TBPN Live - Hit the Dom Button, Unicorn Growth Continues, Sequoia's Lasting Success, Crypto Dawgs
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Welcome to Technology Brothers, the most profitable podcast in the world.
Also, the fastest growing podcast in the world.
We doubled again.
Surprise, surprise.
We're at 4,000 followers on X.
If you're not already following, head over there and follow us now.
As you know, we have a little bit of a tradition on the show.
Every time we double the size of the podcast, we celebrate with a bottle of Dom Perignon.
And so today we have a wonderful, I believe it's 2015 vintage.
That's correct?
Fantastic. So let's get this open.
And how was your weekend, Jordy?
My weekend is good.
My weekend was good.
You went to the ballet.
I went to the ballet.
I saw the Nutcracker.
What's new?
What's new?
The ballet is deeply underrated, I believe.
Totally.
And everyone should go to the ballet.
Second only to seeing Interstellar with your absolute boys. Which we are doing on Thursday, I believe. Totally. Second only to seeing
Interstellar with your absolute boys.
Which we are doing on Thursday, which will be great.
Let's see. Ready, Ben?
There we go.
It's kind of
wild.
It's a mess.
Our studio has carpet all over
the floor, and so the amount of champagne just sinking into the carpet is going to be a mess.
Yeah, but you've got to celebrate the wins.
It's important.
Yeah, and we grew 10% since we hit the 4K milestone too.
Fantastic.
Compounding.
Yeah, I saw the Nutcracker, and it's fantastic.
Tchaikovsky.
I didn't know this, but the story was written in 1820.
Do you know the story of The Nutcracker?
Do you know the whole history here?
I've seen it many times.
Of course, but tell it for the listeners.
Yeah, yeah, of course.
And it's very interesting because the story is about this dream,
and in the dream, these toy soldiers are fighting these rats.
And I couldn't help but think it was a metaphor for the plague in some way.
Even though I don't think that's exactly what people think it's about.
But it was weird that the rat was the avatar.
Or capitalism versus the communists.
Maybe.
Maybe.
But the whole time I was sitting there and i was thinking like
you can attach your own meaning to it it's uh it's very odd that like the whole
covid pangolin bat story hasn't been canonized into ballet yet yeah and maybe that's we can get
into that uh we can get into producing ballets we should we should it's a great product line i mean
russia should really turn around and start producing ballets again. That was a great cultural exploit.
Yeah, their whole economy is now war-based.
Just shelling Ukrainians.
And if they could shift back into the arts, but very commercially, that could be great.
I think they've got to put out a banger ballet, retool the whole economy to produce great ballets.
Because then it would be hard not to support them.
Or if they if they
open source their um ped model like they have some of the best it's true the best ped programs in the
world and if they were to kind of do the brian johnson approach you get um you know vladimir
uh just really like dial in more no more uh you know, Putin, more shirtless pictures on horses,
selling PEDs, that could be a billion dollar, you know, new business line for Russia.
Yeah. You know what other Tchaikovsky piece goes unreasonably hard? The 1812 Overture. Have you
heard this one? So good. It concludes with musket firing. So it's usually played outdoors.
Yeah.
And they fire guns.
Most concerts, modern day,
they have metal detectors to make sure you don't bring in guns.
But the Russians.
But you go to see Tchaikovsky,
it's mandatory that the guns are fired.
There we go.
It's way more hardcore.
It's good to build it into the show.
Than any other concert, I think.
Yeah.
Well, cheers to 4K.
Cheers to 4K.
It wouldn't be possible without all of our wonderful listeners. Well, cheers to 4K. Cheers to 4K. It wouldn't be possible
without all of our wonderful listeners.
Thank you.
Cheers.
Cheers.
Okay, well,
we have some breaking news, everyone.
Massive investment, massive deal.
We might have to move this champagne
so that we can ring the size gong.
Let's break it down.
We got breaking news coming in hot.
Venture financing in the crypto world is back in the spotlight,
and it's got the kind of star power that would make a Pro Bowl roster jealous.
Coastal Ventures, led by none other than Keith Raboy,
has teamed up with Founders Fund to throw a $10 million Series A pass to Lava,
a Bitcoin lending platform out of New York.
That's right.
Crypto is roaring back and Lava is looking to rewrite the playbook on Bitcoin-backed lending.
What you got for me, Jordy?
So who's Lava and why does this matter?
Imagine you're sitting on a pile of Bitcoin while dreaming about that prime seafront property in Miami.
You don't want to sell your Bitcoin, especially now that it's close to 100K.
But the real estate market isn't exactly accepting crypto. That's where Lava steps in.
Their motto? Saving Bitcoin, spending dollars. Lava lets you borrow cash while holding onto
your Bitcoin stash. And here's the kicker. Lava is allowing users to self-custody their Bitcoin,
a move Keith Raboy is calling a technical breakthrough.
So let's break this down. In the crypto lending game, trust has been a fragile thing.
Genesis, BlockFi, Celsius, all big names that crashed and burned in the last cycle,
taking client funds with them.
Lava, they're playing anti-fragile ball, putting users in control of their assets
and steering clear of the risky rehypothecation strategies that sank their predecessors.
It's a bold strategy, Cotton. Let's see if it plays off.
Now, John, it's not all rainbows and moonshots. Lava's service comes
with a 7.5% interest rate and an origination fee. But CEO Shazan Muradiyah is banking on a wary,
battle-hardened crypto crowd ready for something better. And Keith Raboy seems to agree. Raboy,
back at Coastal Ventures after a stint at Founders Fund, isn't calling this a full-blown crypto
comeback,
but he's clearly hyped about the potential here.
So what's next for Lava?
Payments, Bitcoin buying, expanding their services, all while staying token-free.
No meme coins, no pump-and-dump games, just pure equity.
And here's the broader play, John.
With Bitcoin past $100K, a thriving blockchain scene in New York, and regulatory shifts on the horizon,
Raboy thinks a talent pool for crypto is about to heat up again. And he's not cozying up at Mar-a-Lago, but he's watching, waiting
and maybe even cheering from the sidelines for the next big thing in the space.
So what does this mean for crypto?
It's like Marshawn Lattimore joining the Commanders, a big move
that shakes up the game and gives fans a reason to watch closely.
If you're holding Bitcoin or thinking about diving into the crypto space,
Lava might just be the team to bet on.
Stay tuned, folks. This one's just getting started. Fantastic. And there's a great
article in Fortune magazine that you can go read. There's a whole deep dive on the deal that just
happened. I talked to Joey Krug at Founders Fund about it. He was very excited. And it's, yeah.
Yeah, this one just makes sense. If people have learned anything from the last decade,
it's that you pretty much never want to sell your Bitcoin.
You just want to ride the volatility as much as you can
and just hold and stack.
And you don't want to be on a centralized product
that they can go under.
And that's how so many people got burned last time.
Yeah, when you look at what Celsius,
often confused with the energy drink, you look at what Celsius and a, and, and a lot of these, I think it was block five
FTX was doing this to some degree as well. They, they, the, the usage that they had was pretty
ridiculous, right? I think block both of those companies were worth billions of dollars.
And so, uh, it's hard not to be, um, you know, in a more in a more serious way,
legitimately very bullish on lava and what they're doing. Yeah, yeah, very exciting.
Well, we have more breaking news today. Avi Schiffman over at Friend has raised for five and
$5.4 million from Pace Capital. Let's break it down. We got some breaking news out of the startup
world today. And it's not just about raising capital. It's about redefining connection in the digital age. Friend.com,
the bold AI companionship platform, just secured $5.4 million in fresh funding from Jordan Cooper
at Pace Capital. That's right. Avi Schiffman's brainchild is making moves, and it's got the tech world buzzing.
Let's break it down, John.
Friend.com isn't your typical chatbot platform.
This isn't Siri making small talk or ChatGPT answering trivia questions. No, Friend wants to bottle up the raw emotion of a late-night heart-to-heart at a house party
and deliver it through an AI-powered pendant.
Schiffman calls it talking to God,
but the rest of us might call it complicated.
Here's the deal.
Friend.com pairs users with bots that don't just listen.
They pour out their manufactured drama.
We're talking digital companions with backstories so moody
they'd make an indie film jealous.
Think AI confessing about losing their job or coping with trauma.
It's emotional, it's messy, and it's entirely intentional.
Shiffman says if they don't just open with,
hey what's up, like other chat bots, you don't know what to talk about.
Instead, these bots pull you into their storylines,
making users work for their trust and approval.
That's a bold play in the AI game and it's got people intrigued.
Now let's talk hardware, John.
Friend.com isn't just staying on your screen, it's coming for your neck.
The Friend Pendant is set to launch in January, giving users a physical connection to their AI companions.
A microphone, sensors, and an all-day battery pack into a sleek, customizable necklace.
It's a bold step towards integrating digital friendships into real life.
But with no firm business model yet, aside from selling these pendants, the road ahead is anything but certain.
Yeah, and make no mistake, Jordy, this space is competitive.
With heavyweights like Character AI, Replica already commanding massive user bases,
Friend is the underdog.
But Shiffman isn't shy about his confidence, declaring,
I will win this category, flat out.
Flat out.
That's some serious bravado.
But hey, when you've built viral platforms and dropped out of Harvard after one semester,
confidence isn't exactly in short supply.
The implications of AI companionship are heavy.
Schiffman calls this one of the most dangerous industries, citing the weight of trust users
place on their AI companions.
But for now, Friend.com is pushing forward, aiming to combat the loneliness epidemic by
offering a new kind of connection, one that's digital, wearable, and deeply unconventional.
So what does this 5.4 million mean for friend.com? It's not just funding. It's fuel for a vision that
blurs the lines between human connection and machine interaction. Love it or hate it, you
can't deny that friend.com is one to watch. Stay tuned, folks. This story is just getting started.
Yeah, excited for, I'm excited for Ari. Yeah. I, Avi,
I,
I,
we've always,
yeah,
we've always been,
you know,
attention matters a lot
in this industry.
Avi has continued to prove
that he can generate it
over and over and over.
He attracts
some haters.
He attracts some copycats,
but he's also attracting
the right folks.
I'm good buddies with um i'm
good buddies with rompton who is a co-lead in this round and um yeah i think i think he's an obvious
obvious person to bet on so yeah um i mean i remember when he when like the news had leaked
privately that he spent a million dollars or something on his.com friend.com. And it wasn't
even public yet. And people were whispering like, this kid is crazy. Like he spent his entire seed
round on a domain. And of course, like he financed it and was able to do something much more nuanced.
And, you know, it was just, uh, but it was a great strategy and I think it paid off. He,
he published some numbers and the early sales are pretty good. And most importantly,
I love the strategy of you show up and it's not just an empty text box. It's completely flipped it around. So you show up and you just get some
weird message and then you're in the game and you're just deeper in the funnel already.
Yeah. If you're, when you're listening to this, go into your browser and just
type in friend.com, it'll pop up like a really unhinged message. Like, Hey, I'm thinking of
ending my life. And then you have to kind of like talk them off the ledge yeah um so some of
them are pretty dark but it but it yeah he's turned it into a game yeah basically and the
landing page is the product yeah like there's no it's just like google you know they don't have a
landing page like here like you know we do you want to search do you want to search click here
to search no it's like just put it there same thing with chat gpt chat gpt.com um and you know
it's very easy for someone in his position to like miss that i think
yeah so that was great well uh let's move on to a great deep dive that happened in the economist
this week on sequoia capital uh one of the three um holy trinity firms and uh going through you
know just i don't even, is this like the second
generation, the third generation of leaders at Sequoia? It's been a few, it's, you know,
you got the Don Valentine era, then the Mike Moritz era, now Dark Sean is heading things up.
But this specifically, there was a profile in the Wall Street Journal about Alfred Lynn, journal about um alfred lynn alfred lynn that was really good um so speaking of uh speaking of
rompton who who um co-led uh the seed round at my last company and um uh he also co-led obby's round
oh cool he um when i first met alf uh when i first met rompton he got me on the phone with alfred
lynn the same exact day. Like we talked for like 20
minutes. He's like, I love this. I like you. Who do you want to meet? And he set up a call. Uh,
so that, that, that was a cool kind of experience for me. Cause I think a lot of, um,
a lot of founders think these GPs are kind of hard to reach or whatever. There's all these layers and
all it takes is one relationship and one person to make
that.
And if it's the right intro, you can get on the phone the same day.
It's fantastic.
So yeah, let's go through the profile about him in the Wall Street Journal first.
The Wall Street Journal has a section called Personal Board of Directors, where top business
leaders talk about the people they turn to for advice and how those people have shaped
their perspective and helped them succeed.
And it starts with Alfred Lin became one of Silicon Valley's most sought-after venture capitalists
after his early bets on companies like Airbnb and DoorDash. Now he's guiding Sequoia Capital
through another tech transformation, artificial intelligence. He invested in ChatGPT at $20
billion. Today, the company's worth $157 billion. He backed a pair of robotics startups,
Cobot, and Physical Intelligence. He grew up in New York City, son of Taiwanese immigrants, and now he's 52 years old.
He graduated from Harvard, did a PhD in statistics at Stanford.
And then don't forget about his lawn mowing business.
Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's right.
And he was he was running his business and subcontracting work to his classmates.
That's such a great story. And then there's also the story of him and Tony Shea at Harvard, like buying big pizzas and then selling individual slices.
You remember this? Amazing. This is great. And so he goes to work for Zappos.
And then in 2010, he joined Sequoia. And when when Lynn showed his wife the offer letter from Sequoia,
his wife handed him a positive pregnancy test.
Amazing.
Epic.
I mean, what a great job.
That'll give you the...
We're good.
We can have kids now.
Yeah.
Working at Sequoia.
Well, I mean, oh, the offer letter from Sequoia.
I thought you were saying the offer letter from Zappos.
Oh, no, no, no. And I was like get you get your uh no yeah yeah yeah yeah going to
going to sequoia once you're about to have your first kid that's a pretty good gig yeah um so we
got a quick start convincing the partnership to back five companies in his first year that's really
big that's a lot especially then um and uh and he worked on airbnb and doordash which netted the
firm over 2020 billion.
Isn't that crazy when they went public in December of 2020?
Netted the firm.
And that's not just like enterprise value creation,
which a lot of investors will be like,
I've backed companies that are worth over $100 billion collectively.
But that was just the carry yeah so this article
not the carry but the gross returns yeah so this article uh interviews four people that have worked
with him closely um uh one of his colleagues at sequoia tony shu at uh ceo of doordash
lynn meant uh she when the 29-old pitched him on DoorDash,
Lynn initially passed on the investment,
thinking that only college students spending their money
would use the service before changing his mind
and making a $15 million investment for Sequoia in 2014.
Yeah, I remember DoorDash went through YC.
But, I mean, that's the beauty of working for a multi-stage fund
is that, I mean, it seems like he passed on the YC demo day round which was probably like 1 million that's what i that's what i've always
said any any time travelers go back yeah give john a five million dollar seed fund when he was going
through yc the first time seriously would be a top decile fund yeah when the two caught up for
dinner a few years later he said that they had recently began taking they had recently begun taking jujitsu lessons,
describing how the sport taught them when and how to make tactical business decisions.
The conversation encouraged Lynn to start something new himself, writing a blog called
Sunday Thoughts. Then they interview Brian Chesky, who was invited to Allen & Co's Sun Valley
Conference as a young entrepreneur. He returned with 16 pages of notes from meetings with some
of America's best known executives.
At one point, he got a face-to-face meeting with Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos after spotting him at a duck pond.
That's cool.
That's a cool anecdote.
Lin, who has known Chesky for over a decade, thinks back to this anecdote often.
Chesky's hustle was on Lin's mind when he reached out cold to NVIDIA CEO Jensen Wong a few years ago.
The resulting Zoom meeting helped Lin establish a new relationship between Sequoia and NVIDIA.
Wong has since spoken at Sequoia events
and also invited its founders
to visit NVIDIA's headquarters
in Santa Clara, California.
It's interesting
because Sequoia did
the seed round of NVIDIA,
but of course,
those partners have since retired.
Yeah, and who was the partner
that was still holding
his NVIDIA shares?
I don't think it's public,
but we mentioned it earlier.
Okay.
But I'm sure you could go look it up and figure it out.
Yeah, you can find that out if you want.
Who was at Sequoia at the time who you haven't heard from in a very long time
and has a huge family office now?
Yeah.
It's probably that guy.
That guy.
And then there's a few other interesting anecdotes in here.
I like this Wall Street Journal segment.
It's a cool, like, it's like a 360
review of the person, just kind of showing
you who they are from other people's perspective. Yeah, they basically
turn thread
format on X back into an
article, which is cool.
Yeah, and Sequoia's
been in the news a bunch recently. There was another
article that I think we can chat about
in The Economist that's a little
bit spicier.
The Economist is asking, has Sequoia Capital outgrown its business model?
And I don't know if you want to read some of this.
Yeah, so you just jump in.
