The Tim Ferriss Show - #582: Mark Zuckerberg on Long-Term Strategy, Business and Parenting Principles, Personal Energy Management, Building the Metaverse, Seeking Awe, the Role of Religion, Solving Deep Technical Challenges (e.g., AR), and More
Episode Date: March 24, 2022Brought to you by Eight Sleep’s Pod Pro Cover sleeping solution for dynamic cooling and heating, Magic Spoon delicious low-carb cereal, and Helium 10 all-in-on...e software suite to sell on Amazon. Mark Zuckerberg (FB/IG) is the founder, chairman, and CEO of Meta, which he originally founded as Facebook in 2004. Mark is responsible for setting the overall direction and product strategy for the company. In October 2021, Facebook rebranded to Meta to reflect all of its products and services across its family of apps and a focus on developing social experiences for the metaverse—moving beyond 2D screens toward immersive experiences like augmented and virtual reality to help build the next evolution in social technology.He is also the co-founder and co-CEO of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative with his wife Priscilla, which is leveraging technology to help solve some of the world’s toughest challenges—including supporting the science and technology that will make it possible to cure, prevent, or manage all diseases by the end of the 21st century.Mark studied computer science at Harvard University before moving to Palo Alto, California in 2004.Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by Eight Sleep! Eight Sleep’s Pod Pro Cover is the easiest and fastest way to sleep at the perfect temperature. It pairs dynamic cooling and heating with biometric tracking to offer the most advanced (and user-friendly) solution on the market. Simply add the Pod Pro Cover to your current mattress and start sleeping as cool as 55°F or as hot as 110°F. It also splits your bed in half, so your partner can choose a totally different temperature.And now, my dear listeners—that’s you—can get $250 off the Pod Pro Cover. Simply go to EightSleep.com/Tim or use code TIM at checkout. *This episode is also brought to you by Magic Spoon cereal! Magic Spoon is a low-carb, high-protein, and zero sugar cereal that tastes just like your favorite sugary cereal. Each serving has 13–14g of protein, 4g of net carbs, and 0g of sugar. It’s also gluten free, grain free, soy free, and keto friendly. And it’s delicious! It comes in your favorite, traditional cereal flavors like Cocoa, Frosted, Peanut Butter, and Blueberry.Magic Spoon cereal has received a lot of attention since their launch. Time magazine included it in their list of Best Inventions of 2019, and Forbes called it “the future of cereal.” My listeners—that’s you—get $5 off and a 100% happiness guarantee when you visit MagicSpoon.com/Tim and use code TIM. And some great news for Canadian listeners: Magic Spoon now also ships to Canada!*This episode is also brought to you by Helium 10! Helium 10 is an all-in-one software suite designed to help entrepreneurs launch, manage, and scale a profitable e-commerce business on Amazon and Walmart.com. Whether you are an entrepreneur who wants to start a business on your own terms or you want to scale your existing e-commerce operations, Helium 10 is here to help. They process more than 2 billion data points daily, have a robust 450+ million ASIN database, and provide at-a-glance analytics like seasonal trends for products, profit estimates, and more.Join more than 1 million Helium 10 users worldwide by signing up for a free account at Helium10.com/Tim!*How did teenage Mark get involved in the world of competitive fencing? [07:01]What does Mark find particularly compelling about classical studies and history? [10:00]Influential and recommended science fiction related to virtual realities. [13:32]How do Mark and his team get an organization of a hundred thousand people on board with long-term project plans that can extend into the next decade and a half? [17:26]What does Mark do to get comfortable with discomfort and manage his energy for whatever the day throws his way? [23:05]How long does Mark think it will take for us to realize VR technology as immersive as presented in Ready Player One? What kind of progress can we expect to see in the not-too-distant future? [27:02]The challenges of making VR a satisfying, nausea-free experience for everyone. [33:35]Projections for the societal effects of people earning sustainable livelihoods in the metaverse. [39:00]The new values being built into Meta’s cultural operating system — and the old values being adapted — to prepare for a more distributed, more honest, and faster future. [44:16]Challenges presented by moving from a Web2 to a Web3 world. [57:35]Mark’s assessment of Meta’s oversight board. [1:03:07]To what does Mark credit the longevity of his unique partnership with Sheryl Sandberg, and in what ways has it shifted his life and business over the past 15+ years? What does he consider to be Sheryl’s superpowers? [1:07:49]How did Mark’s family dynamics growing up shape who he is today and how he parents his own children? [1:12:52]What role, if any, does religion play in Mark’s life? [1:20:40]Did Mark go through an emo phase early in life? [1:24:53]Of the annual personal challenges Mark undertook for 10 years, which were the easiest — and the most difficult? [1:26:12]Does Mark foresee navigating the metaverse on multiple mobile devices running OSes not necessarily under Meta’s control, or will there be a more efficient, unifying device in the works? [1:30:49]Parting thoughts. [1:35:15]*For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsors.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss and welcome to another episode of
The Tim Ferriss Show. My guest today is Mark Zuckerberg. Mark is the founder, chairman,
and CEO of Meta, which he originally founded as Facebook in 2004. Mark is responsible for
setting the overall direction and product strategy for the company. In October of 2021,
Facebook rebranded to Meta to reflect all of its products and services across its family of apps and to focus on developing social experiences for the metaverse, a term you have no doubt heard in
the last few weeks and months, moving beyond 2D screens toward immersive experiences like augmented
and virtual reality to help build the next evolution in social technology. He is also the
co-founder and the co-CEO of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative with his wife, Priscilla, which is leveraging technology to help solve some of the world's toughest
challenges, including supporting the science and technology that will make it possible
to cure, prevent, or manage all diseases by the end of the 21st century.
Mark studied computer science at Harvard University before moving to Palo Alto, California, beautiful
place, in 2004.
You can find him on Facebook, facebook.com
slash zuck, and on Instagram, instagram.com slash zuck, Z-U-C-K. And Meta, you can find,
of course, at metameta.com. Just a few more comments before we dive in, and that is related
to questions and subjects. I wanted to cover new ground with Mark. I did not want to rehash
questions and topics that have been covered a lot in the media, whether by the New York Times
or anyone else for that matter. And one of those topics is Ukraine, because Meta has spoken and
published publicly about their ongoing efforts regarding Russia's invasion of Ukraine. So you
can read about them also in the show notes to Tim.blog.com slash podcast. And Marcus commented on these
things already. If you want to learn about what I am doing on the front, you can go to Tim.blog.com
slash Ukraine. But we had limited time in this conversation and I wanted to cover subjects that
would have some staying power, some relevance moving forward six months, 12 months, maybe even several years when people
are listening to this podcast in the future. So thank you very much for listening. And I
hope you enjoy this very wide ranging conversation with none other than Mark Zuckerberg.
Mark, nice to see you. Welcome to the show. Thanks for making the time.
Yeah, thanks for having me on. I'm looking forward to this.
You've had a very, very busy week, and I imagine most weeks are very busy,
perhaps this week busier than some. But before we get to perhaps current day,
I wanted to flash back just a little bit. In the course of doing research for this conversation,
I chanced upon fencing. Now, fencing, I had seen in connection with your name,
but I had no idea that you had been as competitive as you had been. And I was hoping you could just
describe a little bit your involvement with fencing and for people who don't know,
what makes fencing interesting or what made it interesting to you? And I have follow-up questions,
but I have taken two fencing instructional lessons. This was maybe 10 years ago and was inspired to do so because of the writing of Bruce Lee,
of all things.
But could you just describe your background with fencing and how you ended up competing?
This is probably one of the more interesting places to start an interview that I've ever
done.
I fenced competitively when I was in high school.
It's not something I did since I was like a little kid or something like that,
but I've always loved sports and just being active.
I like problems that you can solve intellectually,
but I also just think managing your energy and kind of being out there and being physical,
it's just always been a really important part of my life.
And I was looking for a sport that would do this in the winter in high school. I did a bunch
of running, right? So I did cross country and I did tennis as well. So I started doing fencing
and I didn't do it competitively for a super long period of time. But the thing that I loved about
it is it's obviously very physical and cardio taxing, just being kind of on your feet and
kind of bouncing around. But it's also very,
very mental. I mean, I have these memories when I was in my high school chemistry classes
of writing out sequences of moves that I wanted to try when I was like doing bouts later after
school that day and different things that you can do to win in multiple ways, basically try to
catch people off guard in one position. It's like,
okay, if they do power you, then you're still in a better position. You can get them on the left or
something, or if they don't, then you get the touch. So I found it to be a very intellectual,
but a good sport. I was never that good at it. I did it competitively, went to some state
competitions and stuff like that, but I don't think I would have been good enough to do it at college, for example.
But it's mostly, it's a fun thing to do.
So the closest experience that I have is with kendo.
I lived in Japan for a period of time and I did some kendo.
And I think it shares quite a bit in common with fencing.
Of course, the techniques are quite different.
The slashing movements predominate in kendo.
Although you are allowed to stab to the
throat if you're past a certain age, which is all a separate matter. But the idea of, as they might
say in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, this sort of position before submission is an interesting one, right?
So even if your first attempt fails, you're in a superior position to execute on your next move.
And it's always struck me that as much as people think of you as someone who studies or even predicts or looks at trend lines into the future, it seems like you have quite a
background in studying the past.
And that's where I wanted to go next, which was classics.
It seems like you've spent quite a bit of time studying classics.
And I was wondering if there are any books or any figures who stick out
to you from that chapter in your life. Maybe that chapter continues to this day, but if you could
speak to that, I figured we'll use that as a segue to other things. I loved classics. I picked it up
in high school as well. I started studying Latin because I was so bad at speaking French and
Spanish. So I'm very interested
in languages overall, but like the whole kind of thinking on your feet and understanding like
really quickly, just I process things more methodically. So Latin was more my style because
you don't have to speak it. So you can just read it at whatever kind of pace makes sense.
