TBPN - Mary Meeker's AI Report, Ukraine's Operation Spider Web | Soren Monroe, Connor Love, Melisa Tokmak, Jordan Schneider, Maxwell Meyer

Episode Date: June 2, 2025

TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wa...nder.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://youtube.com/@technologybrotherspod?si=lpk53xTE9WBEcIjV(28:07) - Trends in Artificial Intelligence Deep Dive (01:00:14) - Soren Monroe. Soren is the co-founder and CEO of Neros Technologies, a U.S.-based defense startup producing advanced FPV drones with a fully American supply chain. A former world champion in drone racing, he co-founded Neros in 2023 to address the U.S. military's need for mass-manufacturable unmanned systems, securing a contract to deliver 6,000 Archer drones to Ukraine. Monroe-Anderson is also a Thiel Fellow and previously founded FPV Supply Co., specializing in high-performance drone components. (01:32:12) - Connor Love. Connor is a Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners, focusing on frontier technologies in defense, space, manufacturing, and autonomous systems. A former U.S. Army Captain, he served in Northern Iraq and as a strategic advisor in Washington, D.C., before earning graduate degrees from Oxford and Stanford GSB. At Lightspeed, he has led investments in fintech and insurtech startups, including Seel, Lemon Markets, and Herald. (01:59:44) - Melisa Tokmak. Melisa is the founder and CEO of Netic, an AI-native revenue engine designed for essential service industries like HVAC, plumbing, and electrical contracting. Launched in 2024, Netic utilizes real-time data and automation to help service businesses capture leads and stabilize revenue during fluctuations in demand. Previously, Tokmak held leadership roles at Scale AI and Meta, and holds a degree in computer science from Stanford University. (02:21:47) - Jordan Schneider. Jordan is the founder of ChinaTalk, a newsletter and podcast offering in-depth analysis of Chinese technology, politics, and U.S.-China relations. He is a fellow at the Rhodium Group and the Center for a New American Security, and previously worked at Kuaishou, Bridgewater Associates, and the Eurasia Group. Schneider holds a BA in history from Yale and an MA in economics from Peking University’s Yenching Academy, and is fluent in Chinese. (02:44:00) - Maxwell Meyer. Maxwell is the founder and editor of Arena Magazine, a quarterly print and digital publication launched in 2024 that focuses on technology, capitalism, and civilization. A Stanford geophysics graduate and former editor-in-chief of the Stanford Review, Meyer created Arena to counteract negativity in legacy media and to champion innovation and American dynamism. He also serves as president of the Intergalactic Media Corporation of America, the magazine’s parent company.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're watching TBPN. Today is Monday, June 2nd, 2025. We are live from the TBPN Ultradome, the Temple of Technology, the Fortress of Finance, the Capital of Capital. How was your weekend? I saw from X. You watched the new movie Mountain Head, break it down for us. Give us a little jewelry review. I did. You know I don't watch a lot of movies. This is your second movie ever after Borot was the other one you watched? The Bore? Classic. Cole classic. So I felt inclined to watch this film. It released on Saturday. And it was kind of pitched.
Starting point is 00:00:36 We talked about it on Friday. It was kind of pitched as like very Silicon Valley coated, very tech-a-loot. This is by Jesse Armstrong. Sure. Creator Succession. Oh, okay. I did watch Succession. I loved it.
Starting point is 00:00:48 I thought it's this blend of, you know, dark humor in a good storyline. And Mountainhead felt like. the exact opposite. It was, it had a really kind of, I'll give you the high level, I'll try not to give anything away. Sure. It's four tech entrepreneurs who are going to meet up for a poker. All entrepreneurs, all founders, no VCs? It seemed like everybody was a founder, but of course they dabble in investing as well. Yeah, as one does. Anyway, so four of them are going for a poker weekend. I found out it was in Park City, Utah, because Wander actually helped them get the house. No way.
Starting point is 00:01:27 Fantastic house. So they all sort of like descend on this house for a poker weekend. Yeah, yeah. I think the deal or their deal was no heels, no deals, no chefs or something like that. Oh, it's like it was like one of those. Bro's trip. Yeah, it was boy's trip. So they get together.
Starting point is 00:01:44 One of them, I couldn't, I'm sure somebody's put it together better than I have, but it was like some, it felt like a combination of Evan Spiegel and Mark Zuckerberg, social media guy running this business called Tram. And he had released a generative AI tool that was so good that it started as they were sort of descending on this Park City home, starting to cause global chaos. Really? There was like, you know, you could. It's like a doomer movie. Yeah, the idea, the idea was that the deep fakes were so good that there would be a deep fake of like one tribe in Kenya attacking another tribe and then it would spark, you know, real conflict.
Starting point is 00:02:21 Wow. Wait, wait, wait. So that, that screenshot, you, you said like there's, uh, at least. there's a new meme format and it's Steve Carell saying he is a decal with crazy P. Doom and zero risk tolerance. Like you didn't put that text over that. No. That's actually from the show. That is actually Steve Carell saying he is a decal with crazy P. Doom and zero risk tolerance. Wow. We'll get to that. Okay. Anyway, sorry. So the movie, they descend on this house. Tram has launched this product and it goes on. They're basically just hanging out over the
Starting point is 00:02:48 weekend as this product gets worse and worse and worse. And I pulled up some notes. So deep fakes are causing global chaos. They're using a bunch of like very awkward buzzwords. Like you could tell it was written by people that didn't like tech entrepreneurs. Oh really? Or beanaires or senties. There was a funny dynamic where one of the four pros is only worth half a billion. Oh, okay. That's rough.
Starting point is 00:03:18 At one point they go on a mountain and they write their net worse on their chest. And everybody has a bee except the one guy who has just, an M. Oh, okay. So it was pretty, you know, he was, he was feeling really bad about it. Later, yeah. Now, this is just a dead giveaway. So I'm not going to, I'm not going to go there. Okay. Anyway. But I mean, like the P-Dium thing seems pretty in-group. Like, it's pretty close to like, you know. So eventually, it's a couple years old. Eventually, there's a guy, one of the founders has some type of filtering technology that detects deep-fakes. They have to do a deal. And so the social media guy is like trying to do a deal with him.
Starting point is 00:03:58 He says, no. Filter guy goes to one of the other guys and says, we got to get this guy like fired, basically. Okay, interesting. And so that's when Steve Corral goes, now this guy's a doomer with a crazy P-Doom. And then the three other guys plot to kill the other. So then most of the movie is them trying to kill the Duma.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Yeah, it seems like it's part of that, like I forget what they called it, like mansion core, have you seen this? Yes. Where E24 got very, very good at making a movie, like knives out where they basically go and rent like an incredible house and then they shoot the whole movie there. And it's just like takes you around from one room to the next and you're kind of in this like beautiful cinematic environment the whole time. And it seems to be an interesting takeaway for Hollywood that it's like the higher leverage
Starting point is 00:04:49 production because it has the aesthetics of a big cinematic movie and they're shooting it on nice cameras, but it's one house. It's like basically one location. And so if you rent just one location, all of a sudden you're not like, oh yeah, our second unit is in Tokyo for the scene where Batman jumps off the thing. It's like that is so much more expensive. Moving around is so much more expensive than just being like, we're going to dominate this one little house for a month. Yeah. And then we're just shoot the conversation.
Starting point is 00:05:14 So that was it. It was basically one location. It was a very nice location. But ultimately it was like this weird combination of like it was like a critique of the of the tech billionaires But at the same time it was like using all this insider sort of teapot language very interesting that would have been wildly confusing to Somebody that wasn't a tech insider I came away being like I don't know who this was for Like I understand making a movie for the sort of anti-tech crowd Yep or making a movie that's like succession Yep
Starting point is 00:05:46 meets AI, but it came away sort of neither of those things for me. And it was really rough watch. By the end, I was watching purely because I wanted to be able to comment on the show right now. There was a review, I believe, of the movie. It's the end of the world and it's their fault. The tech bros have ascended to movie villain status by Charlie Wurzel in the Atlantic. tick.
Starting point is 00:06:14 And it has a very attention-grabbing headline because it makes it sound like it's like, you know, tech bros are really bad, but then it's about the movie. And I don't know. It's just like part of the vibe shift. We'll see. I wonder who's giving it rave reviews, I'm sure. I mean, it's certainly broke through on the internet. But anyway.
Starting point is 00:06:30 It has 79% on raw tomatoes. Not too bad. Yeah. Too bad. Well, we should talk about Andrew Reed's latest investment because he's investing in movies now, too. Sequoia just invested $100 million into movie at a $1 billion valuation. He's joining the board and partnering with the founder and the movie team to champion great cinema around the world. You are a movie guy.
Starting point is 00:06:55 Yeah. Are you a movie user? I'm not a movie subscriber, but I'm sure I've watched stuff that they've distributed or published, but probably just on Apple TV or just purchase those films or seen them in theaters. But it sounds like the movie has a much bigger in like vision. And we kind of saw this with what's happening at A24. It seems like A24 is expanding pretty significantly. But Andrew Reed shares a little clip here. What is movie?
Starting point is 00:07:20 A streaming service, a distributor, a publisher, a curator, a cinema lover, a community. Yes. And there's a quote from the Financial Times or maybe from a different article about the company. It says, but Karell is the founder, that the founder isn't just interested in topping the box office. He wants to reinvigorate movie-going culture by creating an ecosystem that extends from streaming to publishing to art house theaters, offering movie lovers, the chance to see the kind of offbeat visionary work that other studios are afraid to make. In doing so, he's intentionally creating a worldwide community of film devotees that has been neglected for too long. Very interesting. Yeah, we should get Andrew on the show and talk to him.
Starting point is 00:08:05 And we have Scott Belski coming on the show from A24. I'm not sure how much he can talk about A24 strategy right now. but I'm sure we'll get to know him and learn more about how the film industry is changing. It's obviously super relevant to us since we're trying to bring media to Hollywood and we're building a media company here. And so it's, you know, as these distribution engines change, it's obviously good to keep track of. Anyway, in other news, there's a couple things that we want to cover today. Obviously, we're going to go over the timeline and break down everything. But the big news over the weekend was the Ukraine drone attack on Russia.
Starting point is 00:08:41 They shipped shipping containers into deep into Russia, at which point drones flew out of the containers and hit strategic targets. We're going to have two guests on the show today. Soren Munro Anderson from Niros to talk about that. And also Conor Love from Lightspeed to talk about that and also defense tech investing generally and a bunch of other things that are going on in his world. And there are a couple other founders in, um, and, um, and, in, in, and, in, and, in, and, and, in, and, and, and, in, and, and, and, and, folks coming on the show. Let's go to Cole Rotman and talk about he made his own version of the minus list, which I think in some ways is potentially, I don't know, it's like in some ways even more indicative. People have been calling it's the Rotman list. The Rotman list, yeah. So he says
Starting point is 00:09:24 16 investors have led two Series A rounds that became $5 billion companies since 2012. You can see a pattern. Alfred Lynn in consumer marketplaces, Andrew Mack in FinTech, Mahmoon in B2B work tools, Mickey Malka, and FinTech, Mitch Lasky, in consumer social. And so he, he basically, his algorithm, so the Midas list has always been a little bit tricky because funds report the allocation of deals differently. Yeah. Are you familiar with this? Yeah, they want to, they want to, they're gaming it a little bit.
Starting point is 00:09:59 Yeah, it's a game. They're giving sometimes a little more credit than maybe they should to a certain investor on certain deals. order to. So if I remember correctly, like the Midas List has a great data partner through one of the LPs that's in, that's basically an LP in every fund. And so they have a really good, they've really great insight into ownership by individual firms into individual companies and valuations of those companies.
Starting point is 00:10:24 And so sometimes those marks can be a little bit frothy and it can be debatable because there could be like, you know, you could, you could have made the Midas List for being in FTX and then the next year it's zero. And so it doesn't feel like it has a staying power. But in general, they have a very good tie between VC firm and company and valuation and entry price too and multiple. But what they don't necessarily know is the individual who is responsible for the particular deal inside the firm because that doesn't necessarily get reported to LPs. And so what funds will do sometimes is they will kind of shift the chips around the table afterwards to give maybe the hero partner that they're trying to boost up more credit for deals. that they were only tangentially involved.
Starting point is 00:11:07 Yeah, if one partner led a certain deal but then had no chance of getting on the list at all, they might say, hey, look, you're going to take one for the team. Yeah, yeah. And then there's also the question of like, sometimes partners change from one firm to the next. And who gets credit for that deal? If there were two partners at one fund that did a really amazing deal and then one of the partners leaves to go to another fund, then that partner's going to want to take that deal credit with them.
Starting point is 00:11:35 but that other fund is going to say, hey, well, it's our position. And so we should actually, this guy. It was actually our guy, the guy who left. He left because he was saying no. Yeah, he's on the press release. He wanted to pass. He wanted to pass. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:11:46 Exactly. So there's a whole bunch of funny dynamics. But this is kind of an interesting methodology because it's almost simpler. It's basically just like who's the Series A lead investor? Who joined the board? Which is probably easier to figure out. Although even boards seats change around sometimes. Because it's like, oh, your company's doing really well.
Starting point is 00:12:03 well, we're going to make our named partner of the board member instead of the person that found the deal, which is sometimes rough, but sometimes actually some investors are like, no, I don't want to be on the board of a public company, so I'm happy to hand it off to the storied partner at my firm in order so that I can go and be on more boards at the earlier stage. And so the true goat list here, series A lead investors that have had three, five billion plus outcomes since 2012, You got Doug Leone, Hamant from General Catalyst, Keith Rubei, and Mark Andreson. And then there's maybe 10 or 15 that have done two Series A lead investments in a $5 billion outcome. Now, it is kind of... I saw Elia Seucar posted and was like, just one more deal.
Starting point is 00:12:56 Then I'll be happy. Because he's got two from the... Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. So he just wants to be, clearly, you know, there's a big gap between the threes and the twos. No, if Ilya wants to move up the rankings,
Starting point is 00:13:09 in the short term, change his name to Ardvark. Ardvark, Sukar. Because within the list of VCs that have done two $5 billion deals, it's alphabetical. And so Alfred Lynn's up at the top, so you've got to have 2A's in front of you
Starting point is 00:13:27 to jump Alfred. So Ardvark Sukar is the wicket. it. I mean, that's what business did with Amazon, right? He was like, I want to be first in the dictionary, so I'll just, I'll use Amazon because it's an A name. It'll show up first. Legend. Yeah. Anyway, congrats to everyone that made the, the Rotman list. Yeah, very fun to see this. This could be the start of something very. Yeah, it's an interesting methodology. It could be the start of a new list, John. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's an interesting methodology. Of course, it doesn't really take into account. If you had three deals that were exactly
Starting point is 00:13:59 $5 billion, you would be ranked higher than one person who got the $100 billion or the trillion dollar company. And so, you know, you kind of miss out that. And also it's like, this is particular to Series A lead. What if you got 20% ownership in the seed? Like, that's probably even better, right? Yeah, lower entry price. So there are always nuances to these lists, but it's still fun to see all the, all the goats
Starting point is 00:14:21 in one place, in one goat herd. One herd. And one herd. it. There we go. We got a new soundboard today. We get some more soundboard. In other news, you can save time and money with Ramp.
Starting point is 00:14:38 Time is money. Save both. Easy to use corporate cards, bill payments, accounting, and a whole lot more all in one place. Go to ramp.com to sign up. Do it. Indreason Horowitz and Coastal Adventures are backing a bridge AI for doctors
Starting point is 00:14:47 at a $5.3 billion valuation. Let's hear it. Why are you clapping instead of hitting the size gong? It's a $5 billion deal. Sometimes I like to clap. I'll hit the gong. There we go. There we go.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Yeah, I mean, part of an interesting trend, obviously application layer, an important narrative, more, more focus on these verticals, Harvey having a lot of attention. Yep. I heard, you know, Open AI is something like, you know, 80 plus, 90 plus percent penetration with chat just in terms of users, MDOW or Mao Dow, like the Mao Dow ratio. Yeah. Like just in terms of users, users, the chat GPT app has been the runaway success. and consumer, but there are still nuances to how medical data is handled. And so the vertical applications are exciting, and that's certainly driving this. Yeah, so this investment will double a bridge's valuation from only a few months ago
Starting point is 00:15:43 and underscores the tech industry's interest. It's crazy that this is the first time I was hearing about this company, and it was at a $2.75 billion valuation. Like, there used to be when a company makes unicorn, like it is big tech news. It breaks through that day. it's like, okay, call us when you're at 10. Yeah, so Bridges CEO, Shivrao, a cardiologist turned founder, said earlier this year that part of his motivation to start the company
Starting point is 00:16:07 was that his handwritten notes from patient meetings were often illegible. This inefficiency also made billing and summarizing patient interactions a nightmare. You end up feeling bad about yourself, Rao told Bloomberg in an interview in February, everybody ends up losing. What's been a game changer is that with a bridge you just walk in the room, have the conversation in your present, making eye contact. Which is very cool. Found in 2018, wow, even pre-Cha-GPT.
Starting point is 00:16:33 They've been working for a long time. The company initially struggled. Rao faced a wave of skepticism from his healthcare peers and doubts about the efficacy of AI tools. There we go. At one point, Rao feared the company's heartbeat was getting more and more faint. Then came ChatGPT, and the rapid progress in the capabilities of generative AI tools and a bridge became an overnight success. Six or seven years in the making, he said, let's go.
Starting point is 00:16:56 I love it. Since then, the startups were read more than 400. million dollars in venture capital funding is investors race to back application layer AI startups that make language models like open AI more useful for doctors lawyers salespeople and other professionals earlier backers include IVP a lot Gill spark capital Bessemer Union Square Ventures good to see every all of those people finally having yeah it's good to see a lot of USV getting in a deal yeah yeah exactly you're always rooting for them and hoping that they'll come from behind make something happen
Starting point is 00:17:28 And they did. Let's move on to David Holes. He says, at SpaceX, I saw oxygen snow in zero gravity. I saw methane bubbles shimmering like crystal glass and liquid oxygen swimming pools at ripple Lake Silk. I remember sunset plasma vortices flickering through compressed data streams at Mach 25. Pink, you think it glows on its own, but really it is in celebration for those who hurdle monuments through the sky with dreams of earthly beauty everlasting. Wow. It's so amazing.
Starting point is 00:17:59 He's like a little poetry. He's, yeah, I mean, he's clearly like writing in a way that like, you know, the LLMs cannot. He's like flexing. That's the way I see this. But it does seem like he got a pretty incredible tour of SpaceX and probably got to hang out with Elon and talk about robots and all these different world models and how MidGourney can, you know, partner with that and whatnot and all the cool things that he's doing. Yeah. The interesting thing about mid-journey and David Holes is that his methodology is, obviously, he's very like scale-pilled, very AI-pilled, but he's not trying to build the average image of what's on the internet. He's just trying to make the images look good.
Starting point is 00:18:44 And so he's bringing this, like, artistry to the process. And that leads to, like, a particular mid-journey look that can be seen as, well, this all has the mid-journey look. But he's happy as long as the mid-jorney look is good, I think. So interesting, interesting way. Anyway, if you're looking for design tools, go to figma.com, think bigger, build faster. Figma helps design and development teams build great products together. You can get started for free at figma.com.
Starting point is 00:19:12 And they now have websites. If you want to make a website really fast, make a new Figma and just publish it. It's pretty great. Oh, this is hilarious. So I think, wait, was this just a few days ago? Sahil from Gumroad. tweeted, if I give you one million and you give me the one million back, we'll both be at one million ARR.