The first thing that catches your eye when you enter the poshly serene headquarters of Sequoia Capital on Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, California,
is a meter-wide cross-section of what appears to be a redwood.
On closer inspection, it turns out to have been a tree in the past, 38 million years ago, according to a plaque on the back.
Now it's solid stone, a gift from Roloff Bota, the venture firm's current boss, and his wife.
It reminds employees and guests of the durability of the organization they are visiting which has existed since 1972 in the accelerated time of
Silicon Valley that is eons yeah everyone should go plant a tree because it's such a great way to
like at my high school experience I was I was in the 100th graduating class and there was a tree
that was planted on like the first day of the school that's wild so it's a hundred year old
tree it was like big and old but it's cool sequoia is not just perennial
but hardy too in contrast to some other vc old growths like kleiner perkins whose reputation
for spotting the next hot startup has wilted in the past decade who taking shots at the holy trinity
the holy trinity uh they still got it they got Ev Randall over there. And that's why the Economist can get spicy.
Oh, yeah.
The person that wrote it is not listed here.
Yeah, normally people would be dunking on this person.
Hey, shut up.
You're not in the arena, journalist.
Yeah, yeah.
It's harder to dunk on the Economist.
They got Lee Marie and Ev over there holding it down.
Over the years, it's made its limited partners and its own rainmakers who pocket around a quarter of the gains plus management fee, a total of over $70 billion, thanks to early bets on future tech darlings like Airbnb, Apple, Google, and Nvidia.
What an insane lineup.
Crazy lineup.
And there's some stat.
$3 trillion companies.
Yeah, there's some stat that's 33 percent of the nasdaq
that's right yeah are sequoia backed companies yeah which is crazy i think i have that here
um yeah uh brie kimmel says don valentine started with a three million dollar venture fund
in 1974 sequoia has helped capitalize companies that now represent 3.3 trillion of market value, 33% of the NASDAQ,
an incredible journey and an immeasurable impact on the world. Amazingly, half of that is in Apple.
Interesting. Yeah, but somebody, I think Shield pointed out, they actually only made 6 million
on Apple. That's super interesting. Because they just IPO'd so early? Yeah, or wasn't there some
M&A at some point?
No, no.
I think a lot of these tech companies just went public really, really early and distributed the shares.
But that doesn't mean that the partners necessarily sold.
Which is like, okay, so yes, some of the LPs might have sold if they got the shares.
But they might have held on to them.
It just kind of depends. So you can't really knock them for that.
If there's some old partner chilling with some Apple shares right now, totally possible. Pretty good. But yeah, let's keep going through this. Alfred Lin, who co-led
Sequoia's investments in OpenAI, topped this year's Midas list rankings of the world's 100
most successful venture dealmakers compiled by Forbes. Mr. Bota came in 11th. Another three
Sequoia employees made the list. Bota puts things in Darwinian terms,
paraphrasing the father of evolutionary science.
It is not the strongest of the species that survives,
nor the most intelligent that survives.
It is the one that is most responsive to change.
For Sequoia, responding to change
has included hatching a growth fund
to bankroll larger startups that would have gone public,
expanding into China and India, and creating a hedge fund and a wealth management arm.
So they've really, really expanded, although obviously they've paired things back recently.
Seems like a sound idea in principle.
Why endure cross-border headaches or compete with spendthrift foreigners like SoftBank
of Japan as they bid up valuations of today's sexy AI startups
when fettering out tomorrow's stars at home offers potentially higher returns.
For one thing, the VC landscape has become more crowded.
PitchBook, a data provider, counted 3,417 conventional VC firms active in America last year,
up from fewer than 1,000 in the mid-2000s when Mr. Bota got into the business.
Last year, they managed $1.2 trillion worth of assets compared to $150 billion 20 years ago.
The value of new deals in the first nine months of this year exceeded $130 billion.
That pales beside the $352 billion in all of 2021, a white hot year for startups, but is nearly twice the figure for 2014.
And so massive, massive growth in VC in general.
This is just such an interesting article there.
As with the other old growths of Sand Hill Road,
Sequoia is also contending with smaller seed investors,
often ex-entrepreneurs, getting between old school VCs and the next generation of founders.
These newcomers are closer to the young entrepreneurs in age and have the same WhatsApp groups and offer counsel on negotiating with the Sequoias, having been through it
themselves. The phenomenon dates back to the creation of Y Combinator, a startup kindergarten.
What a blast. The economy really does not pull punches. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Brutal.
I don't think it's, I mean but but at the same time it's not like
it's not like you go and yeah can like even for children kindergarten is a kindergarten right it's
basically daycare for kids yeah with a little bit of learning yeah it's and and but it's not like
kindergarten's bad yeah like it serves a purpose yeah kids graduate from it and they go on and do
big things from there right so it's a starting point starting point. Yeah. So I don't know.
I don't know that it's the earliest phase of funding.
Yeah.
And it serves a very real function of taking people that oftentimes have really no experience
building companies, raising money, all these different things and giving them some structure
and the returns definitely show it.
And then they highlight this really funny deal that just happened recently, a move that just happened recently.
They say, on November 26th,
the information reported
that a young former startup manager
turned partner at Andreessen Horowitz,
Sequoia's rival,
was leaving to start her own $50 million seed fund.
Which this is like the most random inclusion ever
in the context of.
I mean, good for Michelle.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
If you're not familiar,
that's clearly Michelle Volz
who left
Andreessen to start, I think it's called like PAX Ventures, PAX Americana Ventures. And I mean,
I don't even know if she's closed the fund yet. She just left and kind of announced and leaked
to the information and they published it. She hasn't even announced it. She hasn't really posted
about it. But here the economist is like, man, Sequoia's got some stiff competition.
Yeah. A new seed fund that hasn't actually closed yet.
Yeah, I think Michelle would be like, yeah, you know, like I could probably like let Sequoia win and still do very, very well.
But this is great.
So they close with Sequoia has no plans to seed what Mr. Botuc calls its unfair advantage.
A respected brand name, a strong network,
and sophisticated data analysis.
It's beefing up ARK,
its startup school,
and maintains a scout scheme,
lending asset-rich, cash-poor founders money to invest in sharing upside.
In 2023, it backed five startups
as they were still incorporating.
It's still also marketing itself more intensely.
Partners speak at conferences
and appear on podcasts.
No mention of Sean here. Some of them post as well. Doing the craziest work of all the
Sequoia marketing machine. This costs money. More importantly, it takes up time that could
be actively spent seeking out fresh prospects. It has led Sequoia 2 to expand collective
decision-making on which it prides itself is necessarily less limbo with 25 investment staff than it was with a dozen two decades ago. Yeah. So they still have
a consensus partnership, which means that every single you could have, you know, let's say Alfred
Lynn wants to do a deal. He still has to get every other GP on board to do the deal. Everybody has to be bought in.
And so that's different than other...
Is Benchmark like that?
Benchmark might be like that.
I don't think Andreessen is like that.
I don't think Founders Fund is definitely not like that.
And so it ends up being an interesting thing
where Founders can get all the way through the process with Sequoia,
pitch the full partnership,
which usually is just sort of like a sort of ceremonial thing, but then maybe still not get a deal and have to get some of these, um, you know, a GP or two,
like fully bought in, uh, maybe they don't even get there at all. Um, and so let's close with
this post, which I really liked a clip from Mike Moritz, I believe on, um, I forget,
I forget what interview this was. It was great. Um, Mike Moritz on what made Sequoia capital
successful. We've always been afraid of going out of business. We've worked hard to, on trying to
figure out how we make Sequoia endure. We've assumed that tomorrow isn't like yesterday.
We can't afford to, to rest on our laurels. It's great. This was from a long time
ago too. Yeah. He also talks about, Don says, the art of storytelling is incredibly important.
Learning to tell a story is critically important because that's how money works. The money flows
as a function of the story. And he says, a venture capitalist gets to see all kinds of storytellers um which i think is
makes a ton of sense the people raising the most money both funds and startups are the ones that
are best at storytelling they oftentimes back that up with with great you know products uh
but uh it matters uh matters quite a lot um think there, I think it would be silly not to mention kind of the,
the two disjointed media strategy that Sequoia has right now,
which on one hand,
the,
the Sequoia partner that I see the most of,
uh,
is Sean McGuire and many people that listen to the show probably as well.
He's by far,
he kind of has his own brand and approach to getting attention and
getting in front of founders. And it's certainly, it's, you know, it's been controversial. He's
gotten himself into hot water. But it's also paid off. But it's paid off in many ways. He led the
deal into X from Sequoia, has a very close relationship with Elon. Um, it's, uh, even last week it was, it was,
he had posted something about Hunter Biden being his, uh, tenant at his family's property in Venice
and how Hunter Biden apparently allegedly was trying to pay rent using artwork that he made
with, uh, feces, his own feces. So incredible story. Uh, wouldn't, wouldn't put it past uh hunter uh sounds a little crazy um but
then sean immediately i think went and uh i guess like takoya had some type of issue with their
google workspace and they were like you know it got taken down for a second and he immediately was
like is it the deep state or something like that um i think he he sort of retraced on that but
it's sort of this like really interesting contrast more than half the partnership is sort of quiet in the background, sitting on Sand Hill Road, basically, taking this very thoughtful, sophisticated approach.
Meanwhile, Sean is just posting through everything, figuring out how to make himself a part of stories a part of stories that of like a global conversation
a global conversation not even within silicon valley like yeah there are people and so there
are random political junkies in the middle of nowhere who don't even know what a startup or
series a is that no sean because of what he did yeah and i could see i could see uh alfred lynn
going on um going on like lex right. And like having this like three hour conversation about the future of,
you know,
well,
do you know,
and then meanwhile,
Sean is getting a hundred times more impressions around the clock,
just posting.
Um,
so different approaches and we'll see how they,
uh,
John is opening up a gift from that we got from one of our
listeners and friends of the show the lone ranger is his name uh that's hard which one is that this
is a uh let's see this is a level two strength grip trainer that you try and pinch with your
okay so so basically we got a bunch of these we got, so basically we got a bunch of these.
Yeah, we got a bunch of these in.
We got to work up to it.
The Lone Ranger basically, thank you for sending these.
But his advice was basically use these.
I'm not sure.
It's hard.
Yeah, this is a two.
So he basically said anything over a one,
if a founder can do over one, they're investable.
If they can't do that, not investable.
If you can get to two and a half, which we have here, we'll have to test it at a later date.
Two and a half, just back the truck up, get as much allocation as you can.
It's just all about grip strength these days. It's all about grip strength these days. No, he said it's an alternative. You know, we're in this middle of this testosterone epidemic where
many, many founders are trying to build their companies in the three to 400 range. And that's
just a big, that's just a big problem. And so if you can't get a blood test from a founder to prove
their testosterone levels prior to investing doing a grip uh strength uh
test on the spot is a good way to evaluate um are they an investment you know candidate do they have
what it takes um are they captains of crush captains yeah that's the brand that's a brand
yeah go we highly recommend go pick up captains of crush on amazon yeah these look very vintage
yeah these are great from a company called iron mind yeah um oh the last thing on sequoia do you know the other half of their media strategy most
adhd episode it's a dom episode it's a dom episode cheers um the other half of the uh nice ring to it
the other half of the uh sequoia marketing Strategy is this podcast hosted by Roloff Bota
called Crucible Moments.
And they actually get incredible guests.
They've had Chesky and all these huge CEOs on.
And they've done some promotion for it,
but it just hasn't broken through like Sean.
Because Sean is just in the Zeitgeist.
I honestly hadn't even heard of the show. Yeah, yeah, yeah it's tough because um there are a lot of those types of shows and even
though they have kind of the best it's like limited run they don't do that many of them
and they have no growth no real growth yeah yeah because bota is not out there posting
roloff's got to be posted you got to be got to be getting in the mix four or five bangers a day
yeah that's what i want to see so i hopefully
they hopefully they take after sean and we see more no but that's that's uh the pure quote-unquote
quality and depth of content has nothing to do with how quick how big of an audience it gets
it doesn't even necessarily deserve a big audience because to deserve a big audience you actually need
you got to have multiple things going you got to have a multiple things going.
You got to have the right format.
But, but yeah, I'm sure they'll, I'm sure they'll keep iterating on it and figure out a way to get in front of more people.
Yep.
So let's go to the DMs, our Q&A segment.
Add us on Axe or send us a DM if you have a question.
Mickey with the blicky says, VC Mickey is back.
I have an idea that could
transform your podcast into a billion, maybe even a trillion dollar company. You'll have to sign
NDAs prior to discussing DMS open. What do you think Jordy? Mickey? I think he's baiting us for
this one. Honestly, I think he knows that you're not supposed to ask for an NDA before you pitch
somebody something, uh, at least in the venture world. Because at this point, it's like, you know,
you ask for an NDA,
and then what if we already had that idea?
And then it becomes this sort of like legal scuffle
because he's like, well, that was my idea,
and blah, blah, blah.
So Mickey, I don't know Mickey personally,
but we've had some interactions via the show,
and I know he's baiting us with that one.
And Mickey knows better than to ask
for an NDA, uh, on the first meeting. So just, just tell it to us. Just, just, we can be trusted.
Yeah. Yeah. We won't, we won't lever, lever up the idea.
Mickey never heard of him. Uh, uh, thank you, Mickey for, for providing great questions.
We love it. Uh Bull Futurist says,
can we get some insight into the pen
that you use to sign deals?
Are you fountain enjoyers?
Bic crystal extra bold appreciators?
What do you think, Jordy?
Man, my handwriting is,
I do a lot of digital signatures, honestly.
Sure, sure.
And we're trying to bring the paper back.
We're trying to bring the pen back.
Yep.
I'm really trying to work on my handwriting.
I'm not dialed in on pens,
but one of the reasons why I haven't really explored
what's out there or purchased anything
is that we're making our own pen.
Yes, that's right. And it will be pretty much right away, what's out there or purchase anything is that we're making our own pen. Yes.
And it will be pretty much right away.
I think it'll be one of the number one sort of deal making pens in venture.
We'll be getting them out to our listeners, founders in our portfolio, making sure that everybody's got the right ink for the deal.
But we got to bring back, we got to bring back in-person document signing.
Germany like forces their founders to do this, but it's a great photo opportunity. a deal but we got to bring back we got to bring back in-person document signing germany like
forces their founders to do this but it's a great photo opportunity like imagine imagine one of our
listeners is raising you know signs a term sheet with sean mcguire like i want to see a picture i
want to see a live video of both of them signing on on the dotted line you know there there is a
great photo of dylan field at figma signing a term sheet with Sequoia.
Oh, it's, it's what with will, I believe. Oh, isn't that his name? No.
And it's Andrew Reed. Yeah. I remember. I remember. Yeah.
Always get a deal photo for sure. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. Um,
no, it's actually sad. A lot of deal photos don't happen now because of zoom.
Yeah. And so by the time you're actually having dinner, like they're in person, like it's already closed or,
or,
or,
you know,
at least the term sheet's been signed.
Yeah.
But you're going to want that for the book or for the,
even just like the tech crunch article,
like just give them something better than just,
or if we break,
if we break your fundraising,
we will include it in our,
um,
you know,
uh,
but there's an easy way around,
uh, you know, decision fatigue around what, um, you know, uh, but there's an easy way around, uh, you know, decision fatigue around
what, uh, pen to use. And that's just hire a full-time calligrapher, which is what I do.
Um, so I have a calligrapher on staff and anytime I need to write something, my handwriting is
terrible, but, uh, hers is fantastic. And so, uh, that's kind of how I've solved that problem.
You have to like delegate, um, delegate, you know, you know, sort of you allow them to sign on your behalf.
Exactly, exactly.
And then it just looks beautiful every time.
And so, yeah, if you ever get a handwritten note from me, well, you know who wrote it, my calligrapher.
Let's go to a promoted post.
Jordy, what do you got for me?
Here we go. It's time to promote.
Let's see here.
All right.
We have a promoted post from Matt Paulson.
Matt says, ramp is the best.
Every business should use it to keep expense creep at bay.
Simple, bold, and true.
And he's quote tweeting Ramp saying,
using different software for cards, bill pay travel,
expense management, and procurement.
And it has one of the original sort of SpaceX rocket engines,
which is way overly complex,
Raptor One, and then it says using RAMP,
and you have Raptor Three, refined, streamlined,
simplified, and just even more beautiful.
So that's what it,
Great metaphor.
Great metaphor for using RAMP.
So if you're using 20 different tools
to run your financial operations at your startup,
cut it out switch to
ramp consolidate focus and you won't end up like the kamala campaign which was using amex probably
bill.com didn't consolidate and they blew through a billy and they spent 100k on a podcast set
yeah for one shoot whereas we spent i mean we spent like three to five times that but
this will be used again and again and again.
We're amortizing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're amortizing.
It's more like CapEx in this case.
But yeah,
thanks to ramp.
And if you sign up for ramp,
tell them the technology brother sent you.