And then from there, I got into Greek. And I actually thought that when I went to college,
my plan at the time was to be a classics major.
It turned out I took no classics courses at Harvard.
I ended up doing psychology and computer science
were the two areas that I focused on.
But I just loved the discipline of classics
so much in the history.
I mean, philosophically is sort of the underpinning
of kind of Western thought.
I think it's super interesting.
But I've also just been very interested in basically people who shape the way we live,
right?
So the historical figures who I like learning about, I'd say there's a set of people like
inventors, you know, people who just create things and change the world through that.
But I'm also very interested in historical figures who kind of
try to invent or usher in new ways for people to live. So I always thought, you know, Augustus was
a very interesting historical figure. And I mean, one of the things, I mean, he's controversial for
a lot of reasons, and you can debate all the good and bad. But one of the things that I thought was
just really always stuck with me about what he did was when he basically stopped the wars, you know, at the time in history,
there wasn't really a concept of perpetual peace. The concept of peace that they had at the time
was like, this is just the temporary period during which your enemies are too weak to fight you,
but they're going to come back. And he basically ushered in this notion of actually trying to convert a lot of the military towards other
trades because he's like, all right, no, we're trying to be more peaceful. We want to build a
more positive sum economy. Let's kind of do this in a way where we can get people doing more
productive things. And I always thought that that was just a really interesting historical thing.
And in some ways has parallels today to some of the work that I think is going on in the tech industry around
the whole creator economy. If you just think about how many people today basically do jobs that they
have to, that they might not actually like that much, they're supporting themselves,
compared to where I think and hope that the world is going, which is just a much more robust creative economy where way more people can do things that are kind of intellectually or physically interesting to them.
And in doing so, build up communities around that and have enough monetization and economy around that to kind of support that.
That to me is sort of like the modern version of kind of how do you upgrade the way that people live and work to kind of fulfill
human potential. So I think there are a lot of interesting lessons from the past. I think you
can also read into it too much, but I really enjoyed it when I studied it.
Where I'm going here across a broad spectrum is trying to, and we are going to talk about
the creator economy and the potential of that and also questions around it. And right now, what I'm hoping to learn more about
are some of the influences. And influences can take many forms. One would be books. And I want
to ask, this is from a profile in The New Yorker from 2010. And I remember this because I noticed
it before I read it in The New Yorker at the time, which was for a period of time, I think the only book that was on your profile on Facebook was Ender's Game. It's a great book.
It is a great book. It was one of my favorites. I was hoping you could explain why Ender's Game.
And then if there are any other books that you have in particular that come to mind,
reread or say gifted to other people, what those might be. But if we could start with Ender's Game, since it is also a personal favorite of mine,
I'd love to know why Ender's Game. I actually don't think it has any unique significance.
So I'm surprised to hear that it was the only thing on my profile, but I do love it. It's a
great book. I mean, I think that kind of science fiction, not just exploring certain technologies,
but it's also a very compelling story
and has good moral lessons.
There are parts of the technology
and things in it
like the Ansible
for faster than light communication
across the galaxy
that we had a project
at our company
that we had codenamed that
we're all focused on communication.
I can't really speak to it.
I'm not actually sure
why it was the only thing
on my profile. Oh, just the only book. Not the only thing. Yeah, I don't think it has
some kind of unique significance in my life, but I love science fiction. I mean, I have spent a lot
of time reading that. I think it's often a good way to kind of understand what's possible. You
know, in recent years, you know, for the last decade as I've gotten more into virtual and augmented reality and actually starting to build some
of these things more, I've certainly spent a lot of time reading the science fiction and going back
and revisiting a bunch of the books around that. It's just, it's really fascinating to me to see
kind of what people predict and what the sociological phenomena that people predict
around this stuff as well. Are there any books in particular, writers in particular? I mean, one who comes to mind for me would be Ted Chiang,
who's written a number of short story collections like Exhalation, which seem to include a lot of
potentials kind of right around the corner, right? Near future speculative fiction. Any books come
to mind that you've done just in the course of reading in the last few years, whether related
to VR, AR,
or otherwise? There are some that are just classics around this. I mean, I think at this
point, anyone who's interested in this space would read Ready Player One and Snow Crash. I think
Rainbow's End is one that is maybe not as commonly cited, but I think is maybe the augmented reality
sort of equivalent of some of the seminal works that talk about
virtual reality. One of the things that I think is pretty interesting about all of these is that
they sort of posit that the world is in some sort of dystopian state. And that I think is very
different from kind of how I think about this. I think that there are all these reasons why
it is very valuable for people to be able to be present in another place,
no matter what their situation is.
I mean, I kind of laugh about this sometimes when I like my family has a,
you know, we love going down to Kauai and it's beautiful there.
And we'll be out there and I love surfing.
I love doing a lot of stuff, but I also love being in VR when I'm there too.
So it's obviously that's not, you know, that's not some kind of dystopian thing.
But I think that just if you look at like
equalizing opportunity across the world,
you don't have to be in some kind of dystopian situation
to want to be present with another person
who you care about
or an opportunity that's better in another place.
So that to me always struck me
as a very interesting theme of that science fiction.
But in terms of like exploring sociologically
and technologically what's going to happen i've
always found it pretty fascinating let's talk about long-term planning and long-term bets for
a second i find you particularly interesting in this respect because you're a founder ceo
with sort of a lot of founder driven control you're you're in a sense you know one of the
last of a generation and you can make long-term bets. And I know when we
were chatting, I guess last week a bit, you mentioned having a 15-year roadmap for Metaverse.
And what I'd love to ask you is how you manage, say, the short-term or the intermediate term
within the company with employees. Because? Because if you look at,
say, Instagram, WhatsApp, the bets paid off. But at the time, there's a lot of scrutiny.
The media sort of had a field day, and by and large, were wrong. But I'm wondering,
since those types of bets are not necessarily obvious in the moment to everyone involved,
how do you think about managing internally when you are making these long-term bets? It's hard. And I don't think that there's just one way to do it. People are psychologically
much more interested and capable of focusing on a long-term outcome when they feel secure in the
near term. So when there's a lot of near-term thrash or prospects don't look good or the market is down overall, even if that's not specific to your company, even if it's a kind of broader thing, I think that that definitely strains people's time horizons.
But good leadership is you try to get people excited about where you're going.
You obviously, you can't just ignore the short term.
There's a lot of stuff that we need to get done there.
And at this point, it's a pretty big company.
So, I mean, as remember when I was getting started,
feeling like you weren't understood kind of feels bad. I think that there's a normal human impulse,
which is you want to be understood. I think that that's partially why people want to express
themselves and why communication is so important. People at some level have this intrinsic desire
to be kind of understood and belong
and feel like they're, you know, belong with the people around them.
And obviously being in a state where you're kind of, something that you're trying to do
is kind of fundamentally misunderstood or that people don't believe in it can be tough.
But after going through a bunch of these cycles, I actually feel like I've trained myself to
kind of see it the opposite way,
which is if I'm doing something that feels too well understood for too long,
then I feel like I'm just being complacent. So after having gone through a bunch of these different cycles, whether it's, you know, a lot of things that are just not controversial today,
but at the time people thought were crazy, taking the service initially from being a
college website to not buying Instagram or WhatsApp, which were,
you know, billions of dollars for the acquisitions. But like at the time people were like, what?
You know, I remember, I think it was, I don't know if it was Jon Stewart or Colbert, but they did a
segment that was making fun of the Instagram acquisition that was like, what? It's like,
you bought Instagram for a billion dollars of money? Are you kidding? So I think some of these things,
it's like, you just, you kind of go through a bunch of these and you have the conviction to
kind of push back on the, on the world a little bit and say, okay, no, we're going to get through
this and come out in 18 months, 24 months with something that we believe in. And, and after that
happens a few times, you kind of understand that that could happen. Most people still will get more of these bets wrong than right.
So it's not like, you know, I think it's obviously very important to not get too overconfident
with this.
But at this point, I kind of feel like if people fully feel like they understand what
we are as a company and what we're doing, then I'm not pushing it hard enough.
And that actually, now I'm at the point where like that feels bad to me.
So I kind of like want to push us into the zone, which is, okay, let's kind of constantly be doing something that
can be doubted. Because if we're not, then what are we doing? We have this huge opportunity to
do exciting things and help invent things and create things for the world. And if it's obvious
to everyone that we're kind of going to be able to do each of the things that we're working on,
then I don't feel like we're kind of making the most of what we need to do. So I'm not sure that that answers the original
question around internally, you know, how do you get people through it? But I actually think a lot
of this, how do you get an organization of 100,000 people through something is about managing your
own psychology and about managing your team psychology. For sure. You know, one of the
things that I've always found is you can pretty much, I think, get an organization through and a team through almost any challenge,
as long as you can maintain good cohesion. So it's the external stuff that doesn't bother me
that much. I mean, it's, you know, people can criticize us. I mean, I, you know, if they're
people I respect, I care a lot about that and want to make sure we do better, but it doesn't
make me not sleep at night. When our stock price goes, but it doesn't make me not sleep at night.
When our stock price goes down, that doesn't make me not sleep at night.
When there's a new competitor, that doesn't make me not sleep at night.
If there's an issue on my team and there isn't good cohesion, then I'm not sleeping well until I resolve that.
It goes back to the very first thing we were talking about with fencing.
It's intellectual and you're managing your energy. I think in order to get through these things and build big long-term things, you kind of just need to, I think you
need to take care of yourself and you need to take care of your core team. And basically in doing so,
you can lead a pretty large organization through some pretty difficult times to do some pretty
awesome stuff. But I think that it's intellectual, it's energy, and it's about kind of training
yourself to be uncomfortable. So let's it's about training yourself to be uncomfortable.
So let's talk about the training yourself to be uncomfortable or to become more comfortable with discomfort.