Starting point is 00:19:34 And Stephen Tay says, no freaking way. Someone actually did this IRL. And it's a story about building AI. So this company, Builder AI just shut down. Oh, rough. They faked business with Indian social media startup versus the innovation for years to falsely inflated sales. And, yeah, so basically they'd just be like, hey, we're going to sign up for a 50
Starting point is 00:19:55 million AAR contract with you and then you're going to sign up with a 50 million AAR contract with us and we'll both be at 50 million of AARR even though you know there's there you know it just wasn't real so anyways unfortunate uh Stephen Stephen Tah here very savage tagging both companies that's rough um anyway uh yeah they say in many cases products and services weren't actually provided to either company for these payments oh okay so it was just like completely fake there was a contract and then there was a payment. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:27 But it was effectively the same amount. It sounds like they, you know, adjusted it slightly. Because there's always been like this, this take, kind of going back to like the dot-com boom around how a lot of the, a lot of the dot-com telec- like internet providers were selling to like fast-growing internet companies and they were doing kind of like equity investments and then the money would flow back to the telecom provider.
Starting point is 00:20:51 It was like pretty circular and kind of created a little bit of the bubble narrative. And people were always kind of saying that about like Nvidia and like the big tech companies But you know it's very different when like yes in like Microsoft might buy Nvidia GPUs and then Nvidia might buy Microsoft Excel licenses to to run their business But like both of those are clear value creations and they're independent contracts and so it's it's very much more like arms like Yeah the other thing is if a hyperscaler is is investing compute into a start up, the startup isn't, they're getting investment dollars spending that back with the
Starting point is 00:21:29 hyperscaler. They're not necessarily like using, they don't use a new investment to drive new investment, right? In the same way that like if the hyperscaler would spend, had a contract with them and they were sending it back, that's, that's quite a different situation. Yeah, much tricky. Much trickier. Anyway, if you want to automate compliance, manage risk, improve trust, continuously go to vanta.com. Vantos trust management platform takes the manual work out of your security and compliance process and replaces it with continuous automation, whether you're pursuing your first framework or managing a complex program. It makes me want to hit the air horn like automated compliance, John.
Starting point is 00:22:04 I love it. Yeah, I think you threw this one in here. Andrew Huberman talking about the health indicator that no one talks about, the strong desire to work and build things, whether for the intrinsic love of the work, the rewards or both. Yes, we need sleep and some need recreation, but drive is at least as important as any other metric. Basically grinds that. number one biomarker to be tracking.
Starting point is 00:22:26 I completely agree. And I think that I was, we asked Brian Johnson about this and we said, you know, Warren Buffett is in the news because he was stepping down, but had a phenomenal run, particularly from age 65 to 90 something, you know, like those were some of his most productive and consequential years of his career when most people spend those in retirement. And so, and also he drinks Coca-Cola and eats seeds. candy and eats McDonald's and whatnot and doesn't do biohacking, right?
Starting point is 00:22:57 And yet he seems as healthy as you can possibly be. And Brian Johnson was kind of like, oh, well, like he's like, you know, like a single outlier. But I was talking to somebody else and they were like, well, like, but Charlie Munger had like the same diet. Like the first was like, I went to dinner with Charlie Munger and he had like five glasses of wine or like ate the steak and like ate all this stuff. And so I think that, yes, like a life's work is, it's.
Starting point is 00:23:23 not that it's a complete replacement for a healthy lifestyle you should do both for sure i think i think it's that the human spirit can overpower its environment totally inputs yeah there's there's there's there's some like physiological or biological explanation for this the whole idea of like the being built different yeah being built different but but no like yeah i remember you you hear about like uh like the mother who lifts a car to save her baby like that's kind of apocryful but it's also like in an intense moment of stress, the body can send a signal to really like refocus and kind of like you're basically just like shifting around all the energy in your body to like fight this one thing, whether it's like strength or focus or something. And it appears that the brain works pretty
Starting point is 00:24:11 similarly. There's there's some interesting case studies where traumatic brain injury victims, like they'll get hit in the head and they'll become savants. And so they'll be able to remember every single word in a book. And it's just like, why is that? And I think what, and it's odd because... Don't tell David Senator that. He's going to get himself in the head. No, but the question is like, is like, if we have that ability, why didn't we evolve to do that?
Starting point is 00:24:40 And it's because like, we're actually fine-tuned not on just pure recall, although it's extremely impressive when you can see someone who's... It's not as valuable as... It's not as valuable as compression. and synthesis of information across different domains. So you actually don't need to be the memorizer to really win in our society. But we do have the ability to do an immense amount of wrote information.
Starting point is 00:25:02 And so there's certain brain treatments and, like, effects in the brain that can kind of shift the focus and, like, the output and the performance of your body to something. And so you can imagine that if you're, if you're, like, incredibly driven for what you're doing, your body kind of sends these signals that like, hey, we need to be on top of the game. We need to fight back all the bad stuff and deal with the endless stream of Coca-Cola that's coming into our organs. Anyway, very, very, very fun post by Huberman.
Starting point is 00:25:34 Anyway, Dan Primack has an announcement that Mary Meeker is back. We covered her on the show early on. We did a whole deep dive based on her fantastic profile on the New Yorker. Mary, you're always welcome on the show. She has a new trends report. This time it's focused on artificial intelligence. It's over at Bond Capital. Remember, Mary Meeker was on Wall Street,
Starting point is 00:25:54 cell-side analyst for a very long time. The dot-com whisperer, then went to Kleiner Perkins, eventually spun out and is running a growth equity fund called Bond Cap. And Ev Randall worked there, former friend of the show, or former guest on the show,
Starting point is 00:26:07 current friend of the show. And people are, people are being spicy in the comments. This is the most sell-side thing, a cell-side person has ever done. Bad day for left-aligned text fans, I guess, because the deck is centered or something. But we can share some of this, and we can go through some of these. Yeah, why don't we go through the outline first. So this is,
Starting point is 00:26:29 for the first time, I'm coordinating with some of the other guests. So for the first time, I'm going to be hopefully driving this. We'll see. Hopefully this will work. And I don't docks my private keys. I don't have private keys on here. So trends in artificial intelligence from Bond. Good name for a fund. James Bond. So, of course, she worked with his team. The deck. There are some-
Starting point is 00:26:53 Charts. It has crazy aura despite not even being overly designed. It's just when Mary Meeker makes a deck, people pay attention. It definitely has, like, classic Wall Street investment bank aesthetics. Wait, so why don't we start with the outline? I'll read through it. Okay, sure, sure. First section, seems like change is happening faster than ever.
Starting point is 00:27:14 Yes, it is. second AI users plus usage plus CAPEX growth is unprecedented AI model compute costs are high rising plus inference costs per token are falling the performance is converging and developer usage is rising none of this stuff should be too much of a surprise but yes but they've all been kind of like vibes and whispers and hot takes issued on Dorcasch's podcast but now we have kind of like the Wall Street interpretation of the same trends, and it's instantiated in data, which I think is very fascinating. And so we'll go through some of this.
Starting point is 00:27:54 Seems like change is happening faster than ever. Yes, it is. Developers in the leading chip makers ecosystems, the number of developers has started absolutely moaning to over six million. AI plus... Why wouldn't she just call this Nvidia? Well, so this is developers on top of it. of invidia. So you can think about this like kuda engineers essentially. Got it, got it. People, developing on top of invidia as opposed to like more, more abstract. And from 20, 2005, I still,
Starting point is 00:28:24 I still was just curious if there's like a reason if she didn't want to call out. Oh, oh, why did she say, oh, you could say developers. There are so many of those, just you wait. There are so many of those weird, like she doesn't want to say this or she's saying this instead of this. A lot of it's just like Wall Street parlance, right? So this is a way, okay, yeah, she's doing it every. Yeah, yeah. Leading USA-based LLM users. Rock it up to 800. There's obviously Open AI. It's literally the Open AI chart.
Starting point is 00:28:51 And it's funny because KOTU, I believe, put out a similar report, which we can maybe go through. But they just say Open AI and they have Sam Alton's face right next to it. But yeah. So ChatGPT obviously grew very quickly. But just this year, they doubled from $400 million to $800 million. It was this huge, huge spike. The question is always the monetizability of. those users because as as large internet companies eventually reach saturation, the
Starting point is 00:29:22 value the incremental value of the next billion decreases a lot, right? Because you're you're getting into developing nations and there's less propensity to spend. The advertising dollars go further and realistically there's just lots of countries where you can't sell two hundred two hundred dollar a month subscription. Yeah, or even 20 or even 20 and so AI user plus usage plus CAPEX growth is unprecedented. Internet versus leading USA-based LLM, total current users outside of North America.
Starting point is 00:29:53 And so the internet share of total current users kind of grew slowly, and you can see that LLMs came out, and they started it at 50% of internet users and rocketed to 90%. And this is a big part of the AI narrative that we already have the internet. It is the world's, the greatest distribution engine in history. Yeah, and, you know, like bits move faster than atoms.
Starting point is 00:30:18 Yeah. And even though the internet was a bits movement, it was bound by atoms in the sense that you had to put pipes in the ground and you had to make and sell phones to get the penetration app. And now when you're leveraging on top of that, you actually, it's like, Open AI might build a device, but they don't have to to get on 90% of, to get 90% penetration. This is a funny one. You're going to love this. So, AI user plus usage plus capec growth is unprecedented. The Big Six, USA Technology Company, CapEx. Big Six.
Starting point is 00:30:52 That's what people say about Big Tech. They don't say Magnificent Seven. Yeah, Big Six. And she, so it's Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, A-DBS-only, and Meta-Platforms. Just X Tesla. Just writing Tesla out of the Mag 7 to create the Big Six. And it's, and normally, you, might say, okay, well, it's like a car company, but like, Tesla has an AI division that is like
Starting point is 00:31:17 scared very aggressively. They change the name of their self-driving or automists to Tesla AI. Exactly. So a little bit odd and maybe you should put that. Maybe Tesla isn't investing at the same level as the other big six, I suppose, but it's still just funny to coin kind of like a new, a new term. But obviously CAPX is increasing very quickly. And we track that during earnings to see that, I mean, it's really just like a few of the hyperscalers that are driving this, but there are multiple big tech companies that are investing at the $60 billion a year range now. So total Cappex is over $2.12.
Starting point is 00:31:50 Tesla's total CAPEX for 2025 across the entire business was projected at just $11 billion. So. Yeah, that's not compared to Google, which is spelling like Google, Microsoft and AWS are all in like 60, 70, 80 range billion. Yeah. Got to get those numbers up.
Starting point is 00:32:09 CapEx for ants. I mean, it is when you think about the KAPX that goes into a car plant as well. That's definitely significant. That's what I'm saying. But at the same time, Elon's getting this sort of off-balance sheet. With X-A-I through X-A-I. Yeah. And so there's trends in declining cost of inference.
Starting point is 00:32:32 This is interesting. 72 years that you can see the cost curve here. So the cost of, it's kind of an odd metric here because we're talking about AI inference cost, which was so high to begin with. It's kind of apples and oranges, but basically electric power went through this pretty slow driving down the cost over time. Computer memory fell off on more of an asymptotic curve, and AI inference is just basically a line straight down as it got incredibly cheap.
Starting point is 00:33:03 Let's go. A.I monetization threats. Rising competition, open source momentum, China's rise. China's obviously growing in LLMs, but interestingly, it seems like went way up from zero percent penetration in February of 2024. By February of 2025 had grown to maybe 10 percent,
Starting point is 00:33:23 but then had fallen. Or maybe it was even higher, maybe it was 15 percent, and then it had fallen. So the pushback against deepseek is maybe working. Interesting. China versus rest of the world. up here. Yeah. Yep. I don't know where else we want to go with this. Yeah. AI
Starting point is 00:33:37 monetization threats equal rising competition plus open source momentum and China's general rise. But you can go through the whole thing. There's a lot to dig into here. Global GDP, the computing cycles over times, the AI era. It's interesting. It's all focused on just telling a story almost to like the public markets. Yeah, this one. That's interesting. AI and physical world ramps equals fast plus data driven. Doesn't really say much. But they're charting a ride chair versus autonomous taxi provider.
Starting point is 00:34:13 So this is Lyft versus Waymo in the San Francisco operating zone market. And so you can just see Waymo really running away with the market. I was over by LAX yesterday and I saw like five Waymos all in the same like block. They're really dominating LA now. They're everywhere. They're everywhere. It feels like they're every 10th car. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:35 I mean, it makes sense. People prefer them. Like, it's a better product. Yeah, I was I was barbecuing with a buddy last night. And he was like, yeah, I was, you know, I was, I watched this waymo, pole was parked in a red zone. And then just like ripped out and ran a red going left. And he was like, yeah, like, you know, just me, I sort of don't fully trust them right now. I'm like, you drive around, LA, like, you know.
Starting point is 00:35:02 That's like normal moves for people in LA. Like, you know, there's people that go out and they're like, I am going to break a lot of traffic laws today. And they just do that. So it's like, it's not great that, yeah, it's not great. But coming along. Yeah, I was talking to a friend who over the weekend, who's been saying that Waymo is like completely cooked for a long time.
Starting point is 00:35:25 And now he's like, no, Waymo's going to be fine because like, apparently there's one guy that did the company who's just insanely cracked. is basically like solving all the technical problems. And so he's like, yeah, I'm actually kind of bullish on it. But he still maintains that it's pretty, it's still heavily human in the loop. You think the AI is anonymous Indians? No, I would say.
Starting point is 00:35:50 Kind of. He says that, I think the number he quoted was, I was like, so he was saying like, it's not remote control in the sense that it's like hands on the wheel, right? It's not like somebody's remote control driving, like it's a video game, but they are watching a screen and then they can press a button to be like, okay, break or like go around or like throw the warning lights on or like, you know, okay, this is fine or I'll draw on the screen.
Starting point is 00:36:17 It's like they can intervene very easily. Well, I think I said this maybe last year or early this year, if you're Waymo, it's worth $5 an hour to have somebody exclusively focused on the one car. Yeah, to not. You don't have that many. Disaster. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:34 And so apparently the ratio of like support humans to Guamos is less than two, but more than one. Yeah. And so they've proven that it's not bully just one to one, but it's close. Yeah. I think it's like 1.7 or 1.4. They kind of need to make it not one to one to one. But even I think that pure teleoperation is cool. Totally.
Starting point is 00:36:54 I would love to be able to pay somebody $5 an hour, $10 an hour to drive my car. Yeah. It's also funny because it's like everyone kind of knows that. that this is happening, that there's some sort of teleoperation involved, at least. And most people who understand it at that level think it's a good thing. But then you'll see like a headline about like,
Starting point is 00:37:12 oh, it's actually like anonymous Indians or whatever. And it's framed as like a bad thing, which is very odd. But I've always felt like maybe Google is like keeping it as an ace up their sleeves in case there's more pushback on, like, oh, this Waymo's too risky. Then they can say, well, actually, we do have a human.
Starting point is 00:37:30 We didn't even tell you. but like we're even safer than you thought we were. So like you should, or maybe they tell it to regulators behind the scenes to say, hey, we're really, but that also presents like a whole other set of problems which are, okay, do the teleoperated people need to get, do they have international driver's license? Yeah, I have no idea.
Starting point is 00:37:48 Well, they might not be international. They might just, they might be in the San Francisco area. That's true. Or they might be, yeah, WMO HQ or something. Or Vegas. I mean, we fly the drones remotely from Vegas. I just think we would have had one of those people, leave already and be like whistleblower? Yeah. Maybe I don't know. Maybe maybe the
Starting point is 00:38:07 the exit package is too delicious. You just can't get out. I don't want to give up on that sweet. This was an interesting slide for a few reasons. Two hundred and sixty percent annual growth over 15 years of data to train AI models led to an absolutely exponential increase in the size of training of data sets, which feel feels less important now that we're in the post pre-training era, I guess. But you know who's up here right at the top? A Ramco Metabrain AI? I love that Saudi Aramco just trained a massive LLM somehow.
Starting point is 00:38:49 It didn't make it to my news until this moment. But like there's a whole bunch of these here and you can kind of see that the curve is changing. But then at a certain point, you run out of tokens on the internet. There's some interesting stat. Like all of GitHub is, I think, like, 10 million tokens or maybe 100 million tokens. Like it's just not that big of a data set. Yeah, and there's pretty massive data sets you can get off Hugging Face that is like almost the entire internet. That's like 44 terabytes.
Starting point is 00:39:19 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Which you could get like a 50 terabyte hard drive. Yeah. And so I was talking to some folks about like, is there a world where like what we're seeing with V-O-3? and Google's cornered resource, which is the YouTube data set, could something like that happen with Microsoft
Starting point is 00:39:37 that owns GitHub? Because they have the best code data set in theory. And they're just like, well, it's not that big of a data set. It's already been exfiltrated. And so plenty of people have like all of GitHub just saved locally basically.
Starting point is 00:39:54 And so it's not as much of a cornered resources. Like very few companies have been able to have been, able to scrape all of YouTube, even if some have like maybe tried to do stuff here and there. It's clearly not the same as the resource that YouTube has. Yeah. What else is interesting in here? I mean, we could go through other stuff, impact of improved algorithms on AI model performance.
Starting point is 00:40:18 This is the classic like chinchilla scaling laws. Just kind of breaking down all the different, all the different trends here. But let's go back to the timeline. timeline. And let's do the timelines. I think so. Is there anything else you want to talk in here? You really hit and Mary with the boring? No, there's just a lot in here and I don't know if we have enough time to dig through each slide. Yeah, we should have her on to give us the highlights. Yeah, we should have her on. This is pretty interesting. The AI milestone timeline. I've covered this before, but 1950, 1950, Alan Turing creates his touring test to measure computer intelligence,
Starting point is 00:41:00 positing that computers could think like humans. In 56, Stanford computer scientist John McCarthy convenes the Dartmouth Conference on Artificial Intelligence, a term he coined, great coinage, artificial intelligence. Arthur Samuel in 1962, an IBM computer scientist creates a self-learning program that proves capable of defeating a top U.S. checkers champion. Precursing the chess stuff.
Starting point is 00:41:25 1965, Stanford researchers deploy shaky, the first general purpose mobile robot that can reason about its own actions. Then there's an AI winter that goes from 1967 to 1996. Unclear these AI winter narratives because that was like the craziest moments in tech.
Starting point is 00:41:46 True, but also. More of a moon landing winter. Yeah, I guess. But there was an incredible amount of underlying technology built in that period that was, was directly correlated with artificial intelligence, even if you just go back to like, you know,
Starting point is 00:42:03 linear regression got faster during that period of time. Computers got faster. This was the era of, this is like the rise of Intel. Like, Nvidia was born in this winter. And so the AI winter narrative is always, is always a little bit odd because you can always go back and draw a pretty smooth line after the fact, but in the moment it feels very flat.
Starting point is 00:42:24 But anyway, the AI winter ends with deep blue in 1997. IBM's chess playing computer defeats Gary Kasparov, the world chess champion at the time. In 2002, Rumba, the first mass-produced autonomous robot vacuum cleaner that can navigate homes is launched. I didn't realize Rumba has been around since 2002. It's a vintage robot. Now they got some competition with Matic. The Mavic founder came on.
Starting point is 00:42:51 He sent us some cleaning robots. They've been working wonders. It's actually crazy. Toby Looky was posting about it too. Toby was posting about it. It's amazing how my children have it completely welcomed the robot into the family. Oh, yeah. Like they say,
Starting point is 00:43:06 Hi, Maddoch. Really? Like, they like chase it around while it's working. It's like, it's totally a member of the family. That's incredible. It makes me very, even more robot-pilled. Cool. It's great.
Starting point is 00:43:20 2005, Stanford, a Stanford team builds a driverless car named Stanley. it completes a 132 mile course winning the DARPA Grand Challenge. That, of course, starts the great rivalry between Sebastian Throon and Andre. We'll get excited about, we'll really get excited about Waymo when it can win Lamont. Yes, yes. Like just 24 hours. Waymo has so much money, they really should get an F1 team. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:43 It would be amazing. Yeah. And just be like, yeah, there's still a driver in there. We just bought some random team and we're winning because we're putting a lot of money into the car. Imagine an F1 race, but it's like a roller coaster, so you're not actually, like, driving. You're just like experiencing, like, insane. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I think it would be deeply uncomfortable if you weren't properly trained.