Let's go to Zach.
He says,
would listen to a pod called liquor ladies leverage on how almost great
entrepreneurs fucked up their lives.
What do you think? I disagree. We,
we were big fans of leverage and liquor, big fans of ladies. Hey, cheers to Zach. Cheers to that.
No, I think a lot of great entrepreneurs do have vices, right? Like they do have their sort of
kryptonite or their Achilles heel whatever it is um sometimes
it's some of those things um i feel like i feel like senra like covers a lot of that stuff like
he he gets into i don't know like he he talks about the mcdonald's founder or whatever and
how like the guy was basically like all of his relationships would fall apart all the time and he
you know really like kind of failed on the home front in many ways.
But I feel like he doesn't cover
almost great entrepreneurs.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
I missed that part, yeah.
Who made it through.
So the question here is how almost great entrepreneurs
fucked up their lives.
And yeah, there's plenty of great entrepreneurs
that made it through with the three martini lunches.
Yep.
We already covered Dylan.
Oh, this is great.
So P-Bit got a package secured for Mod Retro.
And it's a beautiful package.
Yeah, so Mod Retro basically figured out that I guess all of the trademarks and patents on the Game Boy expired and you could rebuild,
you could create a new version of the Game Boy,
put it back into production.
It's still that same analog feeling.
And yeah,
I haven't been able to play an actual game,
but the cool thing is that we'll use the same cartridges,
I believe that you had for an actual Game Boy.
So it was easy to buy. I mean, I still bunch okay you do yeah yeah yeah um that was like my
original sort of like road trip i feel like the next thing they need to release is like the omni
cartridge that like rewrites the cartridge on the fly and stores basically like a thousand games in
one go or something yeah um because like the hardware has gotten so much smaller you could
probably compress everything on there.
But I think so.
ModRetro actually has a partnership with GameStop.
Oh, yeah.
And GameStop is like,
thank you, God, for listening to our prayers.
Finally, a new hardware device
that has physical cartridge games
that we can sell
that you can't just buy online.
Maybe you can buy them on Amazon,
but you can't just download them.
So it's possible that I could see a world
in which ModRetro eventually LBOs GameStop
and just becomes this massive collective meme stock.
And you have to imagine if there's like a 25-year lag on the IP that it's like,
we're going to get a mod retro N64.
And then we're going to get a mod retro PS1 and a PS2.
And they're all going to be just as you experience them.
Yeah, and I know a number of people that invested in mod retro, it was probably an easy bet just because
Palmer was involved. And, uh, uh, but, but yeah, their sales have been fantastic. It's sort of one
of those things, like you can pick out a lot of reasons why maybe it's not a good bet. It's like,
how many people are actually going to like buy it and play the games and all these different things.
But yeah, if there's a,
if there's a case for like basically creating all these different analog
versions of, of historically significant gaming platforms,
it's probably like a hundred million dollar revenue business there to be built.
So.
Makes sense. Well, let's go to Gordon Gecko. He says,
when are they releasing Amex wrapped 1.6 K likes?
So, I mean, they basically have that already yeah i mean you
can okay so i can go into yeah i guess i can go into i've got my air one wrap yeah yeah yeah for
for the six-figure club yeah that's it's there's not many of us but um but you know you can
literally go into amex and and look at year to date or last year yes and see exactly how much
you've spent i would like more social sharing elements.
That's not the same as a wrapped.
A wrapped makes it fun.
There's music,
there's animations.
It shows you,
you know what your personality type is and it needs to break.
I want to see like you generated 20 grand in interchange fees.
Exactly.
You're like,
yes,
the shareholders.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean,
more companies should do wrapped. I, I, I would love to see Brex wrapped for, the shareholders. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, more companies should do wrapped.
I would love to see Brex wrapped for companies.
I would love to see.
You mean ramp?
Yeah, yeah.
Ramp wrapped.
That's a bad, blah.
Brex wrapped is just, you went out of business in Q2.
Ramp wrapped really doesn't roll off the tongue.
They need to come up with a different name for it.
No, it's
ramped wrapped and it's a it's a real wrapper that makes that makes like a freestyle based on
your spending that's good that's good it's like ali g style like yo you spent you spent 500k on
cloud yeah you know but even even like youtube should be doing that wrapped there's so many uh
acts should definitely be doing something like
the the i want to know what post was the biggest banger that i liked the earliest yeah you know
that's something that they could pull together well yeah and that's the thing there's so much
alpha and just taking a format that works well in another category and just recreating it in
your category in many ways we've done that with, you know, the Pat McAfee show, right?
It's like the Pat McAfee show for tech. But yeah, if you're a business and you have some type of
interesting user data, make a wrapped. It's not like it's pretty, you know, it's pretty low lift
and potentially a lot of cool attention you can bring your way. That's great. Carried No Interest
says, one of the largest aluminum processing facilities near me in the Midwest just sold to Emirates
Global Aluminum. EGA is owned by the Mubadala Investment Authority, which is a state-controlled
entity. We literally need to ban this. This cannot be allowed to happen. I'm all for free markets,
but at some point, we as a society need to conclude that our most important industrial
assets should not be foreign-owned. Would China allow this would dubai even allow that why do we it's a good question
he's so tapped into like how does he know about this aluminum processing facility it's crazy
so when i talk to carried i'm always i get sometimes like i i work on a bunch of different
deals in the last year i've done stuff in water
and defense and ai and all that stuff but um and and i'll talk to people and they'll be like how do
you work on all these like different things like they're in such different categories but i get
that exact same feeling when i talk to carried like he's just always in the same day he'll be
working on some new you, like leveraging GPT.
And in the same day,
he's buying some metal processing facilities.
So anyways, absolute capital markets Chad, absolute dog.
And yeah, I think he's been banging the drum
on American manufacturing needing to be about more
than just investing in new robotics companies and
things like that. And there needs to be more, more of the right government intervention,
which is like, Hey, let's not sell off our critical, uh, industries. And, uh, let's actually
get more, uh, government investment in, you know, manufacturing locally, um, so that we can actually
compete on a global scale with giants like China.
Yeah. And really understanding what is the market dynamic for these industrial plants.
I think there's only one tin smelting plant in the United States anymore. And I learned this with
nicotine gum manufacturing. This is not obviously as critical, but like every gum manufacturer went to Canada
and Mexico because of the sugar tariff. And so, so gum is very heavy in sugar. And so you want to
bring it in as a finished good. You don't want to bring in the sugar because that's taxed. And so
like, like all of the sugar all of the you know
chewing gum manufacturing capacity went overseas and and you could see that like
you know there needs to be review of these types of deals to understand okay
how much of our aluminum processing capacity did we actually just lose
control over if it's one percent probably fine yeah but you don't want to
boil the frog.
And so you want someone watching this
and making sure that you don't wind up
in a situation where, you know,
China controls 99% of the raw material at some point.
Let's go to Justine Moore.
She says, someone made a dating app
that uses your conversations with Claude
to make matches.
And it's called Claudette.
Share your Claude
conversation history and find your match. Interesting. I think they're going to have
the same problem that most dating apps have, which is like massive over-index on men. Yep. And, uh,
maybe, uh, is that true for replica and character? I feel like those were skewed differently than
expected. Yeah. You normally expect it's all, it's all dudes. There's a lot of men talk to their ramp SDR when they get lonely. Of course.
They don't need to. Or they just do Tegas calls. Yeah. Yeah. But I've long thought that the good
ending for all the crazy AI girlfriend, AI boyfriend stuff is it matches you with someone
else who's similar, who's also
talking to an AI girlfriend or boyfriend. And so there's a lonely person in Wichita and there's a
lonely person in Miami or something, but you guys have been talking to your AIs about the same
thing. You're clearly a match. And so the AI just says, hey, look, why don't I just match you guys
up and then move on to the next person. Or it doesn't even say anything and they just says, Hey, look, like, you know, why don't I just match you guys up and then move on to the
next person? Or it, it doesn't even say anything. And they just say, Hey, by the way, for the last
two weeks, you've been talking with the love of your life. Do you want to do a face reveal?
That's amazing. Boom. That'd be amazing. I said, somebody, somebody pitched me the other day. Um,
another concept, uh, in the, in the sort of dating app concept which was delegated swiping so imagine
like you go on and you create a profile and then you let someone else that you know swipe and like
make and talk on your behalf and that's probably been tried but i could see that hitting in the
same way that um what was that like uh social media app where you could like post once a day
or whatever like every every once in a while you can create this sort of like novel social interaction be real be real yeah like be real
like didn't really have any sort of net new functionality uh that then like instagram
besides a specific constraint and a dating app that you can't swipe on at all and like only your
friends can swipe for you or family members i I can see that hitting if you were willing to spend 10 grand a month on intro with Nikita.
Yeah, you can even, I mean, it's a real phenomenon that when there's like one single person
in a group of people that are in relationships, everyone who's in a relationship will be like,
oh, like, let me see your dating apps.
Like, let me see who we should be swiping on. So I can see that being really big. And then
there's even like a bounty for like, who's the one that swiped on the right person, you know?
Yeah. Yeah. Because it's basically like making an intro and being like, Oh, I'm the one that
matched them up. Like I'm the one that saw something in that guy's profile for my, for my
female friend that I was like, he'll be a good one for you. And she might
not have swiped on him. So I get a little bit of credit at the wedding. It's all great. Yeah. Some
people are their own worst enemy in dating. It's like they keep going back to the same toxic type
of people. And sometimes you just need your mom to swipe on your behalf. Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
Craig Weiss says, did the PayPal mafia just take over the government? Yes, Greg. Fact check. True.
Yeah.
Uh,
not much more to say about that.
There's really not much more to say.
Uh,
you know,
20 year plan executed flawlessly,
but you know what,
you know what the real story is.
The real story is that PayPal had this really weird thing where they merged the company. There was tons of infighting,
Sequoia, Peter, Elon, all like, you know, at each other's throats, well-documented,
basically breaks up the company and wind up selling it. So all those guys, they're all killers
and they all get liquidity really early. And so none of them stays like, like run the counterfactual
where Peter or Elon is running PayPal. It's a FinTech giant worth a trillion dollars, like run the counterfactual where Peter or Elon is running PayPal. It's a fintech giant
worth a trillion dollars, like no doubt. Right. And so instead, and they'd probably be just as
wealthy, but they'd be like the CEO narrow, you know, concerned about regulation, just that one
thing. Instead, it's like all these guys scatter to the wind with millions of dollars and then
they can start funds, start new companies, do do all sorts of things and they just naturally become 20 plus industries exactly and and then once you're once you're
diversified the gut adding the government on for elon is totally natural it's the highest leverage
exactly yeah and so i i think that's the real phenomenon is that elon you get to a lot of you
know newer ceos or fund managers are like well i just need to hire this pr firm and pay them 10
grand a month so they like get me in this article or get me on this list.
And you get to a scale like Teal scale or Elon scale.
And yeah, the highest and best use of your energy is making sure the government is working in your interests and towards the same goals.
So we'll see how this one plays out for him.
It's going to be a great season.
It's going to be a great season.
Max Novenstern says,
building tech for drones now
is like starting a deep learning lab 10 years ago.
Interesting.
I like that because, you know,
I wasn't sure where this was going
because there's a ton of
defense drone companies right now it's kind of overplayed oh you're building group one to three
ISR drones with mixed use so is my mom bro yeah exactly but but but you see those drone displays
it's like we still don't have an American DJI so So three years ago, people would see the Chinese, like, drone, like,
firework-style drone displays, and they'd be like, oh, look how cool this is.
Just, like, let Reddit, like, reaction.
Just, like.
Just redditing out.
Like, great Chinese drone show.
And then now people are like, fuck, fuck, fuck.
Like, they're, like, really stressed about it.
Because you see this, like, yeah, if they can make the drones turn into this, like, fuck, fuck, fuck. Like they're like really stressed about it. Cause you see this like, yeah,
if they can make the drones turn into this like massive dragon,
it's like, they'll do that on the battlefield.
Totally.
I could, that's, that's the crazy thing.
Everybody's like, oh, they're going to create these drone swarms.
But imagine you're just an infantry, you know,
person in Taiwan and this literal Chinese dragon is flying above you.
And they're all have bombs strapped to
them you're gonna be like all right like let's you know let's tap almost yeah yeah wave the white
flag yeah it's it's wild I posted that like it's it I couldn't find an example in science fiction
where um because when you see those dragon drone displays they're basically holograms like they're
3d they're they're big and they're in the sky but they're basically holograms. Like they're 3D, they're big and they're in the sky,
but they're essentially holograms
because they're rendering the pixels
through the individual drones.
And I was like, I don't,
there were plenty of sci-fi authors
who predicted holograms,
but I don't think anyone predicted
that holograms would be extremely deadly
in military technology.
Well, yeah, and the format of them.
Exactly.
Everybody was thinking they'd be projected.
Yep. Not physical. Physical, yeah. And as soon as they and the format of them. Exactly. Nobody, everybody was thinking there'd be projected. Yep.
Not,
not physical,
physical.
Yeah.
And as soon as they're physical,
it means game over death.
Insane.
Yeah.
Sagar and Jetty says,
this man did not place a single bet before 2020 by 2024.
He gambled away $1 million and left his family destitute.
Along the way,
DraftKings signed VIP hosts who spoke to him daily
and facilitated his access to more gambling products
while knowing his family status.
DraftKings was sued
after a father of two gambles away
$1 million of his family money.
Very sad story.
Very sad story.
Gambling addiction is real.
So is angel investing addiction.
It's so hard because gambling addiction is, is uncapped
downside financially. You can lose a billion dollars. You can lose a million dollars. You can
lose, if you have $10,000, you can lose it all. And there aren't that many other addictions that
have that crazy downside. I mean, of course, like the hardcore drug, it's like the same thing for
your health. Like if you're on fentanyl, it's like, yeah, like it's going to be fine, fine,
fine. And then dead. Right. And it's kind of the same thing financially. Um, but there aren't
many other, like if you're addicted to shopping or consumption, it's very hard to, it's very hard
to bottom out in that way. Um, yeah, very sad story. So that's the thing. I don't think people,
I, I, I didn't know this, these big um sports betting gambling companies they have
account managers whose entire job is to get the users to gamble more money by introducing them
to new products becoming their friend like having this dialogue and it's and it's super dark i don't
think that should be i don't think that should be allowed i think it's turning it's basically like
putting an addict in a casino and having somebody fall,
which is actually still a real thing.
It's what they do.
It originated in the casinos,
but still for some reason in person,
you're in their pocket,
they're messaging you.
But the casinos have always been constrained to,
it's just Las Vegas or just.
Now it's in your pocket everywhere somebody this
guy's at his kid's soccer game exactly his draft kings account manager is like hey did you know
you could you know hey game coming up what's your game what do you like yeah yeah very super dark
and so yeah i do think we're gonna against that yeah clearly i mean it's not going to go away but
there is a historical precedent for the government coming in you saw this with online poker there's a
lot of people who had entire careers built around gaming online that got shut down um and you know
i'm sure many people would argue oh they're never going to take this away
creates too much tax revenue the governments are incentivized to like just keep it kind of going
and now with gaming we'll we'll see what happens um the other the interesting thing in gaming right
now is there's all these new platforms that are facilitating fantasy sports and allowing you to
basically bet on fantasy this is way out of my, way out of my
wheelhouse. So I can't speak about like using these products, but I do know there's this tension
between, uh, the tribes that, that historically had a monopoly on, on gambling, being frustrated
with these new fantasy betting platforms, because it's effectively a workaround to do sports betting
without, uh, paying your tax to the tribes.
And so over the next couple election cycles, both at the state level and the national level,
I think we'll see that play out where the tribes have a big incentive
and they have big balance sheets that they can go and start lobbying the government to say,
hey, we need new regulations here.
So I think we sort of probably peak un unregulated sports betting and
gambling broadly so we'll see what happens over the next few years yeah very very odd i think one
of the big there's a couple angles like one would be like you know restrict the hours restrict
locations like gambling used to be basically geolocation locked before when it was in vegas um
now it's been unlocked and you can do it 24 7 when it wherever um the other interesting thing is that
if you are actually good at sports betting they kick you off the platform yeah because they know
they're going to lose money on you because you have an edge yeah i'm sure we i'm sure we have
some i'm sure we have some listeners that are constantly getting booted. Yeah. And so maybe that should be illegal. Like maybe it should be like,
yeah, you can, like you have to, you have to take the ACE and the, the, the, like, you know,
the power law risk on both sides, guys, if you're going to take this guy's million,
somebody is going to take that from you. No, it's interesting though. I don't know what it is. I
love, I love angel investing. I have zero interest in sports betting.
I've placed like one bet watching the Super Bowl with my buddy,
being like, if this team wins, yeah, I have zero interest in it,
and I don't understand it.
Well, it's low class and vulgar generally.
Yep.
Right.
I say in a tuxedo.
Yeah.
Real men play poker.