Does anything come to mind just in terms of managing your psychology?
For my own psychology, the way that I try to manage this stuff is I wake up in the morning and you get whatever emails you have of stuff that's going on in the world.
So it's world events, it's team events, whatever trends we're seeing across our products. And
often in there, there's a fair amount of bad news and like new things that I need to absorb.
And one of the things I've found that just for kind of managing myself is that if I try to just
go straight into the day, almost every morning when I wake up
and like read through my emails and get the news,
it's almost like getting punched
with sort of like a ton of new context.
And it's like, okay, I need to like internalize this.
So I found that doing something physical
and something that's like meditative
to take my mind off of it for like an hour,
so that I can reset and go do work is really important. So that's why, you know, things like foiling or surfing have been really important
to me because when you're out there in the water, it's like pretty hard to focus on anything else.
When you're on the board, you're focused on making sure you stay on the board and don't
mess something up. When you're not, you're, you know, especially if you're kind of towing
or something like that, there's not a whole lot of downtime. So I've found that for my own performance is significantly better when I
have something like that, that's like meditative and physical and allows me to kind of output
some energy and then I can come back in. And it's almost like I'll have subconsciously settled all
the news that have happened in the world. Now it's like, okay, now let's go deal with it.
Now, obviously, if there's something that's really an emergency, I'm not going to,
you know, go do a sport or something, I'll go deal with it. And obviously, part of life is you don't
always get to control your schedule. And that's kind of how that goes. And when I compare kind of
how I do on the days when I kind of get to have some time to soak that in or to kind of have an
outlet versus just like jumping right in. I
find I'm often like stewing in bad news or something. And then I just, I'm not as productive.
So that's sort of my own personal way that I, that I try to manage situations like this, but
obviously a key part of this is like having an awesome team. And, and it's not, it's not,
you know, primarily about me at this point, you know, it's a big company and we have awesome
people who are, who are running all these different groups. So I get that the, what I'm, And it's not primarily about me at this point. It's a big company and we have awesome people
who are running all these different groups.
So I get that what I'm saying,
kind of how I've worked out the system for myself
isn't necessarily something that would work
for a lot of other people.
I think the meditative palate cleanser makes sense though,
especially if you're talking about things like foiling
where the consequence of a lapse of attention
on what you're doing has immediate penalties.
So it's regulating in a sense.
Maybe I'm not strong-willed enough or calm enough to just do straight-up meditation.
It's like I actually need to put myself in a situation where it's difficult to not focus
on that thing.
Part of this too, and I do think managing energy is an interesting thing. I mean, some of the folks who I work with at the same time, just kind of managing
that so that way I can like manage my own energy and diffuse it well enough. So that way it's like,
okay, I have the thing that I'm focused on that that day. And I it's really important to me that
I can as often as possible manage my schedule. So I can actually focus on the things that I'm
naturally thinking about. I just think the engagement that you get of having like a
immediate feedback loop around thinking about something
and then getting to go talk to the people
who are working on this is so much better
than like going and scheduling a meeting
that you'll have three weeks later when,
I mean, maybe the topic will still be important,
but it's not like what's going on at that time.
So getting that balance right,
I think is an important thing for sustainability
for the organization as well.
Yeah, for sure.
And we may come back to energy management. We're going to touch a lot of subjects. We're going to bounce from the professional
to the personal and everything in between. Let's touch on some things that are kind of top of mind
or might be top of mind right now, because I certainly have a lot of questions related to, say,
the metaverse and a longer-term roadmap. And we chatted briefly prior to this
about engineering versus science problems.
So I think I'd love to unpack that at some point.
But let me ask a really specific question first,
and that's related to kinesthetic feedback
and engagement, right?
So one thing that struck me about Ready Player One,
especially in the cinematic version,
so the movie itself,
is that you have this incredible tactile environment
where they're grabbing objects and interacting with objects,
feeling impact and so on.
But then you see them cut to an external shot of someone in a, say, trailer
where they wouldn't actually have that kind of feedback,
even though they have haptic suits in Ready Player One.
What do you see as the roadmap for that type of interactivity?
I mean, the more I thought about this, the more I realized, well, surface level stimulation
may not be quite as immersive as people would hope for. Do we need to wait for some type of
Neuralink type of computer brain interface where we're actually stimulating the brain
and not simulating, but actually producing
sort of the perception of kinesthetic engagement.
How do you think about the future
of that type of hardware and interaction?
I think that there's a pretty long arc there.
And it's also just pretty amazing
how good of a sense of presence you can get,
even with certain things being pretty raw or out of place.
The original devices that we had for virtual reality didn't even have hand presence.
They just had a headset and it had this wire.
So you kind of had this wire wrapped around your neck because it had to go to a computer to power the thing.
And every year we basically knocked down one or two more barriers, right?
So then we got Quest, which you got rid of the wire.
You got it so that now you could run virtual reality at, you know,
one 50th or one 100th of the compute power than what you have in a powerful desktop
with a mobile chip on your headset.
Then we got hands.
And the first set of hands were basically controllers. But now
you're actually getting actual hand tracking with like all 10 fingers being able to be tracked in
real time. You know, in the next version that's coming out, we have sensors for your eyes,
you can make realistic eye contact with someone in virtual reality. And just thinking about to
what extent you can do without some of this stuff. I mean, think about all the Zoom calls that you've been on over the last couple of years during COVID.
There's no real eye contact over video conference because your cameras are in different places.
And even without that, you know, it still gets you pretty far.
So in VR today, adding realistic eye contact, each of these things, it's like you kind of almost don't realize that you're missing them. And then when you have them, you're like, whoa, that's like a really core part of the human experience
is being able to make eye contact and hold eye contact with someone and have that gaze.
So I think you'll just add more things over time, more realistic expressions, more realistic avatars,
going from kind of cartoon and stylistic and fun to photorealistic and having that work.
And then at some point, I think you will get haptics.
And the way that we kind of think about haptic glove, for example,
screens have resolutions, right?
You think about how many pixels are on the screen.
And you can actually think about haptics in your hand or anywhere else
is basically also having a resolution.
It's like how many pinpoints can it make across your hand?
And your hand is super sensitive.
So it can actually,
your actual physical hand can have a very high amount of resolution for haptics. But when we
first start getting haptics, they're not going to have that high of resolution, but it's still
going to be amazing. And then every year they're going to get better and better and better. So I
think that there's quite a far roadmap on this, which is partially what makes it super exciting.
It's like you can have realistically a 15 15 year roadmap of like, what is it going to take to deliver the
kind of virtual reality presence that you want to be, you know, feel like you're physically there
with another person. At the same time, augmented reality is a whole separate set of problems,
because now you're putting a hologram in the real world. So that's kind of a similar thing there.
But being able to just work on a project that's
like a 15-year project where there's a lot of it is an engineering problem that you just need to go
build, but a lot of it is also unknown, right? So there's like six or seven key unknowns that we
just have multiple teams going out and trying to attack different approaches at that. I just think
it's a fascinating and fun way to make progress. And of course, each year you're intercepting and
launching a new product. So I find this to be some of the most exciting work that I've ever
gotten to be a part of. And I hope that for the rest of my career that I get to engage in more
projects that are sort of longer term oriented with this mix of engineering and science and
kind of continual milestones. I think it's just a great way to make progress in the world.
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I'd love to ask some more questions about Metaverse and also the recent announcement
related to Instagram and NFTs. Just to touch on that,
and then we're going to go back and fill in with some backstory and some family questions,
if you're open to that. As I'm looking at the metaverse and have been observing fairly closely
Web3 developments and NFTs and so on in the last handful of years, I've been thinking quite a lot about your long-term
planning and then how you must think about secondary effects, tertiary effects of these
technological advances. And then I've also thought about, I think it was Andy Grove who had paired
metrics. So he would have a primary outcome metric that they were tracking, and then they
would look for correlated impacts that they could track that were undesirable or should be addressed in advance. And I'll give you an example. So
playing with Oculus, I was very impressed with the technology because I used a very early,
I don't want to say prototype, but version years ago. And the advances are really tremendous.
And I had an opportunity to chat with a friend of mine who, unbeknownst to me, at some point, and I'm blanking on the exact game title, but he was something like second in the world or third in the world in mini golf.
And that was, I want to say, a year, year and a half ago.
Now he's not even in the top 500.
So there's clearly a large demand for this.
The number of users is increasing rapidly. And it's still early. It's really, really early. because it was my first time not mapping out sort of the playing area and walking around.
So I actually had the ability to test it as somebody who was sort of mobility restricted,
which was amazing. When I came out of the experience, it took a while for my eyes and
brain to readjust to sort of the depth perception of objects around me. And I was chatting with this
friend, John, he said, oh yeah, you know, it takes about two to three months and then you adjust completely to that. And I'm wondering what types of societal changes,
maybe physical adaptations you're tracking as more and more people come online and begin to
spend more and more time using, say, VR. The framework that you're talking about,
about having goals and metrics to track those goals and then countermetrics is, I think, a really important one that we basically encode into
all of our teams across the company.
They're basically things that we think are good if we can enable more connection or more
different things across the company.
But then there are countermetrics in all of these areas that we're tracking to make sure
that we don't exceed or don't increase negative effects. For VR specifically, the biggest issue that people report is still
this feeling of motion sickness. And the basic issue, just to kind of break it down, is your eye,
now eyes are not computers, but you can kind of think about it as a refresh rate. If something
changes in the world, it'll kind of take five to ten milliseconds for different people for you to sort of recognize that.
And if you think about what's technically happening with VR, basically, you have to render this whole world continuously.
And if a person changes their head position or eye position, it expects the image to be different. But then by the time that their saccade is done, which is what it's called,
basically your kind of eye refocusing, if we haven't rendered correctly what
you would kind of expect to be in that space, then it creates this real
feeling of discomfort over time.
