep. At any moment.
Starting point is 00:30:20 Yeah, we're all wide awake, John. We're all wide away. I might need to drive home the point that business is like an air horn. And at any moment, it could blast off like a rocket chip. So you've got to buy the stock now. You've got to invest. You've got to get me a term sheet. Because at any moment, at any moment, I could do it.
Starting point is 00:30:35 The team's so distracted, they can't even get the right camera. Rod me. Anyway, that's enough with the air horn. We use that randomly from time to time. I love Dylan coming in. We pitch for Figma's seed round in 2013. Most folks didn't get it, but everyone I met was super nice to me. Yeah, it's so funny when you compare, when you compare VCs to the other, like I said,
Starting point is 00:30:55 the other kinds of calls you have. VCs are probably like generally nice, way way nicer, right? Like a customer is less likely to like be overly friendly if they're not. interested in what you're selling, right? They're like, yeah, this like doesn't really seem like a, you know, doesn't really seem like a fit. Yeah. But, uh, or a regulator.
Starting point is 00:31:17 Brendan. Talk to any VC. Brendan from record. Talk to any founder who's dealt with a regulator. Like, look at like Brian Armstrong. He has he had any problems with VCs that match up with what he's dealt with on the regulatory side? Those meetings, everyone's asleep. And they're like, oh, yeah, like, we'll get your approval in the next decade.
Starting point is 00:31:33 And we're trying to, we're actually trying to shut your whole company. Yeah, exactly. Like, nobody. They're falling asleep. but as they're falling asleep, they're like, it's over. It's very rare that a VC is in a meeting with you and actively trying to kill your business. Every once in a while, they're like,
Starting point is 00:31:48 okay, I'm going to go fund a competitor because I don't like this founder. And that's just like the competitive dynamic. You're in the arena. But anyway. Brendan from her core, former guest and friend of the show, has a bone to pick with everyone. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:05 He's coming after YC. He's coming after Sequoia. He says, in the last six months, I've seen half a dozen rounds where Sequoia invests in two tranches. Everyone pretends they only did the higher valuation. Founders misrepresent this to their employees and then shop it to Angels two. Sequoia's blended price is blatantly deceptive, less than 50% of the one projected to the market. Yeah, so they'll invest at half a billion and a billion, two tranches, and then the founder will go out and say we raised 100 million at a billion, when really Sequoia got in at the blended price, right?
Starting point is 00:32:41 Now, that's not illegal. There's nothing wrong with that, and that can make sense for both sides for a variety of reasons. You don't want to misrepresent that, though. If you go and misrepresent that to another investor, and you don't tell them the actual structure of the deal,
Starting point is 00:32:57 that can be securities fraud. So that is a major risk. But that's not on the VC. Like, the VC should not go to another investor and say, oh, yeah, we just did the full deal at a billion, they should give that context. But that doesn't seem like... It's on the founder in the same way.
Starting point is 00:33:12 This is like classic, like all the crossover funds were doing this, tons of funds have done this. I mean, also this isn't some secret. Like, you go back to the original Sequoia YouTube investment memo and it's trunched and structured. Like, they've been doing this for 25 years and it's just like nobody read the manual or something because like if you actually study in no ball,
Starting point is 00:33:34 like you would know that structured investments exist. But at the same time, I don't put it on every employee who's getting stock options and thinking about the heat on a company and every journalist to understand that structure. So there is an impetus and responsibility. Yeah, very aggressive and unnecessary to call this a scam. A quote, Sequoia scam. Because Brendan also replied to his own tweet saying, just 30 minutes ago, after the post had gone viral. In fairness to Sequoia, this is common practice in the industry across all top. 1,000 likes on the other one.
Starting point is 00:34:06 Brutal. Brutal. Yeah. Yeah. Not super fair to Sequoia at all. I do think it's, I think, uh, yeah, employees. Employees should be aware of this and, you know, maybe ask the companies. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:23 It doesn't mean that it's not a great company to join. Yeah. Um, that's tough. Anyway, uh, Travis Kalanick said in 2001, I intercepted a partner to VC. he was trying to escape his office before our meeting was supposed to start. I ended up pitching him in his parked Lexus from the passenger seat. At one point, he grabbed my laptop, placed it on his large belly, which was pressed against the steering wheel, and rapidly flipped through the slides himself.
Starting point is 00:34:48 2001 fundraising hit different. I want to know how the story ended. Did he invest or not? Did he pull out his checkbook? Because maybe he was like, you got me, Travis, you know? Anyway, there's a lot of people that are going back and forth. I really, the worst part of this is that over the weekend, I was convinced because Matthew Prince talked about Vanode Kosla, who's coming on the show, by the way, and Matthew Prince is coming on the show. We're very excited to having both. Same day. The, I was convinced that it was Vinode who fell asleep. But it wasn't. That's a different thing. Greg Eisenberg's found VC at one of the top three firms, could be anybody, fell asleep. Vanode, what Matthew Prince is, is upset about is that there, There's something about he wanted to, you know, to redo the team, the founding team.
Starting point is 00:35:36 He was like, do you need all these founders? Maybe you need a different team. Which is like, it's a bold statement from a VC. It's like, would you switch up on your day once? First question. And you're like, no? Not even your day ones, your current business partners. Yeah, your current business partners.
Starting point is 00:35:51 For a new partner. It's sort of a crazy thing. At the same time, sometimes founding teams do go through changes. Sometimes it's the right move. I don't know. It's a little, it's a little, it's a little iffy. But, uh, Veno, you know, stands, uh, not guilty on the charges of falling asleep. Although I was getting ready to steal man it because I think as much as I love Cloudflare, Matthew Prince,
Starting point is 00:36:14 some details of content delivery networks might be a little boring. And so it's possible that an older man who's a legend and has done very well in Basting might fall asleep when he's hearing about the intricacies of delivering content across the internet. And we actually had a plan to test this theory. Tyler, do you want to take us through it? Yeah, well, so I was just looking at this. I found a study. Basically, it was they took a bunch of older men, 66 to 83.
Starting point is 00:36:43 This actually happened. They put them in a room where it was kind of a slightly dim room. Okay. There's not a lot of like simulation going on. Like a lot of VC offices. They're very shady. And they just sat in there and they read them CloudFlures S1. And they basically tested to see how long would it take them to fall asleep. And so the median was 36.9 minutes.
Starting point is 00:37:03 I feel like, okay, so. So if you, and here's the thing, a pitch, a pitch. Usually an hour. Well, sometimes, I mean, if it's an early pitch, early conversation, maybe it's 30 minutes. Maybe. If it's going well, it starts to drift over. Yeah. That's a danger zone.
Starting point is 00:37:15 Danger zone. So this is the lesson, this is the lesson for founders. If you have a boring business, if you have a boring business and you're pitching a VC who's an older gentleman, you got to keep the pitch meeting to less than 30 minutes. I've got to bring the air horn. I think in that story, it also said the older gentleman was in a Herman Miller chair, which we know are quite comfortable. Those are quite popular in Silicon Valley too.
Starting point is 00:37:40 So I think that only compounds the fact. Okay. Yeah, I mean, that's an elite spot for a nap. That's an elite spot for a nap. The chair was arguably designed for office naps. Yeah. No one's getting like real work done. I think so.
Starting point is 00:37:53 I think so. So, yeah, this one's tough because it's easy to just jump right. I'm in Matthew Prince's camp. Oh, I'm in Vanneau, Coaseless camp. Also, Vanneau didn't fall in sleep. So it's all moot. But we know the secret. It's the air horn.
Starting point is 00:38:10 Bring the air horn. No one's falling asleep. Problem solved. Tyler had a good story when they were building Divi. They pitched Rajiv Mistra and the SoftBank Redwood City HQ. And then Moss in Tokyo soon after, it was absolute cinema. Poppins in. smoking of vape, loud coughing to throw us off.
Starting point is 00:38:33 Wait, what? Intentional coughing? Assistance whispering in Regieve's ear. That's a power play. You got to respect that, for sure. See, that's a post-singularity job right there. Yeah, for sure. Come in, whisper into the person's ear.
Starting point is 00:38:47 It's good. Some of the most half-nine questions ever asked in Tokyo. Mosa starts a meeting with, you have 10 minutes. We flew like 20 hours. See, that's just a great way to get to the- Powerplay, Tyler. Sorry, buddy. I think that's just a great way to get, like, really get to the meat right quickly.
Starting point is 00:39:06 I think so. What did TJ have to say? He said the VC meme is very funny. If someone's falling asleep, not liking your idea or ghosting you, gets you bent out of shape, NGMI, go spend a day in private equity or try competing with an incumbent venture is arguably the most pleasant form of dealmaking in the world. And I agree. And I agree.
Starting point is 00:39:25 So, uh, I do. I do like the. Vinode says, not only did we not fire them, we did not give them an offer to invest based on our assessment of the team. And then Matthew just responds with the term sheet. That's actually crazy. Cloudflare, up to $100 million. $50 will come from KV, Series C, pre-money $700.
Starting point is 00:39:54 I like Vanneud running the calculation. All right. I give it a 5% chance that he posts a term sheet. That would be absolutely insane. Only a post IPO founder that's trying to buy a ski resort that ever do something as crazy as that. He forgot to check in. And of course, Matthew Prince doesn't really have anything to lose at this point.
Starting point is 00:40:21 Yeah. Well, fortunately, we're joined by another public company CEO, Will Marshall from Planet Labs, Planet now. He's the co-founder and CEO. First, I'm going to tell you about MongoDB. What's the only thing faster than the AI market? Your business on MongoDB, don't just build AI. Own the data platform that powers it.
Starting point is 00:40:40 And without further ado, let's bring in Will Marshall. Ooh, new graphic? New graphic? For Will. How you? How are you doing? How are you doing? Great to see you.
Starting point is 00:40:49 Great to see you, too, guys. How's it been too long. I feel like we barely got to talk when we met a couple weeks ago. But it's great to have you on the show. I'm a huge fan of the company. But I want to go so much deeper. But since this is your first time in the show, why don't you kick us off with a little bit of the backstory
Starting point is 00:41:04 and yourself and the company? And then we can get up to speed with where Planet is going in the future. Yeah, sure. Well, for those of you, the new to Planet, basically we help make change visible, accessible, and actionable. Help people make smarter decisions around the planet by having a fleet of over 200 satellites, the largest satellite fleet doing Earth imaging.
Starting point is 00:41:26 They take pictures as they're going across the Earth service. We end up imaging the entire Earth landmass every day at about three meter resolution. It's a huge amount of data, but we track everything across the planet. So we liken it to Google that indexed the Internet to make it searchable. We're indexing the Earth to make it searchable. With a combination of these satellites and AI on top, we're enabling people to make smarter decisions about what's going on on planet Earth. Walk me through the actual rollout of those 200 satellites. Obviously, you had partners on the launch side, but do you make your own cameras, your
Starting point is 00:42:04 own lenses, satellite buses? The company has been in business long enough that you're sort of like pre-space economy boom where there was a small startup for every piece of the stack. But what was it like actually rolling all of those, rolling those satellites out? Yeah, well, we're very vertically integrated. So we build the radios, we build the computers, and everything that works together. We buy chips, but all of our boards are custom, our telescopes are custom, our radios are custom. And, yeah, so basically, think of it a bit like assembling a smartphone.
Starting point is 00:42:43 It's that sort of complexity, a spacecraft. We're not building millions of them, like iPhones or what have you, but we're building dozens at a time. We've launched on 40 rockets to get all of our satellites up to space. We've launched over 600 or 700 satellites at this point on 40 rockets. Typically, we're launching 20 or so per rocket. Most of the time we're secondary payload on another, a billion-dollar satellite that's going to launch or a set of other satellites that's going up. A couple of times, I think three times we've bought our own rocket. But roughly speaking, we're hitchhiking, at the launch site, trying to get a ride to orbit. It's a little bit more complicated than that,
Starting point is 00:43:26 but not much. So the launch has become a little bit more routine now, especially with SpaceX, which is really cool. But all the complexity is in the integration of all the satellites, the satellites working together, having to put ground stations all around the world that collect all that data, send it back. And then we have a software company, if you like, that sits on top of all that data, doing on the analysis to make it usable for all of our clients. Yeah, it's really crazy. As you say that stuff, I'm thinking of, like, Bridget Mendler's company that does ground stations now, and there's so many different pieces that you could like subcontract out in the modern era, but you had to do it all with, like, grit and figure
Starting point is 00:44:06 it out yourself, I'm sure. Yeah, and you can contract them out, but, I mean, we have looked at those because we don't want to do ground stations. The only reason we're doing them is that we're far cheaper, and it wasn't possible at all to buy those sort of service. But even now, it's, you know, we're so much cheaper infrastructure than anything you can buy online. Yeah. Or commercially. Talk about the decision for altitude and the orbit. What tradeoffs are there?
Starting point is 00:44:34 Where do you sit? Why is that the sweet spot that you landed with? We basically try and go as low as possible where you don't reenter. Yeah. I mean, because you want the cameras as close to the Earth surface so you can take high-resolution pictures. I mean, what's amazing with our imagery. If you look at our satellites, they're about this big. Some of them weigh seven kilograms.
Starting point is 00:44:56 They're only the size of a loaf of bread, basically, a bit heavier than that. And we can see from San Francisco to Los Angeles, we can see things three meters across. 500 miles away, you know, we're seeing things. It's crazy, right? And with our bigger satellites, you can see things 30 centimeters across now. I mean, just imagine. It's incredible the power of these telescopes that we put up there and all the camera systems that take all the imagery. And, of course, we take a gobb's amount, a huge amount of it.
Starting point is 00:45:30 We take 4,047 megapixel images per day. So each satellite is taking eight pictures per second and there's 200 satellites. It's just huge. What was it like finding that sweet spot? Did you just one shot it? You never, you know. Never burned up. Never burned out.
Starting point is 00:45:49 Never burned anything up. Actually, recently the sun's got angry for some reason at us and it's got a little bit more bright and the upper atmosphere went much denser and a couple of satellite fleets lost half or more of their satellites because they got the calculus slightly wrong. So it's not messing around, especially when you spent millions of dollars on the satellites. On the camera, do you have the ability to translate your specs into something that would feel like consumer camera? Like, is it a 50 megapixel sensor with a 4,000 millimeter focal length or something like that? Is there some like... Well, actually, if you have a really powerful telephoto lens,
Starting point is 00:46:30 it's not so dissimilar from that. The main power for a telescope is the size of the optic. So the primary optic for our Dove satellites is about this big. The primary optic for our bigger satellites is around 50 centimeters, so a little bit bigger like that. And And they're, you know, actually the design of the telescopes is not that hard, but getting them to work through the launch, which is 15 G's shaking of the telescope, and then explosive bolts as the upper stage and the lower stage separate, which sends a 200G shot load through the satellite. Those are the things are really gnarly.
Starting point is 00:47:13 So you have to design all of this to survive that launch environment. that's where the tricks come in for space engineering. Talk about what you guys have, one of the use cases when we met, I guess it was maybe a month ago at this point, you talked about how you were able to track gas leaks ahead of time and help get them shut off. I would love for you to talk about that
Starting point is 00:47:40 because I thought it was fascinating. Yeah, I mean, we help people do all sorts of things around the world. I mean, even though we're having, the satellites are all in space, all of our applications are in the real world here down on the earth surface. And we are helping farmers, we're helping energy companies, we're helping civil governments, we're helping security. But you asked about methane and we track methane leaks using a special hyperspectral camera that we've got on one of our satellites and we're launching a couple more of those this year. Basically, this gas methane absorbs in a particular spectral line.
Starting point is 00:48:19 So if you have lots of color bands, lots of spectral bands, so this one has 400 spectral bands. So it's like we have three, RGB in our eyes. This has 400. And with those narrow bands that you can detect these absorption lines. And we can tell actually the amount of methane in each leak as well. So we can then go along the gas pipe. of major oil and gas facilities, find leaks, tell them about it, and help them to shut them off. And no one, not the energy company nor the environment nor anything else, wants all these gas leaks.