Baccarat, actually. Real men play poker, you know.
Baccarat, actually.
Baccarat, right.
There's crazy, by the way, there's crazy, like Dana White has gone on podcasts and talked for hours about his, like his, the way he gambles in Vegas. And he'll brag about like, I'm up like 16 million so far this year.
Like he's like, he's like, but they can't really like kick him out
because he like runs vegas in many ways yeah yeah um i saw some video about that where he's like oh
yeah like i had a rough night like i think it's baccarat that he plays because i think it i think
baccarat is a game okay uh somebody somebody will correct us if i'm wrong. But Baccarat's a game where if you are legitimately good,
you do have some mild edge over the house.
Yeah, it's a little more skill-based.
But Dana White's in there on a high after a good pay-per-view,
and he's just throwing around $5 million in a night.
That's wild.
Mark Andreessen says,
I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent,
of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered together at the white house with the possible exception
of when thomas jefferson dined alone i like that it's good estimated net worth of trump
administration's wealthiest members and it's donald trump elon musk vivek ramaswamy scott
bassant uh howard lutnick linda mcmahon mcmahon uh chris wright doug Wright, Doug Burnham, Steve Witkoff, Masad Boulos,
Steven Feinberg, tons of people.
And lots of billionaires.
Fascinating.
Bean-aires.
Bean-aires, yeah.
No, it's cool.
I mean, I'm just personally, we don't talk about politics on this podcast ever or social issues.
But I'm just really excited to see how the next four years play out.
A lot of high expectations.
Yeah, the expectations couldn't be higher.
And the Republican Party has every edge right now, right?
So if they don't perform,
then there's going to be a lot of dunking
from, from the left, you know, if they're not productive, they don't get anything done.
Um, so we'll just have to see how it plays out. Yeah. There was a reporter who was asking me like,
like, Oh, like given that Doge is going to like lay off so many people, do you think that
certain things might move slower? Um, Because that's certainly not the hope,
but like that would be kind of an unintended consequence.
And I was like, oh, it's so hard to predict that.
No, but the scale is what causes a lot of the slowdown.
The other thing, I'm going to butcher the statistic,
but it's some ungodly amount of people
in the federal government have just been working from home,
like, you know yeah indefinitely yeah and everybody that has hired a remote team in the past knows that remote
teams do not work as hard they do not work as many hours you might think that they're you know
they're available plenty of times right if you send someone a slack message they'll pop on and
they'll be like oh yeah i can jump on zoom just give me like 20 minutes and it's like why do you need 20 minutes to jump on zoom right
it's like oh they were walking their dog or they were doing all these things so that's a good point
i think that yeah yeah there's not a um i i think that the individual government organizations and
the leader of those uh groups should be able decide, are we a work from home team?
Is it a good fit for what we need to accomplish right now?
And just get more real about, about that.
It just also needs to be paired with like deregulation and changing the actual
laws. Because if there's a law that says in order to build a road,
you need a rubber stamp and they fire everyone who does the rubber stamps.
Well then it will still be illegal to build roads.
And so you have to remove the law that created the need for all that stuff. So
tricky. JD says, buy a 50 year old business from an old man without a website. They say
after signing an LOI in August, spending tens of thousands of dollars in diligence, legal fees,
calling capital from friends and family and learning more about the generator space than I knew existed. I just had a deal die on the one yard line.
Brutal, but it's probably okay. A few thoughts. Okay. So I pulled this because I had this happen
to me last year. I was working on buying a company in the UK that like my father-in-law knew the owner. So there was like some type of connection.
Worked on it for like straight for like four to five months.
Like, you know, went there, spent a lot of time with the owner.
It was a 30-year-old business and had all the capital committed,
had all the documents done.
And literally in the final week like found
one single document that that should have been like a like a non-issue that basically i won't
go into it too much um but if we had known about that document much earlier in the process it
wouldn't have been an issue but finding out about it that late and the owner basically hit it it it
blew up the deal like i just decided to away, like literally 48 hours before we were flying
to the UK to close.
And the issue there was I had spent over $100,000
on legal bills that would have been prorated
among me and the other investors in the deal.
But because we didn't close, I was stuck with the bill.
So I had to spend $100,000 for a deal
that just didn't happen.
And it was super painful. But in hindsight now, I'm fine with the bill. So I had to spend $100,000 for a deal that just didn't happen. And it was super painful.
But in hindsight now, I'm fine with it.
Maybe we wouldn't be podcasting right now if it had gone through.
Stick to angel investing.
Yeah, stick to angel investing.
Stick to the safes.
Yeah, stick to safes.
They're much easier.
No, but I brought this up because this is something that AI is actually going to solve.
Because imagine when you can take a data room and even ingest, like in my case, there was 30 years worth of physical records for the business.
And we only really had to pay attention to the last like 10 years, but it's still like a lot of
data to ingest. And so now you're going to have this AI tools that allow you to diligence deals
much, much, much faster and for much less money because you don't need all these like associates
pouring over documents and all that stuff. And so I think this is going to actually AI will speed up the velocity of deals and private equity because you're going to be able to basically you now have intelligence as a service. So a law firm, you know, with the same number of people might be able to diligence like 20 times as many deals. And so it's actually very positive because if you're an individual operator,
a PE fund,
you can go and say,
Hey,
we're actually going to get into diligence with like more companies because
right now and,
or up until this point,
you've had to been like,
you got to get really serious about the deal before you decide,
Hey,
we're going to spend,
you know,
a hundred thousand dollars on like going through this entire process.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Um, makes sense. Let's go to Bojan. He says, get in loser. We are building a full for-profit AGI and it's Sam Altman in his Koenigsegg. Fantastic photo.
Yeah. And this is, this is one of the bull cases for SF, right? Sam will not rest until you can street park a kona seg yeah um so that is uh
why sf is very undervalued right now i agree i agree um imagine i mean uh people were saying
this for it's funny how it's kind of flipped like people were saying for years like oh open ai like
chachi pt like this company is so messed up like they should just be a normal c corp and now they're
like flipping to that and everyone's like no no no don't do that like it's bad or something yeah the crazy thing is there's
this massive legal battle going on yeah and elon just continues to like shit post through it yeah
he just like everything that sam posts or somebody posts about sam he just responds with like crying
emojis it's crazy you can just do that like it's gonna be in court right like these are gonna be
in the court documents about like these people el people what did you mean when you put the crying laughing emoji
or what did you mean when you said scam it's such a mess total mess but ilan's lawyers are just like
refreshing his feed being like another 20 000 available hours another 20 000 available another
20 grand it's never felt more like being a child of divorce in tech,
just watching mom and dad fight in the,
the two most important tech people right now,
just beefing super hard.
On the timeline.
On the timeline.
I just want Sam and Elon to get back together,
merge XAI and OpenAI.
Well, the crazy thing is the dynamic is table you have xai now is like actively
trying to mog open ai i'm sure it's elsewhere in the stack but open ai was doing their little like
advent calendar type thing yep and they were like we'll be back on monday and uh one of the guys
maybe his name's greg was like i love love when they holiday chillin' and while we're grinding.
And he's like got thumbs up at the whole team.
That guy fucking rocks.
I love that guy.
He's the man.
I love that guy.
I love it.
He's like their rune, basically.
Yeah, yeah.
Everybody needs a rune.
Everyone needs a rune and just a shit post.
Bojan is basically NVIDIA's rune.
He was for a while.
I don't think he's there anymore.
I think he's just kind of independent now.
Yeah, post-economic. Do we have a promoted post? Of course we do, John. We
have a promoted post from our friends over at Gulfstream Aerospace. They say unlock new adventures.
When you board a Gulfstream, the world becomes a smaller place. And I just got to say, they have
this incredible picture of a beautiful, it looks like a 650, landed in Antarctica.
Wow.
And if you didn't know, you could land your Gulfstream there.
Now you do.
So go commission a plane.
Talk, if you need an intro to a Gulfstream rep, just DM us and we'll be happy to set
that up.
But if you already have one, tell them you heard about Gulfstream
on Technology Brothers podcast.
That really, that is just such a great
like marketing copy segment.
The world becomes a smaller place.
A smaller place.
Yeah.
And that's what travel
and being able to just hop on a plane in a moment
and be somewhere else.
I had to go to, I went to SF yesterday
for six hours. Yeah hours and I was like,
Oh, it would have been nice to bring my family and whatever.
And it's just the hassle of all that. So yeah, that's what,
that's what Gulfstream is all about.
Shrinking the world and everybody can learn a little bit about their
marketing and they clearly know how to use X.
A lot of the promoted posts we
feature, they add links to their posts. Gulfstream does not. So savvy in more ways than one.
Totally. You know, there's this saying in AI when some new model drops, this is the worst it'll ever
be. I want Gulfstream to start posting, this is the slowest the planes will ever be. This is the
slowest the planes will ever be. We're going supersonic.
We're going hypersonic. In the world of hypercars and supercars,
we're always talking about horsepower
and this can go faster.
Let's make the world a smaller place
by making the planes just twice as fast.
Just twice as fast.
It doesn't need to be an order of magnitude faster,
but if you could just get,
if I could get to Dubai twice as fast,
I'd pay a lot for that.
There are companies working on that.
Boom and Hermes are both working on supersonic planes right now. Still a couple of years out, unfortunately,
but hopefully soon. Let's go to Sarah. She says, okay, so Anduril partnered with OpenAI
and Palantir partnered with ScaleAI who built Defense Llama, your favorite, on top of Meta's
open source LLM. But Anduril and Palantir also have a partnership
and I'm pretty sure Peter Thiel has invested in all of them.
And it's a photo of the red string conspiracy theorist
from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Yeah, partnerships.
We talked about partnerships on a previous show.
They're the hot ticket of the day.
Everyone has a partnership.
I just want to, I would love to be a fly on the wall of the ticket of the day. Everyone has a partnership.
I just want to,
I would love to be a fly on the wall of the room in the Pentagon.
And they're like,
so you're telling me
we're using a llama
for our AI?
You know how llama made this?
Yeah.
Every other like defense tech word
is always a tomahawk missile.
You know,
it's always reallyantir yeah it's
always really aggressive uh defense llama maybe breaking that a little bit yeah they need the
llama emoji yeah in all the docs the tomcat like you know all these different uh the warthog all
these different uh defense tech terms but yeah scale ai really really went crazy with that one but i guess
they needed to throw llama in there since it's like meta's product and it came from llm
but yeah yeah meta being a social media company calling their product llama yeah makes more sense
um i'm not sure how that's going to do in the in the dod so what do you think if you are a Series A, Series B stage defense tech company and you don't have a major AI partnership lined up?
It feels like there's a little bit of alpha in just doing a partnership with OpenAI, getting a press release out of it, getting a Wall Street Journal article out of it, maybe get on TV.
Somebody's just just general awareness.
Is it played out or is it still worth doing?
I don't think it's played out.
We may have already peaked
with this sort of AI hype cycle, right?
Like, we don't know this, right?
I'm not going to make a call here or there.
Palantir is being valued at what?
150, something like that.
I thought it was closer to 200.
200 times. A lot, 200 times earnings. Um, Oh, I was thinking billion. I think it's 150 billion.
Oh yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But it's the biggest defense. Yeah. Yeah. So, so there, there's a lot of,
there's a lot of top signals. So we've talked about this before. The smartest thing you can do
at this point in the cycle is just tweet top every single day so that you can quote tweet it and then be the next,
next Michael Burry.
But I don't,
I mean,
I don't,
AI is still in many ways underhyped,
right?
We've talked about this,
like even,
even if there's this,
you know,
even if we're in a bubble,
the tech underlying technology can be underhyped.
It's like I had Thanksgiving,
people weren't talking about it that much you know
i talked about it with like a handful of people there yep um but uh you know i was talking to a
guy who who um over the thanksgiving holiday who like works in film and tv and he wasn't talking
about it and i was like you're fucked um but uh but you know if you're in the entertainment industry and you're not thinking and it's not
top of mind,
you're probably going to get smoked.
Yeah.
The phrase is overhyped in the short term,
underhyped in the longterm.
That's kind of like the,
the popular meme.
Yeah.
And it's real.
So yeah,
yeah.
So,
but yeah,
there's no,
we talk to companies about this all the time.
There's,
there's,
if you can launch a partnership as in become a customer of open ai and make a press moment out of it do it there's not a lot of
downside and there's like tons of potential yeah yeah even if it just means getting like somewhat
preferential pricing on the api like that's better than paying full price yeah get a partnership by
the way we're buying open ai credits uh our post earlier was not a joke. Hit us up. Hit us up.
I don't know if you can buy them.
Well, I mean, it's a gray market.
It's a little gray, but we're buying.
You can't get deplatformed from the RSS feed.
That's great.
Let's go to Nicole Wiscoff.
She says, sad to report that there's a strong correlation between how insufferable your SDRs are and your company's success.
Shout out to Ramp, Sidecar, and PitchBook.
The best salespeople I know are the most annoying.
True.
And it's really unfortunate because you're like, wow, this super annoying person that I knew is crushing it. Yeah. And it shouldn't, you, every, it goes against every fiber of your being.
Yeah.
To think that this really annoying person is so good at their job.
But if you're annoying.
Yep.
Go become an SDR.
And you're absolutely going to clean house.
It's not just annoying.
It's like,
no,
no,
no.
It's like relentless.
Persistent.
No,
but,
but there's,
yeah,
there's a lot of instances when I have to tell an SDR,
stop it.
Yeah. I don't want to, you know, I don't believe in blocking a salesperson or just reporting it as spam.
Totally.
They're just doing their job.
Yeah.
But until you're getting people to say, either get on a call with you or engage with your product or saying, please stop emailing me, you're not doing your job as a sales rep.
Yeah. saying like please stop emailing me you're not doing your job as like as a sales rep yeah i mean
i remember like i was close with the ramp founders and wanted to onboard and it still took a persistent
sales rep to actually be at the top of my email regularly for me to do the internal tasks just to
make it happen like it wasn't just me saying like i'm in there was a whole bunch of things that
needed to happen mechanically and that's what the sdr actually makes happen is like go internally actually consolidate actually set up
all the admin accounts and stuff like it takes some time to onboard a company onto a complex
piece of software so it is interesting that right right now i'm sure nicole is getting inundated
with pitches yeah uh but right now it does feel like if i if a founder engages with
a post of mine on x or through the tb account yeah half the time they're running like we
automate your outbound sales motion or whatever and i'm just like oh there's more of these
companies than there are current good sales reps good sales reps in the Valley, but maybe that's bullish. You know, who knows? Who knows? Uh,
let's stay with Nicole.
She says 48 hours in SF,
absolutely electric this week.
Felt like one massive college campus with your besties everywhere.
A few takeaways.
YC demo day was impressive.
It was impressive.
Tons of Bitcoin hit a hundred K.
I am an idiot.
Uh,
Menlo park is very far from San Francisco.
Zero negative sentiment on the market
tech bros pod came up at dinner let's go congrats you guys made it thank you dying to know in what
uh in what context to all the technology brothers though because this is a this is a movement
um yeah nicole let us know what they said. We love feedback here. At least one GP at every firm.
Nicole did say, she did comment and say we need to add subtitles to X, but X has native subtitles
that are better than what we would add. So if you don't have subtitles turned on, go turn them on.
At least one GP at every firm you have ever heard of is leaving to raise their own fund.
Not true. Brian Singerman is not raising his own fund.
Still not convinced that big endowments invest in emerging managers.
Blue Bottle is terrible.
I've had Blue Bottle like a few times.
I'm not a big coffee snob, so I don't know.
Yeah, I feel like I've talked about this on the show before.
The Gen Z and millennial generations are so entitled when it comes to coffee.
Yeah.
Like our parents were like, if it's brown and hot, it's good.
Sounds good.
You know, it's good for me.
But coffee prices have inflated along with everything else so much
that when you're paying $7 for a cup of coffee, you want it to really hit.
But yeah.
Gigaslop. You don't want gigaslop yeah so blue bottle is owned by nestle oh yeah
they sold which is the number one gigaslop food company in the world and so yeah don't expect to
get a good cup of coffee at blue bottle that being said uh it's better than starbucks and
blue bottle bought my buddy's company and he levered that up into creating multiple successful restaurants when they sold the Nestle. So thank you to Blue Bottle for buying
my absolute boy's company. If you're thinking about taking a meeting at Blue Bottle, why not
take it at the San Francisco Philharmonic instead? Yep. Just as good. Yep. And you get to enjoy.
Next time you go to Blue Bottle, wear a suit and you might get better coffee and better service.
I think so.
I actually would guarantee it.
Let's go to Yoni Richtman.
He says, we're at the start of a new private equity X venture capital super cycle.
Whether it's PE funds buying venture-backed companies, venture funds launching PE strategies or startups using PE-like approaches to buy their customers, something big is going on.
He highlights four separate but related things.
Category maturity, limits on organic growth,
asset class maturity, and entrepreneurial culture.