It's not like you miss one frame and you feel terrible for most people, but it's over time. If you're not doing that efficiently, then that creates this feeling
that it creates, it's a real physical feeling of discomfort. And this is partially why the early
versions of the VR headsets needed to be plugged into a computer because they needed to, in order
to be able to render a world that quickly, you needed a lot of computing power. So it's this
tremendous engineering challenge to now be able to do that so much more efficiently that you're doing that
on a mobile chip, which is 150th or 1 100th is powerful as the desktop things, but get that to
work really well. I would say that that problem is not fully solved yet. It's getting better in
every generation. And people aren't computers and not everyone is the
same and people have different sensitivity to this stuff. So, you know, some people,
if a headset is running at 60 frames per second, that won't bother them. But other people, I mean,
at the other end of the spectrum, if a headset is running at 120 frames per second, they may still
perceive some glitchiness. And for most people, if you can get to 72 or 90, you're in pretty good
shape, but there are like outliers and people are not all the same.
And, you know, at the end of the day, making this a technology that can be comfortable for basically everyone is going to be a really critical part of making this happen.
So that's probably the biggest effect that we see.
Some of the other stuff, like you mentioned, I think you just need some more kind of a longitudinal study.
It's tough to exactly understand all the effects
of anything right up front, but you want to be mindful of that and be open to the fact that what
you're doing could have issues and that you want to improve those issues. And we try to research
that stuff and basically try to continuously improve it. But that's the biggest thing that
we're tracking right now. And on looking at societal changes, we could look at that for a second, then we'll come back to Instagram. I've been very engaged in watching, say, Axie Infinity,
as an example, and play to earn in different forms. And it's been pretty mind boggling to see,
for instance, that there are so many players in the Philippines who are earning income that they can now impact large elections as a
constituent. And I'm wondering how you see this developing. And this is certainly Meta is going
to be a primary player. There are going to be other players. But if we get to the point where,
and please poke holes in this if you have a different view of things. But if we get to a point where there's almost a universal basic income provided by the broad spectrum of jobs that you can have in the
metaverse or online, what do you think some of the societal effects will be of that? It seems to be
certainly growing faster than I ever could have imagined, even though a lot of it is maybe not
right in my backyard, but it's certainly on a global level, seems to be expanding really quickly. I'd love to hear you speak to that in
any capacity. I don't interpret this as a universal basic income. I think what we're
actually going to see is just the creation of a lot of different worlds that have different rules.
So I think we'll kind of explore and people will get to spend more time
in worlds that there are very different rule sets around, right? Everything from different
physics, literally, to like how you can move through the space to different modes of governance.
You know, one thing that I think is pretty important and that I hope that we can build
into the Horizon platform that it's the social platform that we're building,
is the idea that anyone can create a space,
but then spaces can be nested in other spaces.
So you can basically create a building or a store,
and then that can be inside a city that someone else creates.
And then there's the question there of,
okay, well, how do you govern that?
Who gets a say in what policies?
Who can enter it?
How do taxes work?
Like, what's the basic business model of that space?
What are the design codes around, like, what are you allowed to build there?
All these different dimensions.
And the physical world is, there's a lot of it, but it is, at the end of the day, you
know, more finite than what we're going to have with the virtual world.
So not everyone can kind of get to be the mayor of their own virtual space and see how that evolves. But I think part of
what we're going to get to see is they're going to have, they could be young people in Philippines
or anywhere else around the world, experimenting with basically creating worlds that are not just
a single space or an experience, but actually like an environment or a polity in a way that other
people can kind of be a part of. And I think that there will be sort of pretty interesting
innovation, you know, social and economic and governance innovation, as long as this gets
designed in a good way. So I guess more than any specific policy idea, I think this could end up
being a way to basically explore a lot of different ideas and kind of see which of these different environments that evolve are going to be appealing to people in different ways.
I think that's going to be wild to watch play out, and it's one of the things that I'm really looking forward to. catalyzed by meta, but just that you see coming or plausibly coming that you guys are trying to
get ahead of or think about just in terms of mitigating problems later? Is there anything
that comes to mind? I'm not sure if this is exactly what you're getting at, but one big
shift that I think is happening is the rise of distributed work. I don't view that as a problem.
I think it's good. There's just a
lot of research that shows that people's opportunities, social, economic, and otherwise,
are generally pretty anchored to physically where they are. And I think, you know, sometimes people
draw this juxtaposition of, you know, say, okay, there's like the digital world and the real world.
That's not actually how I think about it. I think that there's a physical world and a digital world,
and the real world is actually both. And increasingly, I think people will use these
technologies to be able to be present in places that they physically can't be. And I think that
that's really powerful, right? And it's like, we're doing this podcast and we're not sitting
next to each other physically, but it like feels like we're here and we're kind of having a live
conversation. And in the future, you know, maybe five years from now, if we were doing this,
we'll have AR glasses and hologram version of me will be on the couch next to you. And I think
that will be even better than what we're doing right now. So I think that through video chat,
you can have moments where you feel present. But I think through things like virtual and
augmented reality, when you can have an office and someone can be walking through it as a hologram even though they're physically in a
different place i think that you'll just be able to much more naturally unlock more of the
opportunities both social and economic and i guess other others as well of being able to be around
people and be present no matter where you actually are so people will be free to to kind of live
where they want maybe where their family physically is in a country that they grew up in, but they'll
have all the opportunities that will be available around the world. So that I think is awesome. I
think it's one of the most promising things about the future. And one of the things that I'm trying
to do is sort of taking the conversation in a different direction is we actually recently did
this exercise at our company where we were thinking about, okay, we're coming up on almost a hundred thousand people soon in our company.
And we kind of think about our values as a company is like our cultural operating system.
How do we get work done well and continue to build the things that we need to build? And,
you know, a big part of the values, and I'd love to talk through them here. I mean, I haven't,
this is actually the first podcast or any public thing that I've done
where I've discussed any of the values.
So I think it'd probably be pretty interesting
to go through it.
But one of them is basically,
we've rolled out this value called
live in the future,
which is basically about
the world is moving towards
being distributed first,
both because we think that
that's a good trend for how we work
and because we aspire to play a role
in building all the technology to enable that
through virtual reality, augmented reality, metaverse, software, and infrastructure, and
like avatars to express herself. We have the saying that we want people inside the company
to eat your own dog food. They use the things that we're building internally as part of how
we work because that's also, it gets us in a faster feedback loop to make those tools better
for everyone else around the world. But I mean, that's one of the six values that we
just rolled out. I actually think it might be interesting to go through the others too,
but up to you. Yeah, please, please. Let's go through them. And then I'll have some
questions about them, I'm sure. Some of them we kept, but we're just changing
how we execute them. So one thing that I think our company is pretty well known for
is having the value of move fast. I've always basically believed that values are only useful if you can legitimately disagree with them.
I always thought like values like be honest are not that helpful because like, of course, you have to be honest, right?
It's like I feel bad even needing to write that down.
If you have to write that down, then something kind of went wrong.
But I don't know any good company that doesn't focus on honesty or demand that of their employees. So from my perspective, that's not like a useful,
if you only get to write down like five or six concepts to program into your culture,
you want them to be things that good companies can reasonably do differently.
And I think part of this is that good values, you need to be able to give something up in order to
get them. So around move fast, we've always had
this question. It's like, you can't just tell people to move fast. The question is like, what's
the deal? Like, what are you, what are you willing to give up? And famously it used to be move fast
and break things. And the, the idea was that we tolerated some amount of bugs in the software in
order to encourage people to move quickly. Cause moving fast, I think is the key to learning. It's
like, you want to increase the iteration cycle so you can get feedback from the people
you serve quickly and then incorporate that into the product. So we would literally get
into situations where competitors of us would ship once a year, once every six months, and
we'd ship code every day. Of course, we're going to learn faster and we're going to build
something better if you're shipping something every day. So the question is, what are you
willing to give up? So it used to be, we would tolerate some amount
of defects in the product. It got to the point as the company grew, we were producing so many
bugs that going back and fixing them was actually slowing us down more than we were speeding up.
So I still thought, okay, moving fast, this is still a really important thing.
We've got to change how we do it. So we kind of evolved to building a somewhat less sexy phrase,
move fast with stable infrastructure. And basically the new bet was we're going to invest
disproportionately in building up good infrastructure and abstractions inside our
companies. That way, the average engineer who comes here is going to be much faster and more
productive at getting things done than in other places. And at a scale of almost 100,000 people,
what this really means now, companies just add process over time. And it's all good intention,
right? It's like people are trying to make sure that we don't repeat mistakes that we've made.
So you just add this checklist of things that everyone needs to do before they can ship anything.
But most companies don't have a counter process to that to basically garbage collect and remove
processes that are no longer that useful what i'm really focused on now is just methodically
going through and making sure all of the different processes that we've built up as a company still
serve us well and in kind of empowering an effort to go do that so so now that's that's kind of what
move fast is focused on should we keep going you want to do the next one let's keep going all right
so let's do it so the second one is it's focused on long- we keep going? You want to do the next one? Yeah, let's keep going. All right, so let's do it. So the second one is,
it's focused on long-term impact,
where on the one hand,
you want a very fast cycle time
to learn quickly.
But on the other hand,
you want to always keep people
focused on the prize and long-term.
You know, one thing
that's sort of unfortunate,
we had a version of this before
that we just said focus on impact.
But a lot of people,
especially as the company grew,
interpreted that to mean do something that would make an impact in this a lot of people, especially as the company grew, interpreted that
to mean do something that would make an impact in this six-month cycle, right? So that way,
like when you have your performance review, your manager can point to something good that you did
and you get promoted. And it's like, oh God, that's like definitely not what we're trying to do.
Obviously, it's good if you can have an impact in the near term, but you want to be able to
kind of have a fast iteration speed to learn quickly. But it's not always important to deliver something every six months. You want to make sure that you're focusing and
improving things for the long term. So we've actually made a bunch of changes to our culture.