Starting point is 00:44:05 For sure. 2010, Apple acquires Siri voice assistant and integrates it into the iPhone 4S model one year later. 2014, Eugene Guzman, a chatbot, passes the touring test with one of three judges believing that Eugene is human. Wow. I thought we didn't even get close. I mean, that doesn't feel like passing. I thought passing would have to be greater than 50%. So I don't know about that exactly. But I thought that the Turing test was basically like impossible right up until GPT3. But I don't know. Yeah. I guess they were doing some good stuff back in 2014. Yeah, they never really had like an official organization body, like an Olympics of that, like some recognized. Like, we will be the ones to do the touring test on everything. It's always just been like a philosophical test. 2018, OpenAI releases GPT1, the first of their large language models.
Starting point is 00:45:04 2020, OpenAI releases GPT3, an AI tool for automated conversations. Microsoft exclusively licenses the model. Yeah, that's a good summary of the Microsoft relationship. And then in 2022, Open AI releases ChatGPT to the public. And let's go. It became massive. Fantastic consumer product. Yeah, I'm interested.
Starting point is 00:45:25 I actually, now that we're here, I want to see the entire, so this is the timeline from 2023 to 2025. So this is 70 years here on this slide, and then this is three years. So Open AI in March 23 of 20, or sorry, March of 2020, opening eye releases GPD4,
Starting point is 00:45:43 multimodal model capable of processing both text and images. Same month, Microsoft integrates copilot into its 360 degree 3-6-5 products suite. I remember that day. I remember exactly where I was. It will echo in history. It will echo in history.
Starting point is 00:46:00 You know, the funny thing is that it actually would have if they did Clippy that day. If they had been like bringing back Clippy and Clippy is good. And he's now God. It's also so funny with the paperclip narrative, you know, everyone's all paper clip in. So this still feels so long ago.
Starting point is 00:46:17 So that same month, Google released Bard. Yeah. It's Chat, GPT, competitive. Oh, yeah. Hello, Bard. You don't hear about Bard much anymore because it was rebranded to J. Same month, Anthropic releases Claude.
Starting point is 00:46:31 Its AI assistant focused on safety in interpretability. Yeah. A few months later, in November, 28 countries, including the USA, EU, and China, sign the Bletchley Declaration on AI Safety. Sounds dramatic. Of course. I think the conclusion was that they wanted to be. be safe, not dangerous.
Starting point is 00:46:53 Yeah, which I think we can all agree on. March of 2024, the US Department of Homeland Security unveils its AI roadmap strategy. I don't remember that actually. I don't. It's hard to say that that was, you know, one of the most consequential moments in the last years.
Starting point is 00:47:08 Lama 3 was though. April, 2024 meta platforms releases its open source Lama 3 model with 70 billion parameters. This is so funny. So there's two stars after the open source. And if you're in tech, you would think that the stars would indicate, like, oh, well, like, the difference between, like, open weights and open source code and open data set, right? Like, that's the nuance of, like, open sourcing and LLM.
Starting point is 00:47:32 And also, like, they did open source it, but they set this limit where the other hyperscalers couldn't use it. What does the... It says open source is AI models and tools made publicly available for use modification and redistribution. Yeah. So that's who this... I mean, this is, again, this is just very... Yeah, very, very oriented towards the East Coast, specifically the world of finance. But we love the world of finance.
Starting point is 00:47:57 And they got to get up to see them on this stuff because they're going to be able to, they're going to be able to invest soon in a lot of this stuff. They're not already. So they've got to learn. So May of 2024, a year ago, Open AI. So fast. Yeah, things are moving quick. Opening AI releases GPT40, which has full multimodality across audiovisual and text inputs.
Starting point is 00:48:19 Same time, Google Introduce. is AI overviews to augmented search functions. This is actually very important for Google, because that product has grown super, super fast. Yeah, and I will say now, I got to give them some credit that I use AI overviews. Totally. Because when they pop up, they're usually pretty good.
Starting point is 00:48:36 They're usually very effective. And they do hallucinate, and there's ways to jailbreak them and stuff. But that's accepted. But if you're not trying to do that, you can get a pretty good experience. I did see a hilarious UI mockup that was just, Google has the opportunity to do the funniest thing ever, and it was just go all the way back to the original Google search bar,
Starting point is 00:48:56 but just have it be a Gemini text box. And so it was like the same aesthetics as the original Google, but it would just be a text box that you would put the Gemini, and it would say, like, do you want to think, upload PDF? Like, what model do you want to use? And then it would be like, send. Yeah. And so it would just be, actually, you go to Google.com,
Starting point is 00:49:12 and you just get Gemini, which would be aggressive. You would destroy a lot of the revenue in the short term, but who knows, maybe it happened at some point. At least it would be interesting if it happened like on a per user basis. Like if they know that this user would retain longer and actually be better monetized by seeing a Gemini prompt, they could serve that to you. Because they have like an advanced search product now that you can kind of like opt in or out of on Google.com. But I think if they knew if the PMs,
Starting point is 00:49:48 really knew how much we love big tech, they would start to experiment with us more because they know we'd give them a chance to really iterate, improve, you know, we're not going to just try something and churn. Yeah, yeah. I would never churn off Google. Out of respect.
Starting point is 00:50:05 Anyways, Apple on July of last year releases Apple intelligence, an AI system integrated into its devices. Is that when they released it? I thought they, I thought they announced it then and then released it over the next late. Well, I think it was available in beta. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:23 It wasn't fully released until they released the new iPhone. Yeah, I was delayed. On September of last year, Alibaba releases 100 open source Quinn 2.5 models with performance in line with Western competitors. Will Brown, big fan. Yep. Loves all the different research models. Big Quinn guy.
Starting point is 00:50:45 And then December, Open AI announces. O3, its highest performing model ever. And we basically are in the present now. Deepseek at the beginning of the year. Yeah, deep seek. And, yeah, Deep Seek, I guess that was January. That was really kind of the deep seek moment for deep seek. Yeah, it was.
Starting point is 00:51:03 Deep Seek released R1, R1, open source reasoning models. And yeah, the O3 versus R1 moment was really crazy because R1 was so free and accessible. And O3 was like really paywall and gated. So a lot of people's first interaction with reasoning models was R1. And so opening I had to fire back very, very quickly. Also, Alibaba unveiled Quinn 2.5 Max, which surpasses the performance of other leading models, Claude 40, Cloud 3.5, GPD 40.
Starting point is 00:51:39 On some reasoning tests, OpenAI releases GPD 4.5, Anthropic releases the Cloud 37s on it, and then ChatGPT reaches. 800 million weekly users. Let's hear it for chatGBT. I mean, that's just, it seriously is unprecedented in so many ways. Yeah. 10 years from now, somebody, some kid will be raising trying to build a research company.
Starting point is 00:52:06 And they'll be like, well, Open AI started as a research lab. And then became a consumer internet hit. It's like absolutely wild. Anyway, there's a ton in here. We could go through... Let's go back to the timeline. Let's go back to the timeline. I'll stop sharing.
Starting point is 00:52:24 We got a post from Dennis. Demand for V-O-3 has been off the charts. Millions of videos have been generated in the past few days alone. Now available on mobile and in more countries, including the UK. So the funny thing here with the timing of Mountain Head is that the entire plot of Mountain Head is based on a V-O-3-like product being so good. Sure. that people can't tell the difference and it causes global chaos.
Starting point is 00:52:50 It feels like V-O-4 will be that good. Well, it depends on the rate limits. Yeah. That would be an important plot device. Yeah. Well, that was part of the plot. It was like people are saying, like, you need to contain it more.
Starting point is 00:53:03 And he's like, oh, the metrics are so good. Sure, sure, sure, sure. Yeah. But I don't think the V-O-3 is causing global chaos at the rate you can go. I thought briefly, I mean, I had seen the movie Saturday night, and then Sunday I saw some of the protests happening in Paris. And I did think for a second, this could be, you know, it's shaky video, a lot of chaos, smoke, it's at night. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:32 If I just glanced at it. Yeah, I always just wonder, like, how much, how important is fake video? because there are so many other tools for misinformation that have existed for decades. So just lying in text, like instantiating fake text has always been possible. Yeah, right? Photoshop has existed.
Starting point is 00:53:53 I made it up. I made it up. Also, I mean, one of the classic misinformation things, especially during, like, riots and times of... That's misinformation. During a lot of these, like, protests and different moments is they will just, take a photo or real, real video from three years ago or from a different location and be like,
Starting point is 00:54:16 look, like, this is, this is, you know. Or another classic. This is the Los Angeles fires. And you're seeing like a wildfire from like Montana or something. Yeah, or you just do a freeze frame or it's an image. Yep. And then you write text that supports a different narrative than what actually happened. There's so many different tools in the misinformation tool chest.
Starting point is 00:54:35 I agree that V-O-3 and genera video will be one, but it will very quickly, you know, turn into, okay, well, like, I need to treat this video just like I would treat just like a block of text or like a screenshot or an image that could have been photoshopped. Yeah, I mean, it is going to be a very interesting question. I mean, we were talking with a friend of the show and he was like the worst part of Mountain Head is that it's real, this idea that like tech,
Starting point is 00:55:09 you know, the tech elite are destroying, you know, humanity and they don't care, right? Boo. Boo. But it is, I mean, there's so much about the internet that isn't real or is that it embellished in different ways. Anyways, speaking of social media, we have a meme from Eddie Kwan.
Starting point is 00:55:32 He says, I often think of this. And it is a woman saying, thank you for ruining my life. And it is the Instagram octopus saying, I'm literally an algorithm designed to maintain your attention by learning from your behavior and mirroring back that which consciously or not captivates you and the social worlds through which you move.
Starting point is 00:55:50 I am literally one of the most fascinating tools for collective and personal shadow work ever created. That is, only if you can learn to recognize that you aren't disturbed by social media, you are disturbed by your own reflective. So what does it mean that my Instagram Explorer page is entirely bodybuilding content? And golden retrievers. Yeah, I think it's my own reflection.
Starting point is 00:56:16 So it's saying like I could be a generational bodybuilder. Yeah. That's what I potentially am. And I've told you that many times. Yes. I've told you that many times. Elite level genetics, fantastic insertions. That's the only thing that if you said I'm going to quit the show.
Starting point is 00:56:31 I'm going to be a bodybuilder full time. I would be like, yeah, that is your purpose. Yeah, 100%. Exactly. It's that and super cars and watches. It's really so ridiculous. Anyway, let's do an ad for linear. Linear is a purpose-built tool for planning and building products.
Starting point is 00:56:49 Meet the system for modern software development, streamline issues, projects, and product roadmaps. Let's go. Let's go. I'm bored. They got linear for agents. Start building. Do it. Check out linear.
Starting point is 00:57:02 do it we are pushing linear to the limits internally yeah we're excited uh antibiotics says gave a talk at edge esmeralda on the scientific history leading up to repeat today going to post soon stay tuned very excited i i think i included this more as a mental note yeah i want to do i want to do a deep dive on repeat just because he's influenced so much of uh a lot of the think the current thinking around health and we should have anabology on yeah we should have like a few different people in that space come on while we do some deep dives yeah but i met uh anabolic at really at this event last year cool uh friend of of jessamers so yeah oh back to mary meeker buco capital bloke uh says i asked gemini and chachapiti to construct a portfolio based solely on
Starting point is 00:57:55 the new 300 plus slide mary meeker a i trend report here were the results of the result of Who do you think wins? And so we have Gemini says 15% Nvidia, 10% Microsoft, 10% Alphabet, 9% Amazon, 6% meta, key enablers and differentiated AI leaders. They got TSMC, Apple, Tesla, growth and AI apps and infrastructure, Salesforce, Oracle Palazes. Pretty good company. I don't know. This seems interesting to me. What do you think?
Starting point is 00:58:22 Waiting meta at 6%. That does seem low. But again, it's like all of the. the, I mean, there's some stat where like the Mag 7 grew revenue at something like 30% annually over the last like two quarters. And the rest of the Fortune 500, if you average all of them up, they grew at like 5% or something, 8%. And so like, yeah, yeah, you can say like, yeah, the meta feels underweight there, but you got to take it from somewhere because you, you know, like every point you're taking from, you're adding to meta.
Starting point is 00:58:59 It has to be out of Nvidia, and that's a great company. Or out of Microsoft, and that's a great company. But yes, I agree with you. Very interesting. Anyway, let's go through a real quick overview of what we're about to talk to our first guest about. The Trojan truck, how Ukraine just made nowhere safe. We should have had Pat on the show today. We can do it tomorrow or something.
Starting point is 00:59:20 Across 400 kilometers of Russian territory this morning, delivery trucks, completed what looked like a routine stop near five Russian air bases. These Trojan trucks with cargo containers disguised as garden sheds opened upward to release clusters of first-person view quad-copters into the bright morning sky. Minutes later, over 40 aircraft were burning, including irreplaceable strategic bombers that form a core component of Russia's. So they released this image. This had to just come out of... This is like where they prepped, I think. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:51 I think it's like... But it's an interesting dynamic for Ukraine to be like marketing to the world. Totally. Totally, to show, hey, we did this and we're giving you enough to actually tell the story completely because we want to send the message that we have. This whole plot is extremely crafty. It is, for sure. Well, we have a great guest to discuss it with us today. We have Soren from Neros who builds drones and has been to the Ukraine.
Starting point is 01:00:12 And so we'll bring him into the studio and ask him how he's doing. How are you doing? There he is. Welcome. Great. How are you guys? We're good. We have a new soundboard.
Starting point is 01:00:20 So expect some wild cards. Wild stuff. Perfect. But yeah. We missed you on T.LFELA day. I hope you're doing well. Maybe you can kick it off with just a brief overview of what you're tracking in the news. I mean, we just covered this incredible Ukraine operation. What information, how are you processing it? Let's have him do a quick one minute intro for anybody that didn't hear him the last time and isn't familiar with your background. That's great. Yeah, absolutely. So I am the co-founder and CEO at NEROS.
Starting point is 01:00:58 What we're doing here is building massively scalable defense systems, starting with drones. My personal background is I was a professional drone racer for a long time. I've been building and flying FPV drones, first person view drones for about 10 years, competed with Team USA, won the World Championship, started a company in drone racing, and then got really, really pulled into defense a couple years ago. And now Neros has been around for about two years. I've been over to Ukraine many times. We have a lot of products deployed there.
Starting point is 01:01:27 And we are now the highest rate drone production line in America. So we've been really trying to ramp production, you know, looking at what the Ukrainians are doing and taking a lot of inspiration. And how much of the drones right now are FPV versus fully autonomous? Is that an important distinction for what you're building? Yeah, it is an important distinction, although the line is starting to get more blurry. The vast majority are FPV. are FPV. And in in Ukraine, too, the vast majority of drones in general are FPVs and the vast majority of those are completely manually piloted. Yeah. I had no idea that you started a drone racing company before
Starting point is 01:02:05 this. Did you ever get that to scale or was it still just like bench top? I remember the first time I saw your facility, you were kind of hand assembling. It sounds like now the supply chain is much more robust, but what was that early experience like? Yeah. So the company, it's actually still operating. primarily we were focused on at the beginning we were focused on building the materials for race courses so there weren't really there wasn't a really good place to go for serious racing pilots to buy like the the gates are what they call what you actually fly through yeah so we you know this this is a lot of actually working with the chinese uh you know industrial base figuring out where we can go to get these better materials um and then a lot of the arbitrage was actually in the
Starting point is 01:02:47 shipping, figuring out how to do, you know, shipping all over the United States of these very heavy items without driving the cost super high. And then we moved into other types of components. We like to collaborate with kind of the top racing pilots in the world. So we make like frames and motors and other things that are really tailored to the needs of the best pilots. But it's still operating. I've passed it off now. But it was a really good experience also to see how easy it is to go on Alibaba and you know get something done in a matter of weeks. Basically like zero to full product in a matter of weeks versus you know working with U.S. suppliers that would maybe maybe get you a sample. Yeah. Those gates are somewhat tech enabled, right? Because I've seen like the LEDs on them.
Starting point is 01:03:32 And do they actually have a sensor that can tell if the drone went through the circle? So they do. That's usually on the kind of hobbyist setups. That's that's more on the like just start and finish gate and it's a separate system. Ours were purely just a fabric. But that is a key part of it as well. Yeah, that makes a little sense. Before we dive into the news, specifically the news over the weekend, could you give us a high level overview of the history of drone warfare in Ukraine?
Starting point is 01:04:04 Because I understand it's been progressing super rapidly on both sides. And it'd be helpful to understand kind of the different stages. Did they ever have like predator drones, like the Global War on Terror type of drone? Or did they jump straight to quadcopter and kind of like leapfrog the technology? So, you know, you've had this Russian aggression war in Ukraine since 2014. Obviously the full-scale invasion was 2022. But even during that period before the full-scale invasion, there was some usage of drones for surveillance and dropping explosives. These are primarily still like small drones like what you're seeing now.
Starting point is 01:04:42 But this was not a proliferated technology. Then when the full-scale invasion happened, within a few months, the Ukrainians started thinking about all these ways that they could use, you know, inexpensive drone technology to get an asymmetric advantage. And that is where FPV drones started becoming a really, really big deal. So they pioneered the, really this idea of, you know, putting an explosive on a racing drone and using that as a precision strike weapon. There were instances of this happening in other places.
Starting point is 01:05:12 but they really scaled it and they've really refined it. And then Russia was much slower to take it seriously, although now they tend to in some ways outproduce Ukraine and they have a much, you know, more direct line to China where most of these components are coming from. But since 2022 and FPV is just starting to get used, now it's reached an unbelievable scale. It's estimated Ukraine is going to produce four and a half million FPV drones this year. And those are ranging from you know, ones that are this big to 15-inch propellers, fiber optic-controlled drones, many different types and sizes of warheads, different configurations. And I can talk more about the drones that were used in Operation Spider-Web as well,
Starting point is 01:05:57 because those were really interesting. But what we've seen is just this vast technology landscape where new, clever ideas like fiber optic are going to be the hot thing for a few months. And then they sort of just become another tool in the tool belt, and it's just this constant arms race. Yeah, talk about this attack was unique in a bunch of different ways, but is this something that had been, to your knowledge, or just more generally known to be something that had been attempted multiple times?
Starting point is 01:06:28 Or maybe like I'm curious to know, yeah, kind of the backstory on this type of attack, because it seems, you know, it's a massive difference to be using this technology way behind enemy lines. versus using it, you know, at the front line. Yeah. So primarily FPV drones are used on the front line, say the kind of 30 kilometer band across the zero line. What was so unique here is that it was FPV drones, short-range drones, being used 4,000 kilometers inside of Russia.
Starting point is 01:07:02 It was this unbelievable application where, you know, you've seen the Ukraine using long-range one-way attack drones that are going, you know, 1,500 kilometers. to strike targets deep inside of Russia. But here, these were small drones actually driven in on trucks, basically in the tops of shipping containers. And I don't know of any operations that were similar to this beforehand. I think it was not something they wanted to give away. And the drones were actually operating on cellular.
Starting point is 01:07:35 They were not operating on local, like the normal low latency, local radios you use for FPVs. typically. And so I think, you know, this is going to be something that a lot of people are going to look at and see if you have drones that are operating on cellular, you can't really tell them apart from cell phones. That's really hard to defend against, really hard to detect. But now it's going to be part of air base defense is thinking about drones that are operating on cellular being piloted from basically anywhere in the world. Yeah, talk about, talk about the Russian response, the immediate response to this incident. from the footage that I saw, and I think most people saw that tracked it, it seemed incredibly
Starting point is 01:08:19 challenging to respond to it quickly, right? By the time you could sort of organize a response, a lot of the core damage have been done. What do you think the question I think that every country is asking themselves now is how do you defend against this type of attack, whether you're at war like Ukraine and Russia are or you're just, you know, thinking, you know, long-term. Yeah, this clearly poses a massive threat to critical infrastructure. I mean, being blatant, the U.S. does not have any defenses in place that would stop this from happening. We already know. There's already news stories about drones that are flying over our Air Force bases and we can't do anything about it. And I think the only approach here has to be a multi-layered system where you're
Starting point is 01:09:08 looking at all the different types of electronic warfare and also considering things like satellite communications and cellular communications where you're basically able to turn those off on the flip of the switch, which is a huge inconvenience and a huge thing to build into the infrastructure, but clearly that's going to be required. And you mean that just to drill down there, you mean asking Verizon or AT&T or every cell provider in a certain area to turn off, you know, cell coverage because a drone took off, you know, is, is. Or a fleet of drones. Or a fleet of drones.