Starting point is 00:48:56 It's bad for business and it's bad for the planner. So we have detected thousands and thousands of these, and often these companies just go out and fix them. Another example, we track deforestation across the whole Brazilian Amazon, 8 million square kilometers every day. it's almost the size of the United States, a forest the size of the United States, and we look across the entire thing for any tree that has been cut down, a legal mining operation, legal narcotics, and we send those alerts to GPS local coordinates to the Brazil federal police. They go and stop the illegal action.
Starting point is 00:49:33 And we've helped them to reduce deforestation rates 60% in the last three years because of that AI-enabled satellite data. work. And another example in Ukraine, we've been helping them track Russian movements. In Asia, we've been helping with Indo-Pacific command, the commander of the U.S. forces over in that region to monitor China, the South China Sea. We monitor huge areas, give them alerts. Because what you want is to try and get advance warning of anything rather than having to go into war. So we're trying to help them have the data that stops wars rather than getting there. Does the government not have spy satellites? They do. But their spy satellites are better and worse at the same time. They're much,
Starting point is 00:50:24 much higher resolution, but much, much smaller coverage. Got it. So they can see things that are much better. Reading number plates is the canonical thing, whether or not exactly they can do that is a classified matter, but what they can see is much smaller than what we can do, at least 10 times better. But what they can't do is image all of China or all of Africa or all of Brazil every day. Because necessarily if you look more focus, you look at a smaller area. And so there's a trade-off there. We're the only system that images the whole earth landmass every day. So what is the pie chart of customers for you or revenue? Is it, I imagine you hear about like hedge funds.
Starting point is 00:51:09 You mentioned a bunch of examples of the government and it seems like even non-governmental organizations. Non-profits would be interesting. They probably pay different rates. But like where are the key drivers of the business? What are the different customers that are buying from you? Today, our biggest segment is defense and intelligence, so security. Countries that need to understand their threats on their horizon, be warned of things. That's the US government, that's European countries, Japan, other countries like that.
Starting point is 00:51:43 And we've just started a new program where if a country asks, we'll launch them dedicated satellites for that country. And we've done three deals where a couple of hundred million dollars and we launched a set of satellites for them, they take over the joystick over their area of interest. And if you like, they get ensure that it's just for them in that area. But most of our business is data sales. And I think the future is mainly commercial applications and civil government. So floods and fires and helping people, you know, in the LA fires, we were not just the first image,
Starting point is 00:52:21 but we could actually use AI on top that could analyze which house in the Palisades fire and was damaged or not and helped the relief operators, the American Red Cross used our data to plan their operators. and the aftermath of the fire and so on. But if we could get that data even sooner, that's even better. So we're working on trying to get the data ever sooner. But disaster response is an application. But most of all, all the commercial ones.
Starting point is 00:52:46 So, yes, hedge funds, you mentioned. In principle, we have more alpha than any other company on the planet, I think, because we can track all those soy yields or any other type of crop. We can track output from all the mines of all the different major commodities around the planet, all the shipping networks or the other transportation networks. We, if you like, have an overview of all the different economic activity going on around the globe. And so we do have some hedge-flung clients that do stuff. They shan't be named because they want to keep it private.
Starting point is 00:53:25 But yeah, there's lots of other commercial applications, energy, infrastructure, agriculture, You know, we help with a lot of, we just announced last week that we're working with John Deere helping them drive their tractors so they know when to slow down and speed up in the field based on the amount of crop in each three by three meter box. I mean, it's all terribly practical applications of our satellite data. So it sounds far away like going to space, but actually it's having an impact here on the ground. There are apparently some Koreans in our chat that are investors. It sounds like have some questions around the new capital raise. Wanted to give you a chance to talk about that, why you're pursuing it and what it means for the future. I can't read their messages, but I'm just sort of guessing.
Starting point is 00:54:21 Yeah, well, we just had our earnings last week and we have plenty of capital over $700 million on the balance sheet. And we grew, growing very nicely, 42% growth, which is the answer to life, the universe and everything. If any hitchhikers guide the galaxy fans out there. So we felt very good about that. But, yeah, we did decide to raise some more capital, one of these ATM approaches, which basically enables us to raise at the market and when we want.
Starting point is 00:54:52 And it, you know, it's good to have more capital. It's good to have a secure balance sheet. It's dry powder. If we wanted to do M&A later, we haven't got an immediate need for it, but it's good to do that. We think that maybe there's other data sets. Maybe there's other capabilities that we want, shoring up our supply chain. There's all sorts of things in this crazy world. It'd be good to do to reduce risks.
Starting point is 00:55:14 So we're trying to use the moment of a lot of excitement about planet and space generally. Space is hot right now to get capital. that can help us secure the long time. That makes sense. Last thing, any insights on what the latest blue origin explosion will do to the launch market over the next, call it, three, four, five years? Is that obviously it's a disappointment for everyone, but there's been some debate around just how much. of a setback it'll be I think every company like planet wants more competition in the launch market but how are you looking at it yeah well I mean firstly it's a real tragic event for the
Starting point is 00:56:08 industry and not just for blue and it set back some of the lunar plans that the US government is wearing my Artemis 2 pin that was such an amazing mission but some of the later missions that actually landing humans are on the lunar surface are going to need blue origin and their their vehicle actually so It's a tricky situation. I was just messaging with the mass administrator about this. And I hope we can come together to still do those really critical missions that are some of the most hopeful things that we do as a society when we send humans on things like that mission. So, but I think they'll get back to business relatively straightforward.
Starting point is 00:56:51 You know, by the end of this year, they've already said that they should be able to be back on the launch sign. I think that timeline is about right, what we've seen historically, companies getting back to the launch pad. It's not quite as damaged as people initially thought. So I really wish them luck in doing it. And there is a booming array of other companies that are building launch capabilities. So I think competition really is coming over the next couple of years and it's exciting. And obviously, we're cheering it on. We're cheering all of those guys on.
Starting point is 00:57:23 Yep. We are too. Makes sense. We're cheering you on as well. Thank you so much for coming on anytime. We'll talk to you soon. Hey, nice to see you. Goodbye. Before we bring in our next guest, let me tell you about the New York Stock Exchange.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Want to change the world, raise capital at the New York Stock Exchange. We are very fortunate to be joined by Dunbeisa Moyo. Hi. Welcome to the show. How are you doing? I'm so great. It's very glad to be here. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:57:51 So much for taking the time. Thank you. I would love to go back in time first. and start with a little bit about your journey to where you are now. How do you introduce yourself? You have, you're multi-hyphenate, an author, an economist, an investor. What else am I missing? Take me through it.
Starting point is 00:58:08 Well, first of all, everybody calls me Dambisa, so that's the easiest thing to do. I'm a member of the House of Lords in the United Kingdom, so that's my sort of day job. I also serve on the boards. Yeah, it's not bad, actually. And then I serve on a number of boards. I'm on the board of Chevron, on the board of Starbucks. and Condi Nast. I know you had Roger Lynch here a few weeks ago,
Starting point is 00:58:29 as well as on the Oxford University Endowment. But also my other day job, multiple hats here, is I'm co-principal of a family office, which is tech-based actually proceeds from a sale of a SaaS company in 2018. Qualtricks, right? Yeah, Qualtricks, yeah. Fantastic. I love Coltricks.
Starting point is 00:58:48 Let's stick with the board dynamics first because we've been having a whole bunch of conversations about corporate governance in the modern era. It's at the top of everyone's mind because of governance of AI companies. And I'm interested in your lessons from working with these very important boards, very established companies, you mentioned. They've certainly had decades, if not centuries, to work out any of the kings. Yes. And I'm wondering about your thesis on high-performing board management generally, because we've had Eric Reese from long-term stock exchange talking.
Starting point is 00:59:25 about different structures that have been the triple bottom line. There's so many different options and I feel like a lot of founders and their companies explode in value. They say, oh, maybe I'm different. Maybe I should do things differently. I want to know how you weigh in on all this. Yeah. So the longest sort of company board that I've been on was a company that was over 360
Starting point is 00:59:46 years old. That was Barclays Bank. Yeah. And I think when you think about multiple centuries, most of these companies have already experienced a pandemic, probably in the 1918 to 1920 pandemic. They've gone through economic recessions, obviously peak 1929. You have a crash for 25 years that Dow Jones Industrial doesn't clear. Not many people going through COVID being like, here we go again.
Starting point is 01:00:11 Yeah, yeah, exactly. Been here twice before. Yeah, exactly. So I think history is a great lesson. I think the other thing is advice that I received when I joined my first board about 15 years ago, which is anything can happen. And I think that's, it sounds very flippant and sort of always. but in a way it has a lot of kernels of important truths for how we manage organizations,
Starting point is 01:00:31 not just thinking about risk mitigation, but where the opportunities are on how to invest. Because ultimately, we're taking punts, we're taking bets, but we want to make sure these companies last for another 300 plus years. So I think that's the really most important thing. I've had the privilege of being on boards that have been book-ended by the financial crisis, the pandemic, but also companies which were trading close to $60 a share, and they collapsed down to seven. You know, all of a sudden, you know,
Starting point is 01:00:58 it's the Mike Tyson quote. All of a sudden, you're planned and your strategy gets punched in the face. But also, you know, we've had a CEO die in office, which is very traumatic in terms of resetting. But company, one of them of my favorites is a company that we were absolutely certain would not get purchased.
Starting point is 01:01:16 We were told that we were number two in the sector. This was SAB Miller. Anheuser-B. Bush was number one. And people said there's no way they'll buy you. And they ended up, buying us by issuing the biggest bond on that year in 2016 and they bought the company outright. So anything can happen. And I think, you know, when you think about where we are today with the market valuations and you think about where rates are and that even just this year
Starting point is 01:01:40 coming into 2026 thinking that oil would be around $50 a barrel, well, it's not. And, you know, how did your balance sheet play out in that environment? So help me square that idea of anything can happen. The job of the board, if I'm telling it back to you, this is obviously a condensation of what you said, but the job of the board is to sort of set the level of risk taking in the organization. And I can imagine that instantiated in two ways. One is we are going to the management team and saying that AI is real. We need to be taking more risk to put ourselves in a strong position or the risk of oil going up this year is high, so we need to offset and hedge that. And you're issuing sort of prescriptive strategy notes versus we need to, our job is only to hire
Starting point is 01:02:33 the management team. And if we have a CEO who's not taking the right level of risk, too much risk or not enough risk, we need a new management team. How do you square those two? Yeah. So I would say, you know, fundamentally there are three roles of the board. One is strategic oversight. And so we meet obviously on a quarterly basis.
Starting point is 01:02:51 We have strategic meetings. I think our job is to be additive to management in thinking about these longer-term risks. And we can talk about how those horizons have collapsed just because of the spate and information, more technology, more information. So there is definitely a shrinking in that delta. But the second thing is hiring,
Starting point is 01:03:11 and in some instances firing the CEO, and that's a very important piece, as you've suggested, because the CEO's job is to bring in the team, make sure the team actually can execute on not just, again, risk mitigation, but leading into investments, thinking about longer-term opportunities for the business. And then the third thing, which I think tends to be discounted,
Starting point is 01:03:31 but sort of ebbs and flows over time, is how do great businesses partner with communities, with society, with government, especially something like AI? Yes. It's going to be so transformative beyond just what's the SpaceX IPO going to generate from my portfolio. I think we need to think about what does this mean strategically.
Starting point is 01:03:49 And so that's where I think those three things are very important. I love that third point. And it ties to my next question. People say data is the new oil. What can AI companies learn from oil companies? Well, I think there tends to be in general, and I've been on boards of tech companies. I think we just have to make sure that people don't poo-poo a lot of the governance and the structural sort of muscle that we now know exists from 300 plus years of companies.
Starting point is 01:04:16 So there's a lot of good governance, having an audit committee, thinking about strategy, having regular meetings, that balance between what management does in terms of tactics on a day-to-day basis versus strategic thinking and overlay from the board. I think those are things that people can very easily dismiss when your returns are so high or you're, you know, 30% of the stock exchange, a stock market. But I think really understanding what the process is, purpose of the board is, especially for publicly traded companies where the board is really there on behalf of shareholders. And again, even that has changed. It's more stakeholders, including
Starting point is 01:04:57 what the regulators care about and what does society care about more generally. So with the regulators, I have this interesting, it feels like we're an entirely new era with the AI companies where if you go back to the previous big, big organizations, like before we had big tech, we had big pharma and big oil and big tobacco, right? And each one of those companies went through a process of figuring out how they interface with regulators. And in the case of environmentalism and emissions and also in the big tobacco era, there was a feeling that those organizations were brought to knee by the regulators and that the executives at those firms sort of denied, denied, denied until it was staring them at the
Starting point is 01:05:42 face in a congressional hearing. And then they had to admit that there was a negative externality, and they figured out how to internalize that. And I still think that, especially when it comes to oil, a lot of great things have come from that technology. It needs to be balanced, of course. But we're in a new era in that it feels like the AI, lab CEOs, the big tech leaders are doing the opposite. They're going on podcasts saying AI is going to kill, everyone's going to destroy all the jobs. They're saying all the bad stuff. And the regulators are like, what? I'm learning this from you. It would be, like if in 1910, you know, an oil executive came out and said, we really got to worry about carbon
Starting point is 01:06:23 emissions. Like that just didn't happen. And so what is going on and how should things change? Is this a positive development? Well, I think most companies that have existed over 100 years or plus 300 years have figured out that they have to be more partner, a partner not just to government in thinking about what dislocations might happen to jobs or to productivity. gains. What does it mean for more concentration in one sector versus another? And it's not just a capital markets question. It's also about what does this actually mean for our pensions? What does it mean for taxes? What does it mean? And I, you know, you can tell that I sit at the intersection of not just corporations and investment, but also public policy. This is absolutely a debate
Starting point is 01:07:07 in the House of Lords trying to think, what should we be doing? Should we be aggressively, you know, sort of imposing risks. I personally, that's not my view, and I argue very compellingly. I hope that we need to be leaning into what AI can do. It can improve productivity, but that would be naive to just say it's all upside and having government as partners.
Starting point is 01:07:31 It doesn't matter if you're an energy company, a tech company or a bank, or even pharma. You want to bring them on side so that they can understand what the second-order implications of technology might be. and how we can get ahead of some of the downside risk. What is cultural or consumer sentiment around AI like right now in the United Kingdom? Very similar to what you have in the United States.
Starting point is 01:07:54 I worry a lot that it sort of seeped into the narrative in policymaking. So I do hear a lot of my colleagues in the House of Lords who are sort of reciting sort of tropes about AI, which can be very compelling. Obviously, in the United States, people are very very very, very attuned with the difference between how the Chinese population views AI versus the United States population. And I think that just means there's a lot more work to be done, not just by the AI companies,
Starting point is 01:08:23 but by regulators also, and say this is the first super cycle, you know, real positive sort of push for economic growth that we've had since globalization since women came into the workplace. And this is enormous. And we need it. Growth has been flatline. Yeah. Yeah, is it showing up in GDP in the UK? I think it's early indications of it.
Starting point is 01:08:49 I think the sort of sky is falling down scenarios always, oh, what's going to happen to jobs? But, you know, I personally think from my experience in the boardrooms. But the job market in the UK is pretty poor. From what I've heard for going back to my college years is, you know, you're lucky if you graduate from a great university and get a job for like 50,000. and the USDA equivalent? Yeah, I mean, look, the unemployment numbers
Starting point is 01:09:16 for not just the average in the population, but for the youth is particularly problematic. There's no doubt about it. Even the current government, which tends to lean left, has just put out a report talking about youth unemployment. It's very similar to sort of double unemployment rates that you see for entrance levels in the United States, but in some places it's even worse
Starting point is 01:09:37 because it's permanent structural unemployment where people literally are not. coming back into the workplace. And so there's absolutely a real issue that needs to be thought through. And I have my views on what needs to be done. But, you know, ultimately, I'm just one voice and public policy needs to really change the narrative about what AI can do. It will have dislocations as all technologies do.