We changed performance management and the performance cycle that people have from every
six months to now it's just once a year to make it so that the timeframes that people have are
longer. The next one is a new one that we added.
We call build awesome things.
And the idea here is that I actually think that there's a pretty big difference
between things that are valuable
and things that are awe-inspiring and amazing.
And I kind of think that our company
has been pretty good at building things
that a lot of people use and like, but
for a combination of reasons, we just haven't focused quite as much until the last few years,
especially as we've worked on a lot of this metaverse work in virtual reality and things
like that. We haven't focused as much on things that are just awe-inspiring. And I actually think
there's this balance where you need to do both. You can't do things that are just awe-inspiring. And I actually think there's this balance where you need to do both.
You can't do things that are just all inspiration and no substance.
But I also think you can go too far in the other direction
of just doing things that are useful.
But I think a lot of what the world needs right now
is inspiration.
There are a lot of things in our lives in modern day
that work pretty well,
but a lot of what we sort of lack
is a positive vision for the future.
A lot of the metaverse work, to me, has that level of inspiration. And that's partially why I find it super exciting.
We talked about live in the future. That's mostly focused on being a great distributed workforce.
From the early days of COVID, I sort of tried to put a flag in the ground that we were going to,
even after COVID is done, I think by the end of this decade, hopefully have 50% or more of the company working distributed and working remotely.
And I still think that that will be awesome and just unlock opportunity, get access to more talent.
And then the last two, be direct and respect your colleagues, which I find as the company grows,
one of my colleagues, Boz, has the saying that we're in danger of nicing ourselves to death.
I think like as organizations
grow, there's a sort of politeness that comes in where when you're just working with a small set
of people and you're comfortable with them, you can actually be a lot more blunt and direct. And
Cheryl always says that the amount of progress that we make is directly proportional to the
number of hard conversations that we're willing to have. As companies grow, I think like it's
tougher to give hard feedback. So trying to build that into the cultural operating system, which is like,
we're just going to really reward and focus on being direct with each other, I think is a really
important thing. And then the last one, I realize I've been talking for like 10 minutes straight at
this point, but I think this is the first time I've talked about this stuff publicly. So I have
a lot of things to say. When we rebranded the company to Meta, we had this internal question of what should we call
our employees? And someone actually emailed Douglas Hofstetter, the renowned author and
thinker. He wrote back and was like, it should be MetaMates. And internally, I felt like if
Douglas Hofstetter thinks we should be MetaMates, then who am I to disagree with that? So our last
value is Meta Metamates Me,
which is, it's sort of this adaptation
from this old naval saying,
ship, shipmate, self.
As the company grows,
you want to make sure that the people stay focused
on the long-term and the whole enterprise
and then their teams,
but then also take care of themselves.
I think that that's like,
sort of having that as a framework is pretty important.
So I'm happy to go into more detail on any of these, but I also want to be aware that
this is quite a long answer and monologue as it is.
So wherever you want to go with this.
Yeah, let's pick up on it.
And then I have a whole bunch of other things I'd love to get into.
But with respect to the values, so I've seen and looked very closely at the values of,
say, Amazon, which you have iterated that bezos put
together and others and i think the degree to which values end up the for lack of a better term
sort of operating system of people at a company varies widely company to company and i'd love to
know how or if you are and you mentioned one example of the longer performance review
timeframes, right? Incentivizing these behaviors. Do you have a team that is sort of determining
how to facilitate supporting these values throughout the organization so that they do
have more saturation, so to speak? Each of these is basically coupled with an operational effort.
We have a set of work that we do that's like move fast is the work.
And it's basically, it's actually something that I'm pretty engaged in,
where I will just routinely go and sit down with largely engineering leaders,
but also folks across the company and ask them, okay, well,
what is slowing you down? Right. So in addition to the product reviews that we'll do, where we'll
talk about what are the decisions we should be making or, you know, what should we be investing
in? I think it's useful to often just sit down with people and have a whole conversation that
are like, all right, what are the things that are, that are basically causing you to move more
slowly? And then I view a bunch of my job as CEO, but then also we have other people
who just work on this to try to go remove those obstacles. And obviously we have to do it in a way
that helps fit the other goals of the company. If people are saying, hey, it would make me be able
to go faster if I didn't have to care about this issue. If that's an important issue, then obviously
we're not going to just say no, right? It's like, let's figure out how we can care about that issue and do this as efficiently as possible.
You can apply energy methodically over a long period of time towards oiling or greasing the wheels in the organization in the direction that you want.
And I think you can get it done over time.
I remember when I was first learning about running an organization, I had this conversation with this guy, Dan Rosenzweig.
He was the COO of Yahoo at the time.
And he's great.
He's a great person.
And he told me this thing that will always stick with me, which is that every organization sucks, but you get to choose the ways in which your organization sucks.
Which is maybe the most negative possible way of putting it. But I think it's basically, if you want to move fast on certain dimensions, you can, but you only get a few things
like that. If you want to optimize moving fast, we can do that. If we want to optimize being
distributed first, we can do that. But maybe you get like five of these. And we are very focused
on operationalizing them and making sure that each of these values is backed up by like real
work streams that we have
or decisions that we make or processes that we make. I mean, I mentioned changing the performance
management tool for live in the future. One of the big things that we're doing is, you know,
I don't just want teams to be working distributed and working over video conference. I also want
them to be using workrooms and using their VR headsets to workrooms is this product. It's the
VR product that we built for collaboration. And is this product. It's the VR product
that we built for collaboration. And it's great. It's early still, but it's fascinating. It's like
you can, you're in a meeting and you're sitting around a table. And even though the fidelity
isn't quite as photorealistic on the avatars yet as, you know, say the conversation that we're
having now, the fact that you can sit around a table and you can see people's gestures and you can have a side conversation.
So if there's 10 people around the table, you can turn to the person next to them and ask them a question.
There can be multiple conversations going on in the room, like a normal room.
But obviously you can't do anything like that over a video conference.
There are a bunch of things like that that actually make it in some ways feel more real already than video conferences, even though the avatars are still
very stylized and cartoony. So, but we basically have a rule that everyone who's in leadership or
management should be basically doing at least like one standing meeting a week in workrooms.
We want to get the feedback loop going on that, that that team now is overwhelmed with feedback
on how to, on how to get it to be even better. But, but I think that one of the outcomes of this
is like, I think workrooms is going to probably learn what they need to do to be even better. But I think one of the outcomes of this is like,
I think workrooms is going to probably learn what they need to do to be a great product
a lot faster than a lot of others in the space.
So that's kind of one way to operationalize these.
But yeah, you got to operationalize them
if you want them to be real.
Otherwise, they're just words
that you put on a website somewhere.
I want to say that one thing that came up repeatedly
in the course of doing homework for this conversation
was how relentlessly product-focused you are. And I heard multiple anecdotes. I don't know if they're
apocryphal. I can imagine them happening, though, where you'd be walking down the street and some
kid would be like, Facebook sucks. And you'd walk over and be like, oh, yeah? Well, show me why it
sucks. Show me. And then you'd take 25 notes. And the next day, team would get a long list of
things from having actually sat down with someone for a half hour, 45 minutes, and having them walk
you through their experience. And I do think that... I think that's generally true.
So I'd love to ask a few more questions about just Web3 in general, and then maybe backstep
for a second to ask you about a number of other facets in your
life with Instagram and NFTs. So I know that Web3 is getting a lot of airtime right now. And I just
came from a separate conference where every conversation involved Web3. And it strikes me
that Web2, Web3, decentralized, centralized are going to coexist. I mean, I'm no expert,
but it seems that people want curation. In many cases, they want trusted third parties.
I don't want to always be my own bank. There are good reasons why I use banks instead of
not taking on all those responsibilities myself. And I'm wondering how, let's just say in the case
of Instagram, some challenges that perhaps you foresee. And I can imagine, for
instance, if people can turn hypothetically posts into NFTs, how that might affect, let's just say,
content moderation and safety precautions and so on, if they actually have ownership of their
posts, right? So this is a hypothetical that I'm just kind of throwing out
there, but what type of challenges do you foresee coming up in the near term or in the long term?
The one that you just mentioned is, I think, a really fundamental one. I mean, at some level,
you can make things censorship resistant, which has a bunch of equities. And there are certainly
a lot of people who feel like their expression is restricted online more than they would like.
But that also prevents if you really can't stop people from expressing things, then
how are you going to fight against terrorism or child exploitation or things that people think
are like really awful, even the people who generally want more stuff to be allowed online. So really removing
the ability for anyone to do any kind of moderation at all in a broader platform, I think,
is problematic. I think in something like messaging, we don't expect the people who run
our messaging platforms, whether it's us or Apple or whoever, to go kind of moderate a message that
you send in private. But it's sort of this distinction between the living room and the town square, right? If you're in a space that's a broader space,
then I think that there is a little more need to make sure that things conform to the values that
society wants, right? And reducing things that are just really, that I think everyone agrees are bad,
like terrorism and child exploitation and bullying and things like that.
Taking a step back on your question around Web3 and NFTs, I commit a lot of this from the perspective of thinking about the metaverse and how to make it more interoperable and a better
environment for creators. I do think that there's an interesting conversation to have around
Instagram and Facebook and what to do there. But I tend to think about that as sort of,
how can you help bootstrap a creative economy in these 2D social apps that will be much,
much bigger once you get to this metaverse vision over time? I think the reason why
interoperability is so important is because imagine this case, you know, we get to a point
where instead of spending three hours a day on video conference calls, you're now spending that
same time in basically feeling like you're actually present with someone either because
they're a hologram on your couch with augmented reality, or you're in virtual reality in something
like workrooms, but a future version of it where you're like, actually, you feel like you're
physically there with them around a table. Okay, so now in a world where you're spending a few hours a day doing that,
you're going to care about how you express yourself. Both the avatar, right, you show up
as a photorealistic version of yourself, or you're a dragon, or you're kind of a stylized version.