Starting point is 01:09:43 But either way, it's hard to tell if they're a threat or just, you know, some recreational use. I mean, I'm sure many people on the internet will tell me why this is a very stupid idea. But when I think about this, it's clearly the Russians were not equipped to jam drones operating on cellular. That is totally possible. And we could have better cellular jammers. but if they had been able to recognize this threat and completely and turn off all the cellular networks in that location,
Starting point is 01:10:10 then it basically would have stopped this operation completely. And so that's where my mind immediately goes with something like this. Do you think they had electronic warfare or radio blocking equipment set up at that airbase and it just, you're saying it wasn't functional? Or it wasn't for that particular band. It wasn't blocking cellular. It might have been blocking low latency. I forget, what was the, what's the actual frequency for the radio that you were using with the heads-up display that we were planning?
Starting point is 01:10:39 It depends. So, that is the point. So basically, you can actually see in the videos, the drones take off and they have GPS. And once the attack starts, they lose GPS, which means GPS is getting jammed, which makes total sense. That's a common way of defending against these one-way strike drones. So air bases are going to already be set up with GPS jamming. And, you know, so is Moscow, so is Kiev. like that's common, but they're not set up to just obliterate cell phone usage on airbases.
Starting point is 01:11:08 And they probably do have jamming for like control links in the 915 megahertz range, video links in the 5.8 gigahertz range. There's other common ones that are probably, they're more well equipped to jam. But when I think what caught them so by surprise was the use of cellular. Yeah. I mean, we've talked about some of the different, you said there was kind of kind of like an ensemble approach to stopping these types of attacks. Walk through some of those because I remember seeing like, oh, we're going to train eagles to catch the drones. We're going to just have guys with shotguns that shoot them or anvil drones or nets or electronic takeover.
Starting point is 01:11:50 There's so many different approaches. And it feels like at least in the U.S. defense tech space, there's a whole bunch of startups going after different counter drone, counter UAS strategies. and it feels like there might be an ensemble one, but what do you expect to kind of be the mix or the roadmap or the tech tree that we go down to kind of prep for defense against this type of thing? First off, our strategic bombers should be inside of hangers.
Starting point is 01:12:18 I think that would be a great start. But as you mentioned, there are these really basic things like nets that do help against FPVs, but that's not going to last very long, right? Sure. I think you're going to see a mixed layer, especially with electronic warfare combined with interceptors, combined with the sort of kinetic defeat like the bullfrog system, where you have an automatic machine gun turret that's able to shoot drones out of the sky. The last line of defense is really guys with shotguns, and that can actually work against an FPV drone,
Starting point is 01:12:51 but you don't want to be relying on that. So I think it's one of the things that worries me the most is that I've never seen a jammer in the United States made by a U.S. company that can reliably take out FPV drones. And I think we're very, very far behind in the practical application of electronic warfare, especially with these like local radios. So I believe this is a huge area where we need to start investing dramatically and putting way more attention. Yeah. Okay. So I want to walk through a little bit more of this. you mentioned GPS gets jammed, then they're going over the cell network.
Starting point is 01:13:29 There's probably a way to provision like almost like licenses to operate on the cell network that might make it harder. I imagine that they had to like effectively like buy Russian SIM cards and set them up in the drones. But talk to me about the actual flight experience of flying remotely over cell because I imagine that it's low, it's high latency, low bandwidth. So is this like when you fly, it's. It's remarkable. It's like super precise.
Starting point is 01:13:56 I imagine this is a little bit more jerky and a little bit slower. And so you could probably take advantage of that. But can you characterize the type of flying that we might have seen if we were on the ground that day? Absolutely. So I spent a lot of time looking at the flight videos and the pictures of the FPV drones. And these are not normal drones. These were very special builds to accomplish this. So one of the key characteristics of these systems that are operating off of cellular
Starting point is 01:14:22 where you do have high latency control is they are fully stabilized. So they're doing altitude and position hold, which is not actually normal for an FPV drone. Normally you're running on a firmware called Beta Flight, which was developed for racing applications. And it's really precise. It flies really well to a human pilot, but it doesn't really have built-in stabilization. They were using Ardu Pilot, which is another open source firmware. And it's used widely across drones, but not usually for racing drones or for FPVs. So you can see that it actually shows in the on-screen display from the videos that they're doing that position hold.
Starting point is 01:14:58 And you can tell it's not like a normal FPV drone where they're putting it at kind of any angle. And what was also really interesting is they set these up to not fly into the target forward like you would with a normal FPV strike drone. They descended flat onto the target and they had a camera on a gimbal that can point down. So what you would usually do is have a warhead that's pointing basically in the same. direction forward direction as your FPV camera. And on these drones, they had two warheads that were basically pipes between the motors. That way they could descend with that camera
Starting point is 01:15:31 looking straight down and descend onto the area with the fuel tanks of those bombers. And the other advantage of that is that those drones inherently were flat and stable when they're sitting in the container. Instead of having one big round warhead on the bottom, they had these two smaller ones on the sides, which made it much easier for them to pack them flat inside the top of that shipping container. Interesting. And so having a relatively larger target than a FPV drone would typically had enabled that, right? They just had to land kind of within a, I don't know, I don't know what the surface area was,
Starting point is 01:16:06 but 20 something feet to really have the effect. They were landing on a pretty precise location, but it was, it was, they were able to do that, especially because they knew the targets were stationary. And it's pretty easy to descend, you know, onto a flat wing. versus if you're going after a moving vehicle or a soldier or anything like that, descending flat onto them is going to be really, really hard, especially in that full stabilized mode. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:31 Yeah. What do you think the pipeline is for identifying targets? Are they using satellite imagery to see that the bombers are not in hangers, and then they can clock that in? Yeah, wasn't there? There was a treaty at some point, too, that required bombers to be parked outside. Oh, really? I don't know about that.
Starting point is 01:16:48 No. I think it was, anyway, I'll look it up. Well, that might be rolling back soon. No, I think it did get abandoned already, but there was some historical precedent for nuclear assets needing to be visible. Yeah, I want to talk about target identification, and then I want to talk about just essentially complete offline drone flying and targeting with computer vision and kind of closed loop, basically doing geogessor on the fly and just popping up and realizing like, look around, okay, I'm in, I'm like, I can kind of guess that I'm a thousand miles outside of Moscow. There might be a target somewhere nearby. I'm going to fly over there.
Starting point is 01:17:28 Okay, I see I can identify a hanger. I can identify a bomber. Before we dive into that, let me give some context so I don't leave people hanging. So there was a treaty that the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, start one, signed in 1991 by the United States and the Soviet Union, included provisions for transparency and verification, such as placing strategic nuclear delivery vehicles like bombers at declared
Starting point is 01:17:50 satellite observable locations to ensure compliance with the treaty's limits on nuclear arsenal. So it was broadly, it was suspended by Russia in 2023, but there was still this sort of global infrastructure for storing these types of assets in a way that you wouldn't store them today if you were sort of building systems from first principles. Yeah. So to answer your question, John, I have to imagine that satellite imagery and also just, you know, this was a very well-planned out, planned for a year and a half operation. And it was clear that Ukrainian SBU was operating inside of Russia on the ground. And so it was pretty easy for them to gather that intelligence
Starting point is 01:18:37 of where the bombers were and, you know, when would be the right time to strike. So I don't think that's the, you know, that's not the main challenge here. But there was a lot of talk on on X about using AI and training models to identify the planes and people saying that this was autonomous drones. To me, I watched these videos very closely. There is nothing to indicate that these were autonomous drones. It actually, to me, looks very obvious that they're fully manually piloted. And that also makes sense, where you have a one-shot mission and you spent so much work to
Starting point is 01:19:14 set up the cellular network or these drones that work on the cellular network, it would not make sense to trust that to some kind of unproven terminal guidance on a completely new set of targets. Totally. Where we will get to is drones that are able to accomplish missions like this completely autonomously. And what you were kind of alluding to is like this GPS to nine navigation world that's getting a lot of attention right now where basically you have kind of your known map and then
Starting point is 01:19:43 you have what the camera sees and you're able to match those together and say, look, this is where I am. Typically, you need to do that in a pretty confined space because you have to preload all of that map data. Sure. But that's really, really useful if you, especially on these one-way strike drones, the larger drones, when you're trying to do deep strike and hit a precise target. And you've accepted the fact that GPS is just going to be completely useless. And cellular as well, right?
Starting point is 01:20:07 Right. So total signal jamming, but you maybe don't have to load like all of Google Street View from all over the world, but you could load in just this thousand mile region in Russia, and then you kind of know that we're going to start here, so you need to be grounding, and then you can compress that ideally with some AI maybe or just some general compression to load as much as possible on the drone. But I'm wondering about like if we can't do that without like an Nvidia GPU on board,
Starting point is 01:20:37 that's going to change the weight and cost and all the economic equations around this. But it sounds like we're maybe close to that already. I can speak from the nearest perspective, which is we are specking all of our autonomy to work on a computer that doesn't kind of ruin the inherent nature of an FPV drone. Right. It needs to be small enough. It needs to be low enough cost. And that doesn't tend to be an Nvidia GPU for the systems we build. But you can still do a lot with that.
Starting point is 01:21:05 And there's also these much more traditional forms of navigation, inertial navigation has been around for a very long time and works quite well. And so what you want to do is actually combine these different things together. And it's going to depend on the user and the doctrine if they will be okay with drones, just fully autonomously going after targets. But we are getting very close to the point where you could have a low-cost FPV-style drone that's completing a mission, basically on its own, flying to a certain area, scanning four targets, identifying those targets, and then basically just saying, like, go or no-go. then you just have to click a button. That's what I think we're actually approaching quite quickly.
Starting point is 01:21:48 Yeah. Are there international treaties around that? I mean, it feels like the decision to maybe not destroy a military asset that doesn't have a human on board, but certainly to like take a human life that feels like a pretty distinct Rubicon that would be discussed in the global order or at the UN before it happens. And yet it does seem inevitable as technology progress. but where are we in that type of discussion and like Geneva Convention stuff? I think the line gets blurry with AI because we've had weapons for a long time where you press the button and once it fires and it can be fine for hours, and you're still never calling it back, right?
Starting point is 01:22:31 Like a cruise missile, right? Or even just like a mortar shell, right? Exactly. And so my opinion here is that the systems that nearest builds and these systems that are enabled by AI and drones in general are are much more precise and cause much less casualties of civilians. True. And that idea, I think, is starting to proliferate. But it's heavily debated.
Starting point is 01:22:58 I don't think anyone could give you a perfectly clear answer of this is exactly what everyone's agreed upon because when you get in a situation like Ukraine where you are just defending your territory and it is an all-out war, those things don't seem to matter. much right you're just you're you're you're coming up with the most clever solution to get it done with your limited resources and so i think it's really the only thing it matters is what is actually going to happen in a real conflict and we can look to ukraine for that and we can think about uh what potential adversaries the united states has in the future yeah it does seem like the like if the ukrainians had the choice to to you know like send a couple more mortar shells and
Starting point is 01:23:39 like kill 50 russian people they would have much rather just destroyed the capital assets of these exquisite bombers that are very hard to build and are, you know, not like, strictly speaking, more valuable than human life, but certainly like more strategic to the, to the war effort. So yeah, it makes sense that like a precise instrument, like a drone, would actually favor targeting the, the bomber, the asset, as opposed to the human, which is potentially good. How are you seeing, you mentioned a little bit about how the warhead this time around was different and that it was flat so it could be packed into the truck. What is the, what's the general evolution of, that you're seeing on the warhead side? So the classic image of a Ukrainian
Starting point is 01:24:26 FPV drone is a 7, 8, 10 inch FPV drone with an RPG7 warhead. Yeah. Duct tape or zip tied to the bottom and some type of homegrown initiation board to actually trigger that. And then there's a blasting cap that just goes in the back of the RPG 7. That's like the most common setup, and there's a lot of images of that. For a long time now, Ukrainians and Russians have been building purpose-made FPV warheads, and these can be basically from scratch. We, on our systems, have warheads that are very purpose-built for the intended target. And so that's really just depending on the mission, you're able to quickly swap on, swap off various different warheads. And I think that's the ideal scenario where you can support a wide array of different effects and swap them out quickly.
Starting point is 01:25:20 Can you talk about the economics between the drone and the munition? It seems like the disposable drone was quickly adopted. And is that a function of the fact that the warhead costs more than the drone or they're roughly 50-50? What's the evolution been there? Because you could imagine if you wind up in a world where munition cost is, driven to five bucks and the drone is still hovering around a couple hundred, well, then it might make sense to release the munition and try and return the drone, even if it's somewhat low probability. Yeah. The costs are roughly 50-50 on an FV system. And it really depends,
Starting point is 01:26:01 but I would put it roughly 50-50. Why you don't want to release the munition is because the point of an FPV drone is that it's the cheapest and most precise guidance system you can have. Sure. So as soon as you decouple that, even if it's very close to the target, you're losing precision and it's not a great cost to actually blow up the drone, right? And we do have bigger bomber drones, which makes sense because those are much more costly and they're able to carry very, very heavy warheads. But to me, the reason why an FPV is so good is because it is actually just kind of a guidance
Starting point is 01:26:37 system around a warhead. Yeah. When you say we, you mean the U.S. armed forces, not near us? I mean. I mean. The collective. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, yeah, what is in the, in the Neros portfolio right now?
Starting point is 01:26:54 How is, how has scaling production been? And I'm interested in specifically knowing, like, what are the downstream, what are the frustration points that you've experienced building? that manufacturing line that you maybe even expect someone to build a startup around to make it easier. I've been talking to a lot of defense tech friends who are employees and I've been telling them like if you just go into the most hyperscale, the most aggressive startup, like if you want to be a founder but you crush it there, like you might discover something that needs its own, its own business instead of like looking at a market map and trying to decide that way. Like go experience
Starting point is 01:27:35 the pain. So where has the pain been? Where has been the operation? opportunity and how has that process been scaling with the manufacturing line? So speaking to our current products, we produce Archer, which is our FPV drone built on an allied supply chain. It's certified by the DOD for usage and to be cyber secure and supply chain secure. We have Archer Strike, which is the version of that where we actually integrate the warhead system. And then we have our various different ground stations for different use cases. Crossbow is more tactical and portable. Longbow is our max range. max anti-jam ground station. We have other things in the works, but the main focus has been
Starting point is 01:28:15 scaling the production of Archer and the ground station. It was quite painful earlier this year. We went through sort of the first version of a production ramp, which I think for any company ends up being a really, really painful time. For us, it was all of our, not all, but we have all of these custom electronics that we bring in from a boardhouse in Arizona. And we were finding these really high failure rates in some of the designs. And sometimes it wasn't even because of something we were doing. And so we had to spend a lot of time to get those components to a really high first pass yield. So for a while, it was lots and lots of testing, lots of drones failing at the end of line test. Now we're in a really stable spot. And that is going quite well. We're
Starting point is 01:28:59 shipping very consistently, about 1,500 drones a month, but ramping that actually very fast. On the ground station side, there's also been a lot of engineering challenges. But I think what's more interesting, what you were alluding to is the supply chain. And one of the big things that I think you'll probably hear a lot of drone and defense tech people talking about right now is the supply chain for brushless motors. We have worked with a partner outside of China to scale up their capacity. But even right now, that's still a game where we're pushing them to go faster, pushing them to make new specs and they are not prepared for the volume that we're doing and that we're planning to be doing quite soon. So this is one that I've seen a lot of folks getting interested in. I think there's
Starting point is 01:29:44 some really good efforts that are starting to appear within the U.S. and allied countries for making brushless motors. But there's probably going to need to be a lot of people serving this because there's many different sizes, many different specs. One of the challenges here is also the the neodymium that goes into the motors, and the other raw materials are also typically controlled by China. So there's a many, many layer supply chain problem that, you know, one single drone company isn't going to fix on its own. Yeah, I talked to a friend who was doing business with an international founder who had experience
Starting point is 01:30:19 in the brushless motor industry in China and was thinking about setting up an operation in America and was asking this other friend, you go, yeah, like, oh, yeah, like, like we want to get set up, but of course, like we want to be where the action is because we have a supply chain. We'd love to set up in the brushless motor district in America. Like wherever the district is, where all the brushless motor companies are, like, we'll go set up there so that we're just walking distance. So if we need a specific material and they had to explain like, no, no, no, no. Like, America doesn't even have a district for that. That's not even a concept here.
Starting point is 01:30:53 Like, we don't have any companies, but we also don't have the rest of the supply chain. And China's really, really done a great job of like creating not just the, the power law outcomes like the DJIs of the world, but also all the minor supply chain companies, they're all right next to each other. So if you need some piece of equipment, you can just go across the street. It's kind of like what's happening at El Saganor right now. You guys are building it up where you can go over to Cameron at Rangeview and say, hey, can you help me with this part or something like that? But we're a lot earlier on that curve. So hopefully it's solved. I know people have flagged the brushless motor industry quite early, and so people are
Starting point is 01:31:29 definitely working on it. Yeah. Anyway, thank you so much for coming on. I'm sure you're going to have a very busy week. I'm sure we weren't the first people to, uh, give your call. Shoot you a text and ask,
Starting point is 01:31:38 uh, get your thoughts. So thanks for coming on and breaking it down. And, uh, thanks for doing what you do. Yeah, we'll talk to you saying. Cheers.
Starting point is 01:31:44 Thanks guys. Great. Uh, quickly, let me tell you about numeral, uh, sales tax on autopilot. Spend less than five minutes per month on sales tax compliance.
Starting point is 01:31:52 What is this? It's just a cool. It's just a cool sound effect. Go to numeral HQ.com. Put your sales tax. on autopilot. Next up, we have Connor Love from Lightspeed coming in. He's been on the show before. We're going to get an update from him on all things in the defense tech world, what he's thinking about and how he's seeing things in the government. Welcome to the stream, Connor. How are you doing?
Starting point is 01:32:12 Good. I'm doing all right. You're like, get to be back, guys. Yeah. Oh, he's got a suit this time. Oh, looking great. We love to start. I won't say I dress up just for you, but, you know, I would have taken the suit off far before this, you know, if I wasn't coming on. Fantastic. Good, good. Thanks so much for jumping on. Have you been tracking? the Ukraine story closely, any insights there, anything in the portfolio that's at all relevant in the defense tech world. Do you expect a response from the U.S. government or guidance or change to any strategies? Really, any takes on that? I mean, first shit, what a what a time to be alive. I mean, you know, I'm sure your Twitter feeds and your group chats were blown up,
Starting point is 01:32:52 you know, pun intended over the weekend. I mean, it's pretty crazy. I mean, let's be honest, like, First, I'm not shocked that the Ukrainians did this. I mean, the execution seemed to be flawless from what we can pull from open source intel. I do think, though, I mean, again, it's not a surprise. The Ukrainians have been mastering drone warfare for the last handful of years. And, you know, you want to call it, they called it Spiderweb. Like, this was their, this was their Trojan horse. This was their, you know, Israeli beeper.