Starting point is 01:09:58 Is there any type of reindustrialization movement or energy happening in the UK? Do you mean energy as a pun? No, energy literally. Like, yeah, as a pun, yeah. Or a lot of reindustrialization projects are directly linked to power generation. Yeah, so I guess both. Well, don't get me started on the power situation. I mean, again, I've spoken about this in the Lords.
Starting point is 01:10:26 The UK, as an example, since we're talking about that, is on average about 40 cents a kilowatt hour. The U.S. is somewhere between 12 and 16 cents a kilowatt hour, depending on which state you're in. And then China, some of the estimates are around 8 to 9 cents. a kilowatt hour. There's no country that has achieved levels of per capita income without cheap energy. And so, of course, there's not a single person I know, you know, whether it's in my boardrooms or my colleagues in investing, who doesn't appreciate the sort of second order concerns around carbon emissions, et cetera. But I think you can strangle economic growth by doing some of the things that I'm afraid of are happening around the world, banning, you know, energy sources. I think that
Starting point is 01:11:09 kind of approach is probably too aggressive and doesn't really work for the long term. We need the energy. Have you wrestled with this question of the source of China's optimism about new technologies? I sort of think about two possible, and they might both be contributing. But one is that it's easier to grow from a lower baseline, 6,000 GDP per capita. There's a lot of room to go up. And so the tide is so low that. if it goes up, it will raise a lot of boats.
Starting point is 01:11:41 But then there's the other side, which is the actual, not just the economic standing of the country, but the actual political structure and the jobs guarantees, the works projects, the trains to nowhere and the empty buildings. Like, those are rough, but they can create a lot of jobs. And so I think that there's maybe less fearmongering about job loss because at the very least the CCP will put you and say, hey, go build a building over there and maybe it's empty, but you don't really care because at least you had a paycheck and you showed up and you had a sense of purpose. Have you wrestled with either of those? I have, and I think maybe I'd add a third aspect, which is probably related to the role of the state, which is to say that a lot of the public goods issues,
Starting point is 01:12:27 healthcare, education, are areas even in the United States that have not benefited from technological advances, partly because of regulation, but there are a whole host of vested interests, et cetera. And so if you take that hat and you think about how sort of AI is permeating through the Chinese population, a lot of it is through those same public goods, through health care and the sesame sort of calculations, thinking about education, et cetera. And so, yes, it can be viewed as somewhat heavy-handed, but at the same time, I think people can more easily see a direct impact of benefit. Whereas, you know, in the United States, when you think of AI, I think a lot of it is still disconnected from the average day user. People maybe
Starting point is 01:13:11 will see it more in show up in terms of their social media or consumer. Exactly. And so I think that's an area of opportunity. If you think about it in the West where a lot of the public goods costs, social costs that we know are coming could actually be, I think, a net positive, not just for the GDP numbers, but also for just for people thinking about more positively about what AI can do. Yeah. How are conversations going on the boards that you sit on around AI adoption? And particularly, we've been grappling with a lot of, you know, CEOs need to experiment. They need to move quickly. At the same time, costs can get out of control, the risks, the benefits, not getting left behind. And then also just like, does your business, is your business even
Starting point is 01:14:02 technology, like Chevron, Starbucks? I'm thinking like, AI. could be a useful tool for some back office stuff, but, you know, the robots aren't going to drill oil or pour coffee yet. Maybe that's coming, but certainly that's not what's being sold right now by the AI lab. So what are those conversations like? What is the mature way to think about testing and evaluating and rolling out AI at a large company? Yeah, so it's all of the above, everything that you've listed out there. And I think any company worth its salt will be looking at these issues in a very broad way. It's a learning curve, obviously, to state the obvious.
Starting point is 01:14:39 And I think that what the best companies are doing is trying to figure out not only what does this mean for our bottom line. Is this going to increase revenue and cut costs and, you know, think about new metrics of how we compare ourselves, what are our new KPIs and the financial metrics comparing ourselves to other competitors, other peers, but also other sectors. But I think they're also thinking about what does this mean for society? Is this a complete reshaping of how government's tax,
Starting point is 01:15:08 if it's just going to be a handful of companies that are thinking about, you know, generating revenue and concentrated success, constantly returns, you know, how do we then think about where our role is in that? Of course, also thinking about the job market. I mean, I think it's Henry Ford's quip about, you know, you have to pay people a reasonable wage
Starting point is 01:15:29 for the work because ultimately, in a very cynical way, but I think it's something that I think about a lot is you still need to think about consumers. He said that he needed to pay his workers enough that they could buy a car. Correct. The ultimate circular deal. Yeah, no, exactly. But in doing so, it wasn't that every Model T was sold to a Ford employee. It was that he set the market wages at a certain level, and that created a sustainable
Starting point is 01:15:55 ecosystem. Yeah, I mean, I think corporations get short shrift. because people just think that there are these sort of 12 people on a board and a corporation, that's sort of greedy shareholders that are just simply going and trying to gouge, you know, consumers. I think what I would say about AI is that the breadth of its potential impact is now bringing about a level of sophistication and discussions that goes beyond just narrow metrics. What's the shareholder return going to be? I mean, of course, if you want to compete in a capitalist society, those things are important. But I think the most sophisticated companies are understanding that their role and the role of the state, but also the role of the consumer is going to change.
Starting point is 01:16:34 The demands of the consumer are going to change. Can we talk about the family office? I was going to ask the same thing. Good timing. Yeah, I want your overall market outlook, how you think about what insane year it's been. I think everyone, you know, was watching. set of geopolitical events play out and assume now would be a good time to bet against the global economy. At least that hasn't been reflected in the markets just yet. But I'm curious your
Starting point is 01:17:12 overall view and then I want to get into more specifics around kind of managing the family office itself. Yeah, look, I think I would say that the global economy, we need to be growing at 3% per year in order to double per capita incomes in a generation. So, generation's about 24, 25 years. In order to double per capita incomes, you've got to be growing at 3% per year. The realities, most countries are not growing at that rate, both developed countries across Europe, you know, Japan until recently, it has started to see some interesting story coming from there, but also large emerging market economies that have at least 50 million people. They're stalling. I was just in Peru 10 days ago, and everybody's concerned about growth.
Starting point is 01:17:58 And you can add to that other structural issues, the debt story, the fiscis being challenged here in the United States, et cetera, et cetera. We know about these issues. But, you know, as I pointed out earlier, we're also at the early endings of a super cycle, which could really power the productivity contribution to growth, could really change the narrative about growth. I mean, PWC thinks growth. It could add about $16 trillion worth of GDP.
Starting point is 01:18:24 2030. That's four years away. So that's really constructive story. I mean, my concern would be that it's quite skewed. I think this is very much a U.S. story. You can't bet against the United States. I think the changes and rollout of this new era are quite choppy in places like China. I mean, there's some elements of it that are quite interesting, but China does have a lot of, you know, debt drag. It has, you know, demographic drag. I mean, they're thinking now by some forecasts that it will be at 800 million population by the close of the century. So structural challenges remain there. Europe has been quite a disappointment in many respects. A lot of the larger economies growing somewhere between 0.5 to 1.2%. A lot of the structural things we've touched on already, debt,
Starting point is 01:19:09 but also now in the near term, real risk of inflation. So I think the picture is very much don't bet against the United States, but understanding that it's quite concentrated, it's quite skewed and thinking about how to play that is obviously top of mind. How do you wrestle with international efforts in AI? So when the whole sovereign AI theme started maybe last year really getting talked about, I was deeply skeptical because I said, well, you know, England doesn't need their own Google. They can just use Google and it can be localized into Spanish and French. And it's pretty easy for the core.
Starting point is 01:19:48 technology to live in one country and it's hard to compete with something that's compounded like a Facebook or an Instagram or consumer app or even in the enterprise you know Salesforce like I don't know that sales force has a has a native French competitor that's really eating their lunch there but as I've gone deeper into the supply chain I'm starting to see a lot of opportunity for like France generates a ton of nuclear power that's clean energy they if they have the right permitting and the right place for it and the right community, they could potentially build something that they sell to American AI companies that
Starting point is 01:20:25 winds up generating a ton of return and you sort of have a new energy story about let's go around and find all the cheap wind energy, cheap solar energy, where can nuclear be built? Because the nature of AI is that it doesn't need to be on premise because you're waiting 20 minutes for something to come back. It doesn't need to be down the street. it can be halfway across the world. Yeah, the story doesn't need to be my conflict with Macron. Yes, yes, yes.
Starting point is 01:20:53 We went back and forth. Potentially underinvesting, we want them to go full-po. Well, SoftBank, I was just with Alex last week, and he was talking about the new data center that they're thinking about building there precisely because of some of these costs, advantages on the energy side. Look, I would say as a sort of shorthand,
Starting point is 01:21:14 Europe generally thinks about things as glass have empty. The United States tends to think about things as glass have full. Glass overflowing sometimes. Exactly. And you can think about a whole range. Let's gamble on this. Yeah, too shame. But you can think about whether it's energy or AI, climate transition.
Starting point is 01:21:33 Like there's many different themes that have occurred where Europe's, you know, again, short-handing it, the response has always been, oh, my gosh, you know, we need to regulate this thing. we need to put, you know, curbed emissions. And I'm not saying it's all bad. I'm just saying that they tend to err on the side of risk mitigation as opposed to investing through to figure out, well, we don't like X, so why don't we try and think about how to do that better?
Starting point is 01:21:58 And I think that's part of the culture. I will say, you know, since with 2008, the United States and Europe were about the same GDP, as you know, and now, you know, the United States has just run with it. And so I would hope that a lot of the, I wouldn't count Europe out. United Kingdom is the home of the Industrial Revolution, there's some kernels of goodness that remain in terms of rule of law, the stuff that everybody talks about. But if you do look at the top sort of top footsie companies, the stock market, they tend to be pretty old and stodgy. Yeah, it might not be a Europe story, maybe more of a global story. I'm just thinking about, you know,
Starting point is 01:22:35 a certain region in India or Japan or Greece or Egypt might have some piece of the puzzle that they can now bring to bear because there's more demand for that. You could imagine a French company that's an expert in nuclear. Maybe they don't build another data center nuclear power plant there, but they expand. They build the nuclear power plant somewhere else. There's another place that has a lot of land, a lot of solar. I think it's comparative advantage is what you're alluding to. And so, yeah, in principle, yes.
Starting point is 01:23:02 But, you know, we're in a world of de-globalization, broadly speaking. So we can't, you know, we can't dismiss the fact that the policy world has to do. Is there, are there, is there, is there a bullish narrative outside of AI and robotics? I've been trying to, I've been trying to, I've been trying to fence and de-lobalization. Are you talking about in Europe or in the world? No, no, no, no, no, just, just generally in the world, because you see like, you know, lots of, lots of debt, inflation, low growth, population, decline, you know, employment. there's so many, you know, ongoing conflicts. There's so many bearish and negative stories.
Starting point is 01:23:47 And it feels like AI is, you know, the only thing really happening. And basically almost every country in the world saying like, like, we got, we basically have. The one trillion dollar GLP1 market would like a work story. Okay? Yeah, no, no, no. Biotech is another one. So much so that people on X, I think last week, were saying we're going to see the first $100 trillion biotech company.
Starting point is 01:24:17 It's possible. It's possible. So very American to see something working and assume. And if the replacement rate, fertility rate declines, you've got to live longer. That's where biotech comes and solves that problem. The other thing I would say is that what does history tell us about this is that kind of things just repeat themselves. So, you know, if you think about us being an. period post-World War I, post the pandemic, 1918 to 1920, and post-1929 crash, you could argue
Starting point is 01:24:46 we're kind of in this period of, you know, smooth-holly, larger government, more tariffs, you know, protectionism. And so the question is, will there be this new era that came, you know, post-World War II, which is where you get more globalization, you know, governments start to work more cooperation? And I think we have to be optimistic. I mean, you know, you know, there are a lot of good things that are happening. I was just in India. I had been in India 15 years prior to that. It's a changed society, and people are, yeah, it's not, is it rich?
Starting point is 01:25:15 No, but is it on a path of growth that's quite diversified, and it's got an intriguing story of being part of the service sector, but also technology? Yes, absolutely. As I said, I was just in Peru. There are plenty of places, and I was just in Silicon Valley. It's hard to sort of be negative about the world, and I think it is beyond A, BNNTII. We have the blessing of having a job where we talk to people all day long about what they're building for the future. And so it's hard to ever get, I never get completely blackpilled, even though there's so many different sort of negative stories.
Starting point is 01:25:51 Because I do believe that a small, relatively small number of people can have massive outside impact on the fate of humanity and economies and all these things. Yeah. Well, that's a great place to leave it. Thank you. A message of optimism. I completely agree. Thank you. And go Nix.
Starting point is 01:26:08 Oh, yes. Go Nix. Thank you so much. Thanks. I was just, I was in New York. I was in New York over the weekend. And there was some enterprising young kids that were doing a lemonade stand. Really?
Starting point is 01:26:21 But, and they were giving discounts to Nix fans. No way. How do you prove that? Yeah, yeah. I was like, it'd be kind of crazy to be. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:26:31 Yeah, exactly. Well, thank you for having me. pleasure being here. This is a pleasure. Thank you so much. Cheers. Thank you so much. Our next guest is Samuel Hume, who's going to completely debunk Jordy's blackfilling
Starting point is 01:26:47 about biotech because we got him on to talk about all the advanced. I'm not blackfilling on biotech. Oh, oh, there's nothing else going on outside of AI. This is what you said. Don't deny it. We can roll the tape. Well, is he not applying AI? He must be a little bit.
Starting point is 01:27:03 I'm sure there's a little bit of technology. No, no, no, he actually uses just pencil and paper. Wow. Pencil and paper. No computers at all. Anyway, first I'm going to tell you about Shopify. Shopify is the commerce platform that grows with your business and lets you sell in seconds online, in store, on mobile, on social, on marketplace, and now with AI agents. And now we have Samuel from Stomatic Labs.
Starting point is 01:27:20 He's the co-founder. And I'm very excited to have him join the show. How are you doing? Hello, good. How are you guys? Good to see you. We're good. So, Jordie was making the claim that there is nothing good happening anywhere out of the way.
Starting point is 01:27:33 outside of artificial intelligence. And I said we have the perfect guest to debunk that. So could you please introduce yourself first and then maybe take us through some of the exciting things. When there's a protein shortage, John, it's hard to be optimistic. It's hard to be optimistic. I'm going to blast you with the air horn. Anyway, thank you so much for joining. No problem.
Starting point is 01:27:52 Good to see. Good to hear you talk about biotech as well. So, yeah, I'm a medical doctor, a scientist and, yeah, co-founder, its somatic labs. and just fascinated really by the trying to figure out what's going on at the frontier of medicine, the frontier of science, which is what I use Twitter for, what I use X for,
Starting point is 01:28:11 and also what brought me to the conference the other day to Chicago, to Ascove to the big cancer conference where I was lucky enough to see the Draxor Rasib study get presented life. Standing ovation. Okay, let's get right to it, though. What does it take for a...
Starting point is 01:28:30 A hundred trillion dollar, since you brought up X, there was some, there was some discussion among investors around, we'll see the first $10 trillion. I thought you said a hundred trillion. And then $100,000. Oh, somebody went further. So they're already, I mean, it's, I mean. Hyperinflation. I'm never, I'm never a guy to say that a hundred bagger is impossible.