But a lot of this is going to be like, okay, how do we choose to express ourselves is through the
clothing and what we wear and what we put on. But now imagine that every app that you go to,
anything that you do to express yourself, so you get a sweatshirt, it's in an app,
you can't actually bring that to another app. That would just be massively stifling for the
whole creative economy. Because now, as a consumer, you're not going to want to buy a lot
of sweatshirts because they're not going to be that useful because you can't bring them between
places. And because you're not going to want to buy that much, it's going to be less useful for creators and fewer
people are going to be able to make a living basically designing these kinds of experiences
or virtual architecture or virtual clothes or different things like that. So the ability to
be able to take how you want to express yourself and take your stuff with you between these
different experiences, I think is just like a really key technical principle
and standards thing to hopefully achieve
with the metaverse.
So I hope we can get there.
And in order to push in that direction,
I think it's helpful to start sooner
in things like Instagram and Facebook
by supporting the communities
that are doing things like NFTs.
That way you can get to minting,
you can get to bringing your stuff around
between these different places.
But I do think that the challenges that you're mentioning where all systems, I think, end up being some combination of some element of decentralized and centralized. I think actually a lot of new systems just create value by decentralizing and creating more opportunity in some area by creating a new tool that a lot of people use. But I think we'll need to get the balance right. And that's something that
I'm probably more optimistic about the Web3 stuff than most other people who are running
these big companies. So I'm trying to push us to be more forward leaning on that.
Our kind of fundamental belief is that if we create more use cases, where creators can start
to do this stuff, then you'll get more experimentation. And you'll also just get a
bigger creative economy over time, which I think is a huge part of the goal. It's going to be exciting
to watch. I have to say also that doing a bit of biographical research, looking at your trajectory,
having known quite a bit already, it's incredible to me how much complexity you have learned to
grapple with in the sense that now on a global stage, if there are
conflicts or state actors who want to engage or need to engage, meta is almost always,
it would seem, going to be on the playing field in some capacity. And it's just very impressive
to me that you have, from the very beginning, reached this point where you're grappling with so many different
layers of complexity. So I just wanted to say that first and foremost. I appreciate that.
I can't even imagine. I honestly can't even imagine. I have enough trouble dealing with
the complexity of a tiny team of fewer than 10 people, much less 100,000 and then the global
stage. One thing I did want to ask about, I had Noah Feldman on this podcast a long time ago.
You put a lot of time and thought into the oversight board.
What is your assessment of how that's going?
Well, I think it's early.
One of the things that I think has been really promising
is that society needs a network of different institutions
that it feels like are legitimate
or have some legitimacy for
making decisions in order to basically accept the decisions and feel like they're fair.
And I think one basic issue that we've found ourselves in is that there's just no way that
any single private company should be responsible for arbitrating so many questions of social values
between free expression and safety or
locking things down to ensure privacy versus making sure that the marketplace can be open
and competitive, right? It's like these are real issues and there's equities on all sides.
And there's no single decision that any company can make on any of them that I think is going
to be universally accepted. So I think therefore, you really want to not set up a situation
where one company kind of has to make a lot of these decisions by themselves.
That's why I wanted to create this oversight board.
I recognize that we're always going to have to be kind of the first line
and we're going to be responsible for making the moderation decisions on our platform.
But I kind of thought it was important that we shouldn't have the final say in the most important decisions, and that there was
a different body. The judicial analogy is something like a Supreme Court, although obviously, you know,
there are all these differences here, but something that people can appeal to, and that we can also
refer some of the most complicated cases to, and that they can make the final and binding judgment
on that. And one of the things that we've seen and that they can make the final and binding judgment on that.
And one of the things that we've seen that I think has been interesting is that it does seem like there's a little bit more acceptance when the oversight board weighs in on something complicated
than when we just do it ourselves. And I think part of that was we put a lot of thought into
making sure that the people who are on the oversight board are world-renowned in terms of a focus on human rights, really focused on free expression as well.
Because at the end of the day, these platforms are about giving people a voice, diverse, spanning a large portion of the globe.
Legitimacy isn't like a binary thing.
It's not like either it's completely rejected or it's completely accepted by everyone.
We were mindful in setting this up. And I think the oversight board has also done
a good job itself in kind of managing its independence. It is a completely independent
organization from us, and it has to be. And its independence is super important for its continued
legitimacy. Overall, I'd say I'm sort of optimistic about how it's going, but I think
building that sort of trust and legitimacy also takes time. It's not like a thing that
you can just turn on in a year and then all of a sudden people will think, okay, this thing exists,
great. It's going to be making decisions, it often overruling us or rebuking us on things
and people seeing that we respect its independence and its authority and going and implementing that.
That's, I think, how it basically builds legitimacy over time.
But I think as an institution, I think it's really important that we have this kind of
independent function.
Of course, over time, you know, having clear rules set in kind of democratically elected
Congress would be, I think, the most useful thing.
And we're getting that more or less in different parts of the world.
Obviously, it's a little harder in the United States because I think the First Amendment is
great. I'm obviously hugely supportive of the First Amendment, but I think that makes it harder
for anyone in the United States to create or craft different regulations that weigh in on some of
these trade-offs. But I do think over time, there will be a balance that is struck across all of this.
And I think that this is all part of that moving towards that equilibrium.
You mentioned Cheryl earlier. I'd like to come back to Cheryl. So this is a question from a
female friend of mine. I'll just read it kind of as it's written, and I'd love to hear your
thoughts. So Mark's business partnership with Cheryl is legendary. I can't off the top of my
head think of another partnership like this. Male-female, lasted 15 or so years, 15 plus, still going. Why does it work? How does it work?
Why does he think so very few others have such a partnership? I'll just add one more. What has
shifted in his life and business as a result? So I would just love to hear any thoughts on that,
because it does strike me also as a very unusual partnership that has proven itself with tremendous longevity.
I think in a lot of ways, that partnership has defined the growth of the company.
And so first of all, I would give a huge amount of credit for this working to Cheryl.
I think she is an amazing person.
And if you think about when she joined the company,
you know, I was like a kid. She was actually as old as I am now. It was 15 years ago. And,
you know, I was in my early 20s and didn't know anything about business or running a company or anything like this. And I just think the extraordinary amount of patience that she had,
and I mean, in a way is like, as a manager of an organization,
it's almost like she raised me like a child. And not just me, I think like a lot of the people we
have on the team now. So I think she's exceptional in that way. One thing that's interesting about
our company is that the business is sort of oddly divorced from the actual product. Most things, it's like, okay,
you build a product and you sell the product. And in our case, I think one of the things that
created enough space for someone who has as much energy and is as senior as Cheryl to join is the
fact that in the type of business that we have, the consumer part of what we do is actually
somewhat distinct from the advertising and the business part of what we do is actually somewhat distinct from the advertising and
the business part of what we do. So there was enough space, I think, in the company to have
two people who basically were like primary principles for the company. And I've debated
this with a bunch of other peers and people who've created companies. I mean, I know you had
a great podcast with Daniel Ek a while ago towards the beginning of COVID. And I've had this discussion
with him a bunch of times. I was like, well, he's like, I just couldn't do that because like
literally for Spotify, it's like they build the business and the content and all that stuff is
like one kind of package. Whereas I think we're sort of uniquely set up where we can, I can focus
on the consumer part of what we do and she can focus on all the advertising and building the
business. And that just has worked incredibly well over a long period of time, and I think will for a long time to come. So I just have a huge
amount to learn from her. And I think she probably feels, I guess she feels the same way, but you'd
have to ask her. Yeah, maybe that'll be round two. So I do think that the separation of church
and state, I mean, that's probably an overstatement, but the clearly delineated halves of the company,
so to speak, lend themselves to that. It's a really good point. What are her superpowers?
I know that may be a strange word to use, but I think of, say, Warren Buffett referring to
Charlie Munger and saying he has the best 60-second mind on the planet. And they have
very complementary skill sets, slightly different views of the world, although highly compatible values.
What are Cheryl's superpowers that come to mind, if any?
Well, I think she has a very good combination of IQ and EQ.
People either, I think, tend to be more manager or more strategic.
And I think she is very unique in being both. And I just think that that's pretty
rare. Obviously, if you get someone who's great at strategy or great at products, and they're not a
great manager, that's great. If you can have someone who's excellent at one of those things,
you hire them every day. I think it's just exceptionally rare to find people who have,
who are kind of spike in both of those areas. But she actually uses a lot of dating analogies. I don't. But in terms of this
one, I was talking to a friend who is single recently, and we were talking about why she was
single. And I do just think like some people want to go through life with partnerships more than
others. I think that there are some people who like, they want a co founder, they want a partner
who they can run the thing with and who they can have that
experience with on a day-to-day basis. And then there are other people who are just like, okay,
I'll just have a team of five or six people around me and I'll be the leader or the founder,
but I don't need another person. And I just think that's different.
Partnership has always meant a lot to me, both in my personal life and in work. I want people to be on the
voyage with me. This isn't like a solo story. That's a lot of how I derive meaning in life.
And again, you'd have to ask her whether maybe she's oriented in a similar way. But I think
to some degree, I think whether partnerships work over time, probably the number one
factor in that is whether you want the partnership to work over time, probably the number one factor in that is whether you want the partnership to work. Yes, for sure. Or if out of the box, in a sense, you are predisposed to partnership.
Right. Well, let's actually use this as a way to move to a question or just an observation and
then a question that I'd love to ask. And we can take it any direction you'd like to.