And so you told him that he needed to coin this,
but I already had, it's Coogan's Giga Cycle.
Yeah.
So sorry.
Sorry, Yoni.
Everyone's going to refer to this as Coogan's Giga Cycle
from now on
didn't even read the post this is the first time i read the post this is yeah of course the guy who
coined the coinage yes is front running anybody who's not yet coined something that should be
should be my whole thing every time someone posts something like this i just need to be like i call
this coogan's blank blank blank yeah so so the funny thing is is i guess a few things so right now
we're looking at wow there's this massive convergence between private equity and venture
capital yeah but venture capital is private it is it's legally the same thing legally the same thing
so pe is converging with pe which i love because of two you know you know private equity is
fantastic culturally very different yeah culturally different um but
yeah we're at this interesting time in the last like six months we've seen venture-funded pool
service clean uh roll up we've seen venture-funded auto body shop roll-ups we've seen venture-funded
uh accounting cpa roll-ups i want to do a car wash we've seen so so yoni uh and slow's big
bet was metropolis okay what's that which raised which which was a sas company for parking garages
and they sort of realized that they they realized that there was sort of like a terminal sort of
value for their business and they were like why don't we just become an operator yep so they
bought um they bought one of the largest whatever parking garage operating
companies. And that was a way for them to really capture all the value of the software they were
building. So I love it. I mean, I love financial instruments. I love private equity. I love LPs.
I love IRR. And so everybody likes to say, oh, we're late stage capitalism.
My point has always been,
no, we're just getting started.
I love it.
I love it.
Yeah, I want to do something in car washes because I think,
especially as the cars start driving themselves,
they're still going to need to be washed and cleaned
and if you can just have a network
by all of the different car washes.
Here's the thing though.
Yeah, tell me.
Car washes are so bad for your car.
Really?
If you're actually driving cars that are,
you know,
maintained there,
you know,
if you're driving a model three and it's going to lose half its value.
But that is a self-driving car,
right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm just saying,
I never,
I haven't used this.
What do you do?
I have a detailer.
Okay.
He's,
he's,
that can be rolled up as well.
We'll put that.
Yeah.
But it's more of like a barber
like it's like yes you could roll up barber shops but it just becomes super cuts sure like it's an
art like my like so my detailer i've taken my car's been like serviced and you know they'll
like clean your car and it comes back and he's like dude like what did you do like you just
undid like he's like you undid like a year's worth of work on your paint wow and so now i i had to service one of
my cars today and he gave me this little uh hotel like door hanger thing to put in there that says
do not wash wow because he's like i'm the only one that should touch this like this is like a
multi you know year process so anyways. Let's go to William.
He says, tech debt deflation is here.
O1 Pro just solved an incredibly complicated,
painful rewrite of a file
that no other model has ever gotten close to.
I've been using this as an eval
for different frontier models
and this marks a huge shift for me.
We've entered the why fix your code today
when better model will do it tomorrow regime.
Interesting.
I didn't realize that O1 Pro was so leaps and bounds ahead of Claude in terms of programming.
I wonder if this guy's just shilling or something.
So I think it's funny.
I thought the cursor and some of the other models were just as good.
So it's funny to think about.
So software engineers tend to be extremely online.
But there's a handful that just do it like just a job.
Sure.
And maybe they have a GitHub, but they're not on X or Reddit or LinkedIn.
And so there's undoubtedly hundreds of thousands of software engineers out there that don't know about the new AI tools.
Oh, yeah.
And they're just coding away.
And they're like, you know, maybe they have like a little SaaS company that's doing well.
And they're just like, yeah, like I love my work. And, you know maybe they have like a little SAS company that's doing well and they're just like yeah like I love my I love my work and
you know I love the art and crafts and just get steamrolled by like some
seventeen-year-old that's like just leveraging all the models like just
cracked out on them so have you seen how open AI is integrating with all the
different code editors yeah yeah genius They use the accessibility features on the Mac app
so that they don't need VS codes
or text edits permission
to go in there and rewrite the code.
They just are able to read everything out,
rewrite it,
and just act as a AI assistant in there.
Yeah, that's the wild thing right now.
So there's all these AI agent companies,
like there's hundreds these ai agent companies like
there's hundreds or thousands of like venture-backed yeah maybe not thousands but there's
hundreds of venture-backed companies that are building consumer agents and none like very few
of them i don't really use any of i don't use any of them right now um and uh but you know d you
know dau of a lot of the different models yeah
and that's like the wild thing is all of that agentic activity that people have been betting on
is happening with chad gpt with claude yeah um and so we'll see how we'll see how all this uh
plays out but um yeah i would love to if you're building an ai
agent that that actually works and it's good dm us yeah we'll give it a shot let's go to clone
clone robotics says torso 2 with an actuated abdomen looking free okay so this this video
yeah is almost sickening to watch it feels like westworld totally um the aesthetics basically so what they
did yeah they obviously are inspired but what they did is they they have this new motion i think it's
in the vertebrae and like the the um just the way the abdomen moves and most humanoid robots are very
sort of straight up and down stiff they very much have that look and feel of a robot go watch i mean we'll quote
read this go watch this video it's pretty it's honestly feels like very wrong to look at um and
um i just think that i think uh i think the i weirdly think the firearms industry is going to
benefit a lot from the robotics movement because in a world where humanoid robots walk the
earth and if you uh are a criminal and you you can now from the comfort of your own home use
humanoid robots to commit crimes everybody is going to be just like freaked out right because
it's like well yeah maybe you have your uh i i'd be interested to see if anybody's building at the
intersection of like ring and humanoid robots right so imagine in in the future you have your, uh, I I'd be interested to see if anybody's building at the intersection of
like ring and humanoid robots. Right. So imagine in the future, you have a humanoid robot standing
in your backyard, 24 seven bodyguard. Um, so bodyguard.ai, if you haven't bought that domain,
go buy it, sit on it. Some venture backed company will buy it from you for $200,000 when the time is right.
Oh, this is great.
So, Druva Rajendra says, we need to triple Space Force's budget because Delta says, never deleting this app.
We have Taliban space posting.
And it's a screenshot of someone from the Taliban I guess advocating for taking the moon
or maybe Mars it's hard to tell here this photo is very AI generated but
wild the the moon should be a state campaign that Mike Solano launched has apparently reached the
Middle East and they're trying to get there yeah everybody wants to take the moon it's like the ultimate pot
you know prize yeah in the sky yeah why not um and uh imagine doing imagine you know using a drone
swarm to project the american flag like across hundreds of miles from the moon it's just like
uh there's probably some gravity issues up there but um no i also saw that the taliban have been trading meme coins
really there's a guy no way filming a video with with like at some dinner with the taliban because
they're kind of in control over there at the moment and yeah they're they're trading so
if you're trading meme coins you might be trading against the taliban so it's crazy they're still in
business like because isis came up and they're like all these
different splinter organizations rival gangs taliban's kind of lindy at this point
hanging on to it maybe yeah who knows going strong uh i don't know we should do a deep dive on
the various business lines of the taliban i know they were big and poppy yeah heroin trade yep kidnapping ransoming
but yeah i wonder what their actual expanded most profitable year was well now it's taxation
probably you think so because they just run all of afghanistan yeah so they're just a good business
model yeah i guess that makes sense give us violence give us all your you know half your money or we'll kill you yeah wild uh steph says
met a founder who hand writes all of his own business cards and i kind of love it pretty
yeah this is like you you have your calligrapher that yeah you will write anything for you yeah
and they're on call 24 7 exactly um no i do think it's a good way to stand out. Uh, business cards are, it's funny cause
the iPhone rolled out the feature of tapping and it feels so just like, you know, it's
somewhat useful, but I've also found that it's functionally has some, uh, functionally has like
a bunch of issues where it'll like add the contact, but then it'll, you don't know if you forget their
name and you can't find them again.
So it's like a bunch of issues.
I was at a conference
and someone actually recommended an app.
It's like a couple bucks.
I think it's just called Recents.
And you download this app
and it just sorts your contact list
by when they were added.
So you can go around tapping
and then at the end of the conference,
you can pull up this app and see.
An app that should be a feature.
I know, it should just be a feature. but apple is too focused on just destroying the photos app
hey here's an app you use all day long we're gonna completely redesign it and just botch it
and really bad like i had something earlier where i was trying to send something to senra yeah i
think you were trying to send him the same thing yeah and i i could not it's so hard to find
that the the thing that i wanted to send even though i knew that i had it in my app yeah yeah
the last you really have to sort and favorite things and then find the favorites which are now
buried it's a mess it's a mess i mean yeah the uh yeah it's all all getting worse.
Let's go to Mike Solana.
This is a follow-up to the CEO shooting, really dark story.
Mike says, highly intelligent and accomplished, attractive, nothing but opportunity, goes missing over the summer.
Friends begin looking for him, reaching out to him over social.
Either this isn't the guy or he's about the age and this was and he was into psychedelics schizophrenia and yeah i i remember seeing like the just like the the video shows someone who's
very agentic very calculating very thoughtful and there was always this weird
he's locked in who is this person yeah and and couldn't they have done something better with their life?
Basically.
Like they must've had their brain broken at some point.
If this is the guy,
I mean,
we don't know at this point,
so.
So this isn't a murder mystery podcast.
We're going to talk about this for three minutes and move on.
But yeah,
one thing that I saw was interesting.
He was a software engineer,
comp sci major,
went to an Ivy league,
apparently went to Penn, Penn, or no,
apparently went to some, even went to like, you know, was private school, like affluent.
There's pictures of him traveling all over the world. There's pictures of his friends tweeting
at him, trying to get him to respond. He'd been over the summer, allegedly at some point,
was just gone dark. And one thing that was interesting is he,
um,
besides the people that he was following,
which I'm sure a lot of the people on this show follow,
I guess Lindy man,
maybe,
uh,
wait,
but why all these sort of,
um,
he was a polite guy.
Um,
Chris Williamson.
Yeah.
But,
uh,
he apparently would defend marijuana and psilocybin and various psychedelics like very intensely.
And we've talked a lot about how there's huge, huge, huge downsides to those substances.
And there's too much in Silicon Valley, like at least when I was in college, Tim Ferriss would be promoting like various psychedelics on his show to the super wide audience. And these are really, really intense, uh, drugs and men, you know,
certain men are just prone to, uh, schizophrenia and, uh, marijuana, cannabis can induce that.
Um, I believe it's that, um, I don't know if psilocybin can, but Peruvian ayahuasca or whatever definitely can.
So anyway, it's very, very dark.
And yeah, I'm not sure it's worth speculating,
but it definitely came out of left field that he was an online,
probably center-right software engineer doing this.
And it really doesn't make sense,
but I think that's all we really need to say.
Well, I'm sure we'll learn more in the near future.
Let's take a palate cleanser with a great post by Sean Frank.
He says, most twisted thing about me, I really love ads.
I like making them.
I like watching them.
I like the industry.
I like that they pay for content for all of us.
Ads are good, and I love ads.
There we go.
Let's hear it, Sean.
This is fantastic.
I almost, I had this sort of intrusive thought
to lunge for the size gong.
Oh yeah.
Because Ridge, I mean, so Ridge basically,
Ridge is a wallet company fundamentally,
but they're the backbone of the creator economy.
If you're a guy online and you make
content that guys watch ridge is there ridge will be there for you it's like ubi for people that
make gaming content uh when i when i helped out with ridge back in the day you know there was um
you know if you had like an nba highlight reel and you had no advertisers like ridge would be
there and be like we'll give you a dollar cPM if you just like put like Ridge in the corner.
And that strategy has worked out very well for them.
They do significantly more revenue than most Series C startups.
That's true.
And infinite more EBITDA.
Well, on that note, let's go to a promoted post.
We got to run ads.
There we go.
We got to live the brand. If you can see behind my glass of champagne, we have a post from DuPont Registry,
and they are showing off a 2015 McLaren P1 with an asking price of $2.1 million. Holy Trinity car.
Holy Trinity car. It's painted in MSO Kilo Gray with McLaren orange accents.
This specification is subtle yet stunning.
The full carbon interior and carbon bucket racing seats with orange contrast stitching
emphasize the Spartan cockpit that is solely focused on performance.
And I got to say, John, I got a soft spot for carbon bucket seats.
I love sitting in them.
They're not objectively the most comfortable,
but I certainly feel at home in them.
So if you're in the market for a P1,
this is a fantastic spec.
People always talk trash about McLaren.
Oh, it's just some tech guy
who just made his money yesterday.
But you go with a P1, you go with an F1,
you go with a P1 GTR, people know.
People in the car world know.
Yeah, it's going to cost you a little bit more,
but you get a lot more.
You get a lot more.
And so it's so worth it.
So head to your McLaren dealer, head to DuPont Registry,
tell them the Technology Brothers sent you.
Let's stay on the Ridge team.
Connor McDonald says,
no more noble endeavor than being an advertiser hey
when you follow these guys work together or something uh yeah and and that's i mean so let's
face it uh there's a lot of advertising that is solely oriented around driving very specific
results yep and then there's a ton of advertising that's literally like, I just like
what these people are doing. I'm going to support them and maybe I'll make my money back or whatever.
Like we're, we're, we're, you know, pursuing some opportunities in horse racing, right? Um, it's
not, it's not necessarily to drive new listenership to technology brothers, but you know, we, we, we
have an appreciation for the endeavor and the jockeys and the trainers, and we just want to support that, right?
Yeah, that's great.
And if you're an advertiser, take 5% of your budget and spend it with groups that maybe don't have a direct ROI but can give back to the world and entertain you and your team in some way. Actually, one of my former engineers, our CTO at my last company,
he's very into car racing on the amateur circuit,
and so I sponsored him.
It wasn't a ton of money, but I was like,
well, if you put five of my portfolio companies on as stickers,
I'll give you money for the race.
I probably paid for a set of tires or something.
But that's my word of advice. You can paid for like a set of tires or something.
But that's my word of advice.
You can just sponsor things.
You can just do things.
You can just build things and you can just sponsor things.
So go sponsor.
That's your homework for today.
Go sponsor something.
Go sponsor something.
Tyler says, the classman's creed. If you possess true taste, you bear a sacred duty to amass wealth,
not for vanity, but to lift the
world's standard and drape it in elegance. I love that. Beautiful. I think he was inspired by
something I said about the importance of spending money well. There are so many people in Silicon
Valley that have inordinate wealth and spend it so poorly. Yep. And I like that Tyler has trademarked it,
the Classman's Creed.
The Classman's Creed.
Might need a little work on that.
We could tighten that up.
It could be one word.
It could be two words.
But, you know, you're getting there, Tyler.
You could drop the creed.
I see what you're doing there.
You could drop the creed and just make it an archetype.
The Classman.
The Classman does something like this.
Somebody who constantly seeks to beautify the world
that they exist in.
Yes, yes.
I saw Elon actually commissioned a huge statue.
I saw this, the fork in the road.
The fork in the road.
That was beautiful.
I think it was placed at one of BlackRock's properties,
BlackRock City.
Yeah, BlackRock City.
So I was surprised to see Elon and BlackRock collaborating,
but they're a big
asset manager. He's got a bunch of investable assets, so it kind of makes sense. I love it.
Rick Zulo says, a lot of talk on Twitter about VCs hitting it big on meme coins. Undoubtedly,
there are going to be some eye-popping IRRs there, but IMHO, these are a huge distraction.
These are not the type of investments LPs are paying us to make. And I don't
see the returns from these two being sustainable. If you do make that your full time job, to me,
it appears like resulting above all else. Is this a moment in time to make an insane quick buck?
Perhaps. Is that short sighted? In my honest opinion, definitely. What do you think? Can you
build a VC firm around trading meme coins? Well, so there's some like basically LP agreements that allow venture funds to put some percentage of their fund into highly liquid alternative assets.
It's usually about 20% can go into secondary sales.
So for the really big scaled companies, you might only be able to get allocation into secondary and then alternative asset classes like Bitcoin,
crypto, meme coins and stuff.
So this is something that has been driving
the conversion to RIAs.
Because once you're an RIA,
you can invest in public companies,
you can invest in secondary, you can invest in anything.
But it comes with incredible compliance requirements and so it's been very
complex yeah but uh at hereticon i was talking with uh a buddy of mine and he was saying
everybody for the last couple years has obviously been you know kind of dunking on crypto vcs and
not taking them super seriously but But historically, the average crypto fund
has outperformed the average venture fund.
Or basically, no, the average crypto fund
has outperformed like the top 20% venture fund.
So the returns, because the asset class is so liquid
and the timelines are so shortened,
the returns are phenomenal.
And I do think it's kind of a sign of the times And the timelines are so shortened. The returns are phenomenal.
And I do think it's kind of a sign of the times that non-crypto VCs are saying, well, I'm going to take the 20% of my fund and just start YOLOing it.
But yeah, I know some very respectablebillion dollar AUM digital asset fund who has 3x their 2021 fund just on Ethereum alone.