Starting point is 01:28:49 Yeah. It's always possible. How do we get there? And what is the ticker? I'm kidding. So Lily today is, Lily today is one trillion dollar company, right? or just about. But I think the issue really in biotape with getting to $100 trillion would be the patent cliff.
Starting point is 01:29:09 Right? So in big tech, Apple and so on, these guys don't have to deal with patent cliffs. But Big Pharma certainly do. So the other day, for example, you guys had a guest on the show talking about AI versus biotech. And it's perfectly true. But just be clear that if companies could actually enforce patents where it's like no one else can create a login button. You cannot log into an account
Starting point is 01:29:36 of a software product. Holt to refresh is technically patented but unenforced. So there is patents, but yeah, they just don't get enforced. And there's an argument that that's probably a great thing. Yeah. Yeah, I guess in biotech and pharma, so the drugs can only be sold for a big price
Starting point is 01:29:57 for about 20 years, at which point they go off, And then the price drops by 90, 95%. So if you have, like, so the biggest drug in the world today is to Zepotide, which did about $51 billion of sales already this year, which is insane, right? More than the big AI labs. But as it goes off patent, then the generics come through and it will dwindle those revenues away for Lilly. And I think 100 trillion in pharma is going to be very difficult. Is there any world where the CAPEX required to actually compete with a third?
Starting point is 01:30:31 $50 billion drug becomes a market dynamic, like cost prohibitive, any analogy there? Or will you just get a ton of small compounding firms and a ton of generics companies that underwrite smaller investments and just sort of like eat away? Because I've always heard about the patent cliff and you lose 95% of your gross profit on day two. But I've also heard that Eli Lilly and other Novo are actually struggling to stand up just the manufacturing equipment required because at a certain point when you're shipping 50 billion dollars worth of a drug you're talking about you know not just a little lab that's making like one rare cancer drug does not already exist just just getting a drug actually through trials yeah and I guess
Starting point is 01:31:18 like Tylenol sold in by the by the billions of pills probably I don't know is there anything there I mean so the trial is themselves there uh Very expensive, right? So to run a clinical trial, each patient in the trial costs about $50,000. And so the big trials cost over $100 million. So that is kind of a mode in itself. But, yeah, I'm not too sure about that. Is that speeding up or slowing down?
Starting point is 01:31:50 Like, we generally have, like, the ossification of governments. Governments are getting bigger. It feels like it takes longer to get things at the DMV and whatever. It feels like things are. slowing down. We're certainly building less houses. Permitting reform is top of mind on the right and the left. And I'm wondering, but at the same time, you have AI, you have all these tools that should speed up, review. Do you have a feel for where we're going over the next couple of years? I think it's still very slow, right? So from target identification to phase three takes about nine,
Starting point is 01:32:29 10 years and then even after phase three and then takes a long time for it to get kind of adopted in the clinic right? But can AI speed these things up? Yeah, absolutely. From kind of every step I think AI can speed it up. Even like some of the paperwork is very slow
Starting point is 01:32:47 right? Yeah. What is China done on this front? The chat is... Steal everything. No, no. I mean, like a lot of trials are are happening there now and just overall development because of the cost advantage, but I don't know about the speed advantage.
Starting point is 01:33:09 Yes, so it's definitely cheaper in China. So I spent the last, with you, I was in this big conference, ASCO, the cancer conference, and lots is very interesting. Lots of the most innovative stuff is actually happening out of China. So they've got, for example, some fascinating bi-specific antibodies, which is the kind of new cancer drug or new modes of action for these different cancer drugs. So they're doing, not only are they're doing fast following, which they certainly are, but they're also doing some very innovative stuff as well. What people are kind of worried a little bit about in US biotech
Starting point is 01:33:41 is the big farmers doing deals with Chinese biotech. But I think if we have China in the US kind of competing with each other, if you're on the side of medicines, if you're on the side of patients, I would say more competition is better. Yeah. Tell us about your company. Tell us about what you're working on. So I'm, yeah, so I'm a medical doctor, but so we started a company called Stomatic Labs, which is actually aiming to speed up this process of drug development and getting drugs to patients faster. So one of the reasons that drug development is so slow is because of, so one of the essential steps in the regulatory process is something called a systematic. review, which is basically a big, boring literature review. It takes years currently, it's done manually. We used AI, we have a little team. We used AI to automate many of the steps and do it in
Starting point is 01:34:40 more like four hours rather than like two years. I know a guy who does something similar. He gets around the whole systematic review. You just like, you text him on like signal or telegram and he doesn't interface with the FDA at all. He'll just send you exactly the drug, like whether or not it's approved. It works perfect. I'm kidding. Joking. What has progress been like? How far are you in like the R&D phase?
Starting point is 01:35:05 How are you scaling up? Have you raised money? Give us the flavor of the business at this point. So it's early. It's early. So pre-seed. So we have a product. It's on the market. It's being used by thousands of people.
Starting point is 01:35:19 Okay. Working on raising a pre-seed round. We have some customers in big pharma, in academia, that in biotech as well. But it's early. It's early. We're still just kind of rolling it, rolling it out and ramping it up. How, like, is there a market to sell software to the FDA? Like, because my, my dream might be, like, I'm excited about speeding up things for biotech and biopharma. Like, I feel like they will figure that out and you'll be a piece of that. But what I really want is, like, an API from the FDA where you can submit something.
Starting point is 01:35:57 And then it like programmatically runs or automatically runs like as many of the tests that it can possibly delegate to just tell you, okay, this is going to get flagged. Or like you have a typo here or you forgot to attach this document. And so you're getting like this red, yellow, green response from a robot. And then at a certain point, you say, okay, I'm passing all of the programmatic like computer based checks. let's actually call in a scientist from the FDA who's in short supply and have them review it. But I have no idea how you would actually go about getting that into the FDA. No, that's right. Yes, good idea.
Starting point is 01:36:40 One thing the, one thing the FDA has said recently they're doing, they could run these things called real-time trials. So at the moment what we do when we run clinical trials, the data are kind of blinded and locked until the end and then they open it up and have a look. But if you could run a real-time trial, you can see if there's an efficacy signal or a safety signal early and then stop the trial if it's working or not and then get the drug either stopped or moved into patients faster. So that's one of the kind of things that the FDA is doing. As for selling into the FDA, I'm not sure.
Starting point is 01:37:15 Good luck. Hopefully you get there. I don't know. I feel like you should be speeding up both sides of the equation eventually. But obviously it's early. amazing traction though. Thank you so much for coming on the show. We didn't get to talk about the pancreatic drugs? Was that part of the impetus for coming on?
Starting point is 01:37:32 Is it fair to say that pancreatic cancer is cured? Like is that how far we can go or is this just? Because standing ovation, I have high expectations. I'm like, okay, it's cured. So standing ovation, definitely high expectations. It's not cured. So the reason it's such a big deal. And the reason everyone was so quite,
Starting point is 01:37:52 so excited the other day. And, you know, it's not an easy crowd to excite because everyone's kind of oncologists and scientists and so on. That is a good point. So the reason it's quite so important is really two reasons. So pancreatic cancer is a cancer with miserable survival rates. So five-year survival is... Steve Jobs famously. Yes. It's about three percent for metastatic disease and most disease is metastatic at diagnosis. And that number hasn't progressed in decades. That's the first reason. The second. The second reason is because mainly this disease, pancreatic cancer, is driven by this one protein called RAS. And forever, really, this protein was considered undruggable, totally undruggable.
Starting point is 01:38:33 Because it's this kind of small, little compact protein, you can't get a drug into. You can't design a drug to kind of fit in there, slot into a pocket. So what this company Revolution Medicines did is they used a very kind of innovative, creative approach to drug the molecule using a molecular glue. and if you do that and you put it in pancreatic cancer patients they were able to double the median overall survival versus the standard of care chemotherapy as well as improved quality of life as well as so the new drug has actually fewer serious adverse events than chemotherapy so it's kind of creating a totally new but double it that's taking taking survival rate from
Starting point is 01:39:14 three percent to six percent so yes so in the trial it is so it's the details are it's second line metastatic pancreatic cancer and the overall survival with the chemotherapy is about seven months and with the drug is about 13 months. Significant. I'll take those out next. But not not cured, unfortunately. But it unlocks a path to a cure that it's like the door was open to the mountain to the hike. And now we're going on the hike.
Starting point is 01:39:48 And that's amazing because before we weren't even on the trail. Right. And it's a good day to talk about this as well because there was a new kind of update breakthrough today. So this new drug is called Daryxamacid. It's going to lay, I think it's going to lay the kind of baseline of therapy in pancreatic cancer. And we're now going to be able to add new drugs on top of it in order to improve its benefit. And we saw exactly that today. So there's a new drug from a company called Tango Therapeutics. And they added their drug on top of DaxaamraZib and even improve the drug. the survival even further. Wow.
Starting point is 01:40:23 So I think exactly. We're going to see that. Very, very cool. Amazing. Well, thank you so much for coming on the show. Great to meet you, Sam. Great to meet you. Good luck with the round.
Starting point is 01:40:31 We'll talk to you soon. Go bye. Cheers. Let me tell you about Figma. Agents meet the Canvas. Your AI agents can now create and modify your Figma files with design system context. I'm pulling for a cure for liver psoriasis because I'm trying to go hard this summer.
Starting point is 01:40:47 Just kidding. That's your favorite. Yeah. We were in the Wall Street Journal. The Wall Street Journal wrote an article about TBPN reacting to Leopold's 13F. They put a screenshot of me and Jordy and a meme from the Truman Show and Leap Trader. If you're Leap Trader underscore on X, you're in the Wall Street Journal the day. Now, they needed to come up with some sort of excuse for putting us in the journal.
Starting point is 01:41:14 So they wrapped it in a profile of Leopold-Ochenbrenner, I guess. But no, it's an interesting article. the 24-year-old AIWiz, who counts Jane Street as an investor. You probably saw the highlight stats showing up on the timeline. 24 years old, 20 billion under management now, up 270% after fees. We need to stand a good for this year. Standing ovation, or at least a gong hit. Fantastic work.
Starting point is 01:41:43 One of the best to ever do it. Investors now include Jane Street. Jane Street is an investment investment in situational awareness is particularly notable because the firm rarely allocates capital to outside money managers. Game recognized game. They put a quote for me in the journal. I said, we have not seen this level of attention on a hedge fund's filings in a very long time. And I agree with that.
Starting point is 01:42:11 It was a fun, fun thing. A little bit of backstory on the fund. Later that year, Aschen Brenner launched his hedge fund firm, which he described as a brain trust on AI with Carl Schulman, another AI intellectual, who once worked at Peter Thiel's macro hedge fund, Teal Macro. Early backers included Stripe co-founders, Patrick and John Collison. Good to see them getting a win. As well as Daniel Gross and Nat Friedman, good to seeing them getting a win.
Starting point is 01:42:36 Duar Cash also. Duar Cash, early backer. Who are both currently helping lead meta's AI platform efforts. And so situational awareness, they actually lost money, one, in early 2025 after Deep Seek, but they've been on an absolute run. They ended 2025 up about 200% when most hedge funds are like, we'd like to do 13%, 15%, 20% would be amazing. 200% absolutely legendary work. Call it his shot.
Starting point is 01:43:09 Very impressive, yes. Well, we have our next guest here in the waiting room. Let's bring in David Kirkley from Phileon. episode. They should. That would be a lot of fun. Or a poker match. They should do a, they should do a world series of poker because poker is very popular over there. Anyway, we have David currently from Helion Energy. He's the founder and CEO. David, how are you doing? What's going on? Hi there. Thank you for having me today. Thank you so much for taking the time. First time on the show, long overdue. I think most people will be familiar. But how are you
Starting point is 01:43:41 describing the shape of the business these days, how you got here, how long it's taken, what the current milestones are. Take us through the intro. Awesome. Thank you. So I am Dave Carely, CEO of Helion Energy, and we build Fusion. So what we were announcing actually last week was that we raised a Series G, a $465 million round.
Starting point is 01:44:03 That is, John. Sorry to interrupt. Fantastic. Awesome. Yeah, and that's the key building. So we've built, We built now our seventh generation system called Polaris that does fusion here in Washington State. And then this allows us to keep moving, beginning construction of our eighth generation system. This is for a power plant for Microsoft that uses fusion energy.
Starting point is 01:44:31 And then expand manufacturing. We want to the key to how do you build fusion fast is you got to build the hardware. And so we spend a lot of time focusing on manufacturing and investing in that. And so we're 60xing our manufacturing line that produces the electronics and the the capacitors in the modules for fusion right now. Give us the Fusion 101, the different paths that you could have gone down, and then the technology that you chose, because it is different than I think what some people have seen other fusion companies working on.
Starting point is 01:45:03 You have particular strategies, so walk us through it. For sure. So fusion energy is what powers the universe. That's what happens in stars and supernova. But we don't really use it here on Earth, except more really an academic and national lab settings for the most part. So our goal at Helion, and my personal goal is I wanted to solve the energy crisis, bring that universe power to Earth.
Starting point is 01:45:26 And in fusion, what you're doing is you're taking lightweight isotopes, hydrogens and heliums, things that are found everywhere, and then at pretty extreme conditions, literally thousands of atmospheres and hundreds of millions of degrees. You force those together. They fuse, form heavier elements and electricity. The problem is, is that what we see most folks in fusion, earlier in my career do, is do all that to generate heat, to run steam turbines, to run cooling
Starting point is 01:45:50 cycles, and all the other things that we normally do for power. And at Alien, our goal was, can we do something a little bit different? Can we directly harness the magnetic and electric energy from that reaction at really high efficiencies to get and extract electricity and then sell it? And so that's what we set out to do. We've built now seven generation of machines that do that direct electricity extraction and then show that you can do fusion. So talk about the road to Q greater than one,
Starting point is 01:46:18 Q engineering greater than one, all the different milestones that, it's interesting, you have such a, in fusion, you have such a solid, like, ground truth for your KPI, that is very different from other businesses. It really is, like, there's scientific milestones, and it's very measurable.
Starting point is 01:46:37 The energy that goes into the system must be less than the energy that comes out. But talk about that path where you are today, where you need to be in 2030 to meet your goals. Yeah. And I think that there is actually some room to talk about that ground truth in terms of what you need for the business. Because our goal at Helion, anyway, is not to focus only on those scientific milestones, but to do it in a way that makes electricity. And so that's actually something we sent out that's different about Helion from the beginning is extracting electricity directly. getting that out to the grid, and then showing that you could do that at really high efficiency.
Starting point is 01:47:15 If you can extract electricity at 95% electricity, now the fusion just has to do that little bit. And so the systems can be smaller, faster, and easier. And so that's what we've proved to do. So what we've set out to do. So we've built now seven generations of systems set world records for plasma temperatures, plasma pressure, plasma energy, and then also showed we could do some of the electricity piece of extracting electricity from it. So we're running our seventh generation system Polaris right now. Its goal is to show you can make that electricity and make electricity from fusion so you can go out and build those power plants with it.
Starting point is 01:47:50 How big is the system? I was going to ask about size. Yeah. I mean, we've seen small fusion reactor companies that are making effectively a battery that could go in a vehicle or spacecraft. Obviously, there's the Chernobyl nuclear reactor that everyone knows. But where do you sit? Why did you wind up in that particular? position and then what's the strategy if demand winds up being, you know, one megawatt,
Starting point is 01:48:15 I come to you and I say, I want 10 megawatts in one facility. How do you meet that demand or do you just sit it out? Yeah, so our goal for Microsoft, the PPA, the power purchase agreement we have with them, is to build a 50 megawatt facility. So that's industrial scale power. It's not your house. Yeah. But it is not large-scale data centers.
Starting point is 01:48:33 It's actually my house. I need 50 megawatts personally. But speak for yourself. No. What are you doing it? I'm training, I'm training models for myself. I got to do it. Sovereign.