So this is from a mutual friend who said, one thing that most people don't know is that his mom is an MD, but she stayed home and never practiced medicine. She worked at the front
desk of his dad's orthodontic business, which was under their home. And she was wondering,
you know, how these family dynamics have shaped who you are today and how you parent your own children? That's a big
question that could go a lot of directions, I recognize, but I'd love to hear you to speak to
that in any way that makes sense. That story is partially true. My mom and dad are both doctors,
and my mom did practice for a bit, but it is true that when Randy, my older sister, was born,
I guess my mom was having a hard time finding childcare and people who she trusted enough
to raise the kids.
So she decided that she wanted to spend more time with us.
But my dad's dental office was attached to the house, like you said.
So it's just this like magical thing where my parents both worked super hard growing
up and were great role models in that way.
But also like when I got home from school, I could just like throw my backpack on the
couch and run downstairs and go see them. And then my dad would always like be drilling someone's tooth.
And like that person was probably not that happy that I came in and was like, Hey dad,
but plenty of stories there. But I mean, my parents are, I mean, they were great parents
for us growing up. They really prioritized family, which is something that I definitely
took from them. And I think not only did I take it from them for myself,
but it was really meaningful for me
in basically who I look for as a partner.
And Priscilla, I think, is really focused on this.
And she obviously has an amazing career
and has way more jobs than I do
in addition to being a parent.
But the family orientation is a really big deal.
My parents always pushed for the they cared that we were,
that we like achieved and did great in school. But beyond that, they didn't really care what
specific thing we were interested in. They just wanted to expose us to a bunch of things. And then
if we were interested in something, then they would try to kind of push
us to become excellent at that thing. My mom was never like, you should go fence. She was just like,
you know, sports are good. Go find some sport. And it's like, oh, you like fencing? It's like,
all right, well, let's get good at that. I have three sisters and they're all excellent at very
different things. Our family is quite musical, but that's most expressed through Randy, who is just an excellent musician.
You can kind of go through the different siblings.
I guess I got computers.
Seems to have worked out for you.
Yeah, I think so.
I'd say Donna's like the intellectual one.
And Elle has always been the kind of most well-rounded and social and athletic of us, which is, you know, as I've grown up and I've kind of gotten even more into sports,
it's just, it's been really fun
just getting to see how much better she is at me
at like skiing and all these things
that we kind of grew up together doing.
But no, I think like that's sort of how I hope
to raise our kids is,
I care a lot that they're going to be good at school,
but I also care that they can get
exposed to a lot of different things and kind of choose the things that they want to do.
It's a fun adventure. One of the things in terms of my parenting is I try to,
no matter what is going on in the day, I always do bedtime with them. I mean, I guess every once
in a while I have to travel, although with COVID it's been nice. I haven't had to travel that much.
So that's maybe one silver lining of the pandemic for the last
couple of years. But it's, you know, I just take an hour every day and we read, we like sing, we,
you know, it's, I'm reading this book with them now, The Way of the Warrior Kid, which is good.
I recommend this. Wait a second. Is this Jocko? It is. This is Jocko Willink. Look at that.
That's great.
It was recommended to me. Do you know him too?
So Jocko's first ever long-form public interview is on this podcast.
Okay, there you go.
Yeah, so I know Jocko very well.
So this book was recommended to me by Toby Lutke, the founder ceo of shopify and the girls love it and now
they've started training jujitsu and they're like so this is the stuff you know takes on a life of
its own it's super fun you know having stuff that we do that we do together every day and then i
always wrap up the day with them we have this routine that max calls the good night things
which is basically every night we go through,
I'm like, all right, what are the things that are most important in life? And they're health,
loving family and friends, and something you're excited about. And like, what did you do to help
someone today? And we basically go through each of these things. And it's like, all right, so health,
it's like, well, what did you do to like, make yourself stronger, more fit today? If you get
hurt, Max broke her leg skiing once. Let's go
through the parts of your body that like still work and that you're going to like be able to
use while you're recovering. And it's like, okay, loving family and friends. Let's go through,
you know, something that you did today with a person who is meaningful to you.
And then I think something you're excited about is, and this is actually, this is like my philosophy
on life. I'm just trying to like boil it down for them. I guess the adult version of this is I think you have to have something that you're looking forward to for the future.
I think that that's just a really important part of keeping people going with the weight of life.
But for kids, you know, it tends to be something that they're excited about tomorrow.
More often than not, it's just like, all right, I'm excited to see mom in the morning.
Or like I get to eat Cheerios at breakfast.
It's like, okay, it's not super inspiring,
but the right basic idea.
And then every once in a while,
it's something like, okay,
Max is like, I'm going to get ski poles next week.
And it's like, okay, that's like a big milestone, right?
Or it's like, I'm going to lose my first tooth, right?
Or like, I can't wait until I can like have,
do jujitsu again.
And then the last one,
I think is probably the most important,
which is, you know, I think especially for our family, right. And especially for, for these girls who are obviously
growing up and very wealthy family, it's like, you're going to do something nice to help someone
every day. This is just like an important service orientation that I think that I just want our
family to have. And we just all go around and like, I tell them something nice that I tried to
do to help someone. And, and they have to tell them something nice that I tried to do to help someone. And they have to tell me something nice that they did to help someone. And it could
just be like another kid at school, or it could be mom or cousin or something like that. But
probably much to their chagrin, I don't let them go to sleep until they can tell me something
that nice that they did to help someone that day. So that's probably the best encapsulation of
how I think about parenting and the values that I want to try to impart to them.
Thank you for sharing all of that. I want to say a few things. Number one,
Toby, one of my favorite people. I've known Toby since 2008 or so. And people might be wondering,
why am I asking about family? Why am I asking about parenting? And part of the reason I'm asking is because many people who listen to this podcast listen to
model. They listen to model people. And I think it's very important to get a holistic picture
of how people think about and prioritize things in their lives and manage things in their lives.
Because you can end up, if you're not careful, say in the realm of business,
modeling someone who is, from an external perspective, very financially successful,
but their family lives, their relationships are in shambles. So I do think that the micro can
be a reflection of the macro, which is why I like to explore these things.
So on the point of things that are important in life, man, I love that you're
reading Jocko's book to your kids. It's fantastic. Do not, well, actually, no, someday you should
roll with Jocko. He is a black belt in jiu-jitsu and is an absolute killer. Probably above your
weight class, but worth rolling with nonetheless. Speaking of things that are important in life,
I would love to ask you about, and this is going to be an interesting transition, the sacred and then the secular. And for the secular, I have a very
specific kind of technical question, but on the sacred, I'd love to ask you what role religion
plays in your life, if any. How do you think about that?
It's actually, I think, playing an increasing role in recent years.
And so, I mean, I was raised Jewish.
And I think from the time I went to college or so, maybe I wasn't as focused on it.
But I think a few things in the last five or six years have made me a little more focused on it.
One is, of course, family and having kids.
You want to have traditions for the kids.
And a lot of the time, it's like, okay, well, here are the things that I did when I was growing up and that I thought were meaningful.
And the ones that are good, you want to do. And the ones that aren't, you don't, but I just found
having that community and values grounding was really valuable. So, so we are raising our girls
to be Jewish and that's, that's just become a more important part of our lives.
So it's like every Friday, pretty much no matter what's going on, we do Shabbat dinner. Priscilla
actually loves this. I mean, she's basically, it's sort of a meditative thing for her, but
from I think about Tuesday or Wednesday, she starts carving out like an hour or so of the day
to like start cooking the Shabbat dinner. And basically we have a bunch of friends over and it's just like a real center point to the week.
That element, I think, is more cultural.
Then there's, I'd say for me personally and for our company, probably for a lot of people around the world, I mean, the last five or six years have been pretty tough.
You know, if you just look at kind of how people felt about our company, you know, before 2016, if you look at like average sentiment around the company, it's like there was almost like never a month when the sentiment was negative.
And since 2016, there's almost never been a month where the net sentiment has been positive. brought to the forefront that, you know, we talked about this a little bit before in terms of the oversight board and how it's important that it's not just like one person or one company
making all these decisions, trying to balance these complex social equities, but there just
need to be things that are bigger than you in your life. So even though our country has a lot
of struggles, I probably believe more in democracy now than I would have. I probably
hadn't even, you know, didn't think about it that deeply before, but I just think like,
you know, believing in kind of democracy in our institutions is like sort of a bigger force than
any individual, I think is sort of a grounding thing. But I think similarly believing that there
are things that are bigger than that, like God, I think are also, is also just sort of a really grounding thing for me. So the more you sort of study the Bible or the Torah
or whatever, I mean, there's, there is like just a lot of wisdom in it in terms of, you know, how to
live your life, how to think about creation and building, I mean, no matter what you're doing,
no matter how kind of modern or technological it is. I just think that there are interesting lessons. It's like at the beginning of the Torah and Genesis, most of like
the Bible is basically rules for how to live your life. But it starts with, why does it start in
this place of talking about the creation? It starts off with like, okay, God created people
in God's image. And it's like, well, what does that mean? What does that mean you're supposed
to go do? But it starts off talking about creation, how God created all this stuff.
It's like, yeah, I think that there's like a real interpretation in that that is kind of personal
to me, which is a lot of what we are here to do is create good things in the world. And I think
that's like very intrinsic to when I'm having a bad day or a bad month.
I just think there's something that's sort of grounded in, no, this is what I think a big part
of what we are here to do, build things that make the world better. And I think that that is a
fundamental thing that is sort of ancient wisdom. As people face challenges in their lives and
as you think about the next
generation, I think that these are both things that tend to ground you and tie you to much longer
arcs and traditions. And that's certainly been the case in my life.
You know, I've actually gone to a number of Shabbat dinners here in Austin with friends of
mine, and it's made me feel like I have perhaps a ritual deficiency. It's such an incredibly grounding, nourishing tradition, I mean, outside of the religious
context.
And it also, what you're saying reminds me, I'm blanking on the book.
I think it's 4,000 Weeks, but that's by Oliver Berkman.