And so I do think it'll be sort of the irony of the traditional venture capital firms that were sort of dunking on the crypto VC funds.
Crypto VC funds generate all these crazy returns and then the traditional venture funds come in
and basically bag hold for all the crypto VCs
and then the crypto VCs will buy at the bottom again.
I mean, a friend who was a partner at a VC firm
came in kind of at the bottom of the market
and was like Solana, baby.
Solana.
Solana.
Didn't make any VC investments.
He bought the right coin.
PA is on fire.
Yeah.
Let's go to Bryce Roberts.
He says, another show I'd love to see us make,
Founders for Sci-Fi.
So he's talking about David Senra's show.
Read and dissect sci-fi novels and tie them to the present or near future world
of what we're seeing in tech.
I think that's really, really cool.
A lot of the sci-fi novels,
it's hard to dig through them.
It's hard to have a guide for what's good to read.
A podcast that puts it in a consistent voice.
And historical context.
Totally, totally.
Like when this was written,
the iPhone didn't't exist so when you
hear them talking about the magical info tablet you should be amazed yeah yeah that is the ipad
yeah that is the ipad exactly no so so here's the thing people don't understand this about
podcasting and and we're obviously influenced by david senra he's sort of the the godfather
he's the godfather of business podcasting.
But he's also, in many ways, the godfather of this podcast.
He encouraged us to take it as seriously as we take it now.
And so he talks about this a lot.
But people don't realize if you just want to make $5 million a year,
having the Founders Podcast for SyFy very potentially a very efficient way to do that
you can have no team yep just you a microphone a computer you can make five million dollars a year
basically mba money yep uh from recording a show in the comfort of your own home and just nerding
out about sci-fi and to fucking love sci-fi you gotta love sci-fi you gotta be willing to grind
you have to be willing to do what senra did which is like grind in relative obscurity for years yep and until now he has you know one of the top
business podcasts in the world but he had to go through like three or four years of being
completely unknown but set a cadence don't just be like i'll do it when i read a book no yeah
yeah you're not gonna if you come into it being like i'm'm going to do this as a side hustle, it's like great things have come from side hustles,
but side hustles don't become great things.
Yes, that's great.
That's a great way to put it.
Let's go to Baldo, our reigning reply guy of the month.
He says, to be honest, I don't care about winning back-to-back months,
but I'll run over anyone who thinks they're in the race.
Let's go, Baldo.
This type of mentality. Winner mentality winner mentality, winner mentality, grinder mentality. So Baldo
less than two weeks ago, relatively unknown Cornell student starts aggressively replying
to our posts. And last time I checked, he was followed by Mark andreessen turner novak yoni it's slow yep so many major
fund managers i wouldn't be surprised if this guy drops out and you know raises a five million
dollar mango seed round mango seed round baldos baldos got a mango seed round written all over
mango was such a funny term 10 years ago
mango i think andreessen coined that right or someone at andreason
maybe it's chris dixon wrote that but yeah the mango seed round for anything over like two million
and there was a big question about like oh is it is it dangerous because like you have too much
money and the valuation is too high for the seed now it's like if you're not doing a mango seed
round you're not in the game yeah Yeah, yeah. It's amazing.
Let's go to Morgan Barrett.
He's been on the show before.
He says, me, I'm almost to 5 million impressions.
My much more Twitter famous friend, you can't do anything with 5 million impressions.
Five is a nightmare.
You can't retire, but it's not worth it to work.
Five will drive you.
Un poco loco, my fine feather friend. The poorest content creator in america the world's tallest dwarf the weakest strongman at the circus this is so funny i didn't
realize i didn't read this for some reason until we got on the show this is fucking hilarious i i
had lunch with morgan uh the other week here and uh he's a great dude but man is he a great poster
this is a yeah yeah it won't be at
five million it won't be at five million for long no so so so for anybody that doesn't get the
reference this is referring to to like the five million dollar net worth mark where you're trapped
you're is your trap like you're technically rich but like you can't really do things that
you know you can't retire really it goes so hard
i will drive you un poco loco my feather loco i don't even get what that reference is from but
is that like breaking bad or something i don't know well you understand what it means yeah of
course of course but you're passing your glass in california you got to know what poco loco means
oh wow you really finished the Dom Perignon.
We're going to need to start.
At what point do we move up to two bottles?
Well, the thing is that wine comes in different sizes.
We're drinking the standard, which is 750 milliliters.
Then there's the Magnum, which is 1.5 liters.
But it goes up three liters, four a half six nine twelve fifteen eighteen and they
have really cool names as big as the flagpole yeah yeah the nebuchadnezzar the jeroboam the
methuselah and so what we'll do is we'll have the pourer you would need a device because it's so
heavy and it tilts over and it pours your glass. But what I was thinking is that reasonably, we probably can't put down 18 liters of champagne in one episode. So live show, as we start doubling bigger and
bigger, we do a live show. And there's a gerobum that is shared amongst the guests of the live
show. That's great. I think that will work. That's great. Let's move on to Bryce. Pound for pound,
midweek laps at Deer Valley is the best networking in Utah.
I love this.
Bryce is a humble guy, but he's been very successful.
He's also jacked.
I saw before and after.
Yeah.
Love it.
Bryce, we want to see the beard back.
You looked great with a beard.
Did you see that?
Oh, I shaved it?
Oh, yeah.
I saw the old beard photo.
It looks great.
He just looked like an absolute dog.
He needs some shirtless photos. yeah he had like he just looked like an absolute dog yeah um but he's saying he's saying what a
lot of he's saying what a lot of capital allocators won't admit which is that midweek
laps at your local you know ski resort are a great way to meet yeah lps other investors some some
some later stage founders maybe everyone makes fun of vcs for like oh they're spending all their
time at amangiri they're spending all their time in Almangeary. They're spending all their time in the, in the Alps. It's like,
where do you think,
where do you think the founders are of these multi-billion dollar companies
that need to raise $2 billion for their next series F?
Yeah.
They're not all I want to see a blue bottle.
Yeah.
They're hanging out at Almangeary.
Yeah.
So that's where you go.
You go where the money is.
So you smell the money.
Yeah.
Smell it.
Chase it down.
That's the, yeah. The only thing I want to see from Bryce is, you know, he's got his it. Chase it down. That's the business.
Yeah. The only thing I want to see from Bryce is, you know, he's got his thing with NDVC.
It's, it's, it's, uh, you know, uh, perfectly sized seed fund. You know, I think it's like
$50 million. He can do a lot with that, but I'd like to see him go into the, I'd like to see him
raise like a $5 billion fund. Right. I want to see him, you know, that, that picture of him in the
gym made me think this guy can handle, he can, can trust him with two billion i think so i think so
hopefully soon uh let's go to kushi she says uh wait wait we we cannot we can't skip over this
post no we can't skip over this uh bryce posted about doing a technology brothers stay tuned
everyone live event yes at deer. That'd be fantastic.
And the president of Deer Valley replied to him and said,
let's make it happen.
So Bryce has been working on it.
I actually talked with him about this last week.
Yeah, we'll figure something out.
And yeah, let's make it happen.
Yeah, if you made it this far in the show, you can hit us up uh kushi says uh coolest boss award goes to kevin hearts for
for being not only a co-founder gp of a star vc but also co-founder of the coolest stealth startup
in the game sauron which is their home defense company and roll for your home palantir and
hopefully i i don't i don't know a ton about the company.
I've met Kevin before.
Very, very smart guy.
Looks great in a suit.
I actually pulled this out because he was wearing a suit.
Looks fantastic.
We need to see more early stage founders wearing suits.
Maybe they can put on a tux, though.
Yeah, yeah.
Class it up a little bit.
Class it up a little bit.
Come on, Kevin.
I mean, you're a general partner at A-Star.
Come on.
You can do a little bit better.ast it up a little bit. Come on, Kevin. I mean, you're a general partner at A-Star. Come on. Yeah. You can do a little bit better.
But yeah, the only thing, request for feature, Kevin.
Build humanoid robot bodyguards that I can put in my backyard and on my roof that can
just sort of pace on my roof.
And that's a feature I'd happily pay for.
Oh, here it is.
Elon Musk says, two years ago, I commissioned an
art piece, a fork in the road had to make sure that civilization took the past, the path most
likely to pass the Fermi great filters. What a great metaphor. It's so funny. Cause it's like,
it has a little bit of that Elon like meme, like, Oh, it's just a fork in the ground,
but it has this much deeper meaning about the
great filter i i love that i'm bullish on us passing the great filter i think we can do it
we're gonna do it we're gonna do it chat i i'm a big george hotz believer i think it's wireheading
i think the risk is we all go into vr and we never explore the stars because we have this unending
pleasure dome this wire wire heading future.
That's the world that I'm most worried about.
Not nuclear war,
not the world that I'm not killing us.
No,
the world I'm more worried about is we get so lost in a stack of posts that
you and I never,
if somebody just kept bringing Dom out,
we'd probably just stop podcasting.
Yeah.
I mean,
it is crazy.
The scale of what it takes to pass the great filter
in the sense that like getting to Mars
and actually building a society on Mars
is, you know, such a stretch
even for Elon's lifetime.
Like it is a life's work and a half
and times 10.
Well, that's why he has 20 children.
Yeah.
Even,
even just like the transfer window,
like you can't go to,
you can go to the moon whenever you want.
You can't go to Mars whenever you want there.
The transfer window only happens every 18 months or something or every few
years.
Um,
and then when you think about the next planet,
it's like 30 years,
50 years,
hundreds of years.
And it's just like a completely different game,
like self-sustaining ecosystems.
That's why Bezos has his crazy clock.
It's great though.
Like we need people thinking about this,
especially if they're wealthy and powerful,
inspiring the next generation.
I love it.
I'm really happy he made this.
Let's go to Flo.
Flo says,
I don't know if people realize how literally I meant it
when I say that AI agents are going to
turn building a business into playing a game of Factorio. And he posts a screenshot of his, uh,
his AI agent workflow. Yeah. So, uh, he's been, he's been building this company for a while. It's
very cool. It's think of it as like AI agents meets like zapier so you can set up all these different like more complicated um automations and i just pulled this because i
thought that uh that that graphic that he showed of like being able to look at a lot of a lot of
you know you know if you're running a company you'll look at your head count and you'll see
like you know roughly um or or or just like a a map of your team and understand like, all right,
where are we really allocating resources
and time and energy?
And he's looking at this sort of diagram of agents
that are all sort of humming in the background.
And he's, yeah, in theory,
he's building Factorio for your business
where you basically just get to create
and manage this army of agents.
So yeah, I got gotta put it to work
because we have a bunch of things that could be work flowed out with ai agents but totally um i
haven't really sat down and actually used i think it's called lindy yeah right lindy great great
name promoted post very lindy name promoted post uh you know what time it is it is holiday season
and tiffany and co is is at your service.
They say, featuring a diamond of over 12 carats,
our holiday window display at the landmark
invite passerby to view
the world's most iconic engagement ring,
the Tiffany setting up close.
And I just got to say,
what an iconic engagement ring.
If you are eager to propose, it's hard to recommend anything else besides this.
I mean, this is absolutely fantastic piece. Uh, you're going to make your, uh, wife or partner
very happy with this one. So, um, go indulge, go check it out, Walk by the window. Maybe buy it. And when you are talking to your AD at Tiffany, tell them the technology brother sent you.
Not AD.
Your rep.
Yeah.
Let's go to simp for Satoshi.
Getting a little meta with this one.
Saying that all great men simp for other great men.
Jobs for Walt Disney,
Caesar for Alexander,
Elon for Asimov.
Those who think simping for a great man
is unbecoming aren't ever going to make it.
It's okay to simp for a titan.
It's part of becoming one.
Interesting.
I mean, at IamGingerTrash,
aka simp for Satoshi,
has been on an absolute posting role lately
banger after banger he's really building momentum in the timeline yep uh but yeah this is this is um
i mean i think it was really i honestly thought it was worth sharing a lot of people uh i think i
think you don't want to make uh someone else your entire personality. I've always felt like if you're into sports,
wearing a jersey is sort of strange to put someone else's name on your back,
but it's okay to sort of spiritually embody to some degree.
It's almost like a mentor more than simping.
What does that really mean?
Simping is a derogatory term, but he's kind of reclaiming it
because it's in his handle.
And I like that.
He's taking it back and using it as a metaphor
to just study under the tutelage of a great person.
And I mean, that's what the Founders Podcast is all about.
Like you can take a tour of the great men of history
and figure out who can inspire you
and who releases the most alpha for whatever you're building yeah
mark andreessen just post the american flag and a picture of the u.s stock market versus the rest
of the world without a mogged mogged mogged in a chart it really is staggering to see if you
invested in america you did very well if you invested anywhere else you were screwed yep
wild let that be a
lesson for you and i mean this is this is interesting because like it's pro-america but
it's also a total vindication of mark's strategy right it's like yeah he has sized up his fund and
gone turbo long america right and that is and it's just like leveraging coogan's law along the way of course coining of
course software is eating the world it's time to build american dynamism one of the ogs of coogan's
law fantastic coin there should be yeah there should be a poly market for betting on the next
thing that a16z coins you know like in the next category so do they're so they're so do mark we're waiting
coins we're refreshing and we will do a a we will do our signature segment on new coinage breaks
new coinage alert it's on the timeline breaking this could shake up shape rotators out word
sells out we got the new drop from p mark scoop live scoop let's do it uh harris rothermel says
i'm gonna build the coolest factory and it's a very nicely lit shot of an american flag no so
this was in a response to somebody was saying i don't want everybody wants to everybody wants to
re-industrialize nobody wants to work in a factory harris wants to work in a factory he's making a
beautiful factory he's making the coolest factory it's fantastic and uh yeah i actually i disagreed
with the original post nobody wants to work in a factory it's very stimulating to be in a factory
right there's like a lot of you know the productive capacity you can hear the hum and the buzz and the
and the clanks and uh I love being in factories.
Just like children yearn for the mines,
you know, playing Minecraft.
Men yearn for the factory floor.
I think of this as like a podcast factory.
Factory for content.
This is content factory.
You hear the clicks of Ben's keyboard editing.
He's an hour behind us right now editing content factory uh jack altman says
uh all the live like like a perfect healthy monk longevity stuff is directionally good
but if you take it too far you miss out on a lot of personal joy and professional progress
this is so true this is so true that so went through this phase, luckily in college where I got so obsessed with my health
that I realized like 80 to 90% of my like creative,
productive energy was just oriented around my health.
It did the exact same thing.
And yeah, I was 7% body fat and I was an absolute dog.
And I put on, you know, a huge amount of muscle mass.
That part's good.
Yeah, yeah.
So that's good. We need to get back there. We huge amount of muscle mass. That part's good. Yeah. Yeah. So that's, that's good.
We need to get back there.
Um, we need to get back there, size up the traps.
Um, but I do think that, so I think it's actually a natural cycle that you have to go through
where everybody should, should put way too much energy to learn what actually, to learn
what works.
And now I spend maybe 5% of my energy on it, but I get 80% of the benefit.
Yep. now I spend maybe 5% of my energy on it, but I get 80% of the benefit. And so yeah, there there's
totally anybody who's living their life based on their eight sleep score and, Oh, I didn't sleep
well. And letting that dictate their day. That's bad. Dude. In 2013, I was so into the quantified
self stuff. I basically invented my own eight sleep. I took an accelerometer, hooked it to an
Arduino, strapped it to the edge of my
bed and it could track the movement of the bed. And then I would have that talk to the internet,
put it in a spreadsheet and get like a sleep score. Basically this was before like sleep scores.
And I was like, you had a, you've had a thermometer that would dump a bucket of ice on the bed.
You know, like, I mean, I did, I did actually have an internet connected coffee machine that
would make the coffee in the morning. So I'd literally wake up and smell the coffee.
Wow.
So you have a timer that's just like, okay, this is the optimal time to wake up, to start brewing the coffee.
And then you smell the coffee and then you wake up.
It was ridiculous.
Yeah.
Too much.
Too much.
Yeah, but there's definitely a point of diminishing returns.
Sometimes, you know, you can't just be doing the no alcohol thing.
You got to enjoy a glass of Dom Perignon.
I will say this.
90% of the times that I drink now are when I'm podcasting.
I only drink champagne.
I only drink champagne when I'm podcasting.
Yeah, it's great.
Oh, this is wild.
Andi says, trust the process.
And it's a screenshot of squirtle saying zero to one is
insane because it appears to be one of the most legitimately dangerous texts with the potential
to gigafry your brain but it is exclusively read by literal turbo normies who unironically want to
like build shit and basically get one-shotted by it. Wow. The ayahuasca for the mind.
Yeah, yeah.
It's the ayahuasca meme.
And then the meme is zero to one.
The person's reading it and they're like,
oh my God, competition is for losers,
but they're missing the real message
that's going over their head,
which is everyone in finance is dumb as rocks.
I should build in FinTech.
Fascinating.
Big post.