Starting point is 01:48:45 Household AI was very, you know, 2025, 2026. Household AI is the new wave. So 50 megawatts at one facility. You're going to need juice to do that. Yeah. You're going to need some helium. So is it one system, a series of systems, racks? Like, how do you think about industrializing that capacity?
Starting point is 01:49:06 It gets to the thesis of the business. What I tell the team is that if we're the first to build a fusion power plant, and that's all we do, then we've totally failed as a business. That our goal is to build systems that are deployed globally at scale. Fusion can do it, and we need to make that happen. And so part of that is building systems that are modular and scalable and deployable. And so the vision is that you're building a 50 megawatt scale generator, each one on that scale, at our facility, gigafactory is a fusion production that then can be put on a truck. delivered to the site, plugged in, and run. And if you need 500 megawatts,
Starting point is 01:49:42 you put in 10 of them, or 12 of them, so you have some redundancy. And then you can scale from there. And so you think about that in that modular building piece, a lot like how we think about data centers and breaking those into those modular pieces that you can then mass produce and then deploy at scale and deploy them quickly.
Starting point is 01:49:57 And so that's what we focused on doing, even to the point of being annoying, where even for our seventh generation system, we built it at our parts in our factory, put them on a truck, drove them down the street and, well, really in the parking lot, and then plug them in to go get Polaris assembled. And so keeping that same philosophy of mass production and reliability and scale so you can lower costs and timelines is really important. So what is the capacity of a single system these days?
Starting point is 01:50:26 50 megawatts. And then you, we'll chain them together to get to bigger numbers for particular projects. Got it. Yeah. Yeah, you're sorry, please. I was going to say with the technology we have now, there's some fundamental physics limitations for fusion of trying to scale it down and scale.
Starting point is 01:50:45 Yeah. And so our goal is smaller scale if we can get there, but fusion scales to the big scale, easy. Yeah, that's great. What are your timelines around the number age, the PPA with Microsoft, all that kind of thing? Because a lot of the, you know, the nuclear found, that we've had on.
Starting point is 01:51:09 Everything's really exciting. It feels like it's happening. And then you ask about the timeline, and it's 20, you know, 234. And you guys have been making, you know, very incremental progress, but I'm curious how you think about it. Yeah, so our goal for the Microsoft program
Starting point is 01:51:28 is to have our power plant out there built in 2028 and start in early operations and then scale that up from there. The key to that is a couple of key things is getting started early. It's been now a couple of years that we've been working on that power plant facility. And I think you point to some of the challenges in nuclear industry around regulatory and permitting. So that's one thing that fusion shines is that we've been able to go out and actually get all the permits. The environmental permits were granted last year.
Starting point is 01:52:00 We broke ground on the actual power plant last year. And now built two buildings on the site and are building the third. and starting this year on that power infrastructure. And so that's really exciting to be able to go get that hardware in the ground, get built, and then here and Everett behind me, actually, in the factory, start building some of those early prototypes and components for Orion itself. And so that's what we're working on, all of that in parallel. It's a little crazy, but the world needs it, and we've got to get it out there quick.
Starting point is 01:52:28 What's the regulatory side of the business look like? Do you need to go NRC tested a dome? We were more familiar with the fission side of the business, which makes a ton of sense when someone's creating a new nuclear reactor. I'd like them to test it in a remote location under a dome in case it explodes. But there's a very different set of risks here. I don't know that there's anywhere near as many, but there's still probably some oversight. So what does that look like? So when we found it, Healyatta, it was something I was really worried about because there wasn't a really a clear regulatory framework.
Starting point is 01:53:03 And White Space is good in a lot of engineering and science, but it's not great in regulatory and policy. And so we spent a lot of work on that. But the good news is a year and a half ago, we got a law passed called the Advance Act, which very solidly, by going through the real technical rigor of what are the risks of fusion, the nuclear regulatory agency made the determination. And then we got a law passed to support that, that the nuclear regulatory agency does not need to regulate fusion. Fectis regulated by the states by the Department of Health. So we're regulated like a particle accelerator and a hospital. It's still serious and it's still industrial scale with lots of licensing and regulatory work. But the timeline is now on the order of a year or less rather than a decade.
Starting point is 01:53:49 And so that's the big difference. And it comes to a lot of the safety cases of why fusion is just fundamentally different. And in general, if I tour Helion's facilities, there's probably no radioactive material. anywhere on site? Is that roughly correct? Because you're not using plutonium or uranium? So we're definitely not using plutonium or uranium. The systems can't melt down, go critical, or any of those kinds of things. But it is still an atomic process, what happens in the sun and what we build here on Earth. And so we do have to consider, just like in a hospital, and a particle accelerator in a hospital, the radioactive materials. And there are some
Starting point is 01:54:28 created, and we spend a lot of work making sure we can handle those. And so we've been licensed and regulated by the state to be able to handle those in that similar way for a number of years now. And so we spend a lot of time and have a big team that does it to make sure that we're handling this safely in a way that the public can believe in and trust. And it's really important that you do that and you talk about those things. I'm glad you have more funding to work on it. Yeah, it's great. And the timeline is very exciting.
Starting point is 01:54:56 Yeah. I'm now thinking about the opportunity to do the first Fusion-powered podcast on. on site, on site when you guys, when you and Microsoft, we might have to call on a favor with Satya, say, hey, can we siphon off? Can we borrow a little juice? But really impressive progress and excited to follow along. Have a great rest of your day. Congrats to the team. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 01:55:21 We'll talk to you soon. Goodbye. Let me tell you about public.com investing for those to take it seriously, stocks, options, bonds, crypto treasuries, and more with great customer service. Let's go over to the retail corner, presented by Public, of course. Matthew Zaitland says, the idea that SpaceX is being, quote, dumped on retail is a little silly. Retail almost certainly wants to buy like 10x of whatever's possible.
Starting point is 01:55:47 He said, I'm just not moved by the index fund stuff. The index funds own the stock market. SpaceSix is part of the stock market. What are you going to do? Go find a way to neutralize your exposure if you're so mad about it. That's a good point. With the public, you could create the S&P 499 if you want. Well, SpaceX isn't going to be in the S&P.
Starting point is 01:56:05 I think it will be. No, they're the one index that pushed back. I think that the profitability hurdle has been met because of the new Google deal. I think that SpaceX, when they go public, will be, I think this is new. And I think that Google is now buying about a billion dollars a month of compute from SpaceX. And between that, between the Google deal and the Anthropic deal, and probably lower burn from just things generally because you're going out and you want to make sure that you're in the fighting in fighting form. I would expect to see a profitable quarter very quickly that will lead to index inclusion.
Starting point is 01:56:45 Okay. Still not like five days. Yeah, probably not five days, but I would probably say within the first year it's possible. And S&P 499 is just, is just an idea. There's other indices that it matters. Can't the S&P just look at Goldman's estimate that they're going to have, $470 billion in 2030? Good point. Can't they just lean on that? They could. No, they actually can't because it's in their rules that you have to be actually gap profitable. But Elon is marshalling the profits from a variety of companies that have money to pay. But I take issue with this question of retail almost certainly wants to buy like 10x or whatever's available. There's so much available. It's not some low float. Oh, it's game stop and like a,
Starting point is 01:57:31 bunch of meme traders can fire it up. Like this is 60 billion dollars. Like I don't know that retail can deploy what 10x that? 600 billion dollars is coming out of retail like Robin Hood accounts. Are you kidding me? Like no. I like like I don't know that that's the I don't think that the like maybe maybe what happens is the indexes come in and they anchor and then there's employee lockups and then Elon's not selling. So the effect. effective float is low enough that retail is actually fighting for shares and moving the price, and they are the marginal trader, which would be the biggest win ever, because then you can move the retail army off of talking about the moon and Mars and all the long-term stuff, as opposed to having a bunch of financial investors that are like, what have you done for me lately? What's going on this quarter? Which is not where that business wants to be. So I don't know. Chats predicting a bloodbath retail. We'll see. I don't know. Yeah, tracked my $135 from $60 billion. It's a lot. I still don't, I'm not putting in the dumping on retail. I'm just saying that like I think that Matthew, friend of the show, love him, but I don't
Starting point is 01:58:45 fully buy that if the retail allocation is 10 billion, that there's a hundred billion of demand just because it's such a big number. One thing I will say, I don't know, we'll see. Hard to find a bear that's actually willing to short it. That's a great point. That is a fantastic point. It is a very, very dangerous proposition. Wait, is this true? No, this is a joke. Morgan Barrett is joking around. Has a screenshot of Aeroon advertising the SpaceX IPO. SpaceX IPO access is in the Aeroon rewards. I know this is a joke because Jordi would have told me if it was real, because he's in that app. Five times a day. His screen time, it's like Aeroon and then X. And then text messages. Yeah, but everyone's at the top.
Starting point is 01:59:33 No. Pull up this post from Cosmos and then we'll go to our next guest. Yes. Cosmos is saying, hey, Siri, find me a trademark lawyer. And this is Andy McCune's company. If you zoom in, you can see that it's the exact same logo. And I do know that Andy does, in fact, have trademark on this design. Oh, interesting.
Starting point is 01:59:59 Wait, so that is the new Siri loading icon? Or is that just this app is loading actively? I don't know. This is an odd demo. At the same time, it's six dots. I don't know. It's six dots. Your honor, it's six dots.
Starting point is 02:00:15 It's six dots. Can you just, can you just trademark a square? Is it potentially? I'm the only one that can use a circle. Cosmos is like a more, more from my understanding, more like a Pinterest competitor. It could be a different enough category. that... Well, Apple also used a Pinterest-style dual-feed layout in one of their app designs. So, you know, maybe they're ruffling feathers all over the tech industry today, but probably giving
Starting point is 02:00:40 consumers what they want. So we'll see. Jure comes on. I like the six dots on my Siri. I'm happy. I was upset about Apple intelligence. I thought they under-delivered. But now they're back, so I'm voting Apple. Yeah, the most biased jury in the world. Imagine. Well, we have Pete Florence from Generalist. He's the co-founder and CEO. How are you doing? Hey, John. Doing great. Thanks for having me on.
Starting point is 02:01:02 Thanks so much for hopping on. First time on the show. Introduce yourself. Tell us about the company. Awesome. So really the backstory of the company is, you know, goes back to kind of the story of the founders. And so for myself, I've been working on robotics and AI for over a decade now.
Starting point is 02:01:19 I started my PhD at MIT. Tonight success. There you go. Yeah, 2014. And it was in grad school at MIT. I met one of my co-founder, Andy Barry, just an amazing overall roboticist. He was at Boston Dynamics for five and a half years. Then after grad school for me, I was at Google Deep Mind.
Starting point is 02:01:38 And there I worked super closely with another Andy, Andy Zhang. We published a ton of research papers together. And, you know, eventually it just kind of, there was this overwhelming sensation that to like really match the shape of this challenge to just go build general intelligence for the physical world that we just needed like, you know, to get the dream team. together, get all the right folks, and have like a really focused plan on how we actually build and scale this whole thing. And that's what we've been doing for the last couple of years. Why haven't you said the word humanoid yet? What's going on?
Starting point is 02:02:11 Great question. We think humanoids are awesome. A lot of people in the team have been working on humanoids for over a decade. Like back when I mentioned when I started grad school, that was the era of the DARPA Grand Challenge, you know, back like one of the first sort of big humanoid things. This is Rocker's Basco, he doesn't want to say anything bad about humanoid. Yeah, yeah. He's like, they're great. They're great.
Starting point is 02:02:31 I'm not really working on them right now. They're great. I don't want to say anything bad. There was those two kids. Because when they rise up, you don't want to be on the record. You saw those two kids in China. Yes. That got kicked by humanoids.
Starting point is 02:02:43 You know what those kids were doing right before the performance? Talking trash. They were talking some smack. Probably talking smack. Saying that there's a different path to our robotic future. But take us through it. Like, what is the future? How do you see this all rolling out?
Starting point is 02:02:54 Because I think I think everyone agrees with you. I don't know if everyone agrees. I mean, otherwise people wouldn't be spending billions of dollars to build an only humanoid. But I do think that humanoids are really, of course, like a form factor that makes a lot of sense for a lot of things, but we just think the future
Starting point is 02:03:09 is much bigger than only humanoids. And there'll be billions of robots, and some of them will be humanoids, but there'll be a lot of other form factors too. Yeah. Humanoids are the cars, and you're building the motorcycle. I like it. I would say we're more like building,
Starting point is 02:03:25 in that analogy, more and more like building fundamental engine technology that could be used in motors or could be using cars or could be using planes or whatever you want. So, I mean, that feels like it gives you potentially a larger Tam in the near term. Because, like, as much as everyone says, like, oh, it's human, what is the, what is the ramp for humanoid robots to actually get into the home? There's so many edge cases in the factory, you have polished floors. Why don't you just have wheels?
Starting point is 02:03:53 Like, there's all these reasons why humanoid's the supply chain. It could take five years. it could take 10 years. But at the same time, like, Amazon actively has a million robots. Like, they just do their Kiva systems. They're rolling around. You don't, they're nowhere near humanoid, but they're incredibly economically valuable. And if you could be a part of that supply chain, you probably have a great business.
Starting point is 02:04:12 But what supply chains that we would broadly define as robotic do you see as being like the most near-term consequential to your business? Yeah, great question. So, you know, overall, there's like, robotics and automation has been deployed in a ton of different industries doing a lot of different things. And, you know, we, this has been kind of obvious over time to learn for me, but like, we don't want to be doing anything that previous robotics and automation has already solved. We really want to be focused on the things that haven't been solved so far today. So in a lot of cases, this is like industries that already have a lot of robots, but there's a lot
Starting point is 02:04:49 of different types of applications in these that just, you know, have not been possible to address with robots before. So things like logistics, manufacturing. the supply chains for those or the, you know, really just like the rollout, you know, operations of those at scale. Those are really two really obvious areas. But then, you know, the name of the company is generalist and, you know, very much like having these models, power robots in a ton of different industries, ton of different applications. That's really what we're doing. Okay. So I have a calculator app.
Starting point is 02:05:21 It's written in Python on the back end. It works fine. I could replace that with an LLM and just ask the LLM to guess the answer to every math question I give it. That would be inefficient and not really an upgrade. It's possible. My question is, let's say I have a factory and I have a bunch of CNC machines with robotic arms that are on deterministic paths. I have some Kuka robotic arms that are all pre-programmed. They take the glass and they put it on the windshield of the car as it rolls along.
Starting point is 02:05:51 I have a bunch of robots that are programmed that, And they're doing their job. They break down. There's all the usual things. But why do I want to go from deterministic control an operation of my robotic fleet to something that's stochastic AI-driven? Yeah, it's a great question. So some things, John, like, yes, and those types of applications that you mentioned,
Starting point is 02:06:13 those are already sold by robots today. Like, we already have welding robots. Yeah, right? Yeah. But there's a lot of stuff that even in like very structured roboticized environments, like it's still very challenging for previous generation, like programmed robots to solve. The easiest example in like auto manufacturing
Starting point is 02:06:30 is like wire harnessing. So the reality is like things like wires or lots of different like finicky, like easy for people to deal with types of objects and applications. These are just out of scope for like traditional, you program the robot to do those things. But that's just, that's just auto, like really like the variety of different like industries that are set to benefit
Starting point is 02:06:51 it from these models that can just, you know, really pick up anything you want them to do in terms of, especially what we focus on is dexterity as we really think is like the Holy Grail. And this is, I think, not even that hot of a take within robotics. Everybody in robotics knows that, like, dexterity has really been the bottleneck. And that's the one where we are just, like, really focused on pushing is making it so robots can use their hands to do, you know, really a massive variety of different applications. So is the best... biggest opportunity taking something that doesn't have a robot in the loop at all and creating
Starting point is 02:07:27 a new robot or a system that can use existing robots to do that task? Or is there still opportunity in, look, I have a Kuka robot arm and 80% of the time it does it right, but we have someone there that's taking over and getting on the Xbox controller or something like once or twice a day. And that's where we want to bring AI to bear to deal with those edge cases. Or is it more of the wire harnessing like you're not you're not doing that with a kuka robot arm at all and so we're going to unlock that for the first time It's much more of the ladder much much more of the unlock right and I think even from what we've seen so far and just like you know starting to announce these these models that that we've been announcing and starting to see people that have been coming us coming to us for what they want them to use them for Like, we just have this, like, you know, there's this general sensation of like this explosion of interest of like, oh, I've never thought about using a robot at all for this entire application.