Starting point is 01:33:21 And the outcome is pretty impressive, to be honest. I mean, what from the outside looking in, like the Russians, spoke up over the weekend and they thought they were getting their $4 team orders and what did they get? They got a thousand, you know, FPV drones, you know, blowing them to Smithering. So it's pretty impressive. I mean, my take away from this are really twofold. Please. The first is like there's never been a clear signal of where warfare is going. And to be clear, you know, what I, when I view this from, you know, both the entrepreneurs in my portfolio, but also from
Starting point is 01:33:53 my perspective, I mean, the world is about, you know, cheap, attritable, a lot of of times autonomous systems and that's you know playing out in warfare that's playing out in other areas of life and then the second thing is you know candidly it's like it's it's really hard to defend yourself at the pace at which things are changing and again like I know we do some things here in the United States and are trying to be on the front end of a lot of this innovation but when this happens I think this almost just resets everyone again and says all right how do how do we respond to it and I think it's to your point it's not a it's not a direct US response it's more of, hey, what do we need to buy? What do we need to develop, you know, for our own fight and,
Starting point is 01:34:32 you know, in some way, shape, or form? Yeah, what do you think, obviously you're a venture capitalist, not a geopolitical strategist, but what's the right Russian response to this? Is it, hey, we suddenly need to be wary of having cell coverage anywhere near strategic military assets? I mean, it seems like Ukraine and Ukraine's perfect world, they could run this style of attack a bunch and copy and paste and hit other targets, but it feels like something that was dependent on cellular technology, that that's something that the Russians can revoke fairly, fairly quickly. Sure, it'll be inconvenient, but I'm curious if you have a take. Yeah, I mean, you know, to be honest, what I think about how do you defend against this? I think there is,
Starting point is 01:35:20 you know, I wouldn't call this the easy answer of just, you know, turning off the cellular network. I actually think the only way to do it kind of practically is in layers or in a multitude of different ways. Because, you know, yeah, the reality is if you looked at how the Ukrainians carried out this attack, they did so on the local, you know, Russian cell network, which, again, I don't think any Russian kind of defense unit any of these basis was ever thinking that they would have to turn off their own cell network. And then there's just a practicality of how you do it. I mean, I think there was, what, four or five different attacks that. hit all at the same time. What do you do? You turn off the network for tens of thousands, hundreds, thousands of people. And oh, by the way, this is like a dirty little secret that
Starting point is 01:36:02 nobody talks about. Yes, you have your military systems that are protected and all that. But a lot of coordination is happening through WhatsApp. A lot of coordination on. And so all of sudden, you turn off the cell networks, you're actually inhibiting your own defense, your own response, the first responder, you know, the, you know, getting your own people out of there. So I think it's a bit more complex than that. And then the last thing I'd say is, just like, even if you do this in layers, you know, you need to be resilient in a way, but you're not going to stop everything. I mean, this was just brilliant masterclass of, you know, again, if maybe there was a plan, we didn't know this, but maybe there's a plan for, you know,
Starting point is 01:36:39 a hundred bases, and we only hit five of them. And so if you think about just the, the broad, you know, geopolitical, you know, geographic coverage you have to have, I think to be 100% certain on anything, it's just you, it's impossible. You can't do it. It's interesting. There was like that Huawei narrative for a while about 5G towers and potential back doors. It was always about, the narrative was always about spying. And I think now you have to consider sabotage, not just espionage. And the idea that if you could even just provision a tower that has some sort of just, just if this SIM card comes through, just let it go through. You know, don't, don't worry about it. This, this SIM card can always communicate. That's,
Starting point is 01:37:22 That's very scary. So I wonder, this is a funny aside, but it's real. I mean, back when I was in Iraq and that long ago, we would go by like burner phones to be able to like check the news and, you know, catch up your family on obviously non-pertinent things. And ever now and then, I was, you know, I was in northern Iraq. And every now and then I would go, just pull up my Google search on this burner phone. And my location happened to be Tehran Iran almost every time that I would go to search there. And I'd say, oh, this is weird. That's where I am. So again, I think, I think it's really hard to do in practicality. I think the manner is like you just have to have resiliency.
Starting point is 01:37:58 You just have to have a bunch of different options, both on the defense and the offensive side. I mean, look at what the Ukrainians are actually using for the majority of their drones in Ukraine right now. Fibro optic cable. They're not even using networks at this point, too. Can you actually, what is that emphasis? Can you go a level deeper on what that fiber optic emphasis? Yeah, Soren mentioned that, but I don't actually understand. And is it like a cable that flies through the air?
Starting point is 01:38:22 100%. I mean, think about it. It's arguably unlimited amount of fiber optic, really thin filament cables that all it's doing is it's transmitting data to the drone. And you're inhibited, you know, arguably by how much fiber optic cable, how much, how much kind of filament can you lay out. And so it's actually like a spider web that they're just drawing across the sky. 100%.
Starting point is 01:38:48 So you could have. And it's, I'm so curious to actually understand, you know, we don't have to talk about it today, but the actual mechanics is it like effectively on a spool that's just running out. That's literally what it looks like. I mean, I haven't been on the ground in Ukraine, but when I talk to my portfolio, you know, founders and companies that either are or have kind of partners there, I mean, you literally drive around the front lines of Ukraine right now and all you see is just miles and miles of clumps of all this, this severed fiber optic cable.
Starting point is 01:39:16 So again, I think that just to zoom back. I actually think the takeaway here is that the pace at innovation that's happening both in Ukraine, but like, let's be honest here, what we are watching in Ukraine and in Russia is a precursor to what life looks like in the Pacific. And I think that's, you know, maybe sounds a little bit doomsday in a way or another. But if you don't think that the Chinese are watching what happened to the Russians and either changing their own kind of defensive plans, you know, building new kind of technology and equipment, you're just, you're wrong. Like they are. We know that perfect. I remember because it was somebody at Andrewl was responding to one of these posts,
Starting point is 01:39:55 but a Chinese official was posting this video, a render. It was a render. They were getting roasted for using a render, but it was like this mothership style aircraft drone that was launching hundreds of drones off the side. And so that's like the scary thing is, you know, could you have, you know, stealth aircraft at at some point that can actually do the same type of deployment that these trucks did. Like a new B-52 should be dropping FPV drones instead of just untargeted bombs. They'll just be a lot more targeted.
Starting point is 01:40:27 I mean, I think there are many, I mean, again, I think the reframing that's happening, both in my mind as an investor, but kind of like also in the DOD in the in the government side, is before we used to think about deterrence, just by like, hey, let's buy the big new exquisite system. Let's buy the thing that if we stack, you know, head to head, like, again, I think I showed this with you guys before, but back when I used to work in the Pacific, we created this really kind of popular and widely distributed, unclassified, you know, slide that was literally just all of the U.S. ships stacked up against the Chinese ships. And just like, you look at the math, it's this crazy, crazy metric where, you know, grossly behind by, you know, hundreds of ships.
Starting point is 01:41:07 And that's just one example. I think the frame, the mindset we had then was just like, oh, well, then if we get more systems and we get more of these things that could have these big effects, then we're going to win. We're going to deter conflict. We're going to win. I just think the paradigm has changed. Now it's about, okay, what are the means that we actually have those effects? And it's not just about, I hate to say it, buying another F-35 or buying another aircraft carrier-exquisite system. It's, let's think about this as a parts of a whole thesis and say, okay, if I can build a missile that costs a tenth of what we used to have, if I can use a drone that costs a thousandth of what we have, but have a thousand of them, have 10,000 of them. You actually achieve, if not a better
Starting point is 01:41:46 end outcome in just a different means. And by changing the modicum of how you deliver it, the enemy has to change how they defend against it. So again, I just, I think that's the future of where we're going. It's not going to look just like what happened, you know, over the weekend in Russia, but it's going to rhyme. It's going to look very similar to that. Do you think this speeds up DOD procurement in any way? I mean, it's certainly such a, such a visceral and like tractable We've seen Anderol working counter UAS for years, but there's also a ton of other startups taking different approaches. We had the secretary of the army Dan Derskal on and he was mentioning that they are ready to see demos from even early stage startups. They want to see things.
Starting point is 01:42:26 And you think about not even in great power competition with China, but just if there's an army base abroad, they're going to want to fight against this and they're going to want a really robust ensemble of counter UAS technologies. technologies. Well, yeah, why don't you give us, I'm curious how you think of the market map of counter UAS technology because, you know, we've had Steve Simonian from Allen Control Systems. That can be a great solution if you're on a battlefield, right? But if you can't, you can't, you know, protect against an NFL stadium for like counterterrorism by like shooting, you know, rounds into the air in the middle of a city, right? Unless you're in Texas. Yeah, Texas. Yeah, I don't know. I think the way to, you know, back to kind of my defense in, you know, multiple layers comment. I think the way you look at this market is almost like a spectrum. On one end of the spectrum you have what I would define as like
Starting point is 01:43:18 the non-kinetic stuff that in a weird way can be kinetic. But this is, you know, your EW jamming. This is your, you know, laser-based systems. And then on the other end of the spectrum, you have like something as simple as like shooting a bullet or shooting a shotgun at something. And I think, again, there's a, there's a middle ground here, which, you know, you start to take both, like EW resilient things, but then also like, you know, you mentioned the Anvil drone from, from, you know, Anderol of a drone flying and hitting another drone. I also just think there's there's this layer that no one else really talks about. And when you look at this, you know, what happened over the weekend, there's a full, like, how would you have solved this in the first
Starting point is 01:43:58 place? You can make, oh, yeah, we can shut down the cell network and get a bunch of shotguns. We can get a bunch of, you know, different systems that shoot down systems. Or you could just do better counterintelligence and understand, you know, in some way, shape, or form. And that's hard to do to be really, really honest, because one truck gets in, you still have an effect in some way, shape, or form. But, you know, in the end, I think, like, the U.S. military is not just going to buy one of these systems. They're not going to be like, ah, let's go with Andrews' Anvil. They're going to buy a litany of these things. And if you think about just the, the sheer complexity of the locations at which we are at and where our critical infrastructure sits, a single
Starting point is 01:44:34 solution doesn't solve the problem. I mean, you know, go talk to, you know, I know you guys were talking about the cell network earlier, but you guys should get a famous John Doyle, who's now building a business called Cape, but used to be an early Palantir guy. You know, he's building a private cell network. And, you know, part of what he's doing is, is enabling for when, you know, we call it a pace plan in the military, when you shut everything off, you still have a way to kind of communicate and talk. But yeah, in the end, I think you're going to see this litany of many buys as opposed to like one solution that that solves them all. Yeah, I wonder if there will be almost like adversarial camouflage for computer vision based models because I mean, I've seen,
Starting point is 01:45:15 I've seen situations where people were worried about like facial detection. So they would wear specific makeup with like triangles. It would look very odd to human, but to a computer. It would read as just, I can't process this at all. And so I mean, it's crazy because in a way this isn't new. Like go back and look at at World War II. Like what did we do? We built literally wooden towns across the channel because when people were looking or doing it like, you know, it looked like it was real. Now it's just, you know, the technology is as fast forward so far. But, you know, in the end, I think, again, it's one of these things where it's like, you know, there's going to be no single solution that fits them all.
Starting point is 01:45:52 I do think that, and this is like worth commenting, I think a lot of times when we look at, you know, we as investors or entrepreneurs building or even, just the general public thinks that the DOD has truly autonomous systems. And the reality is, is like, you have humans in the loop on 99% of what's happening. And that's not necessarily a bad thing. I just think the scary thing is like, you know, call it our doctrine, call it our Geneva Convention laws, call it whatever you want to call it. But the reality is when shit hits the family China, do you think they're going to have a human in the loop and making decisions of how to kill or not kill something? They're just going to kill things. And so to me, it's like we, you know, we need to be thoughtful about how we do it.
Starting point is 01:46:33 We are a beautiful democracy who cares about life and kind of human nature. But at the same time, we're not really doing autonomous systems yet. And that just makes me a little scared, to be honest. Yeah, put this in the context of DJI and TikTok. The TikTok ban was always a little abstract. It was like, well, it's kind of brain rot for kids
Starting point is 01:46:53 and that's not great, but people watch Instagram Reels and that seems maybe equally as bad or maybe fine. But maybe they're steering the algorithm to influence our policy. It was all very like four steps away from something bad. And so it kind of didn't catch ground and didn't really get off the ground. But DJI has been in the news as a potential band target. This seems like it concretizes the feeling of danger so much more intimately than TikTok where it was like, oh, well, like the, you know, the CCP could find out that you are into the
Starting point is 01:47:30 luxury sports cars or something and they could do something with that they can blackmail you but that's very different than drones explode and so maybe we don't want drones so um do you have me take on the even even more important it's like look who's using those drones i mean again oh yeah this is this is what we did i mean i you know i was in the military not too long ago but um i remember on some of my first training exercises this this new team i don't even know who they were up top of my head but they came to us and they're like hey we're going to try this new thing that's drone warfare i was like oh shit we developed a new smaller predator or something like that. They literally just pulled the DGI out of a box. And they said, hey, go screw around with this in the woods. And like we did. It was like super cool.
Starting point is 01:48:08 We innovated on some stuff. But I think you're right. It gets super scary when we're taking the feeds and the data and the information from that drone. You know, not necessarily touching it, putting it into our classified system because there are controls for that. But again, even some of the, you know, again, you should talk to, you know, Sorin. You should talk to the Orca guys. You should talk to, you know, Andy from Vector about like, there's a lot of open source. tools that are actually used as, think, everything from, you know, navigating, you know, the fight computers of these drones. But even in those situations, like, we just have to be thoughtful. Again, I am on the side of, you know, again, when I was in the military, everyone
Starting point is 01:48:45 gets so scared about classifications and no one wanted to get in trouble for this reason and the other. The reality is if you're so scared about using some type of tech, then you're going to lose. It's going to be the different way. It's not going to be the information linkage way. So there's some middle ground of like, we need to just set up. policy and hopefully the policy is broad enough. And then, oh, by the way, hopefully like US builders are building at the same time so we can build a capacity that actually meets it. But, you know, the story is not clear here in the future other than, you know, we need a US version of that to be able to operate in similar ways. Yeah, the capacity issue is so interesting because it's like,
Starting point is 01:49:21 even if DJI is just a friendly consumer drone company, by virtue of buying $100 million worth, like demand, this massive demand signal to scale the supply chain results in an industrial capacity that is dual use, even if the products that reach America are never dual use. I mean, this, you know, again, I said I put on a suit for you, but I was talking with that with a member this morning, a member of Congress this morning, and this is actually what we spent 90% of our time talking about, which is just, okay, say we all agree and say the D.O.D. in Congress fixes our acquisition pathways, say these are the right things to buy. You can't just snap your fingers and build these things. I mean, this takes.
Starting point is 01:50:00 time. I mean, go look at what Andrell's doing in Ohio. I mean, I think they're doing it at a pace better than anybody else. But like, you know, same thing with Seronic on the on the boat building side too. But it takes time. You know what I mean? You can't just have thousands of systems tomorrow. You need to make decisions today. Yes. Or everything from the supply chain to, again, like, you know, Congress gets a little scared sometimes. Or dude, you get a little scared sometimes. It's like, well, if you're not a prime, we can't trust you to give you a bunch of money up front to develop it. And finally, that that's like changing. That culture is changing and saying like, actually giving $100,000 to Castilian or Andrel or whoever in advance of them building it is probably a 10 times better answer than, you know, giving it to a prime.
Starting point is 01:50:41 But we're not there yet. Like, we're still pretty far off. Yeah. Soren said they're the highest producing U.S. manufacturer right now in their class. And they're putting up 1,500 a month or something. Oh, yeah. But the Ukrainians built millions. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:56 I mean, the Ukrainians are building thousands a day. Wow. And again, it's a different ecosystem. People come to me a lot and we're just like, well, isn't the US DOD going to do this? And part of me says, like, no, because I know how slow we move. The other part of me just thinks that like there is some value in what we call interoperability. And again, I think that's kind of somewhat an old school way of thinking. But like, you need to know that if you give thousands of one type of drones to, you know,
Starting point is 01:51:26 one unit that the next unit is going to fight in a similar way where, you know, the tactics and techniques kind of all align. Because in the end, like, what we aren't talking about with these drones, what we aren't talking about with these new missiles or systems is like there's an entire downstream integration and there's a training that happens. It's not just like, okay, once we have them in the warehouse, we press a button and we win the war with China. Like, no, we need to train, integrate. And again, that's just another problem. And again, like, there are some companies trying to try to go attack this like Andy at Vector is doing this he calls it like warfare as a service model which I think is like really interesting it looks more like training with a little
Starting point is 01:52:03 bit of tech but yeah I just think there are big gaps and uh you know I'm optimistic about the future but you know I have a you know a one year old daughter it's like this is what I think about like this is what keeps me up and I man talk to talk to me about nominal um any news there and and really like how does that type of product and interface with like just the the general news and tenor in DC right now. Yeah, I mean, I know you guys have had Cam on your show a couple times, the founder of Novenile. I think what's super interesting is like we are seeing this wave of new hardware development in the U.S. And historically, it's been in a manner and in a way that's very much like, you know, hey, here, Lockheed, here's your hundreds of millions of dollars, go build, go iterate slowly.
Starting point is 01:52:53 And now we're getting like, you know, what looks more like the SpaceX, like build the thing in flight. This is what Castilian's doing. This is what many other companies are doing. And so there needs to be this like software, you know, both, you know, telemetry and, you know, observation layer. But it's also just like the tools that if we want to get to this end state of having a million drones in the hands of our warfighters, having hundreds of thousands of, you know, autonomous systems, having thousands of missile systems, you kind of need to build all the infrastructure and enable it below it. That's both on the supply chain side, like I was talking about, but also on the software and
Starting point is 01:53:25 development side. So I just think what you're seeing, you know, Nominal is one example, but there are many other examples of this is like you're seeing the picks and shovels built out for this ecosystem. I guess there will be big winners in like the hardware categories that's owning the product. But I think there's going to be just as many winners on the downstream, both, you know, infrastructure side and call it supply chain, call it software, call it whatever. And again, like, I just, I'm, I'm optimistic about the market. I'm not necessarily optimistic about the outcome of our security and safety in the world.
Starting point is 01:53:53 But, you know, that's my job as a venture capitalist, I guess. That's rough. Always paranoid. What was your reaction to the meta and roll news last week around VR? I'm sure it wasn't a surprise. But I'm also curious if you think we're going to see more if that gives, you know, other big tech, giants kind of full permission to lean in to that kind of partnership. Yeah, VR is a weird one for me personally. And again, like back in my time in service, there was this, I'd call it a research project
Starting point is 01:54:27 through Army Research Laboratory where they were trying to develop. And again, really old school, you know, bad, you know, VR at the time, but use it for like planning purposes. And the idea is like, in the military, you get out these two-dimensional maps and you look at something and say like, okay, this is how we're going to plan. This is where forces are going to be. And it's really slow. It's obviously not optimal when you talk about terrain and kind of other things. So I was part of a unit in the Pacific, actually, where we were testing this back then.
Starting point is 01:54:56 I remember taking it to like the brigade commander or the guy who, I don't know, was in charge of 5,000 or so soldiers. And, you know, I have this, I still have this photo on my phone of him with these glasses on, like, standing there being like, what do I do with this thing? You know, and again, like, it's part of this is a cultural thing that we need to shift. But, you know, I think when I see the, you know, Palmer, you know, going back with Mark and I put a, it puts a smile on my face because to me, it's like, this is the best of what we need. We need the best technology companies and the best defense technology companies working together in some way, shape, or form. And the reality is where, you know, 10 years ago or more than that when I was in and we tried this and technology wasn't there, I know for a fact that, you know, the solution and the hardware and the software around it is 10 times better now. So I look forward to see what Andrew comes out with. I mean, shit, if anybody's, is going to do it. Palmer is probably the right guy to do it. But we'll see. I haven't seen the outcome yet. So I'm excited to give it a try. Yeah, I really just feel like if it's anyone's game to win, it's Palmer. It's like the perfect merger of everything he's done in his career. In my view, he was going to win that category. It was just whether or not he would have to reinvent
Starting point is 01:56:00 the full production capacity, reinvent the technology that he are created. The patents. They patented there and give them. Yeah. What is your take on Golden Dome? What companies or industries Are you tracking ready to that? Obviously, we have a missile defense system, but we're planning on ramping it up. What do you think is interesting if that project kind of gets off the ground? I mean, I won't bury the lead. I don't think anyone knows what Golden Dome is or isn't, which is okay. I mean, the thing that I give President Trump a lot of credit for is he has these big, audacious things,
Starting point is 01:56:32 and he just goes and wills them into happen. And again, I'm not an expert from the inside the DOD, but that's how you have to get a lot of stuff done. I mean, you have to almost make it not too big to fail, but put the cart before the horse in order to align both Congress and DOD support behind it. I think from a principle kind of like what can a do perspective, it's an absolute no-brainer. I mean, again, like to look at the technology that has happened in Israel and to understand that, like, one, Israelis developed that, but, you know, we had, you know, a say and input in that as well, that we don't have that in the United States. just seems that, again, other things that make me feel uncomfortable. I think the reality is, is there's going to be a lot of different components of this that still need to be built. I mean, there's an entire space component.