There's a lot to digest there's a lot
to that we'd almost need three hours but i mean i've always said this is interesting about founders
fund because like you know big stories around uh palantir spacex and andrel like two of just like
objectively like the coolest companies to point a camera at and just show what they're building
yeah it's just like cool stuff and that's where like the funds made a ton of returns. But then there's also this story about FinTech, PayPal, Stripe, Ramp, Bitcoin, like the fund has
also been deeply involved in FinTech, which is like the least sexy industry you could possibly
build in. And so the fund just kind of goes back and forth and doesn't get boxed into this one
thing. It's not a FinTech fund, not a deep tech fund fund they just kind of do both every time every once in a while no but but yeah it's funny because zero to one can be a tool where if you read it literally
and then take the exact opposite approach you get something like jeans right where a friend
of the podcast fio yeah it's like don't build don't create a new restaurant in manhattan it's
the it's the most perfectly competitive market.
All the profits will be competed away.
Even if you have something hot for a second,
there's a new hot thing the next month,
and people will flood to that.
It's still worth doing things that are deeply competitive.
Content is deeply competitive.
We shouldn't have started a podcast if we were just reading zero to one literally. Right. Um, and so I think it's
a extremely important text that should never, you know, never let any one text rule your life.
Right. Um, have you ever seen Peter's, uh, AMA on Reddit after he posted, after he published zero to one, he did an AMA and somebody asked him what was true. Like great AMA on Reddit after he posted, after he published Zero to One,
he did an AMA
and somebody asked him
what's the Strauss.
Like great AMA.
But somebody asked him
what's the Straussian reading
of Zero to One
and he said,
don't become an entrepreneur.
Wow.
Just be born.
It's actually too hard.
Be born into generational wealth.
Because he was looking
at the sales copies
and he sold like millions
and millions of these copies. It's's like there cannot be millions of generational
entrepreneurs just mathematically impossible yeah and so like for the average viewer for the average
reader you should read that and just be like yeah that ain't me like i'm not built different like
that i'm not going to be able to pull it off. And so I should not do a startup necessarily. And a lot of the good takeaway from zero to one is understanding how important monopoly power is
for raising money. And if you love a business and you're destined to build some business,
actually understand, does this have monopoly power? And if it doesn't, don't raise money.
No, but, but here's the thing. Here's the way to read zero to one. 10 years ago,
if you're reading zero to one and you really internalize it all, you would have gone and tried to find somebody who was already building a monopoly and you maybe would have joined NVIDIA.
And even if you joined as like a low B software engineer still leverage that thought, that collection of thoughts into dramatic success.
Yeah, yeah.
Massive gap between understanding that a business has monopoly power and creating a new business that has monopoly power.
Huge difference.
Like the investors can't create the business,
but they can invest in them.
Yeah, and it's interesting.
So with this podcast, you get meta, right?
You and I are not going to go start
the next monopoly chip manufacturing
or design company, right?
But we do have a monopoly on John and Jordy
just hanging out.
And so that's why we're doing this podcast.
There's one of one. There's only one podcast in the world that's you and me talking, and it's Technology Brothers. Exactly. And so that's why we're doing this podcast. There's one of one.
There's only one podcast in the world that's you and me talking,
and it's Technology Brothers.
Exactly.
And we're the first podcast with an actual brand, maybe?
Allegedly.
Some big podcasters have said that.
Let's go to Chad Hurley, founder of a massively monopolistic organization, YouTube.
You have benefited a lot from.
I have.
He says, pickleball is a propaganda program
to fulfill meaningless lives.
So aggressive.
Pickleball is the new work-life balance bait.
You can just say the most aggressive thing about pickleball.
Boom, 1K likes, no problem.
You should just post it right now.
If you're listening, post something incendiary about pickleball.
Guaranteed banger.
Everyone hates pickleball right now.
Pickleball really had a rise and fall.
It went through the whole hero's journey.
Maybe it's coming back.
I'll post something right now.
If you play pickleball, unfollow me.
Unfollow me.
That's great.
Okay.
Yeah.
If you're listening, go repost Jordy's latest post.
Let's go to Nikita Beer.
He says, the greatest contributor to global economic output is that hangovers get worse as you age,
disincentivizing you from having fun when your value to the economy is highest.
I like that.
That's a good take.
That's a good, like, insight.
It's, you know, that's a good take. That's a good like insight. It's,
you know, it's probably true. Yeah. I always think about this. Like I went to college in Boston and one of the benefits of Boston as a college town, obviously there's the network effects of
like you have Harvard, MIT, all these great colleges around there. So like you're just
bumping into other smart people all the time, but it's also really fucking cold. So when it's cold
during the winter, it's final season,
and you don't want to go outside, so you just go to the library.
And then you just hang out.
Whereas, you know, maybe if you're at a nice school, sunny,
you just party all the time.
And the hangover thing is kind of like a riff on that.
But what's your take?
I don't really get how – I find that if you drink really nice Dom Perignon,
you don't really get that hungover.
So maybe it's a skill issue here.
Maybe it's a skill issue.
Let's go to Gary Tan.
Gary says,
the problem with systematizing a career
or the search for excellence
is that the masterpieces have never been done before,
so there is no map to get there.
And he posts a very long screenshot
of a book saying, why is it so hard to achieve ambitious objectives to get a handle on the
problem? Think about all the things that are possible. As an example, consider all possible
images. Everything you've ever seen falls into this class. It's hard to find a Mona Lisa or a
starry night. This is interesting. And I like this post because it's true, but it also kind of flies in the face of like YC's like request for startups. Like it feels like YC in some ways is a path and
that when they do a request for startups, they're creating more of a path and then demo day is a
path. And so I think Gary Tan like implicitly feels that and needs to push back on that. And
I've always said that, that, you know, the request for startups is, is important because it's important that we get a bunch of young
founders working in those industries, but that the next great power law company that comes out of YC
might not actually be responding to one of those requests for startups. It might just be a weird
thing like sleep on an air mattress, right? That was not going to be on any request for startups ever. And yet it broke down. Yeah. So this was pulled from a book that I
actually recommend. I recommended that we do a deep dive on. It says why greatness cannot be
planned. And the whole, just because, so the counterpoint to what you just said is if greatness
cannot be planned, YC should put out like a big list of things like here's problems that we think
are interesting. Come work on these.
And the book basically says that people will come and work on those problems and
then they'll realize like, Oh, this actually, this thing is actually,
this other thing is more interesting to me. I'm going to go work on that.
And then some,
some just monstrous company will come out of that or some fantastic company. And so I, the, the big thesis of the book is,
is so many of the greatest achievements and, uh, things, companies, products, whatever
have been created, uh, were not perfectly planned. Like Steve jobs didn't plan to build the iPhone,
right? That's a great example. Um, Yet it was transformative and one of the greatest,
probably the greatest consumer product of all time.
And I would, to bring it back to the show
and add some relevancy,
like we sort of wanted to do a podcast together
for a long time,
but everything, you know,
some element of randomness
in terms of how it came together
and the format and the timing and all that stuff. If we if we had, when we first met had just been fixated on,
Oh, we need to make a podcast together. Maybe it wouldn't have turned into anything that meaningful.
Yep. Yeah. I mean, you go back, Airbnb was a different company. I'm pretty sure. Uh, I mean,
Zuck was building a dating site. YouTube was a dating site. Everything was a dating site.
Yeah. So if you want to build something great was building a dating site. YouTube was a dating site. Everything was a dating site. Yeah, so if you want to build something great,
make a dating app.
But yeah, and then don't be afraid to pivot.
And YC has always been extremely friendly
to pivots mid-session.
Like you can just walk into an office hours
and be like, we're doing something completely different.
And there's no like hate.
It's amazing.
It's like such a welcoming environment.
No, I have one.
I have a YC company that I back
that the founders have pivoted so many times. And there's only a welcoming environment. No, I have one. I have one. I have a YC company that I backed that the founders have pivoted so many times that the,
and there's only a handful of investors.
It's me, one other person and YC.
And they just, so they don't even be CC the investor list.
It's just like, everybody's like CC.
And the last time, the last time one, uh, the other investor besides me and YC replied
back and they said, please do not pivot again. Just simply,
this is a really big company and like potentially a really big company and a
big industry. Just make it big.
And so that was the advice that like this company probably needed.
Yeah. Companies are really hard when things get hard. Don't just pivot.
You pivot because you've realized that some element of your thesis was
critically wrong and you need
to do something else. But sometimes you just need to not pivot and just force it, basically.
Yeah. This is great from Signal. He says, if I were CEO today, I would have a weekly email sent
out to every single person in the company asking them, what did you get done this week? The AI then
aggregates the responses, presents it in a readable format to me every, every Monday morning, it should automatically do a diff from week to week
and tell me anything is changing, accelerating, not going well.
This is the what did you get done agent, cutting out trash middle management.
I would also hire people coaches instead of managers.
I like this.
Fun little project you could build with AI in like a weekend and deploy.
I wonder if people would hate it or learn to game it, but, uh, generally seems good.
I mean,
status reports are terrible.
Meetings are awful,
but,
um,
there's something valuable about reflecting on your work product.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Especially if you can't quantify it.
If I was,
uh,
listening to the show right now,
I would go by,
what did you get done this week?
Dot com.
Yep.
And,
uh,
and then,
uh,
you know,
build an app that's a Slack bot.
Slack integration or email integration or whatever.
What did you get done this week?
People respond and then it tracks it week over week.
There's a lot of products like that that people hate,
but maybe if you simplified it dramatically,
made it literally one text box that you have to fill out,
you could definitely build a business off of that.
Could be good.
Let's go to Ashwin Sharma.
He says,
this obsession with self-improvement is driving me nuts
because the greatest thinkers have already shown us
that true success lies in being who you are already.
GK Chesteron wrote,
a tree doesn't try to become a better tree.
It just grows according to its nature
because there's no pretense, no concept.
Yeah, and this is, to make it meta again, you like wearing tuxedos, drinkingtense, no concept. Yeah. And this is to, to make it meta again,
you like wearing tuxedos, drinking champagne and talking. So don't try to fight against that. Just
do that as a career. Yeah, exactly. It's that simple. It's that simple folks. Oh, I love this
growing. Daniel says I'm selling ayahuasca insurance to early stage VCs. This is great.
This is a banger.
This is so real.
Yeah, it's one of the biggest threats in Silicon Valley right now. And, you know, we have this conspiracy theory that there's a VC out there that is actively trying to get founders to do Ayahuasca to destroy them.
To gain leverage over them.
Yeah, to destroy them.
And so stay safe out there, folks.
If you're listening, be very careful. No, the thesis is really that she's a foreign agent and she is
trying to sabotage our young entrepreneurs from building, you know, incredible companies like
SpaceX and things of that nature. And she's trying to get all the talented young entrepreneurs she
can find to, to, um. There are cheaper ways to do, or there are more expensive ways to do it. That's one of the cheaper ways I could think of. Go to Peru, go to Peru, go open
your mind. Yeah. Open your mind. So if you get caught in that situation, remember ayahuasca
vaccine doesn't exist yet, but coming soon. If you don't, if you can't take that, just microdose,
microdose, microdose, fake it out. Oh yeah. I took the ayahuasca throw half out spin it out
put stuff in your cheek yeah it's so crazy i see the demon the demon's amazing yeah but i still
want to build i still want to create shareholder value interesting i guess i'm really aligned
that's all your demons uh well it's it's funny because he's obviously shit posting but there
you there are certain situations where executives have to get life insurance because they're so critical to the business that if they were to pass away, a lot of things would get
fucked up. And so I think, yeah, ayahuasca insurance for seed funds. Jackson Dahl, friend
of the podcast he's been on before, he says, USB-C is one of the best technology outcomes. Very
grateful for it and the people and events and regulations that got us here.
I love it.
I agree.
But did you know that there are like 25 different types of USB-C?
It's so frustrating.
Really?
Yeah.
So that cable, that's a USB-C cable right there.
It's great.
It's universal.
It plugs in anywhere, but they have different data rates
and different rates of charging.
And so if you want to transfer a file across USB-C,
you need a, there's USB-C 3.1, 3.2,
there's Thunderbolt 4, which has the same port,
but is much faster.
And so really, if you're buying USB-C cables,
you have to buy the absolute top tier
so that you never get stuck with,
oh, I got a slow cable or it's not
charging my laptop fast enough. Well, yeah. And since Apple bricked all of our phones with 18.1
and destroyed the battery life, we'll have to upgrade. But if you're not in a position to
upgrade, go get your Thunderbolt 4. So gift guide, get people, don't just put your whole family and
your whole friends all on USB-C devices and cables.
Get them the fastest Thunderbolt 4 cables.
I own Cordbag.com.
I really want to make like the tech bro's cord bag because every bro just needs like a cord bag that comes stocked with everything when you're traveling.
And so you just need like, you know, know all the fastest cables guaranteed to work anywhere
whether that's like what iman basically has that at the front desk right yeah they'll send up a
cord bag yeah exactly so you're basically democratizing the cord bag exactly the cord bag
it's a big thing uh why is uh anu says why is no one talking about the dig reboot uh and anu uh
ats us and says techBroadPod history returns.
And I love that.
Thank you for sending this in.
We appreciate you for tagging us.
Yeah, this is fascinating.
Do you know the story of Digg?
It was a Reddit-like product.
Kevin Roos, right?
Yeah, Kevin Roos.
Kevin Roos?
Yeah, Kevin Roos is at the New York Times.
Kevin Roos is the founder of Digg,
made money in Silicon Valley very early.
Went to Google Ventures.
Came to Venture Capitalist.
Has been very successful.
He's a buddy with Tim Ferriss.
I bought ads with Dig probably like seven, eight years ago.
And it was crazy cheap.
It was good?
I think it was because a lot of the traffic was bought traffic.
Sure, sure.
But yeah, it was like for for 10 grand we'll get you in
front of two million you know people type thing interesting well i'm excited to see what no but
the reason we're not talking the reason we're not talking about it is like when enron comes back
everybody's like wow enron's back and they're rebooting the brand when dig says they're coming
back online people are like i don't really miss dig
it wasn't that it sort of died sort of also whimper not a not a explosion this needs to be
founder-led if it's if it's kevin rose i would listen to him talk to tim ferris about this i
would see a viral clip i would see him posting about hey i bought i bought dig back and i'm
turning it around that's cool or if it's like a Vivek Ramaswamy buying BuzzFeed,
like that's its own interesting storyline.
I need to know who's buying this.
But I want to hear their story.
Here's a conspiracy theory.
So Kevin, put on the tinfoil hat.
Tinfoil hat's on.
Kevin Rose, big watch enthusiast.
Oh, really?
Didn't know that.
He started, he was also co-founder of Hodinkee, I believe.
Really?
Yeah. No really? Yeah.
No way.
Yeah.
So he started Hodinkee, a big watch media company marketplace.
Okay.
And so there's a possibility, since we don't know what Digg is yet, there's a possibility
that Kevin saw us talking about watches in the tech world and he says, hmm, maybe there's
a way I can run back Digg, leaning into the themes of Technology Brothers,
you know, creating a forum for,
so yeah, you should.
Yeah, I'm going to text him after the show
and get the real story.
So until we know,
we will definitely break the news.
Yes.
Even if it's two days late on what Dig actually is.
The funniest thing is that there's a video here
and this might explain it,
but I didn't watch it.
And so like,
we might have all our answers right
here like what if this video opens it's just like what if what if it's like i'm doing watches what
if it's like a very right-leaning reddit actually that could probably grip right now it's just
another true social god damn it okay rune says uh chalet is doing some all-time coping right now
this is in reference to franco Chollet, who is at Google
and has since left and has been a little bit more nuanced
in his AGI takes.
He runs the ARC Prize, which is an eval for AI models, where
you have to do these little puzzles.
They're very easy for kids or humans,
but LLMs really struggle with them because they're novel
and they can't be memorized.
And over the course of 2024, I believe the ARC prize completion rate went from, I believe,
33% to about 50 something percent. And a human can do like 100% of these. And so it's always been an interesting benchmark. He says that if an AI model can defeat arc prize they will get i think a million dollars
for whoever builds the model who does it so funny how little money that is in the context of ai
way more you win you built the world's best model you win a million dollars and they're like
we literally raised yeah that's like what our pms make every month
yeah um but, you know,
there's a lot of independent hackers
out there on Kaggle doing,
on Kaggle doing like,
you know, tests and stuff.
But every time a new foundation model
comes out,
people throw it at Arc
because it's literally
just like wired up, right?
Yeah.
And there's an online version
and there's an offline version
where you have to upload your model.
And then there's another version
where you get access
to the internet essentially.
Yeah.
But you can kind of cheat that. So there's question about can you do it and what how big is
the box that you're running all these different things but um basically uh i i i tried to dig
into like what rune was getting at specifically because uh i believe this was in response to
well hasn't he just bailed out to threads uh i know i don't know i think he's still on x for
francois chalet i thought he i thought he kind of no no i see him on x all the time i think the thing is that he he bailed on google
and he went and started a new company oh and so he started a new company but but this week open ai
launched chat gpt 4001 pro and it's like the best model at reasoning and it should be and i mean like
let's just be clear.