Starting point is 02:08:30 And now, okay, I see. We can start to get these robots to very quickly and very reliably and with good speed and all these other things that are needed to really deploy these things that this is coming online. And, yeah, it's really much more of this unlock for all these different things that we haven't really been able to use robots for. before before. It feels like the way that robotics are naturally diffusing, which is, you know, kind of behind the scenes. I didn't see the video of this. This robot slapping the kid is so bad. So bad.
Starting point is 02:09:04 We'll play them after you jump off. But, you can stay on. So, so the way that robotics are diffusing is naturally in industrial settings, behind the scenes, behind the scenes, and it feels like there could be massive amounts of progress being made and like relatively little hype around it because the people that are experiencing these products in real time aren't necessarily on X just being like, this model changes everything. I no longer write, you know, I no longer write code, I just prompt, et cetera, et cetera. Is that feel at all accurate?
Starting point is 02:09:42 I think, you know, what I think about there is that the industrial applications, we think are likely to be the ones that really start to ramp even more quickly than more like consumer type or, you know, like home type applications. You know, of course there'll be like more and more robots in people's homes, but in terms of these things like really starting to scale, we do think that, you know, industrial is more likely to take off there. But we're also like super excited about everything that will be happening and more like consumer and home type applications.
Starting point is 02:10:18 So, you know, that's, you know, one of the, you know, just fundamental strategies of focusing on the model intelligence and it can be used in all these different cases is we do think industrial is more likely to take off soon. But, yeah, we're super excited about supporting, you know, more consumer and home type things as well. Data, benchmarks, evals. What's the current thinking? the Sim to Real Gap, puppeteering.
Starting point is 02:10:43 I mean, there's so many different pieces of, but I want to get up to speed on like your philosophy on each of these like tradeoffs. Like how much do you believe that, that, you know, the scaling laws apply versus just, you know, we've seen all these crazy companies of doing like you'll wear a camera to collect training data for humanoid robots.
Starting point is 02:11:06 Like, what's the data collection thesis? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, what's your data collection thesis? What's your eval benchmarking thesis? Like, how do you know you're getting better? How much of it is qualitative versus quantitative? Like, take me through that side of the business. Totally.
Starting point is 02:11:22 These are all, you know, very, very good and very core questions. I know it's like five questions that we can spend an hour beyond each of them. Exactly. Tell me everything. So, you know, we think what I would point to here, right, is like we've started to share. a fair bit on like what we kind of think is really core and what drives like all the decisions that we put into our models. So, you know, going back to, you know, you mentioned scaling laws. We announced our Gen Zero model back in November.
Starting point is 02:11:53 And I think, you know, it really was the first time in robotics that anybody had shown like general scaling laws, right, where we can predictably advance performance with more and more compute and data. And of course, this is something that for all the AI researchers that have known what has been happening, And all the other domains, like, this is of course something that we were expecting to happen. And Gen Zero back in November, it really was the first time that anybody had shown this. That was back in November. You know, fast forward just five months. April, pretty recently, we announced the Gen 1 model.
Starting point is 02:12:28 And it's quite a bit better model. And like, you know, the biggest point, nice, you're just showing some videos here, which I can give some color on. But it's really quite a good model. We have a whiteboard and this is a job in our studio. So, Tyler, I'm sorry. And it needs to be erased. It actually needs to be erased.
Starting point is 02:12:48 Everything on the board is irrelevant now. We'll see if we can get a robot to the studio before too long. But, you know, the Gen 1 model, like, it really is starting to cross into like these levels of performance that we think for certain types of applications. And we try to always under promise and over deliver. So there's plenty that it's. that we still have more to go. We feel very early overall in like the general journey
Starting point is 02:13:13 of general intelligence for the physical world, but starting to cross over into levels of performance where these things are commercially viable for a good number of applications. And we think that this is really like a crossover point where we have like a general model
Starting point is 02:13:25 starting to be able to hit levels of reliability and speed and improvisational intelligence where we can start to get these things out there. Very much like, you know, I think that kind of like you take a GPD 2 level model, you scale it to a GPD3 level, model and you start to tick over into certain types of applications become commercially viable. If you remember, GPD3 started with like copy AI and Jasper AI, you know, copyrighting for ads.
Starting point is 02:13:49 That was kind of the first thing to take off a few others. And we feel like that's starting to be where we're at with these models for the physical world. Okay. Question. Is it possible that for certain robotic form factors, let's say humanoids, they get to the point where they can do economically valuable work as, the robot can make something, but the process overall is not commercially viable because of the CAP-X needed to,
Starting point is 02:14:19 or to say, purchase the route. So, like, I've been looking at humanoid's do some work, and they're able to do some type of process, let's say, and I can say, like, okay, maybe right now there's a bunch of humans out there that do that kind of work, and you can put a humanoid there. The problem is, like, a humanoid has all of these different, you know, actuators and motors and batteries and all these different things.
Starting point is 02:14:42 And I'm looking at it and thinking, okay, is it possible that the robot sort of just starts like breaking down where let's say you spend $50,000 on a robot and it replaces a human, but it starts degrading over time and, you know, many of the parts need to be replaced frequently enough that you're effectively having to just buy, replace parts or buy a new robot so frequently that you're better off just having a human in that role. Well, I actually hired a Quinn-a-Manual lawyer to do my dishes. And so, like, even if it's $600 an hour, I'm going to be saving money. Nice.
Starting point is 02:15:20 Yeah. Whether it's the things breaking down or whatever it is, like, yeah, any factor that makes it so that, you know, like, what you need to get done is not getting done and you need to, like, have somebody looking over their shoulder the whole time, Like, yeah, that makes it, you know, not really at the level of viability that I think is really needed for these things to really scale and be useful. We're running long. Do you have another minute? Yeah, I'm good.
Starting point is 02:15:47 Perfect. Tier list of data sources. I want you, do you know a tier list? Yes, tiers the best, A, B, C, D.F. I love tier lists, yeah. I want to throw some data sources at you and you can sort of rank them. So the first one, we're. would be YouTube videos or like internet video,
Starting point is 02:16:08 like transfer learning from there's a video of somebody skateboarding or walking around. Is that a valuable data source? Put aside the cost to license it. Just think about the quality. Yeah, this is great. Yeah, I don't know the whole set yet, so I have to. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's tough.
Starting point is 02:16:25 This is also live, so it's tough. Give them the whole list. Good. I'll give you an answer, but it's not S tier, it's not a tier. Okay. Maybe I give it a B. B, okay.
Starting point is 02:16:36 Next one. I don't know what else is coming. World models. World models. I've heard a lot of hype about transfer learning from world models. Seems a little bit early, but where's that? So world models, right, your question up front was as a data source. Data source specifically.
Starting point is 02:16:53 Yeah. So you can generate infinite worlds. You can generate a world of that whiteboard and use that as training data, even though it's synthetic. Yeah. I think synthetic data in general in robotics is still a very kind of, you know, open frontier. And there's not like, there's not a huge amount of proof points here in terms of it really enabling. It's an area I would think it's promising, but there hasn't been a ton of proof points here. So I would just like, I would put world models like not as a source of data.
Starting point is 02:17:22 F tier. Oh, no, no, no, I just not have on the list. I'm going to, wait, is radical ventures in any, in any world model companies? I'm going to give Rob Taves a call and tell them that you were talking. And Rocco's Basil is not going to like this when Faye-Fei Lee achieves ASI and has a bone to pick with you. It's a complicated question. I think that... It's okay.
Starting point is 02:17:44 We can move on. The data is that behind the data that is behind these world models. That's more like the source of data, I would say. Okay. Third data source, mocap data. You got a bunch of people in mocap suits. You got them doing things. It's a 3D representation.
Starting point is 02:17:59 maybe a point cloud, something like that. This is a good list of questions. So for me, it's not a data source I'm super excited about because... Another F tier? No, well, let me explain. We, you know, we really care especially about dexterity, right? And mocap suits of people running around, you know, studio is not the main place where you get dexterity data. It is good for, like, you know, full body, you know, whole body motions.
Starting point is 02:18:28 I would say... Your first issue is you're caring about dexterity. In my own list, I'd put it C tier. C tier. Next, I get a lot of Instagram reels from this community. It's the gloving community. I don't know if you've heard of the glovers. I don't know this one, though.
Starting point is 02:18:41 Okay, so they put up LEDs on the end of their fingers. They wear gloves and they do light shows for each other. It's like a Burning Man, Coachella type thing. Anyway, they exemplify remarkable dexterity. Is that going to be an important source of data?
Starting point is 02:18:55 We love remarkable dexterity data. I don't know how much of the This source of data exists. It depends on what type of data, not just like what people are doing, but what type of data can you extract when people are doing it. So I don't know what sensors the gloves have, but in general, the more dexterous the data, the more valuable. So without knowing more about it, maybe I'll put it B or A. John will start a gloving data labeling. Next one.
Starting point is 02:19:17 Just the general like open crawl internet data. I talk to a very thought-provoking AI thinker. at one point, he said that, like, with enough scale, you could, like, learn to walk as a human-eyed robot, just from reading the books. By the way, a pretty heavy-hitter robotics founder texting me live and says, Pete is trying to figure out how to not say world models suck.
Starting point is 02:19:44 And he says, there it is. Okay. What is like the world? We wrote a blog post on this. We think they have their role. We'll come back in five years and it'll be great. But specifically, just this idea that, like, to start your foundation model,
Starting point is 02:19:58 to do like the earliest pre-training, it might be helpful to just start with like general understanding of the world. So you bake in like all the Reddit data or all the internet, common crawl, like all of that stuff. Where does that rank on the tier list? So here let me say on this, right? So like exactly this like, you know, idea of like,
Starting point is 02:20:16 oh, let's use all the data from the internet we possibly can and bake that into the robot brain and then that's like a source of knowledge that the robot brain has and then we also have the robot learn all the other things. Like that is exactly like a core, that was like really the core of my work back when I was at Google Devine. Like, like, and, you know, a lot of the research in there was, like, things that myself and my co-founder, Annie Z-Zing, you know, that's what we did.
Starting point is 02:20:38 I'm here and S-Tier. I'm very passionate about it. Talk me off S-Tier. Not S-Tier. Oh, okay. It's great. It's very, it's very helpful. I would, like, it's, it's something you definitely want, right?
Starting point is 02:20:51 But then I would just think of it this way, like, what's the best way to learn how to ski? Is it read a book on skiing? No. It's to read R-slash skiing. It's to read R-slash-skiing. No, it's to watch a bunch of Instagram hype reels added it to SDKid. That's what you got to watch. You got to get the video training data, not the R-slash-skiy.
Starting point is 02:21:12 R-slash-skiing. I did another one. I think I had another one. Okay, okay, the last one. The point is you want to go skiing, right? That's the point. The last one is simulation. I gave you, let's call it, Unreal Engine, and I have a one-to-one representation.
Starting point is 02:21:27 of a particular robot, and I can vary the terrain, and I can vary the motions, and it can sort of goal-seek over a inverse kinematics model, and you can use that to train off of. Where does that fit in? I'd say C. C-tier. Okay, is there anything that's S-T or A-tier? Like, what way, am I missing something, or is this the secret sauce? Is this why I got to give you $400 million?
Starting point is 02:21:50 I mean, you can take a look at some of the data that we have, and we've shared a little bit about what we have. I certainly think that our data is very, very good. But the things that create S-tier data is not just like, oh, what's the overall, like, you know, data capture methodology? But it's also about, like, what are people actually doing? Like, what's the quality of the data? And that's the type of thing that's, like, very hard to,
Starting point is 02:22:15 in a short conversation to put your finger on. But as you sort of, like, live and experience the stuff all the time, you really, you know, you develop this appreciation for what really drives quality. And this is one of the things that really, drives, you know, like, you know, what makes the best language models, the best language models. Quality of data is an incredibly important part. The lived experience is S-tier.
Starting point is 02:22:34 Lived experience of the physical world is S-tier. It would be me wearing a full ski outfit with ski boots and skis, but sitting at my desk reading R-slash-Gee. Okay. You said it right, though. Lived experience of the physical world is S-tier. That is exactly what it is. Just getting the Rhaps in.
Starting point is 02:22:52 I love it. That's a great philosophy. Well, we got to hit the gong. $400 million, $2 billion valuation. Thank you so much for coming on the show. Great stuff. Thanks for hanging out. This is fantastic.
Starting point is 02:23:04 Let's do it again soon. I appreciate the live, like, the proof of work in the background too. They've been cooking. They're cooking. It's just every day here. Thanks for having me on you guys. Thanks so much. Talk to you soon.
Starting point is 02:23:16 Goodbye. Let me tell you about Railway. Railway is the all-in-one intelligent cloud provider. You use your favorite agents to deploy web app, servers, databases, and more. the Railway automatically takes care of scaling, monitoring, and security. And our next guest is here with us live in the TBPN Ultradem. How you doing? Good well.
Starting point is 02:23:32 Welcome to the show. And the Ultradam. Thank you for having me. Jordan Bramble, CEO and founder of Antares. Welcome back. Got some gifts for you guys. Thank you. Hats, fantastic.
Starting point is 02:23:42 I went golfing yesterday. These are good looking hats. You take any hat and you put this flag on it. It gets better automatically. This is good. What's the occasion for the hat? What's the latest? We got a 53 on the side of your hat.
Starting point is 02:23:56 So that's Idaho National Labs 53rd reactor. We just built it, turned it on last week. Fantastic. How to go? Incredible. Did everything we set out to do. So about a year ago, you guys probably remember this, the president signed a series of executive orders. Trying to speed up nuclear.
Starting point is 02:24:12 Trying to speed up nuclear. One of the provisions in those orders called for three reactors to be turned on on American soil by America's 250th birthday, July 4th. We just turned on the first, a month ahead of schedule. Okay. So you took your reactor to INL and you turn it on. What is that process? Like how long did you turn it on for? What were you monitoring for?
Starting point is 02:24:34 Were there any, oh, we're going super critical. It's melting down. Were there any OSHIT moments? Did any, you had some, I think one of your investors, or at least multiple were out there? Yes. Jamie was texting me. Did he fall asleep? No.
Starting point is 02:24:51 Because there's a lot of debate on VCs falling asleep. rolling to sleep. But I feel like turning on a nuclear reactor, having a nuclear reactor go critical sounds really exciting, but I feel like in practice you might be sitting there for like, you know, hours and hours and hours. Yeah, it sounds really thrilling, but it's like inside of a box and you can't really see anything. You might start to do that. It's more dashboard, right?
Starting point is 02:25:12 It's not a, exactly. You're streaming, you know, with the same thing the control room operators are saying. So you watch your approach to critical every step of the way. It's intentionally kind of a slow, dull moment to get there. It's kind of just a number on a screen. Yeah. But the exciting thing is, I mean, this is something that, you know, we as a country have not done with a new design, with a non-light water cooled reactor in I think like 40 years, right? This is the first privately developed.
Starting point is 02:25:37 What do you have against light water? I have nothing against them. I think we should build a lot more light water reactors as well. So we're focused on micro reactors, right? So very, very small scale systems, kind of one megawatt and below. And the idea is you put multiple of these systems together. What about a micro amount of water? Well, what about if you want to put a reactor places where you don't have access to water, right?