Starting point is 01:57:20 There's an entire, you know, kind of missile and effector component. I mean, in a perfect world, when we can see and know everything coming, we actually need to be able to do something to it. And if you think we have enough missiles to respond to, you know, everything we see potentially, you're wrong. So again, I think it goes back to my statement before. These things take time. And I'm glad that President Trump has these audacious goals and getting it done before his third term. I just think it's arguably, in my opinion, if done correctly, it will be a Manhattan project-like undertaking, where it's going to take multiple different departments. It's not just going to space missile defense and saying like, hey, solve this problem for us.
Starting point is 01:57:59 I mean, this is going to create a new line of budget. It's going to create new kind of work streams. It's going to need new congressional support. The beauty is we got a bunch of awesome space companies and a bunch of defense. companies that can respond to it. I just don't think anyone knows what it looks like yet. So excited and optimistic, I would say. It's interesting. Like as soon as we, as soon as we were talking about Golden Dome and like the space based ICBM weapons, like the big guys, now we need like a golden spider web defense system to like stop like the local drones and do. I mean, it's layered.
Starting point is 01:58:27 Like I said, you know, we need both. Yeah. You know, to some extent a missile defense system. I mean, probably not with, you know, I don't have the full specs, but probably not with the height of those drones we're kind of fine at. But you fly a one way drone, a thousand kilometers are still. you know, 3,000 kilometers, you throw it up high enough in the air, like 100% something like, you know, Golden Dome can help with that. It feels like a missile attack, honestly. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:58:47 And again, like this is the last thing I'd leave you with, which is I do fundamentally believe back to my both spectrum on defense. There's also a spectrum on offensive weapons too. Like everyone thinks that the answer is a $10 million missile and that's the most explicit best thing that's going to save us every time. If we can get better, both, you know, on the low, excuse me, on the low cost, high-performant missiles, and in drone-based systems, I actually don't even think we need those $100 million or $10 million systems in the end.
Starting point is 01:59:14 But again, something optimistic to look forward to. It's great. Well, thank you so much for coming on. This is fantastic conversation. Yeah, guys. All right, we'll chat soon. Have a good trip. Thanks, Connor.
Starting point is 01:59:23 Bye. Let's tell you about public.com investing for those who take it seriously. They got multi-asset investing, industry-leading yields. They're trusted by millions, folks. And we have Melissa in the studio. She has some massive news. and we're going to need to hit that size gong. Can you introduce yourself?
Starting point is 01:59:42 Welcome to the stream. How are you doing? Let's go. We're going to have to hit the real size gong. So break it down. What are you announcing today? And why should we hit this gong? Yes, we are coming out of stealth with NETIC today
Starting point is 01:59:55 and announcing our $20 million fund raise from, Woo! Let's go. $20 million and Greylock and Mike Wolfie amongst amazing other investors and visionary founders. and growing our team to survive. Hit the wide, hit the wide.
Starting point is 02:00:11 Let's go. That's one of the class. There we go. Back to background. Let's go. Congratulations. Thank you. Thank you guys.
Starting point is 02:00:23 Now that we've gotten the important stuff out of the way, what does the company do? Yes. We work with the backbone of America. We're building for the essential services industries, like home services. Podcasting? Yeah, exactly. You guys are essential. That's why I'm on here, right?
Starting point is 02:00:39 Yeah, exactly. I could be doing a lot of different stuff today. But, you know, we give them an AI revenue engine so that when they are, these are industries, even though they're super important, they're affected by labor shortages, external circumstances and demand changes, physical infrastructure. So when they have high demand, we help them handle it. So they get all the dollars and help their end users. And when they're low on demand, we help them generate.
Starting point is 02:01:07 So that you can always maximize the revenue. What is a good example customer? We hear about these SMBs in like this abstract context, but is that, is it actually like one guy who owns an LLC who has a few employees or is the median customer more of a like small business or medium sized business with dozens or even hundreds of employees? And then I want to walk through how they actually use the product. Is it replacing or augmenting an existing kind of sales force or someone that they have internally? Or is it just kind of helping individuals do more with less?
Starting point is 02:01:45 So we work with actually pretty large customers that would be owned by private equity from hundreds of millions of dollars to a few billion dollars, as well as smaller companies that are around like $10, $20 million revenue size. So across the board, we started with the larger ones to really, you know, demonstrate the impact of our platform. At the end, this is also a business. But now, actually, this is a life, life passion for me, because I do want to help with smaller companies as well.
Starting point is 02:02:15 That's how I came across this problem as a customer myself or HVAC in my own home. So we just announced a very large partnership with Next Star Network to be able to help a thousand companies that are more on the mid-market side as well. And for the smaller, you know what, we want to support everybody. I think we would start with some materials for them to get ready for AI before maybe they
Starting point is 02:02:39 roll us out. But we want to really help across the board. So one example would be how are they using it? They're actually completely integrated with our platform. So we would use first party signals about their customers as well as third party signals like we find from weather to really property information or different types of things to help any of the customers that are coming in, so they get help immediately.
Starting point is 02:03:07 And these are complex jobs, right? Like there's actually quite a bit of information you need to collect to be able to deploy the right labor. And then based on that data, we predict the user's next need, you know? So I'm almost building for myself. I'm like, I would never think about these things. For me, I wish somebody told me, Melissa,
Starting point is 02:03:25 you're going to need this next month because, you know, I don't know, a storm is coming or San Francisco weather is again. I'm terrible, so you've got to fix this. So, and then we turn that into predicting the next need for their end users so that the companies can really cultivate the relationship with their customers, but based on need versus random promos, right? So everyone wants, everyone wants their HVAC system like tuned up before the big heat wave hits.
Starting point is 02:03:53 Exactly. You can do essentially outbound sales to existing clients and potentially new clients before that hits with like the correct information, the correct pitch. Exactly. What is the actual medium? Are you sending text messages, emails, phone calls, all of the above? Yeah. For inbound, we're really integrated across the board on old channels.
Starting point is 02:04:14 So voice, text, online widgets, web chat, third-party integrations. Because revenue doesn't come from one channel, right? It comes from all channels. And, you know, the same customer, if I'm in a meeting right now, I might be texting an essential service provider right now, even though I'm busy. But a few hours later, I might call them, right? On the outbound campaigns, we really do see a lot of success with especially tech, since it's much more respectful. So we started from there and we'll be rolling out to more channels. So I'm intimately familiar with all the tooling in email. You have MailChimp and all the different
Starting point is 02:04:52 AWS, SES, and all the different systems that have built up to make that easy. And I can imagine how you would automate that. Talk to me about automating a phone call. It feels like with whisper, transcription, and then text to speech, we're now kind of past the touring test on that. But are you building stuff yourself? Are you training your own models? Are you partnered with other AI companies to provide that piece of the stack? Or is that so integral that you're handling at yourself? Yeah. This is actually the integral part of this is that certain technologies have passed stuttering tests, but actually for really mission-critical workflows like this where you are absolutely like utility and you can drop, all the work and the engineering really focus goes to the orchestration,
Starting point is 02:05:44 right? So what does it mean is that like when depending on whatever workflows that you're handling, which models are the best? When they're not the best, how can you actually fine-tune only for that task and how can you make sure not only it looks good in a demo we actually a culture we don't ever do demo we show real deployments and let you test but it's very different out there when you're talking to somebody with an accent or that person doesn't even know what they need right it's actually very complex so all of the engineering work not only goes um you know improving and integrating machine learning advancements but also doing our own orchestration find tuning as well as evaluations so that you can be like utility and really reliable when you're
Starting point is 02:06:30 replacing these systems and augmenting the teams that rely on this, right? What's the process like selling AI to SMBs? We've had a bunch of people on the show that sell to larger corporates, Fortune 500. There's an excitement from the Fortune 500 to just buy AI, even if they're unclear of what the value is. I could imagine you see two scenarios. is one where owners or operators are excited about potential efficiency or more revenue, more leads. And then another side, which is like, well, I don't know about this AI stuff. Why are you doing an accent, Jordy? Why are you doing an accent? You actually, you know, you'll be surprised. This is why I'm building for these industries.
Starting point is 02:07:14 These are probably the best founders and entrepreneurs I have ever met in my life. and I'm in the heart of Silicon Valley and I work very hard to get here. And now all these founders, truly they are extremely ROI oriented. They're extremely customer oriented. And incentives are very aligned, right? Like they only do better
Starting point is 02:07:36 if they serve their end customer better. And I only do better if I help them do better. So it's extremely aligned. So we actually don't see, you know, they might ask questions, but everybody is extremely open about it. They know that that future is here. They can't stay behind. It's not like the enterprises you're a little bit alluding to where let me just put this on my board deck
Starting point is 02:07:56 and have like a few million spend here and there to show how AI oriented I am and then they won't actually use it. No, these people actually are absolutely incredible and partner with us so closely to see it in numbers, right? We let them even track it. This is how much you generated from only AI handled jobs or interactions. So we've been very happy about it. And it's the same from a $20 million. revenue business to a billion dollar revenue business. Obviously, there might be a few steps here and there, but I am pretty happy about how incredible
Starting point is 02:08:29 of entrepreneurs I'm working with in this industry. I think I choose to do that. Yeah, I always, I always think it's funny when people in Silicon Valley, like, look at these maybe trade businesses and they think, oh, I can just, you know, get a better stuff around, get some software. And it's like, you realize the person that was operating this business for 20 years. is like a fixture of their community. Like they are like.
Starting point is 02:08:54 Respective. And also extremely hard working. They're working 14 hours a day. Their overnight success comes over 20 years. Yes. Yeah, exactly. Like various. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:09:05 I don't know. And like tonight in my bedroom I built this and now I have much of work. Yeah. Yeah. And many times it's their families, right? Like everybody really investing in this. And even when you work with a larger company or owned by it, like everybody's truly invested in this to give you a sense like um i have brainstorming calls with my customers
Starting point is 02:09:26 on sundays they'll call me with really cool ideas and i'm like interesting so try this the next day i'll follow up with it try this one try this uh demo let's see if you like it and then we'll actually launch it this week for you right so i absolutely love that um what what's how are you do you guys leverage your own tools at all or do you have your own internal tooling to be more efficient. From what I can see, you don't have very many employees. Yeah. What do you use for outbound? I know. Hopefully you'll help with that. We're hiring across the board, especially for our engineering, but also go-to-market teams now and product. So we actually do utilize various tools internally just to increase engineering output, but also still, especially when it comes
Starting point is 02:10:15 the various coding tools. I will say because we ship for really mission critical workflows, you need to make sure that it might like accelerate you and augment you, but you still have to make sure everything is ready for production because we're handling a lot of large volume customers that are really deploying these services to help somebody maybe after a storm. Like a few weeks ago in St. Louis, it happened after the tornadoes. So we have to make sure everything is really getting that check from us
Starting point is 02:10:43 and like the best engineers we have hired across MIT, Stanford, Scale, Palantir, HRT. But yeah, I mean, you're a fool if you're not using augmented tools for your team. And you are right. We are a small team. And that is by design because I think all of us are also here to create the best things out of nothing, right? And really keep our culture and growing that way. You mentioned you worked really hard to get to Silicon Valley. Can you give us a little bit of the journey in the background to get here?
Starting point is 02:11:15 Yeah, I will say building a company is almost as hard as getting to hear from a small town in Turkey. I grew up in the Mediterranean. This is like a tiny town actually in Turkey on the western coast. And yeah, I think it is an incredible community, but there is absolutely like no opportunity, especially for someone like me who's focused on math and computer science. So I tried to first leave, actually. I went to boarding schools that I got in starting age 13. I haven't lived at home since 13.
Starting point is 02:11:49 And then spent some time in India when I got into United World colleges actually for two years. And I thought that's how I would learn English because my English really sucked. And I did. You know, I'm doing pretty fine. And yeah, from there, it's been my dream to come to Stanford. and I didn't know anything about it actually. I only saw it through a summer camp I came to on a scholarship. And even my flights were funded by thousands of emails I sent to businessmen in Turkey
Starting point is 02:12:21 and one of them responded and sent me here to California. And when I saw it, I was like, I have to be here. And since then, there's no easy way of explaining this. It's you, I think probably I thought tooth and nail. to be able to really get here. And I'm glad because I love this place. And mainly for me, it's about the people. Everybody's interested in your ideas.
Starting point is 02:12:47 Everybody is interested in making them possible for the world. And if anything, I wanted to change one part of it when it came to my own company is that I want to build for the real world, not just for Silicon Valley or other startups. I want to build for America and then the world, like this country that gave me a lot of opportunity and then hopefully globally the real world economies that run everybody's lives. Yeah. I know you worked at scale. Can you talk a little bit about human in the loop or business process outsourcing or any
Starting point is 02:13:20 sort of like the centaur model of AI and how that might play a role in your current or future roadmap? Yeah. So actually labeling does not play a lot of role for our roadmap. Like right now, obviously it was big, especially when you're improving these models, there was a lot of labeling and then it turned to expert labeling. Now you really focus these models in terms of how is it going to be better in physics or coding, etc. But for us, human in the loop actually comes from collaborating very closely with the teams of our customers
Starting point is 02:13:52 because they will have actually many times what we see in these industries that they won't have like BPO's, what we call, or outsource call centers. Sometimes they might have, but they'll have also internal teams, which are very valuable resource. So what they can do with us is that they spend their time only for mission critical interactions when they need to take over and actually see the context from the conversation about the person, about the home, so that they don't have to repeat anything. They can build rapport immediately. And for the remainder time, since AI is really handling everything else, that they can focus on more important and high leverage tasks, whether you're helping with accounting, whether you're helping with actually making me. intelligent business decisions about where to grow. And believe it or not,
Starting point is 02:14:40 a lot of people start from there to build their careers in these industries. For example, our engagement lead, she actually joined us from our earliest customers, and she started as a CSR. Don't worry, they're amazing still customer, and she was making a location change.
Starting point is 02:14:59 We did everything right. I love, you know, immediately coming into that. Did you do anything? I mean, it's great. It's like you could just say, we're going to take your star employee, but we'll give you the greatest software that you've ever experienced. No, no.
Starting point is 02:15:15 Now they also get to interact with her, but just now supported by us. Off balance sheet R&D. It's R&D. It's our balance sheet R&D now. Exactly. I'd like to think that they got a lot of tools from that. But she started actually as a call center employee 20 years ago. And she's so smart and incredible that really built the domain knowledge and went to
Starting point is 02:15:36 consulting from there and a VP of customer experience and really built her career. That's what we want for the people, right? Like actually focus on the things that you can shine in and build your career in, not just the menial tasks you don't want to do and only spend time on customer intake. Sure. Talk about business model, pricing model, Salesforce and Mark Benioff's been talking about cost per resolution in the customer service perspective. There's other companies that are doing consumption-based pricing, seat-based pricing.
Starting point is 02:16:10 What's working? What's not? What are you seeing resonate with your customers best? Yeah. I think we don't do cost for resolution. It's actually an interesting pricing model, but I think works better for customers support companies for tech when it's all about tickets. And even then, I think it's a little bit iffy because, I mean, what's the resolution? You're able to close the ticket?
Starting point is 02:16:32 How many of us have been in a situation where I'm like getting this automated email that my ticket is closed and I'm like, well, I am not close. You know, I am not done here. I need that help. So for us, we really work in enterprise contracts with our customers. So they get on a, there's a platform kind of package that they choose based on which products they want to use and how expanded of channels that they want. And then on top of that, they have a volume package that they add so that they can spend it across any channel. that they liked. And this also gives them that ability that we're not just signing and goodbye,
Starting point is 02:17:12 because in a lot of these industries or quite frankly, in any company, AI is not just like, I got on it and now it works. It doesn't. You really have to make it work. Ensure that it is working for their operational workflows. So it gives us the ability to do that and closely partner. And then as we go to Mithmarket, that was something, that's why I was super excited about this next star partnership because they have decades long experience in these industries and they have accumulated so much knowledge that today we're able to deploy anetic tenant with that knowledge for their members so that you know a lot of the like maybe they won't have any lift to do they can really roll it out directly from the business insights they would be getting from an amazing
Starting point is 02:17:58 membership like them anyways. So. Yeah. So is, there was like a meme for a long time about like the the search fund, going to buy a business, you're going to do a roll up in, in these like S&B markets. Is that has, have these markets been already rolled up? Like, is it, are we past that? Yeah, there's quite a bit of roll-ups. I'm sure you'll be interested in it next.
Starting point is 02:18:21 Yeah. No, we're going to roll up all the podcasts. I'm sure. I'm sure you're looking into it already. Yes, there's quite a bit of roll-ups, to be honest. It really became popular recently because there's quite a bit of capital out there. As you also know, even from venture capitals, there's so much capital that they're looking at. Yeah, VCs are crossing over and being like, yeah, we'll play in the public.
Starting point is 02:18:40 Yeah, they're looking at ways to deploy, yeah, only either deploy the startups that don't need it or do roll-ups. Right. Yeah, yeah, there are quite a bit, but I think, again, the winning strategy becomes, even if you have a roll-up, right? It's a lot about how are you creating value? What tools are you using? What tools are you not using? Where was the company or this combination of companies you have gotten when you got them? And how are you really implementing changes to serve your customer betters?
Starting point is 02:19:12 So we work with various companies that are owned by incredible private equity partners. Let's here for private equity. Thank you. Yes. Yes. Finally getting some recognition. We love private equity on the show. Yeah, they don't get any recognition at all.
Starting point is 02:19:28 Nothing. It's a bankless job. Private equity is really the backbone of America because it finances. It totally is. Many of these SMBs. Yes, yes, yes. I'll tell you what happened. I think 20 years ago, maybe it was all around in all of these industries,
Starting point is 02:19:43 it doesn't have to be one, a lot of companies to be picked up, right? Yeah, totally. So today, that's not the case. Yeah, of course. Like, you're not really looking for that perfect business. Everything is stellar and, like, waiting for you to be picked up. and somewhere in the heartland of America. So I think private equity actually have to be very innovative.
Starting point is 02:20:01 And I think they're obviously already numbers focused. So they are looking for true partners. And that's how many of our engagements started with these companies. Like actually wasn't even about our company. It was about talking about AI, honestly, straightforwardly. What's going to work for you? What's not going to work for you? And I think they are really seeing that for value, they have to change.
Starting point is 02:20:20 It's not just about using one playbook. And it works for you for 40 years. and they realize now that a lot of them have to make it work for these companies with the right partners and, you know, take good decisions. So I think I love that we are coinciding with that change, right? So it's kind of harder to compete there as well because everybody has capital and not much to really roll up around, right? Well, let's hear for the capital. I mean, at least there's a lot of capital.
Starting point is 02:20:50 And congratulations on your round. Thanks so much for coming on. fantastic conversation. Thank you for having me and we're so excited to be here, especially for the two people who also work very hard and especially you, John, have built companies that optimizes performance left and right with Soiland and Lucy. So hopefully we take that from that culture. Yes, yes, yes, thank you. Well, we'll talk about you. Thanks so much for, yeah. Thanks so much for coming on. Thank you. We'll talk to you, bye. Have a good one.
Starting point is 02:21:22 Yeah. Next up, we have Jordan Schneider from China Talk coming on. Jordan. We're going to ask him, an absolute dog. Is China important to talk about? Bring it down for us. Who's talking about China? Who's talking about China?
Starting point is 02:21:35 Jordan, welcome to the street. How are you doing? Can we get a sound effect? Oh, we got the horse now. Is it the year of the horse? What year is it in China? I don't know. We're playing around with sound effects.