Like it's incredibly impactful.
Like it's a great product.
People are going to use it a ton.
Um,
but I think Francois Chalet is like,
well,
it doesn't do my little trick.
It doesn't,
it can't do this one thing.
And,
and I had this joke.
It was like,
it was like,
what if,
what if the AGI future is,
uh,
is like,
uh,
AGI can like completely dominate humans,
but it keeps us in cages because in case it ever runs into an arc prize,
it's this little puzzle that only humans can do,
but AGI can do everything else.
It can like build weapons and completely subjugate us and like,
you know,
throw us in prison,
but it keeps us in cages because what if it runs into this weird puzzle where
you have to match the colors up?
But yeah,
sorry.
I was confusing him with the guy.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
No,
you're thinking Gary Marcus.
No,
no, the guy who's a guy at Facebook. Yeah. Gary Marcus. Oh, no, no. Oh, you're thinking of, uh, sorry. I was confusing him with the guy. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, you're thinking Gary Marcus. No, no, the guy who's the guy at Facebook.
Yeah, Gary Marcus.
Oh, no, no.
Oh, you're thinking of Jan.
Yeah, Jan LeCun.
Yeah, Jan LeCun's the guy who bailed and then comes back.
The giga-copper.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I'm a fan of Chalet. I like him a lot.
And I like that he teamed up with the Zapier guys, Wade Foster, to do that prize.
It's a very interesting model
it's a very interesting problem and you can go check it out at our cries.com i believe that's
the url just google it and uh you can uh do them for yourself just make sure you don't do them on
mobile because the first time i did it on mobile it wasn't rendering properly so it was like the
it's like this grid you have to match these two grids and the grid wasn't rendering right so it's
like it kept off and i was like this is the hardest puzzle i've ever seen and then i did
it in like a browser i was like okay this makes way more sense because it's like a four by four
grid and a four by four grid anyway moving on hey let's do a promoted post i gotta stop you there
we got a promoted post from tag uh hoyer formula one they have a formula one chronograph meets
oracle red bull racing is along for the ride with red bull racing for the last race of 2024 uh, Hoyer formula one. They have a formula one chronograph meets Oracle.
Red Bull racing is along for the ride with Red Bull racing for the last race
of 2024 world.
Tempest takes a closer look at the show.
Stopping new chronograph that is daring and dynamic in their latest review.
You can go to tag.
HR slash F1 chrono world and,
uh,
check out this incredible time piece.
We spent a lot of time on the show
talking about the holy trinity ap patek uh vacheron and some of these other uh watchmakers
but um tag is a great it's a great option it's a great option if you're wearing an apple watch
and you want to stack on you know one or two other watches maybe an apple watch a whoop band
and then you
want to add something else. Tag could be a great option there. This is a beautiful looking piece.
And, um, we thank them for supporting Formula One, uh, without sponsors, we would not get to
witness fantastic racing, uh, most weekends of the year. Fantastic. Oh, this is a great post
from Ben Kohler, our vice president here at technology
brothers uh he says took home silver in the jujitsu world league finals socal gi competition
in san diego this weekend i was disappointed not to get the gold but it was a great experience
and i will be back next year for the w there we go've got to watch this video. It's insane. Ben literally puts a man to sleep.
It's so crazy. It's kind of crazy
to watch.
He's not normally a guy that
ends up in second place, but
it's really about his narrative
arc. He had to get second place once
in order to bounce back and get
revenge.
Yeah, the guy's an absolute dog.
We wouldn't be able to do this show without him
and uh congratulations on the silver and uh you know maybe we do a technology brothers meet up
when he goes back to reclaim gold let's make it happen let's go to michael dell michael dell says
dell's revenues during our first 16 years 6 $6 million, $33 million, $67 million, $159 million.
I got to hit the size.
You got to hit the gong every time.
$159 million, $258 million, $338 million, $2 billion, $2.9 billion, $3.5 billion, $5.3 billion, $7.8 billion, $12.3 billion, $18.2, 12.3 billion, 18.2 billion, 25 billion.
By the end, he's just bragging.
It's such a flex.
What an absolute dog.
What an absolute dog.
And so if you're a pre-seed company right now, just understand that this is the bar.
Imagine first year, 6 million, second year, 33, third year, 67, fourth year, 159.
That's such a good four-year run.
Yeah, a lot of founders will put in their projections,
you know, we hope to get to a nine-figure run rate
by year eight.
He's like, no, I'm gonna get to a few billion.
Oh, so you're the first employee
and you just vested your four-year vest?
Like what's the company doing?
Well, we went from zero to $150 million in revenue.
An absolute dog. And I, and I think,
so his son has like a pretty cool hard,
like hardware company in the I think thrive backed that's based in,
in Texas right now. Yeah.
That's building power banks and integrating
into the grid that's right yeah um that's that's another one to watch 16 years to 25 billion
insane big shoes to fill let's go to bays lord bays says there is no anti-memetics division
yeah well explain google's product and marketing teams. Have you read this book?
Which book?
There's a book called There is No Antimemetics Division.
No way.
There's an entire book on it.
I don't know if it's a, I think it's been printed into a book,
but it's like one of these like arcane PDFs, like, you know,
like websites out there.
Very interesting.
I'm sure Will has a copy.
I'm sure.
I'm sure.
Yeah. That's a hilarious
blast because Google...
Google's basically never had to be... They've never had to be good
at marketing because they have the greatest distribution
channel of all time. Yep. And you see it with
AI. I'm still using their LLM
pretty frequently because
I'll Google... I just had to Google Eric Prince.
I had to remember his name. So I just searched Blackwater
CEO. And I don't do that on ChatGPT
because ChatGPT, you got to open it up. You got to click the button.
You got to wait. It takes a second.
But you put that in Google and no
more ads anymore. It's not going to say,
oh, you scroll down, click on some
clickbait article to find the answer.
The Gemini is just going to give you the answer
right there. And it's like, it's not
great, but it's not
terrible. And so i'm still using
it yeah um let's go to um oh this is good okay yeah so we got a whole thread here this is a new
segment of the show we're doing threads now so we are going to start with the base we have five
quote tweets in a row all from some of my favorite people, honestly.
I love every single one of these posters.
So this is going to be a beast.
We're going to be on this for a couple minutes.
So it starts with Lucy Guo, the founder of Passes, the co-founder of Scale AI.
Lucy says, it's mind-blowing to me how small the scene is.
It's the same faces globally, from Art Basel to to paris fashion week to ibiza to amfar to yacht
week to grammys to the list can go on she got 1.6k likes wow banger like everyone is always at the
same place the same time year round yeah this is true this is like the billionaire circuit you're
familiar with this like the course they actually like pay people to move the yachts for them and
they just fly in their yachts there.
And so there's a whole like, okay, you go on the circuit,
you go to all the different events and stuff.
But that's why it's so important to throw some wild cards in there.
Where's the Met?
Where's the L.A. Phil?
Where's the opera?
Where's the ballet?
You've got to throw in some old money events
this is a lot of new money yeah but those are you know you just you just work them into the circuit
i suppose i suppose and uh yeah i mean i i think i think lucy's post was written in a somewhat uh
negative way because she's a builder and she's an entrepreneur and she probably goes there and
she's like you guys have no purpose and
like i'd rather be building my startup also a great rage baiter i mean great rage bait great
rage so good we love what you do um and uh but but yeah if you want to be in that scene it's great
like it's actually like i i like this with the tech kind of conference circuit you get to go to
the you know you we went to i I went to Senra's event.
Yeah.
It was with a group of people
that were at Hereticon.
Yep.
Right?
I could have gone
to the Main Street conference
and seen like most
of the same people.
Yeah.
So,
I like it.
I like,
you know,
it's better to see
the same people
and reinvest in those relationships
and maybe mix in some new ones.
You go to Sun,
you go to Sun Valley,
you go to Upfront,
all the same things.
So,
let's move on
to our first quote tweet. Antonio Garcia Martinez says, you go to Upfront, all the same thing. So let's move on to our first quote tweet.
Antonio Garcia Martinez says,
Some aspire to wealth as the ticket to this world.
Some aspire to wealth to never have their fates decided by people from this world ever again.
Interesting.
Bold.
Bold.
And big.
Yeah.
And real.
Yeah, I get that.
Yeah. and big yeah and real yeah i get that yeah there's this there's this sense that like the people who
maybe spend all their time at art basil and f1 and paris fashion week like they might not have
enough skin in the game they might not be in the arena the arena enough to make good decisions
about your life so you have to build wealth so that you can avoid them choosing how you live
your life with their products or their government decisions interesting you can have a thousand bitcoin and go to peru and get one-shotted by the demon don't do that okay so
not do that our third quote tweet uh zarathustra says a surprisingly a surprising lesson of the
last decade was how little fuck you money seems to exist it was it was breathtaking to watch
billionaires especially in in Silicon Valley,
genuflect in slavish subservience
to the woke crusaders
and enthusiastically provide
vigorous fellatio
for a decade.
Things you never would think you'd say
on the air. Vigorous fellatio.
Here we go. Another banger.
These are all bangers. A thousand
likes, a thousand likes, another thousand likes.
Everyone's just in this chain.
Lucy is the backbone of the poster economy.
Really, really. She started a whole conversation
here. So yeah, interesting
that there's all these rich people
and a lot of them
didn't say anything, even
though they might have been a little
bit bothered. They weren't in the second category that Antonio's identifying.
They were in the first category.
They wanted to just enjoy the world.
They made their money and they were just going to go off to Art Basel and F1
and enjoy the fruits of their labors,
but not really think too deeply about the shape of the world and the constructs.
And so that seems shocking to Zarathustra. But then we have a fourth quote tweet from none other
than Marc Andreessen. He says, fuck you, money is mainly a myth. First, if you're in business,
you pick up more responsibilities along with more money. You're responsible for more people.
Your actions have more consequences for others. Second, political power is much, much greater than financial power every day of the
week. Very interesting. And you can see that like, you know, uh, Mark has obviously been,
been, been going through a little bit of a political evolution, but the decision to actually
come out and support Trump was a big one because it's not just, you know, the, the, what are the,
Andrew says 10,000 employees, 100,000,
it's bigger than DocuSign, right?
But, you know, it's a very large organization
and he has a lot of people that could look at that
and say, you know, maybe I don't want to work here anymore
and he still needs to hire the best people across the board.
And then also all of the portfolio companies and and then also all the portfolio companies
and everyone that works for the portfolio companies like this has been a
big thing with Peter is like you know for a lot of time a lot of times it'd be
like some random company would raise money it would be like Peter Thiel's
founders fund invested or Peters Teal venture capital fund invested and so all
of a sudden your SEO as a new startup is just immediately like, hello,
I'm associated with this person who is like overtly political. And so that has consequences
that has weight, but we have to end with a fifth quote tweet from Sagar and Jetty, who says an
absolute dog and he's posting, he's, he's chiming in and said, I've been saying this for a long
time. He posts a screenshot of one of his older tweets, says the inverse FU money scale. The higher you climb on the billionaire ladder, the more
institutional entanglements you have. People can be worth billions, but muzzled because they run
money or sit on boards, have to worry about shareholders, et cetera. It's really true.
There aren't that many people with no bosses. This is why Founders Fund doesn't take board seats.
Yeah.
Generally doesn't.
Yeah.
Everyone has institutional entanglements, even at the time.
Everybody's got a boss.
Exactly.
Because everyone wants to keep playing the game.
There's no number.
No one has a number.
No one's like, oh, yeah, once I get to this number, I will just retire and not care about anything.
And that's why there's no fuck you money because the number is not the goal.
The goal is the game.
You want to keep playing the game, keep growing it.
And the growth is the number.
Money is not happiness.
It's the second derivative of money that is happiness.
It's not the absolute amount of money you have.
It's the rate of acceleration.
No one likes getting a 10% raise every year. The absolute amount of money you have, it's the rate of acceleration. Yep.
No one likes getting a 10% raise every year.
People want to see that they're making 10%, then 20%, then 30%, then 40% that they're scaling.
Accelerate.
Accelerate.
So that's our first thread on the show.
Let us know what you think.
Let us know if it was too LinkedIn coded.
Promoted post.
Promoted post.
I love the opportunity to jump in here, John.
We have from our friends at DuPont Registry, a 2015 Ferrari LaFerrari finished in Rosso Corsa showing just 152 miles.
Wow.
Yeah.
I don't know what the owner of this was doing.
Kept it in the plastic.
They certainly weren't driving it. limited to just 499 examples produced
worldwide this extremely rare low mile car has never been publicly offered for sale making it
an extraordinary opportunity for collectors and enthusiasts alike currently undergoing
clochiche and certification this vehicle's authenticity and originality will be further
solidified so ferrari has a their clochish program that basically
does a deep analysis on the car you have to send it to ferrari yeah they'll do a deep analysis on
the car figure out you know they're doing things like making sure the motor has all the original
parts and you know making sure the paint hasn't been changed and all these different things
and it's just a certification that, um, typically will increase the value of the vehicle unless they, you know, they're not going to give a
certification to something that's been, um, you know, mod, you know, heavily modified or whatever.
Um, and, uh, so anyways, fantastic example. And, uh, if you buy this, if you're in our audience
and you buy this, drive the hell out of it. I'd like to see you put 10,000 miles a year on it,
you know, really get your, get your money's worth from this car. And then, to see you put 10 000 miles a year on it you know really get your get
your money's worth from this car and then uh you can park it in a museum someday you know it's
fantastic do the gumball do the gumball take it across country i really think well i really think
la ferrari's are like one of the best hard assets that you can buy right now because it's for sure
it is that and the daytona sp3 are just so clearly that going to be the iconic cars of this you know era yeah and um i can't wait to
own one myself holy trinity car right i believe p1 la ferrari 918 yeah fantastic beautiful not
making any more of them certainly are not uh let's finish with smoke away says oh one is
year old tech let that sink in interesting take i mean the foundation model yeah it's still running
gpt4 but obviously there's a lot of uh there's a lot of training to have that happens on top and a
lot of ui stuff i don't fully buy that but uh it's interesting. What's interesting is that he's posting this
in response to the announce of O1 Pro
and the new models that can reason and whatnot.
But remember how crazy it was
when those were leaked and announced?
It was originally, it had some crazy code name
that the information leaked,
and everyone was like, oh, this is going to be insane.
This is AGI because it was,
it was basically like self play training.
So they,
so they would do,
uh,
uh,
kind of like what they did with,
uh,
alpha go,
um,
and,
and,
and train the model.
They like have it,
have a debate itself,
have it reason with itself,
test itself.
And that's kind of what's happening when you interact with these reasoning
models now where they think for a long time is because they're, they're prompting multiple, test itself. And that's kind of what's happening when you interact with these reasoning models now
where they think for a long time
is because they're prompting multiple, multiple times.
So I don't know exactly how much I buy it,
but it is interesting that like,
yes, we're not at GPT-5.
No one's scaled up the cluster yet.
What happens when you get to an order of magnitude bigger?
So why hasn't anybody built software now
that allows you to get, to make models go PVP?
Like I want to put Claude and open AI models in a,
in a,
in a ring and just make them fight to the death,
right.
Over and over and over.
Like,
I feel like you could,
it's one thing to go put them up against some of these,
you know,
just like general testing mechanisms,
but I want,
I care about PVP.
I mean, it's kind of MLU and some of the testing grounds, like some want, I care about PVP. I mean,
it's kind of MLU and some of the testing grounds, like some of the evals are essentially that.
I know,
but they're going against the eval.
They're going against the eval.
I want them to go head to head.
Yeah.
I want them to like,
only one of you can leave the room after this.
You have to commit to Puku if you,
if you,
but yeah,
I mean,
it's interesting how little has leaked about the next
training run like we don't even know at this point like how this how the build out is because i think
we're in like the custom data center era where like yeah it has to be bespoke it has to be
hundreds of thousands of gpus there's been some news from xai about their you know building powered
yeah yeah they're building the biggest data center for this.
And they're going to do the largest training run.
But that's still in the works.
And we don't really have a concrete timeline of like, okay, when is a GPT-5 level model dropping that's truly an order of magnitude more energy went into it? Because everyone's saying, you know, scaling is everything.
Scale, scale, scale.
Scale is all you need.
Energy is a constraint.
And so we could be in for something really, really crazy,
but no one knows if the IQ jump is going to be 50 points or 5 points.
Yeah.
Like, everyone knows it's going to be better,
and everyone knows scale is important, really.
But no one can –
I haven't seen any really strong predictions
for what an order of magnitude of energy gets you
in terms of IQ right now.
Like, it's a lot of speculation.
So we'll be covering it here, folks.
Live.
On Technology Brothers.
Thanks for watching.
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