Starting point is 02:25:57 So, like, you're not near... Bottle water? Bring some water with you. Wait, do they really go through a lot of water? Yeah. Oh, light water reactors go through a lot of water. Interesting. If you look at where light water reactors typically are, they're...
Starting point is 02:26:08 Like, by the ocean. Oh, interesting. The notable example, the notable exception of this is, I think it's Palo Verde in Arizona. So they actually use the wastewater stream from the city of Phoenix. Oh, interesting. as a cooling source for the reactor. Okay, cool. So obviously there's lots of applications where you're in the desert, you're in space,
Starting point is 02:26:28 you're somewhere on the moon or something, and a bunch of other places where you don't have access to water. That's an advantage. And you've got to save the water for the almonds. Yeah, exactly. Like if he's using a bunch of water to make energy, what are the almonds going to drink? Yeah, it's good point.
Starting point is 02:26:42 But there's other benefits too, right? So, you know, very, very small scale reactors, what you want to do is you want to be able to shrink the plant size. for thermal efficiency reasons, you typically want to operate at very high temperatures. In order to keep water from boiling at very high temperatures, you have to go to higher and higher pressures, which that creates materials issues and other challenges. And so, you know, in our specific design, we're relying on liquid metal heat pipes as the primary coolant. Liquid metal heat pipes.
Starting point is 02:27:08 So small amounts of sodium that vaporize inside of a pipe. When they condense on the cool end of the pipe, they condense into a metal, like a wick structure, think like wire mesh. that through surface tension pulls the fluid back. And so you have this totally passive process of cooling the reactor that just relies on phase change in a very small amount of metal. But the other advantage of that is we operate it near atmospheric pressure. So these are low pressure systems.
Starting point is 02:27:34 From a safety perspective, if something were to happen to the reactor, you don't have a coolant that's going to vaporize and travel over large distances. When you have pressurized water, if you lose that coolant, you run the risk of traveling large distance. Exactly. Transporting fission products, right? So this is a way to generate electricity once you get the heat. So it's called a nitrogen closed brait cycle.
Starting point is 02:27:54 So there's a heat exchanger. Think a tube and fen on the condenser section of the pipe. And gaseous nitrogen is removing heat. And then it turns a turbo machine. Think it like an automotive-style turbocharger. Yep. That turns an alternator and that's ultimately how you're making electricity. Interesting.
Starting point is 02:28:08 So this test does not produce electricity. Our goal is to be there in 2027 and then on customer sites in 2028. So, you know, I like to say neutrons 26, electrons 27, $228. Love it. That's great. Sorry. Yeah. Are you standing on the shoulders of giants?
Starting point is 02:28:27 Like, is this more of a, like, how much of this is, obviously you're innovating in a bunch of different ways along the way. But had somebody said 30 years ago, hey, this is possible and then just nobody did it? Or, like, what is the kind of the balance between, like, execute? Yeah. I think the 1980s was really the last, you know, roughly the 1980s into maybe the early 90s when the Cold War ended was kind of the last time we had the capability to do this as a country. And, you know, I love this question, you know, do we stand on the shoulder of giants?
Starting point is 02:29:04 Because the answer to that's absolutely. So the regulatory process that we used for this was DOE authorization. And, you know, even that was informed by a program that was started. roughly eight years ago called Project Paylay in the Department of Defense. A lot of the lessons learned from that informed this regulatory streamlining. When the president signed these executive orders, I think one of the reasons why ourselves and others were able to jump to action so quickly and be successful on this was, you know, we as industry were ready to do this.
Starting point is 02:29:38 The infrastructure had been built, developed, really the people had been developed at the national labs and in the DOE to support this over the course of eight years. And there were people, exactly. Usually one megawatt, right? You know, anywhere, I mean, tens of kilowatts up to multiple megawatts. So, you know, I think some of the military solicitations, they just say 20 megawatts in below. So all the way down to tens of kilowatts even. But, you know, our sweet spot is anywhere 100 kilowat to like a megawatt, potentially even a little more than that.
Starting point is 02:30:09 And then you string them together if you need a big ground. Exactly. Yep. And so most of the military's critical infrastructure. You know, those assets are hundreds of kilowatts to low numbers of megawatts. And so you want that flexibility. And ultimately, that's what's going to get you the highest capacity factor energy anyways is to have some redundancies built in the model.
Starting point is 02:30:26 But, yeah, I mean, so for example, the fuel that we used, it's called triso fuel, the exact specification that we used, the supply chain for it was developed and funded by the Department of Defense under Project Paley. So that production line already existed. BWXD made the fuel. But even that was built a project. 20 years worth of funded work by the DOE called the AGR program, advanced gas reactor program. That's really what developed that fuel.
Starting point is 02:30:52 So, you know, what it meant was so much of our safety basis, you know, the reason we know that fission products will be retained even at high temperatures is because of how much qualification work had been done on this fuel. We could point to that in our regulatory engagement, and that really speeds things up a lot, right? You get to delete some of the extra safety systems. It actually saves you a lot of analysis work because you're relying on the, the, the, the fuel fundamentals itself.
Starting point is 02:31:17 So, you know, that's one thing, right? If we tried to do this 10 years ago, I don't know if it would be possible because, you know, that data just didn't exist to the degree that it does now. You know, the regulator in DOE, Idaho, you know, a gentleman came out of retirement to do this. This is something he'd been waiting
Starting point is 02:31:34 his entire career to do. And on our joint test group, so there's this thing called a joint test group, that's representatives from Antares, Idaho National Lab, Department of Energy, all in one room driving decisions. the person representing I&L's operations in that had known the DOE regulator since 1979. I just found out that last week.
Starting point is 02:31:54 And this is the first reactor they've done together since before 1979. Wow. So came out of retirement. Absolutely stand on the shoulder of giants. One last tour. The whole narrative around no new nuclear reactor since 1979 is somewhat of a good rallying cry for the nuclear industry. but I wonder if there's actually a benefit to sort of reframing messaging around nuclear to acknowledge the fact that I believe the United States generates more nuclear power than any
Starting point is 02:32:28 other country, including China and France. It's about 20% of our baseload power. Yeah. And so France has a higher percentage of their baseload power. Yeah. But they produce way less electricity just generally. Smaller country. Smaller country.
Starting point is 02:32:41 Lower population. Less industrial. And so there's a different take. Right now that the whole messaging path for nuclear is like we're so behind. We can't make anything. And I feel like there's a more inspirational tone, which is like, no, we're literally number one. Let's not lose it.
Starting point is 02:32:58 Like we actually make the most nuclear power of anyone. So let's just continue doing what we're great at. Sure, we have some problems with approving new stuff. Yes, we need to modernize. But we already have the crown. Let's just defend it. Well, that's, again, what I think is the beauty of this program that the DOE developed. in response to the president's executive
Starting point is 02:33:17 for the reactor pilot program, is on a very tight schedule, we just got to show the world like we can continue to do these things. And I kind of retroactively look at it. I would say, you know, the design work is difficult. Regulatory work actually, you know, comparatively easy. My take on this is if you integrate safety
Starting point is 02:33:37 into the design process itself, if you lead with engineering rigor, the regulatory stuff can kind of take care of itself, especially when you have a bought-in regulator like that. this. The hardest part of all was, you know, when we actually got through operational readiness with the DOE and started operating a nuclear facility, right? So like, really the last two weeks of getting this thing turned on was the hardest part of all. You know, you ask kind of about oh shit moments. Definitely no oh shit moments when it comes to safety. You design up front to ensure
Starting point is 02:34:05 that that's not the case. Yeah. But from the build and integration side and actually operating this facility and this reactor, huge learning opportunities, right? So one of the first things, this was the first time that we had set up our control system, all of our nuclear instrumentation, with neutron detectors,
Starting point is 02:34:24 with a startup source, right? Because it's a nuclear facility. You don't just do this in a warehouse in California, right? Yeah. And so, you know, we started seeing... I do worry sometimes that there's a warehouse
Starting point is 02:34:34 in El Segundo that's, you know, stretching the limits of... Yeah. But, yeah, I'm glad going about it this way. Yeah, we don't. You know, we comply with a regulator. But, you know, we, our reactivity control system, we rely on rotating drums with a boron carbide insert layer to absorb neutrons.
Starting point is 02:34:57 So we can close those shut or rotate them out to modulate reactivity. And when the actuator motors themselves are operating, we were seeing electromagnetic interference with our neutron detectors. And so we went through this, like, five, six-day process to go figure that out and troubleshoot it. It's really these kind of like integration activities, being incremental, being iterative. That's how you ultimately mature the technology quickly so that you can get to a true commercial product. What's the next step? Hitting the gong. Hitting the gong.
Starting point is 02:35:28 Hitting the gong. Yeah, yeah. Go ahead. Go for it. We're turning the reactor on. Congratulations. So, you know, we put a couple million dollars into this facility, getting it ready to be a nuclear reactor test. said, we're going to take the same fuel, same facility, scale up to produce electricity there.
Starting point is 02:35:49 And what that means for our customers, right? So we've announced an agreement with the Air Force to do several megawatts of power for joint-based San Antonio in Texas. We expect to announce more military installations by end of this year. What that means for them is the first reactors that are going to their sites have operational heritage. They're not true for a kind systems, right? Because we spent our own capital in testing these.
Starting point is 02:36:11 So that's really next for us is, and in the lead up to that, we're actually going to test the power conversion system itself in our own facility. So, you know, generally our approach to technology development is we start with the subsystems. So we rigorously qualify those. We've got 320,000 square feet of manufacturing space and torrents. Then we do integrated what we call electrically heated tests. So instead of having to go through the regulatory process and do a nuclear test, we replace the nuclear fuel with cartridge heaters and can test the system. some snapshot of the system with electrical heat, which also means you can take it apart afterwards,
Starting point is 02:36:46 see what some of the thermal effects are. So we've already tested our system at full thermal power for six months, and we're gonna repeat that test again this year with some design iterations. Then we'll test the power conversion system, then we're gonna put it all together and do it in a nuclear reactor. So $140 million raised, congratulations.
Starting point is 02:37:01 Thank you. I don't know what you spent last year, but I wanna know a little bit about where the uses of funds goes. have gone so far. Is it all like nuclear scientists? I mean, obviously there's more cost, but something like $2 million to set up this test facility. But is there like an ingredient or a piece in the supply chain that's really expensive and you need millions of dollars for? Or is it like nuclear scientists are really expensive?
Starting point is 02:37:30 Like AI researchers? Because a lot of these folks, like there aren't a ton of jobs because the industry is contracted. So I imagine it's not like this crazy bidding war. But like what is the binding instrument on the financial side? Well, you know, to me that's another reason why these tests are so important because, you know, not only are we validating some of the reactor physics, but we just exercised our entire supply chain. And so we walked out of this test knowing, you know, the lead times we were quoted, the costs we were quoted, you know, tolerances, quality expectations, does that actually
Starting point is 02:38:04 match up with what we see in reality? In some cases, the answer is no, right? And, you know, we're going to iterate and improve on that. That informs some of the things that we're going to vertically integrate in-house versus areas where we're going to continue to double down with some of the same suppliers. Fuel is by far the most expensive thing in a microreactor, the total life cycle of the fuel itself. But the other thing, a lot of people have talked about that. Are you spending like millions of dollars on fuel? Yes.
Starting point is 02:38:29 Really? Yeah, absolutely. So it is like a significant cost. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, it's the largest single line item in the bomb. That makes sense.
Starting point is 02:38:38 Not a big surprise, but... Not B-O-M-B-O-M-B-O-M, Bill and Materials. Nuclear energy. You got to figure out the new term for that one. No acronyms, I just say bill and materials. Yeah, yeah, that'd be great. I was like, the what now? The what now?
Starting point is 02:38:55 What do you have a secret project going on? Yeah, so, but what I think you'd be surprised by that's also really expensive is all the nuclear instrumentation. So how do you count neutrons? So, you know, things that if you really break them down into their constituents are probably like $50,000 worth of hardware. But it's only made by one company, very expensive.
Starting point is 02:39:13 And because we don't build a lot of reactors, you do it so infrequently, it ends up being just, you know, to keep the lights on, you have to charge a really high price, right? That makes a ton of sense. You know, those are things that you learn from these tests. What is the stuff really, I mean, a lot of times in these industries,
Starting point is 02:39:26 pricing is proprietary, right? So you learn that from doing these things. And that informs where you do next. For the first time, I'm going to have to spend a million dollars on this thing. Yeah. Because you can't, yeah, it's got to be hard when you're,
Starting point is 02:39:37 pitching too to sort of forecast out like okay what's ever going to think going to cost but if you hire the right people I'm sure they have like we've been able to refine a lot of that at this point and just from and now you know exactly yeah yeah we know exactly what our fuel is going to cost we know how long it takes to transport it you know we know what our all of our nuclear instrumentation costs and that's what really drives most of the cost of these systems at the end of the day and also I mean like there's there's like I don't know like I can probably name like four or five promising nuclear projects at the early stage. Obviously, there is some competition,
Starting point is 02:40:12 but it feels like such a, such a, like everyone can win market here. Competing for infinite demand. Yeah, infinite demand. And then also that has the benefit of like deeper in the supply chain. You can justify a company like general matter because there's three startups that are growing and five scaleups and 10 public companies or governments that might buy.
Starting point is 02:40:36 And so all of a sudden you get another company deeper in the supply chain, creating more competition, creating more supply. Yep. And so more problems are getting solved. Yeah. It's exciting. Why military bases? I'm going to guess that secure setting, strong willingness to pay for like a secondary source of power. You don't need a truck and all the diesel fuel.
Starting point is 02:40:57 So, I mean, we believe, and this was, this is, I think obvious at this point, but this was really foundational to us back in 2023. The military is the best first customer for advanced nuclear. And so, you know, I think first piece of evidence for that is the Army alone has a $2 billion budget for its Janus program to buy microreactors for military installations. That's money that's going to be committed to buy and deliver reactors between now and 29, 2030. So huge market for data centers and hyperscalers, but what they're signaling is, you know, they're willing to make small equity investments, MOUs, LOIs, but until this technology
Starting point is 02:41:36 Technology is mature and proven. You know, they're not really spending the big dollars yet. Whereas the military is saying we need this technology, we're going to invest them alongside of venture-backed companies through programs like Janus and A&PI. Sorry for the acronyms. But that's the approach that they're taking. The other thing is regulatory expertise. So between the Navy and the Army, you have regulatory licensing authorities that already exist.
Starting point is 02:42:01 And they're leveraging the DOE licensing pathway, you know, alongside of the DEO licensing you know, alongside of the DOE is in an interagency process. So this reactor that we just built, we had Army reactors, regulators in the room for that every step of the way, getting to, you know, in partnership with the Army, getting familiarity with our design, they're going to take all of that back into their next licensing activities for their programs
Starting point is 02:42:25 as they try to put this technology on their basis, right? We had naval reactors in the room. We had the NRC in the room. So. Yeah, the Navy is really the best place for a long time, for decades, be in nuclear engineering, like some of the best people come out of there. So, I mean, the Navy builds multiple reactors a year.
Starting point is 02:42:40 They've built four and a half times the number of reactors is the entire civilian sector. And they operate a ton of them in extreme conditions on aircraft carriers. Most extreme of all. And they never stagnated in the 70s the way that the civilian sector did in nuclear. It's crazy. So the last thing I would say is there's a mission capability need here with the military, right? So it's about resilient power. You know, over the last decade, more and more of, let's call it, warfighting effects,
Starting point is 02:43:05 generated from assets that exist on our installations here inside of the U.S. So whether that's command and control, SATCOM, cyber warfare, our strategic deterrence, like our nuclear weapons assets, space superiority, how do you affect other people's assets in space? Much more of that is generated from here inside of the continental U.S. And you contrast that with the old world of war fighting where you just ship troops across the world and go invade other countries. Yeah, and fuel. And at the same time, we've got adversaries that are capable of disrupting the civilian grid. And so how do we sustain these assets?