Starting point is 02:21:48 You're playing around with backgrounds, too. I think it's the rat. A year the rat? That seems like an arm. Last year was dragon. So it's like it's worse after. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 02:22:00 I want to start with a victory lap. I said, I said, tariff war, gonna not be a big thing. We're not gonna be talking about it in four years. Push back.
Starting point is 02:22:13 We're not gonna be talking about it in four years? So when you came on last time, we were talking about how it seemed like complete doom and gloom. Like the Trump tariffs absolute chaos. It was complete disaster. And I was saying that like this is within Trump's control. And so he could potentially roll them back and the market would go back up and everyone would be breathing a sigh of relief like, oh, okay, that was a crazy time. But we're not in this
Starting point is 02:22:38 insanely high tariff regime. So things aren't that bad. And we would look back on it like we looked at the previous trade war, which was a crazy time, but did not like permanently change the structure of America. And so it feels like we, we, we, we, we walked to the edge and then we walked back from the edge. And it's less of a story now, but am I right or wrong? Let's be clear. Who's, who's walking him back from the edge? The justice system. The Supreme Court is going to take the decision out of his hands. Sure, sure. And then it'll just kind of be slower and more awkward. And his lawyers will actually have to do work to write these section to 232 investigations, which like, I guess they'll just have chat GPT, right? Because like,
Starting point is 02:23:18 There are no lawyers right now and USTR. But come on, man. I mean, look, two days ago, like, some reporter asked him about the taco trade. And then he said, fuck it. We're going back up to 50s. So look, I mean, it's the story, the saga is not done. We have four years of this. Old men don't change their habits all that often.
Starting point is 02:23:42 This is clearly the thing he enjoys most about being president. I've taught old dogs new tricks. All the time. I got a 10-year-old Newfoundland at home. He just learned to balance the ball on his nose. He's doing great. No, I hear you. Bring a lot of pod.
Starting point is 02:23:57 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. He should. Well, then what else is driving the news? Obviously, the Ukrainian drone attack is very interesting in the Ukraine-Russian theater. Is there a reaction from your community in China world yet? Or are we waiting to hear how that plays out? already we're seeing defense tech companies talk about counter UAS more seriously, DOD procurement modernization.
Starting point is 02:24:24 You can imagine that this brings DJI into focus, but how should we be framing it within the China lens? I got a line from a group chat. Please. Don't ask a woman their age and don't ask a teal-funded defense tech startup where they get their batteries from. Okay. So, look, I'm sorry. Look, I don't know. I mean, it's, it's a brave new world we're walking into.
Starting point is 02:24:52 And I'm worried that we're not ready. I think there are definitely a lot of advantages that the U.S. has, but one of the great ones is manufacturing and sort of, and like speed and agility of procurement. And if you look at what happens in Ukraine over the past two years, like the amount of iterations that all of these drones have gone from in the different electronic warfare, like responses and counter responses and the sort of the size and scope and of these different drones and being able to scale up manufacturing of them. And then now we have fiber optic drones. And now we have like things to cut the tables of the fiber optic drones. I mean, just that the
Starting point is 02:25:35 speed at which you have to innovate when you are fighting and dying is so much faster. than what the U.S. does. And because the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not against high, you know, we're not against like great powers, thank God. The sort of like the new things that the enemy was able to bring to the battlefield was much less challenging and you could kind of be like fat and lazy and still mostly be okay and not have. Well, I mean, even IEDs massively transformed the battlefields.
Starting point is 02:26:12 field at the time and that was another kind of asymmetric trade in some way where you know a small homemade device could could take out you know cause huge loss of life but but you're totally and there's totally taken it wasn't like four million drones a year being produced and flying through the sky and and it was so many iEDs that that it did kind of breed private sector defense innovation in the sense that like one of the first use cases for palatier was map all the IEDs, see that if it, if the, if the ones in this area have nails and the one in that area have TNT and dynamites over here and C4 is being used over here, you can kind of cluster those and see that the bomb maker must be in this city and then you can go and find them. Yeah. And so, I mean, yeah, it is this like cat and mouse game, right?
Starting point is 02:27:03 But I think if you just, if you look at like the story of the procurement side of all that with the MRAP and the other sort of like physical, uh, uh, uh, hardware changes that the U.S. government needed to supply the troops. Like, it was so fucking slow. Sure. And, you know, not the best showing, I think. If, like, even, like, Al-Qaeda can kind of get you on your toes when it comes to technological innovation. So, I don't know. It's a bummer, but hopefully folks are waking up and doing their best on this.
Starting point is 02:27:36 I mean, I got to. Yeah, you mentioned, like, the drone battery thing, but, like, it feels like people woke up to that after Skydeo. the, the, the schedule battery ban. And so I would imagine that there's, that there's probably dozens of companies working on reshoring drone batteries right now, right? I hope. I hope. I mean, I'm sure they are, but it's, it's, it's, yeah, I mean, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, it's, like, to what extent on both the Ukraine and the Russia side of this, there are just like Chinese parts that are that are driving both of the armies. Okay, let's switch to a kind of a less contentious issue.
Starting point is 02:28:17 Immigration. What's going on? What's going on in terms of the students? Students, research labs. What's what's the high level update? Well, I want to challenge you guys a little bit. Because you have, a lot of CEOs and investors in the Silicon Valley broader ecosystem. And they, as well as anyone else in this country, understand just how important international talent is to the future of American science and technology flourishing. So I would be really curious to get these folks on the record to just even talk about their experiences kind of like coming to America and getting their first H1V visa. And the challenges and the opportunity that, like, you have to, in the sacrifices you have to make. I mean, the woman we had on right before you was from Turkey, made it to Stanford, had some random Turkey businessman pay for her flight so she could just get here and is now building, you know, incredible company. So we certainly recognize the importance of international talent.
Starting point is 02:29:29 and I'm broadly in favor of brain draining the world, as I think you are as well. I don't follow immigration law or trends nearly to the level that I imagine you do, specifically around China. And it's an interesting time. I mean, we had some Stanford students on that had written that article that was widely... Pressure from the CCP. Yeah, well, it was widely...
Starting point is 02:29:59 read and it was also controversial because many of the sources were anonymous but it also seems to be something that people just take as fact that there is a lot of you know sort of low level espionage information gathering happening on campus but i i was more less less trying to get your take uh your take more trying to get like the late the core kind of one oh one yeah development so i think i think there are two, well, there are a number of things are going on. First, the Trump administration is threatening
Starting point is 02:30:35 like revoking Harvard's ability to take international students. We'll just, we'll see how legal that is. But that is a remarkable development and something that I think is sort of like spread. If it like ends up being a tool that's
Starting point is 02:30:51 used across a lot of different universities is really dramatic. Like if you look at a lot of the sort of top ten lists of publications, there's like Harvard and then there's MIT and then there's eight Chinese universities. And the fact that, you know, they're going after like what is the, like one of the four most important centers of research in America is really concerning. And I think part, you know, if you look at these, if you look at the STEM programs in America, oftentimes, I think CS is like over 70% for it. And the programs aren't stupid.
Starting point is 02:31:29 Like they want more American students because they understand that there are a lot of challenges by having, you know, you end up having this sort of exposure. But the fact is just the talent isn't there. And you want to, you want to have the best and brightest in your programs go on to, you know, do amazing research and start amazing companies. And so this is sort of the world we live in where, you know, American primary and secondary education is not going to fill up. these thoughts fast enough, particularly for, you know, CS is kind of an exception to the rule. A lot of the hard sciences, you know, are grueling. They don't pay particularly well. And the sort of the options to just like, you know, be a CS major in college and like go get a degree for the past 15 years have been much more lucrative than like studying mechanical engineering or
Starting point is 02:32:18 electric engineering. So kind of if we're trying to sort of like reindustrialize and build the future, like you need PhDs and you want the best PhDs and scaring them off by having the head of the nominee for the head of the immigration process say that he's in favor of revoking OBT, which is like the ability for students once they graduate for any major, I think you get a year. And if it's a STEM major, you get three years where you just have a blanket work authorization. So you don't need your employer to, you know, get you in the HMB lottery and sponsor you is a big part of of the value proposition for going to school in the US alongside being able to go to the best research universities
Starting point is 02:33:02 on the planet. So you have on the one hand from like the demand side, I guess students being a lot, you know, just having to price in an uncertainty factor of whether or not they'll be able to stay in the US, much less stay to finish their program. And then on this on the supply side, I guess, the Trump administration,
Starting point is 02:33:25 having the NSF spent half as much money as it's authorized to spend and kind of blanket cutting off universities which are on the shit list for whatever reason to the tunes of you know billions of dollars just like sorry Hans Hopkins sorry Harvard sorry pen which is leading to layoffs in worse research and I'm annoyed because the future is going to come slower and America is going to be worse off because we're taking these like incredibly unfortunate errors. Have you seen any pressure on the O-1 program? We talked to Sigel Wend, Tielfellow,
Starting point is 02:34:01 who's been trying to speed up the O-1 process for those extraordinary candidates. And it seemed like he was pretty optimistic about that program continuing and flourishing, but maybe that's just not enough in your mind. Owen? That's in a year. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:34:22 And another thing, like, I mean, we have 500,000 foreign students in America. I mean, aside from like a, like this is the thing that is funding the universities. Like there are, there are like maybe 10 schools that have a billion dollar endowments. I mean, you're going to start seeing a lot of universities go under, which is like just sad in general. But this is this like education is not a zero sum thing. And I think that is kind of like one of the the more sad talking points. It's like, why are there more slots?
Starting point is 02:34:53 for Americans. It's like, no, like the American slots in all these universities are being subsidized by all the undergraduates and master's students from a broad who are paying full ride to this where, you know, we have like, you know, in-state tuition and whatnot. I mean, it's a, it's a different ballgame. How would you think about changing higher ed? I mean, there's been this, this idea that, you know, like Harvard, for example, was founded hundreds of years ago and was servicing a population of maybe like 30 million people, and now there's probably a billion people that have heard of Harvard or maybe like in the candidate pool.
Starting point is 02:35:33 But the class size hasn't scaled. Would you scale up these elite universities and try and get the elite pedagogy into more hands or into more minds, or are there other things that you think we could do? Because this feels driven by some sort of dissatisfactory, action with the results of higher ed. I don't know if you agree with them.
Starting point is 02:35:56 Maybe you think it's perfect, but certainly there's the first question of like, there might be a flaw. There's a lot of student debt. There's a lot of people going to schools and taking on debt to pursue degrees that don't necessarily pay and they don't make economic sense. How would you change higher ed without disrupting like the brain drain equation? Sure. I mean, I think at a macro level, it's important to recognize that like anti-intellectualism,
Starting point is 02:36:21 like beating up on the university. has like a long and story tradition in American history of, you know, going, going back to McCarthy and even before. So like the fact that politicians are making, hey, shitting on academia is not like something that is particularly novel. Should, you know, if I was like the secretary of education and I wanted to use a stick, I would do the exact thing you, the exact thing you said, John, and say like, you need to spend down a percentage of your endowment every year if you want to stay tax eligible. And does that mean, you know, growing your class size by 25% every year?
Starting point is 02:37:01 Sure. Absolutely. Like there are, there is a glut of professors and there is a demand glut and like who are like who is gaining by Harvard staying small, like the few people who get in who like get to feel more special about themselves. Yeah. What is your model for higher ed? I mean, like Tyler Cowen kind of mentioned, he, he posited that higher ed is a,
Starting point is 02:37:22 bundle of goods. It's it's both a daycare for parents to get their kids out of the house. It's a dating service. It's also, you know, a series of textbooks that you are forced to read. It's also like a music festival. It's a bunch of different products kind of bundled and so and it's prestige and signaling and essentially a one word summary of your SAT score and you could potentially unbundle those. I don't know if that's necessarily good. I like that. Right, right. Like if you say Harvard, people know, okay, like, potentially you've been filtered for IQ at
Starting point is 02:37:55 some level. And so, you know, like, is that the correct model? Do you disagree with that? Or do you think that's a good thing? Because I'm hearing, like, I'm hearing higher ed is perfect, and I don't really buy that. But I'd like to know what vectors you would improve. Well, I mean, I think, like, uh, uh,
Starting point is 02:38:19 there is a real golden goose aspect to what we have, particularly when it comes to science research. Right. Okay. So, you know, look, I was a history major. And I think a lot of the sort of like soft, they don't teach us any, anything like real stuff, like critique big into what you said is, is a lot more applicable to humanities. I mean, thinking back, like, could I be where I am today? would I have the mind I had if I just read all the books they assigned me in college instead of taking the courses? Like, I think so. But, you know, could I become a biophysicists without, like,
Starting point is 02:38:59 having access to a lab and professors to, like, train and tutor me? I don't, I'm, I don't really think that's the case. So, so particularly when it comes to, um, to sort of science and engineering disciplines, like there is a real aspect of mentorship, um, and like handholding that needs to exist. And I agree with like half of that. I agree with the bio side. Like, CRISPR came out of academia. The transformer did not. And in fact, the one academic lab that is listed on the transformer paper attentionals is all you need.
Starting point is 02:39:31 Canadian. It's a Canadian. Elizabeth Holmes had never been in a lab before she started a $10 billion company. All those fluid and know, if you actually go back to the transformer paper and look at the authors, most of them, by the way, have PhDs. And most of their PhDs were in labs that were funded by the National Science Foundation. So I don't necessarily think you could write off AI as not being something that had government-funded basic research behind it. I think that was absolutely a crucial thing. And we've had a lot of AI winters over the past few decades where people have sort of industry has basically given up on the technology.
Starting point is 02:40:08 And the only folks that were still funding and doing the research were in government, you know, given government money. and working in university. So like, yes. Like it's the, it's the place where not, where the stuff that you can't get venture back funding happens. And no, you know,
Starting point is 02:40:25 I think that everyone can get venture back funding now. There's unlimited venture. There will never be enough venture capital. Let's just venture fund everything, even the basic research that won't return ROI. Yeah, I'm sick of VC's preferring a deck. Like, don't even prefer it.
Starting point is 02:40:40 Yeah. Idea. Yeah. Check. This is the long-term solution. Just just, just, I want to go through a couple. You got executive order for DJI ban in the next two months.
Starting point is 02:40:54 Yes or no? Sure. Sure. I'm worried about my drone racing league. Yeah. I hope they. Do you actually race drones? Chinese last one, Chinese AR, VR, should we be paying attention to it?
Starting point is 02:41:10 Oh, interesting. Yeah, man. I wrote a whole feature about the Chinese AR ecosystem. There are, it's a really interesting development because basically what happened in the U.S. was meta-consolidated. And you had a handful of startups that all kind of gave up because there was a trillion-dollar gorilla in the room. But China is a much more dynamic ecosystem. You have like six or seven players who are all exploring all these different hardware treaties of like where to put the battery in. Do you need the screen on the glasses? Do you not need the screen on the glasses?
Starting point is 02:41:41 So, you know, China Talk. Media, it's one of our more recent articles kind of looking at at Roe Kidd and a number of other, a number of other Chinese startups, which like all have products that are $300 to $600 and are really cool. Can I pitch, can I show a book? Please. Before we go to the next. Of course. Okay. So it's coming out tomorrow, I believe. The party's interests come first.
Starting point is 02:42:05 Joseph Tarigian. It's a 500-page biography of Xi Jong-Shu, who is. Xi Jinping's dad. And it is this incredibly detailed, like, wild ride through this guy's life. He started as a, he joined the Communist Party when he was 15 and 1926. And the first half of the book is like all these crazy war stories where he is like fighting and executing nationalists and Japanese. And then, you know, he becomes, he's like the, he's like the highest flyer in the 1950s.
Starting point is 02:42:37 Like he's promoted faster than everyone in his 30s. And then the culture revolution hits and his life gets completely ruined. Xi Jinping's 15, his dad is this like black stain on the party. And the amount of sort of like family trauma that the dad and then the son by proxy like ingests over the course of their life is just a is is is kind of an unfathomable thing that you can only really experience by just like living day, day through day. through this guy's life. And the fact that he was able to write this book, you know, I see books with this level of detail about books like Stalin,
Starting point is 02:43:18 because the archives have opened at this point. But Joseph did an incredible job, like reading all of these memoirs and talking to people and digging for stuff. And if you want a sort of window into what Chinese elite politics looks like, it is a really, a really special piece of scholarship and something that comes around really rarely in the China study space.
Starting point is 02:43:43 So, you guys should get them on the pod. I would love to talk about teasing things, dad. Sounds amazing. I highly recommend everyone, check it out. Thank you for the plug. That sounds fantastic. Thanks for coming on, Jordan. We'll talk to you soon.
Starting point is 02:43:53 Always a pleasure. Bye. Cheers. See you guys. Next up, we have Max from Arena Magazine. We are surrounded by journalists. Hold your position. We have an arena magazines right here.
Starting point is 02:44:03 Always. You always have to keep one. Welcome to the studio, Max. We always keep your arena on you. There he is. Oh, he's got it behind him. With the tie. He was ready.
Starting point is 02:44:14 Bolo. Looking good. What's new? Well, we just moved into a new arena magazine, world headquarters. World headquarters. The Pensabolo. And, you know, we just push. It's not Arena Magazine headquarters, though.
Starting point is 02:44:32 It's the Intergalactic Media Corporation of America, correct? Wait, don't you have a new? website too. That's the other big thing. We launched our new website during the first hour of the show. Congratulations. Actually, it may have been the second hour. It wasn't ready during the first hour.
Starting point is 02:44:47 We wrapped it up in time for the third hour of the show. That's great. Let's go. So we took a look at all of our favorite websites for sort of consuming long form text. And Silicon Valley won again. We couldn't find any superior form than the software documentation website. And so initially we actually thought about like, hosting the website on GitHub and just using markdown files for all of the essays.
Starting point is 02:45:11 Wow. We didn't literally do that, but we built a site that's based on engineering docs. So it's in dark mode. It's a science you vibe. And we think that people are really going to love it. Wow. Yeah, this is great. Oh, very cool.
Starting point is 02:45:27 I like how I can decide if I want to focus or not. There's a little button. That's right. Oh, focus just puts it right in the center. Okay, cool. You can get rid of all of the. prompts for you to send us money, by subscribing, or you can leave them in there. We got a lot of fun stuff.
Starting point is 02:45:46 And, you know, it's sort of, it's sort of almost a relaunch of the magazine after we did the first four print issues. We're now going to really make a big push to, you know, get a lot bigger. And that happens mostly on the internet. So what's the, what is the flow for specifically windowing? I know Taylor Swift is very good at this, where she goes on a, tour and then there's documentary that comes out later. So you have to see your in person and then you go watch the movie in theaters and then
Starting point is 02:46:14 you can stream it. And a lot of the streamers made the mistake of allowing you to binge all 10 episodes right up front and it doesn't create these like shelling points, these moments. Are you thinking about gating articles to the physical magazine first, then putting them on the internet later? How are you thinking about that? You know, it's great that because our readers who pay us get the print magazines first, We really don't have to be in a rush to put things up on the website that are in the print magazine.
Starting point is 02:46:42 You know, until now, there's basically been 100% overlap between what's on the website and what's in print. That's going to change a lot because we're going to do a lot more stuff online. But, you know, we had something very funny happen in the first few months of the magazine, which was subscribers emailing us upset that we had posted an article online before they had gotten a chance to read it on paper, which is it's sort of, it's sort of sort of strange, but also really made sense. And so, yeah, we put things in print first. And, you know, we're not really sure how the, how the cadence is going to go. We'll figure it out.
Starting point is 02:47:16 Are you going to increase the frequency at all as you go bigger or just trying to go bigger with the stories? For us, quarterly is about the right pace. We might go, we might go more than that. But the truth is, in order to publish, like, you know, every week or even with us every month, you'd have to reduce the paper quality to get the printing time down. It takes us multiple weeks to go from submitting the files to the printer to the magazines ending up in mailboxes. Whereas something that's arriving in your mailbox every single week on what I call glossy toilet paper,
Starting point is 02:47:53 which is the sort of very, very light paper where it's falling apart, it's been stapled together. You know, you can do that at a very fast cadence. It's no good. So what we're going to do, increase the online volume quite a bit, do a lot. do a lot more stuff there, but keep the print magazine sort of, you know, spare in, you know, four of them per year, and super high quality. You recently wrote a profile about Brian Schimp, CEO of Anderol. What stuck out to you about him? What was the most interesting takeaway from spending time with him? He's definitely a genius and a stand-up guy as well. I mean, I just thought it was sort of funny to, like, write a piece about a man that, like, most people are unaware.
Starting point is 02:48:35 is the CEO of this company that they all know. And, you know, even some of the people that I was sort of like discussing the piece with in advance were like, who's the CEO? And all of the Anderral co-founders are like emphatic that Brian is CEO. Brian has the best decision making. Brian is absolutely in charge as everyone expects the chief executive officer to be. I mean, Trey said something, you know, like, you know, I trust his judgment more than my own. And, you know, there's a lot of like fun stuff in that, you know,
Starting point is 02:49:05 in that profile. Even stuff about Palmer. Palmer has zero direct reports at under all. And it was Brian who told me that. And I thought that that was amazing. Zero. That's fascinating. I mean, it's probably the perfect perfect situation. You can just go around the company and invent and do what he does best and evangelize and and tinker and also just like drop into certain projects. Be an individual contributor if he needs to be, be a manager if he needs to be, but doesn't need like a standing staff. Right. One of the other things, things that this is not about Brian in particular. In fact, Brian thought it was sort of funny when I
Starting point is 02:49:40 pointed it out to him. He must not have noticed before. But everything on the Andril campus has been set in the same typeface with the exclusion of the government mandated parking signs. And so it's like everything. The signs on the gates, the room labels, the stationary, it's all been set in Helvetica now, which is sort of a 2000s recut of Helvetica. And you don't see like design discipline like that anywhere. But now that I'm a magazine man and I'm thinking about letter forms and typography all the time, it's like you notice it very viscerally walking around on a roll that they've done everything to like exacting specifications. And they also use the same typefaces. That's real brand. Brand is not a logo or a website. It's it's like showing up
Starting point is 02:50:26 with that level of consistency. It makes sense for products. And you know, it's it's the idea that like don't you dare try to design something, let the design team do it. Because they're protecting the identity. And even the drones, the missiles, the tanks, the submarines, they have the exact same typography as the stationary and the meeting room names. And I just, I'd never seen it before. You know, you go on like an airline or whatnot. The typography is all over the place.
Starting point is 02:50:55 And that was like, that was my sort of, you know, one of the standout things from visiting the, from visiting the Andral campus. How are you thinking about growing the magazine in terms of balance between full-time writers and contributors? It's an interesting place to send a thought or an essay or something. And so I imagine that it's more tractable to be a contributor at Arena than have a column somewhere else. It's probably a little bit more manageable for someone who's maybe not writing all the time. But at the same time, you probably want to steady heartbeat over. writer so how are you thinking about balancing those things yeah well so first of all we want
Starting point is 02:51:36 anyone and everyone that's got something to say about you know technology capitalism civilization to send it to arena we're very very good editors and it's you know it's very useful to have editors and we provide that service to to anyone to help them to help them get their word out some of it will end up in print some of it will just be online you know we have some full-time people we'll have some more full-time people we have some contributors will have a lot more full-time contributors. I think that on the, it's on the like extremely polarized ends of this spectrum that you start to get into weird stuff, which is like way over budgeting for having like full-time writers. You know, you can sort of create this Frankenstein where it's like, it's some
Starting point is 02:52:17 full-time people and some contributors that will create the most interesting balance. It's not going to be the most interesting balance if it's all random contributors or if it's all full-time staff. And so, you know, we mix it up. How do you think about the different types of pieces that you want to, like what is the shape of the different type of coverage? Like, obviously you have profiles. You probably also have like op-eds. You're not really doing breaking news or investigative journalism. What is it called?
Starting point is 02:52:48 Not news. Not news. Anything but news. But what about like what are the other areas that you're interested in exploring? Like Forbes famously has the Midas list and the Forbes 400. Are there going to be the list products or anything? One of the things that we talked about at the very beginning was like how to how to do lists in a non-awful way. Haven't figured it out yet.
Starting point is 02:53:10 So we're not doing, we're not doing lists yet. Well, maybe there's a future contributor in listening right now who can come up with something. Yeah, I don't know how to figure it out. If someone can figure out how to how to make a better list, then I'm all ears. Switching, switching gears. What's AI adoption like in Iowa? So, you know, it's, well, Google was just, just yesterday put $7 billion into like a campus there, but it's just, you know, it's just for server racks or whatnot.
Starting point is 02:53:39 I'm not sure that the people are really, really, are really following suit. That's similar in Abilene in Texas. There's, I mean, Stargates going to be staffed with like not tens of thousands of people, like hundreds, maybe. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a very, very small organization. Yeah. Yeah. My mom just retired as a teacher and all of her teacher colleagues are complaining about the kids using Chachybt. So that's good. There you go. The kids are up to it. But I mean, I sort of doubt whether any of my neighbors are paying attention to it. I sent one of them a poem that I had written with Claude. He was like, how's this so funny? That's like the biggest alpha right now. It's just is just. using models to generate like super thoughtful creative, you know, work for people that aren't online.
Starting point is 02:54:34 Yeah. I mean, I assume that there are some like, you know, people in Iowa that are on Facebook that are looking at the sort of AI images and being, wow, that's beautiful. Yeah. Did you have a, did you watch Mountain Head yet? Did you have a reaction? I haven't. I'm sorry to say. I heard you talking about it earlier. I guess. Yeah. It's just it's it's the main kind of narrative of the story. besides being a critique of the tech elite is that, you know, it's this global catastrophe because AI has gotten so good that nobody can tell what's real and what's fake. No, I so disagree with the framing. People already have a lot of trouble figuring out what's real and what's fake. AI is going to be an improvement over the status quo in certain ways.
Starting point is 02:55:22 Okay. How are you using AI at Arena? I imagine that you're not using LLMs to actually write whole articles, but what about proofreading or even just transforming? Well, they train to model to remove M dashes after they generate. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And then problem solved. And also the word delve is just defined and replace.
Starting point is 02:55:45 But I imagine that the problem of typesetting and transforming text from just a big block of into something that fits nicely in columns, that feels more tractable and more tactical than the artistry that goes into writing an actual article. Is that useful? What about AI images for collages? Has that been useful? Anything like that that's kind of popped up? Yeah.
Starting point is 02:56:11 So on the writing front, you know, I'm prepared for the day, which it is like better, but right now it's not, at least not compared to what we can do. And based on the way that the like that the LLMs operate, They tend to be pretty, they'll use the same sentence structure over and over again. For me, it's a tell. I'm not saying I could judge it 100%, but A, no one wants to pay to read something that's been, that's taken zero sort of marginal minutes to do. It can be very useful for brainstorming.
Starting point is 02:56:40 It can catch some of the copy edits. My mother tends to be better at copy editing, though, than any of the GPs now. But yeah, yeah. We have, we have, we have, we have subscriptions to all of them out the wazoo to, you know, to, to, to, to use them. But yeah, I mean, people are, people are coming to arena for a bit of an analog thing in the first place, which is a print magazine. And so it's like, to the extent that the AI can help us do more with less. It's great. But the core sort of writing work is something that is, you know, we're also trying to keep that, you know, art alive. We were just talking to Jordan Schneider at China talk about higher ed and some of the problems there. How would you kind of diagnose the problems, if any, in higher ed right now? I mean, I think that people tend to focus on the elite institutions because of their sort of cultural power. But, I mean, clearly the biggest catastrophe in higher ed is that we agreed to indefinitely fund higher and higher loans at the federal level for students to pursue degrees from universities. and it's really not the Harvard's that are the problem in that equation.
Starting point is 02:57:56 It's the universities that can't offer much, but that were allowed to sort of way overinflate their budgets with the federal loans. And so this is related to the China point, I read a funny story that the University of Illinois took out an insurance policy in 2018, hedging against a decline in Chinese enrollment. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 02:58:20 But the lawyers messed up. the contract and so it was invalid in December 2019 and then it took them like five months to renegotiate it during which time the COVID pandemic happened happened yeah literally nuts so always have the lawyers read the fine print I think it's possible that Claude would have been done a better got done a better job than those lawyers in that instance maybe Harvey and so somebody somebody you know that wants to go super risk on and China should bet on a rise in American students because right now there are I guess roughly 800
Starting point is 02:58:52 US students in China. Which is just unfathomably low. Yeah. I have no idea how to diagnose what goes on inside China or why people would want to go over there. I don't know how to price that one. You think we're getting a DJI ban
Starting point is 02:59:11 in the next couple months? You're feeling excited? I think the people will be upset if they ban like the best product available. I say this with like a fervent desire that we have one that's like, that's like amazing. But I'm not, I'm not sure that for random civilians, it's going to, it's going to fly. Yeah, it's hard if it's not popular. Anyway, anything else, already? I think we're good.
Starting point is 02:59:37 This is great. Congratulations. Congratulations on the launch. Good luck. Go to arena mag.com. We actually always keep, we've kept an arena mag on our desk at all times in the entire history of TBPN. We got it. We love physical media. It's a very good desk object.
Starting point is 02:59:53 And I'll just say, we're going to have even better desk objects in the future. Oh, can't wait. Yeah, I'm excited. I mean, I know you can take it up a notch to where it's more of a book. Totally. These are sort of like chapters in technology and industry. And, well, I have no, I legitimately have no inside knowledge. I'm just speculating.
Starting point is 03:00:12 Because I just see what you do. Tell them anything. Anyway, thanks so much for coming on the show. Wait, before you leave, before you leave, we got some new sound effects. I want you to hear. You're surrounded by journalists. Hold your position. We're working on these.
Starting point is 03:00:28 Anyways, have a great afternoon, Max. Thanks for going on. We'll talk to the same time. I'll see multiple journalists on the horizon. I still don't know where these came from. These are from Codd. Yeah, but like how do they change the voice? Is this like AI generated?
Starting point is 03:00:42 It's effectively like the Captain Price voice. Okay, but you can just do a Captain Price generator. But it's been making, it's been. Is that Ben's voice? That's Ben's voice. Wow. I see multiple journalists on the horizon. Market clearing order inbound.
Starting point is 03:00:56 I like the kill streets. This is great. I see a large IPO on the horizon. That's so good. I love it. Really good impression. I love it. Anyway, thank you so much for watching today.
Starting point is 03:01:07 Do we not have more timeline? I'm going to be done. Oh, yeah, yeah. Let's do some timeline. Let's do some timeline. That's great. Yeah. Congrats to Jacob Kimmel.
Starting point is 03:01:14 We generated the most visually striking data of my career at New Limit this week. We have a real opportunity to create medicines that add healthy years for everyone. Jacob's been on the show before, of course, started New Limit with the help of Brian Armstrong or in partnership with Brian Armstrong, founder of Coinbase, and really pumped us up. But he barely teased it, but it seemed like something happened that was very good there. We also need to tell you about AdQuick, Out-of-Home advertising, made easy and measurable.
Starting point is 03:01:40 Go to ad-quick.com. Say goodbye to the headaches of out-of-home advertising. Only Ad-of-home advertising. I'm about to buy every billboard in SF. Market clearing order in now. Let's do it. I love it. We covered the attack. James Cadwaller, Cadwadolar?
Starting point is 03:01:57 I don't know. Cadwallader. It says G.G. Try ramp. Which startup in the U.S. is known for shipping new features the fastest. This is Chatchibati. Ramp gets the top spot. These are hotly debated. This is the generative engine optimization, the GEO that Indriason's been writing about the AI SEO like you gotta be you gotta be this is what this is what James coming you remember we
Starting point is 03:02:21 had James on this is profound oh this is okay that makes sense and they're absolutely cooking very cool this isn't this kind of thing isn't by chance sure sure sure yeah that makes sense uh we have a post from kareem car says wild to me how much of a nothing burger AI has been so far it's been 2.5 years and the most tangible effects of AI are students cheating more and slightly higher, more realistic Facebook slot. I don't want vibes or speculation or demos. I want one concrete real world achievement from the current generation of AI. That's not potentially a big deal, but actually a big deal right now because I got nothing.
Starting point is 03:03:01 And yeah, it's just very funny because obviously, like, LLMs have been vended into like every enterprise, everywhere, and are like... Yeah, basically exposing that you're not a business person. Yeah, yeah. But also just like, like, day-day use of like, you know, for a, a lot of... lot of people like Open AI has just replaced Google. Yeah. This, Kareem doesn't clearly doesn't respect how insane it is that people are using something
Starting point is 03:03:27 else for search besides Google, right? That is crazy. That is the entire. Like Microsoft, which is currently, I think the biggest company in the world, has tried for two decades to unseat Google. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:03:41 And they now own a large part of a company that. Yeah. Actually kind of did it. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. And, yeah, pretty, pretty remarkable. Let's also tell you about Wander. Go to Wander.com.
Starting point is 03:03:53 Find your happy place. Find your happy place. Book of Wander with inspiring views, hotel-grade amenities, dreamy beds, top-tier cleaning and 24-7 concierge service. It's a vacation home, but better folks. $50 million series to be, right? It's great that we can talk about it now.
Starting point is 03:04:08 Yeah. It basically leaked weeks ago, but John Andrew was on and broke it all down and he's going for 300,000 homes. Let's go. In a decade. Love to see it. We had Patrick asking,
Starting point is 03:04:19 what is the lightest, thinnest, most comfortable and simple watch? And the best recommendation that I saw here was from Will Menidas. What do you say?
Starting point is 03:04:31 recommending a Richard Mill. And I agree with him. I think it's a great option. Otherwise a Royal Oak. Yeah. Extra thin. Why not a graft I'm in hallucination.
Starting point is 03:04:44 Yeah, he's getting up there. You know, it's not the thinest, lightest, or most comfortable, simple watch, but, you know, it makes a statement. Will recommended the RM 66 manual winding, flying turbion is a good entry level piece.
Starting point is 03:04:57 Yeah. Skeletonize, it is fantastic. I think Patrick should go with like an irwork. That would be interesting. That would be interesting. But I mean, seriously, if he's looking for something like in that category, it's probably,
Starting point is 03:05:10 Potech-Philippe Kalatrava, Vasheran constant patrimony or JLC Ultra Thin, probably. Something along those lines is going to be probably what he's looking for. He didn't really specify dress watch versus sports watch in the thin, but I think he'd look good with a dress watch. Hopefully you can pick one up on Bezzle. Go to getbezzle.com. Your Bezell concierge is available now to source you any watch on the planet.
Starting point is 03:05:38 Seriously, any watch. I think that tweet is just. permission for us to introduce Patrick to the CEO of Bezell over the text message as soon as the show wraps. Yeah. Hey, you guys should really talk. You guys should talk. It's not a double opt-in intro.
Starting point is 03:05:52 It's just happening, Patrick. Zero opt-in. Yeah, you posted about it. You got 140,000 views on this post. It's happening. It's happening. It's happening. We got a post here from Gabe.
Starting point is 03:06:02 He says, quote, LMAO has survived and even thrived over years. But its cousin, Rofl, Raffle, has faded into indignity. The cruelty of fate. 120,000 likes. Wow. I didn't notice that. That is wild. A 120 banger is really good.
Starting point is 03:06:22 Really good. But it's so true. It's so true. There were all these different acronyms. Let's bring it back. Raffle Copter. LMAO really stuck around though. Yeah.
Starting point is 03:06:34 Let's bring it back. Hey, TB Nation. I underrate is that LOL is still around, you know? LOL made it through. See, I actually, I, I adopted LMAO really late. Yeah. Like, within the last two years. I never had a huge amount of respect.
Starting point is 03:06:50 Yeah. For LOL? No, LMAO. Yeah, but what, are you, do you, do you, do you, do you draw upon LMAO more frequently than LOL? Less frequently. Yeah. I'm sprinkling it in, you know. I think I like a, like, like, the, I also like the, like, it's honestly,
Starting point is 03:07:06 variation of the, LMAO is also good because you can go, Ha, that's like not good. Ha ha is like barely trying. Once you get into three ha's, it's like, okay, I'm actually giving you some positive feedback here. LMAO is usually, I usually use it when something's actually ridiculous. Exactly. Like somebody is doing something that is just silly.
Starting point is 03:07:27 Yeah, yeah. It doesn't really have any of the eye roll that the LLL does. The LL can just be like, I can be kind of laughing at it. LMAO is like a little bit, a little bit higher. But yeah, maybe we got to bring back ROFL. Yeah. Rolling it on the floor. Well, we got to tell you about our newest and today our greatest sponsor,
Starting point is 03:07:50 the greatest sponsor of today's episode in many ways. Adio, pull it up. Adio is the AI Native CRM that builds scales and grows your company to the next level. We do a lot of, I mean, we have an interesting show and that we're like, we're basically booking like five sales calls a day in the form of, guests and then we're also running you know an advertising business i've used adio uh over the years they've been around for a while and uh we were excited about the opportunity to partner with them they are the backbone to our the revenue side of our business and we are super pumped to partner
Starting point is 03:08:29 with them uh you can go start with a 14 day free trial of their pro plan and uh you're going to love it it's fast it's flexible it reminds me of if the linear team was going to build a CRM product. Cool. They feel similar in many ways. And, yeah, also Red Point backed, you know, so you know it's a banger. Yeah, you got Logan Barton in the deal. Just attributing, he's like the main, he's the main guy in Redpoint.
Starting point is 03:08:57 So of course he let it. Of course he let it. No, Jeff Brody. Anyways, but go over to adio.com. Let's go. What's that? The founder of Red Point went to my high school. Oh, no way.
Starting point is 03:09:07 Yeah, Jeff Brody. And so. What a dog. Yeah, just being like, yeah, I'm not. I've never met him. But just be like shout out Red Point. Yeah. Shout it out.
Starting point is 03:09:17 I would die for Red Point. I would die for Big Tech. And also I want to give a shout out to Captions app. The founder's been on the show, big fan of captions. They introduced Mirage Studio powered by our proprietary Omnimodal Foundation model. They can generate expressive videos at scale with actors that actually look and feel alive. Our actors flinch, laugh, flinch, sing, rap, all, of course, per your direction. just upload an audio, describe the scene, and drop in a reference image,
Starting point is 03:09:44 and create energetic content in minutes built for marketers, creative teams, and anyone's series about crafting great narrative videos. I'm excited to get that started and check that out. It's actually a new URL, mirage.app. So they're kind of like forking the two products. A lot of companies have been doing that with, I feel like that's a more recent occurrence where they'll spin up kind of a new brand and app to kind of test something. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 03:10:09 More news. Apparently, Elon is doing some type of share sale, $300 million share sale that values the company at $113 billion for X-AI. Oh, X-I. And the official, the official Neurrelink round actually got announced today. Oh, that was just like leaked earlier. It's actually out now. That's great. Well, congrats to everyone at Neurlink.
Starting point is 03:10:34 I believe it's $9 billion now is the valuation. Is that right? Yeah, crazy. Speaking of things that start with nines, my sleep score, 91, I'm back in the game. Back in the game. See what you did. Getting eight sleep, five-year warranty, 30-night risk pretrial, free returns, free shipping. I had a, fuel your best days.
Starting point is 03:10:51 I didn't issue the power went out in the middle of the night, Saturday, my neighborhood. And so it really threw off my- I don't care about Saturday. I want Sunday. I got a 90. 90. Oh, let's hear it for me. Let's hear for John.
Starting point is 03:11:03 Hey, once a week, once a week, I'll give it to you. Once a week, I got back-to-back days coming up. I got you. Let's see what you do tonight. Let's see what numbers I put up. Anyway. Nobody out sleeps me. Nobody.
Starting point is 03:11:16 Anyways. Thanks so much for watching. We will see you tomorrow. Go leave us a five-star review if you like the show. And we appreciate all of you. We're excited for tomorrow. See you later.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.