Starting point is 02:43:39 How do we continue to operate them without access to a liquid fuel supply chain, without access to a commercial grid? Nuclear fission is the highest uptime, highest capacity factor form of energy we have that's available to us today. And that's what drives that willingness to pay. So we believe, you know, long term we'll go after data centers, you know, we'll do like remote industrials. We want to do everything in nuclear.
Starting point is 02:44:02 But the companies that win those are going to emerge from military work first, right? Because our work with the military, we're going to come out of this with more reps for our operators, more reps, regulatory reps, more operational proof points of the technology at scale. More loaders on the landing page. This is a customer that will, yes, this is a customer that will invest equity and debt in your supply chain to lower your input. Yeah, and the private market is, or sorry, like a hyperscaler is going to be much more commercial, much more short term, what can you do for me tomorrow?
Starting point is 02:44:34 Yep. Because otherwise I'm going to allocate these dollars to gas turbines or something. Exactly. And many complex technologies work this way. GPS, right? You know, if we didn't have nuclear weapons driving the need for GPS, when would we have gotten DoorDash, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 02:44:49 Or yeah, when would we have gotten into the Internet, right? Yeah, yeah. The Internet. Rocket propulsion, another great example. Like, born from the military first and then scale commercially. All this stuff. prediction markets. Yeah, maybe.
Starting point is 02:45:02 No, Tyler knows the truth about the prediction market Genesis. You know, there was a big, big prediction market around this. Really, really, around you, around the July 4th deadline? Which reactors would turn on by August or July 4th? Wow. So. Well, thank you so much for coming on. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:45:20 This was fantastic. Congratulations. Thank you. Last question. Are you, any buzzer beaters, we've got less than a month? You think there'll be others? Oh, yeah. Are you trying to make a bet right now?
Starting point is 02:45:30 Actually don't even comment because I don't want. People are going to, you're going to move the market. Just say I wish them all well. I wish all of them luck. There we go. I mean, like you said, like you said, the country needs a lot more nuclear energy. We're all going to be production. Yeah, we're all going to be production constrained before it's competitive constrained.
Starting point is 02:45:48 For sure. You know, I think the advice I would offer to anybody working at it is start operating a nuclear facility as quickly. as you can because that's when all your challenges start. Just do it. And we've got just under a month left on the clock. Stop making excuses. Start operating a nuclear facility. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:46:07 That's good advice. Good advice. Thank you so much for coming in the show. Yes. Thank you so much for having me. We'll talk to you, sir. Appreciate it. Awesome stuff.
Starting point is 02:46:16 We'll talk soon. Let me tell you about Cisco, critical infrastructure for the AI era, unlock seamless real-time experiences and new value with Cisco. I got an idea. A lot of people are trying to, We're closing out on the nuclear thing. A lot of people are trying to unblock the nuclear regulatory thing. You've got to deal with lobbying.
Starting point is 02:46:33 You got to deal with getting approvals. MLM for regulatory. So you employ a ton of people. You promise them financial freedom. Get them on Facebook. And all of a sudden they're DMing. They're high school friends. Hey, man, trying to catch up.
Starting point is 02:46:48 Turns out I'm a lobbyist for the nuclear industry now. We'd love to get a beer. I'm actually hosting an event. And look. Oh, you don't actually work. The Idaho National Lab, well, you should join me, be under me, and then you go find someone from INL, start lobbying them, create multiple layers, become sort of a pyramid structure. And this is the way we bring abundant energy to America.
Starting point is 02:47:15 It could be powerful. Anyway, we got to pull up these videos. We have to watch these videos. I knew you were going there. I'm ready. Let's pull this up. The latest and greatest in humanoid robots. You asked if we were ready.
Starting point is 02:47:26 We're ready. Look at this. Boom. That is brutal. It is such a crazy hit. It's really spinning around and he sees it coming. It's bad to laugh. No, that's terrible.
Starting point is 02:47:39 America's Funniest Home Videos. What was the parent doing? What was the parent doing? What was the robotics company doing? And what is that scarf? That looks so... Is the scarf part of the problem? I'm sorry.
Starting point is 02:47:50 I'm sorry. That's intentional. You think this is intentional? You think this is viral marketing? That's a foul. You think this is... Wait, but do you actually think this is a stunt? Like how can we go viral for our company? Can we tell what brand it is?
Starting point is 02:48:00 You can kind of see the logo on it. Well, if you're playing. Unitary, right? Yeah, you think so? No, it's not definitely. There's, this is why in America we keep the, we keep the humanoid robots in the cages for cage matches for that robot fighting league that Tyler went to.
Starting point is 02:48:15 Oh, that we need to. Do we know if there was a, a human pilot? Yeah. Or is this, is this, uh, how much of this is AI versus just random? Wow. Well, there's another. crazy, crazy humanoid robot video. We can pull up this one next.
Starting point is 02:48:32 A robot wearing a clown head. Stop putting accessories. Oh, my God. This one is just crazy. This one I would actually, like, I'd press charges. I hope the, this is a legal liability. I hope the child is okay because that looks like, like, it's a really crazy kick. And it's not, it's not a soft leather shoe.
Starting point is 02:48:54 It's not a foot. like this is a steel metal bar that's hitting you with a lot of energy this is why is this happening so often like once it is not is too much once is too much stop we need a pause or just create some type of barrier between the children and the robots have we not invented fences have we not invented and watch it like sort of like staggered it realized it knows it did something wrong all right but pull up this picture. I mean, this is starting to make sense. Okay, explain. The, um, it looks like, uh, have you seen the, the picture of the robot's face close up? Average mosh pit experience. This is wild. Um, this is absolutely sending. Yeah. Also, if you, if a robot comes at you swing in
Starting point is 02:49:45 like this, you have, this is, did you see its face, John? That does not look good. I don't like that at all. I mean, no surprise. No surprise. No surprise. This is not. This is not helping the Terminator narrative. Yeah, if a humanoid is swinging at you like this, you have full. I'm shocked. I'm shocked. I'm shocked. You have full approval to just drop kick it back.
Starting point is 02:50:09 Like, it's war at this point. If you come out swinging, you got to put your foot in its chest. Yeah, where were the parents there to put that robot in a headlock? Yeah. Take it down. Try that thing in America. Good luck. A dad is going to, you've seen those videos of like the dad saves.
Starting point is 02:50:24 Have you ever seen? these hype reels. It's like a dad and like the kid is about to fall off the swing and the dad like dives and like catches the kid with one hand or the famous one where a baseball is coming in. He's at a baseball game. The dad has the kid drops the kid has a beer, catches the ball and then catches the kid. We got to find this video. It's one of the best. Anyway, someone can, someone can hunt around. We can close out here. Airhorse one. Airhorse one. Let's do it. Airhorse one. Couldn't tell if these are AI generated. No, no, no, horses fly.
Starting point is 02:50:56 And when they fly, they fly in stables on planes. And it looks like this. And they call it Air Horse One. And this is because horses from all over the world are going to the Olympics for equestrian events. And the event is called Air Horse One. But this is from 2024 and this image is older from previous Olympics or from a previous equestrian event. It's one of the most expensive parts of being into equestrianism is that you rise the ranks.
Starting point is 02:51:24 you become a great show jumper, and then you have to pay to fly your horse on a plane around the world to compete. It's absolutely crazy. Anyway, thank you so much for tuning in. You don't want to go through cars? There's so much news in the car world. This is a crazy one. So both the Jaguar Double O and the Audi Nuvalari, which we talked about at Palantir AIPCon on Thursday, both of these cars were designed under the same design director, Massimo Frescaia.
Starting point is 02:51:52 Frascaia, I don't know. Massimo. Massimo designed both of these, and they look sort of similar, and I think a lot of people are coming around into this design style, and I think this design style might be so widely adopted, sort of light, like cyber truck might have been a little bit too aggressive, had some baggage with the Elon thing. I think when you start seeing the Jaguars, if they make this in different colors, obviously pink and light blue are very bold colors. Not everyone wants this.
Starting point is 02:52:19 I think the reception to the Audi was much better. purely because it's gray, but I think if you see a jet in black, matte black, even white or gray or dark green, like you're going to like that vehicle. Producer Ben, who's like an R8 purist
Starting point is 02:52:36 says, looks like a Minecraft R8. I like it. I think it's cool. I think that it, you know, it screams, you know,
Starting point is 02:52:45 supercar version of the cyber truck. Yeah. To me. Which I think people have been waiting for. People want a roadster. and it's been delayed for a decade. Well, yeah, I think with the Roadster, we're going to get something
Starting point is 02:52:55 that looks more like a Model S. Like, I would have said, all the cars kind of just morphed together. Do you remember the original pitch for the Roadster? It was. So, zero to 60 under two seconds, doable. The price was crazy. Flying.
Starting point is 02:53:10 Flying potentially. But the really crazy one is that the range was like 600 plus miles of range. So you just have this tension of like, how do you make a lightweight car with that big of a battery that can deliver zero to 60 and under two while also doing...
Starting point is 02:53:26 Usually there's a trade-off there. And so the whole thing that broke everyone's minds was that it was just trade-off defying in so many ways on price, range, and speed. Aren't they adding some type of like SpaceX jet engine to try to overcome that? I think if he does...
Starting point is 02:53:44 I think it's starting to leak out that that's maybe the secret is like there's an additional propulsion. Yeah, like a natural gas turbine that then acts as a range extender. Like if they put a V12, like a naturally aspirated V12 range extender, that just gets you all, so then you have 600 miles of range because you fill it up with like 40 gallons of gas. And if you put 40 gallons of gas, there's a battery. Just for launch.
Starting point is 02:54:07 Just for launch. Yes. A little boost. That'd be crazy. From a jet engine. I mean, there are very interesting other techniques. The fan car apparently works. Did you know this?
Starting point is 02:54:18 So there are cars. the fan on the bottom? The fan on the bottom that creates more downforce. And I believe it's been tried a few times. It's very cumbersome to build, very expensive. But that technology was banned in F1. And I believe that the fan car actually does create more downforce. And the trade-off between the extra weight from the fans and all that is actually
Starting point is 02:54:41 outweighed by the down force that you get. So you do, if you were to build around that philosophy. And so you could do something like that. There's a whole bunch of interesting things that you could do. I'm optimistic. Well, going back to Massimo, the designer of the new Jaguar and the new Audi. Yes. So, Audi's rebrand, I was just looking it up, was in late November or mid-November in 2024.
Starting point is 02:55:04 Masimo left in 2020. Yes. He left right at the beginning in January. Yeah. And so he basically was like, all right, I worked here. I designed it. She just put a normal color on the car. We'll be good.
Starting point is 02:55:13 Just kind of a normal launch campaign. Just James Bond, dark green. You're good to go. You're good to go. I've done all the hard work for you. All the cats. files I sent over. This is a billion dollar car.
Starting point is 02:55:22 He's a billion dollar car. Can't mess it up. You're not going to be able to mess it up. Just put, yeah, George Clooney in it. My work here is done. Instead, they went crazy with it. No, but I'm glad. I'm glad he's, uh, uh, I think he's doing good work.
Starting point is 02:55:35 I like it. Someone in the chat said the, the future should look like the future. I agree. This is a good example of that. And I still think the cyber truck, it looks like the future. It is very opinionated cars. It says a lot of time. But yes.
Starting point is 02:55:47 So Nick Cruz Patane says all the VDU, VW group does is rebadge their cars, Audi, Porsche, Lamborghini, and upsell them to double the price or more. It's so obvious. So it does look a lot like a Temerario. That's cool. Temerari is a great car. And the new design looks very different.
Starting point is 02:56:04 And it looks like an Audi. It looks like where Audi is going. And the temerari looks like where Lamborghini is going. So I think that's cool. The crazy thing is $6,000 for an Audi. That is well above where the R8 priced when it came in. is the Halo car. Like the R8 was what, 130, 150, and a nice Audi at that time was maybe 60, 70. And so you're looking at like a 2 to 3x bump. No one's buying $200,000 Audi's right now.
Starting point is 02:56:31 The good news is people with, you know, $600,000 burning a hole in their pocket. They'll have the option of choosing between a luce or this new Audi. What do you think of my anti-halo car take? So everyone knows a halo car. Classically, the Audi R8 is a halo car, expensive supercar V10, $150,000, as we mentioned. But it creates a halo effect around the brand. Everyone sees the R8. Oh, it's so cool. Maybe I'll get an A4, maybe I'll get a Q5, a Q7, something like that, because it has the aura of the R8 on it. Some of the design language comes over. And the RS6 Avant, it's not an R8. I need something more practical, but it has the aura of the R8. That's the way the Halo car works.
Starting point is 02:57:19 The same thing happens in Ferrari with the SB3 Daytona, the F80, even if you get a 296, you're wearing the badge that's worn by the most elite, the F40, right? Luce potentially anti-Halo car, because as soon as everyone started dunking on the Luce, I noticed that people started feeling way more positively around the SF90 and the Perusangue, which for a long time, people have been saying the SF90's too expensive, the price is dropping. I don't even like it. I can't tell the difference between it and a 296. Now people can. Now people have opinions. Same thing with the Perosangway. Oh, it's, oh, they shouldn't be doing an SUV at all. I don't care that it has naturally aspirated V12. Now people are like,
Starting point is 02:58:01 oh, it has a V12. That's amazing. The Perosanui is a steel. This is a great. And so it feels like you could have this effect that by diversifying the portfolio, you wind up with way more people saying, yeah, I will get a Perosanway. Yeah, I will get an SF90 because it is true. complaining about SF 90s hybrid system anymore. Because at least it's not full electric, right? This is the new meta, horn cars. You got Halo cars? Devil horn cars.
Starting point is 02:58:26 Yeah, just horn cars. Put the devil, put the horns on another car, and then you will sell the rest of the portfolio potentially. Everyone's, everyone's projecting that, like, this is the way Ferrari's going to go, and it's going to be all luches, and everyone's going to be buying luches. And, like, I don't know how fast that can happen. I think there's going to be a lot of demand for the, for the classic Ferraris for a long time. Anyway, anything else you want to talk about today?
Starting point is 02:58:50 There's always more stuff to talk about. It is crazy. You can get a 2002-3-R-8 has a V-10 for $309,000. There's $300 now? No way. That's not right. This is a, yeah, I think this is a low mileage. Audi-R-A prices range from $60K to $250.
Starting point is 02:59:14 Yeah, but this is a low-mile. Okay. V-10 with a lot of options. I'm going with the beater. I'm going with the one with three accidents. No, no car faxed. Three accidents. Florida owned aftermarket wheels.
Starting point is 02:59:30 Florida with three accidents is crazy. The eight. Yeah. Wrapped. Sign me up. I'm ready to spend 60K. Here we go. Use 2011.
Starting point is 02:59:43 Use 2011 R8. $80,000, $32,000 miles, minor to moderate damage. Yes, it is currently damaged, but it's an $80,000 supercar. What's not to like? It has a 10-cylinder, so that's good. Well, I just thought it was notable because you got top-of-the-line spec from 2023 for 300 with a V-10 or they're now, they now want 600. And I do think there's enough fans of the R8 from the past that,
Starting point is 03:00:15 I do think this car quickly trades probably at least 700, maybe beyond that. Yeah. Well, if you're a true fan, you'll go for the one with a little bit of damage because you don't care. Ooh, this is a crazy one. Okay, now we're just shopping for R8s. Anyway, thank you for tuning in. Thank you for watching TBPN today. We'll see you tomorrow at 11 a.m. Sharp.
Starting point is 03:00:37 It's five stars. It's an honor. We love you guys. It's sign up for our newsletter. TVGriended.

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