And there's a chapter called Cosmic Insignificance Therapy, which is the relief that one can
feel when their time horizon,
what they're considering sort of spans outside of themselves.
Yeah, that's the balance, is to understand that there are things that are bigger than you,
but what you do still matters.
So I'm going to get to the secular question, and I know we're running up on time shortly.
But in the 2010 New Yorker profile, which I can't believe everything you read, so we'll see where we go.
But among interests that were cited here, one was eliminating desire.
Do you recall having this in your interests?
And I'm curious about this, though, because it's very emo.
That might have been more of a phase of life.
That was the Mark emo phase.
It's like, paint my room black.
All right, we can chalk that up to emo.
So emo, period, check, explained.
I'm going to get to the technical question.
Before I get to that, though, you did personal challenges annually for about 10 years.
Which challenge ended up being much easier than expected,
and which one ended up being much harder than expected and which one ended up being much
harder than expected? Either or. Just be curious to know. I still do stuff like this. I don't
make as big of a deal of it anymore. But I think just kind of throwing yourself into different
situations to learn new things, I think that's just a big part of life. So which ones were hard?
One, I tried to meet a new person every day for the year.
That was hard for me. I'm pretty introverted. I built some amazing relationships out of it. I,
you know, I started teaching this class at the local boys and girls club with a friend and like mentored the kids for just talk to them a couple of weeks ago. They were all like, none of their
families had gone to college before and now they're all graduating college.
It's pretty cool.
That's amazing.
But it's, I'm super introverted.
So I think that that's probably been
another silver lining
of the whole distributed work thing for me
is having space to kind of think
and kind of control my time
and like not get interrupted by other people so much.
But it is an interesting balance being introverted,
but also being pretty sensitive and caring a lot by other people so much. But it was an interesting balance, being introverted, but also being pretty sensitive
and caring a lot about other people.
I think that people kind of think
that introverts are like,
don't like other people or something.
That's not true.
I just get overwhelmed easily.
The interesting thing is
they all went in weird directions.
One year, I did this like year of running.
I just did all kinds of different running.
I did like sprints.
I did long distance running.
And then like my knees started hurting.
So then I broadened out and did triathlons and we were training for this
Ironman.
But then I like,
I broke my arm biking.
So that,
that ended up not,
not quite happening.
So,
I mean,
they all kind of go in different directions.
I learned Mandarin one year,
learned Mandarin.
You can't learn Mandarin in a year. I
ended up studying it for, I mean, maybe someone can. I cannot. You know, we talked about my
language deficiency earlier on. I mean, that was partially, I like kind of throwing myself into
things that they're hard. And, you know, like I said before, I mean, I've studied a lot of
languages in my life. A little Spanish, a little French, a little Hebrew, a lot of Latin, a bunch of Greek,
but it's actually hard for me. So I kind of, I kind of like doing things that are hard for me.
And obviously Mandarin is, is important because Priscilla's family is Chinese. So
Priscilla and I, after dating for almost 10 years had, we decided we didn't want to have like a big
wedding that a lot of people, we didn't want a lot of people asking us about it for a while.
So we did it as a surprise wedding and basically didn't tell anyone. And then the morning of the
wedding, we're kind of telling everyone. And I told Priscilla's mother in Mandarin,
and I never knew before that if she understood anything I was saying. And I just told her and
a single tear went down her face. And I was like, okay, my Mandarin is at least good enough for that.
So a lot of them have a physical element just because I, I tend to think like people focus so much on thought process, decision-making, like how can you be as smart as possible?
But I just think like energy level and there hasn't been that much that's been written about historical figures and energy level as opposed to how they thought.
But I actually would be very fascinated about to kind of understand that.
But I think just,
I mean,
learning how to foil surf and things like that,
it's just,
I mean,
it's super humbling.
I mean,
these are like really hard skills.
It takes like weeks before you can even like,
you can even even get going.
I'm such a beginner,
but it's just wild and it's so much fun.
It's like you start off doing
this down-winding thing.
The awesome thing about the foil is there's almost no
friction compared to a surfboard.
A surfboard, you need to be in a big wave or else
you just stop. But a foil,
you're standing on the board, but you're actually
riding this little wing and it has no friction. So you can kind of just, or very little
friction. So you can basically just ride it on open ocean swells. And it's this great workout.
You just like can pump in between swells and you know, your heart rate gets up to like 160, but
you're, but you can go for like a mile or more and it it's just, it's wild. And it's a great workout. And you can't think about anything else while you were doing it.
Because you will fall immediately.
Learning new things is like, I think, a big part of what brings meaning and joy to life.
We'll link to some of your annual challenges in the show notes.
Because you've tackled some very hard things, including Mandarin, which is certainly not
one of the easier options out
there, having been an East Asian Studies major back in the day. All right, so I'll ask the
technical question, and it may be boring, but then we'll start to wrap up right after that.
This is a question from a friend who's a technologist, and he's very curious how you're
thinking about computing for smart glasses. So his question was, and this is a bit of a left turn yet again,
but with respect to the metaverse,
if the phone is one of the best places to do the computing,
how do you think about navigating, say,
phones that operate on OSs that you don't control,
or how are you foreseeing the future of that unfolding?
One of the wildest technical challenges for augmented reality is that it needs
to basically, you need to fit all this stuff into essentially a normal pair of glasses, right? So
VR will always, it's supposed to be immersive. So I mean, maybe it'll eventually be more like
ski goggles, right? It'll be kind of thinner, but it's not like meant to just look like normal
glasses. Whereas augmented reality, if you're going to wear that throughout the day, it really, you know, it needs to, it needs to be socially acceptable.
So you're, you're basically talking about, you know, the normal frames of glasses,
maybe called thick rim frames, maybe five millimeters thick, right? So within that,
you're talking about fitting what would have been called a supercomputer five or 10 years ago,
basically like a laser projector. and then the tools to basically have
that display kind of holograms with wave guides because in order to make sure that the image and
the hologram stays synced in the right place it needs to know what your eye position is you need
like lasers that understand where your eyes are and then it needs to have speakers because of
course you're going to want sound it probably needs microphones because you're going to want
to have an assistant and talk to it has sort of positional trackings that way if like
i'm sitting on your couch as a hologram and you move your head i'm not moving off the couch it
needs to know exactly where you're looking at so okay all that stuff to do all that computation
instantly in glasses that have that are five millimeters thick so i think this is like one
of the wildest technical challenges
of the next 10 or 15 years,
which is why I'm so excited about it.
It's this odd thing where I think
sometimes people get really inspired
by physically big things,
but I actually think miniaturizing things to be tiny
is in a lot of ways, even a harder challenge.
So this is a lot of the work that's going to happen.
Will it be valuable to have
another phone or something like that? I don't know. Maybe. On the one hand, you can offload
computing. So that's good. One of the biggest things that basically is a limiting factor is
actually heat dissipation. So if you have a processor that's running on your glasses and
it's getting hot, it's like you're making your face kind of warm and that's uncomfortable. So if you can have that in your pocket, that's better. But on the flip side, you need to find
a way to get all that stuff to the glasses and back. And wireless chips are actually pretty
energy intensive too. So at some point, you're going to always have some computation on the
glasses. The kind of equilibrium I don't think is to have all of the computation somewhere else.
And then you start getting into this interesting trade-off, which is, okay, well, if you're Apple
and you have the iPhone, is that an advantage? And I think that there are a bunch of different
questions in that. One is, to what extent are they just going to advantage their own devices,
or are they going to make it so that some of the APIs are open? And I think that this is somewhat of a regulatory question, right?
It's like, are they going to be allowed to just make something that has, you know, they
have a billion iPhones out there?
Are the regulatory agencies around the world going to allow them to just like only make
it so that their glasses work with their thing?
It would seem to me like that there would be an issue with that.
But then there's this other issue, which is if you were designing a secondary device for, say, input or something like that, it probably wouldn't look like a phone exactly.
So there's also some ways in which I think when new computing platforms come around, people tend to assume that that model is sort of going to work and that whatever the new thing is just sort of a peripheral to that existing platform.
But I think it kind of
depends. It's like maybe the watch is more of a peripheral to your phone, but I would guess that
augmented and virtual reality are so fundamentally different that whatever you want in your
constellation of devices, you probably want it to be designed specifically for that and not just
like, okay, you happen to have a phone, so now let's shoehorn it into doing
augmented reality too. So I know there's a lot of interesting questions in this, but I don't know,
at the end of the day, I think that there's just a ton to be invented and there are a lot of
different ways that this could go. Thank you, Mark. I appreciate you taking so much time in what is an
incredibly busy week, I can only imagine. Is there anything else that you would like to touch on? Any requests
to the audience? Anything at all that you'd like to chat about or mention before we bring this to
a close? I mean, this was a pretty wide-ranging conversation. It's fun. I mean, I've never had
someone start by asking me about fencing, and I don't think I've ever done an interview where
we've talked or a podcast where we've talked so much about sports.
I don't know.
I feel like we could do a whole other one of these.
I feel like we could.
We didn't go into science at all or curing diseases.
I know.
I know.
I have a lot of notes left.
Maybe there's a whole other session on that.
Maybe another couple of hours at some point.
Yeah, for sure.
This has been a lot of fun.
Thank you for having me. Yeah, of course. I really appreciate you being on and making the time for
it. And to everybody listening, we'll also link to everything in the show notes, certainly. And
if there are any additional resources, Mark, that you or your team would like to put in the show
notes, we can add those in the show notes at Tim.blogs.com. And certainly people can find you online rather easily, I would say. Facebook, Zuck, Instagram, slash Zuck,
and of course people can find Meta at Meta.com,
and it's been fun to have a wide-ranging conversation,
and as expected, I have many, many pages of topics left that we could cover,
and certainly the science and research side is something that
if the opportunity presents itself, I'd love to get into at some point. But I really appreciate
you taking the time to have this conversation, Mark. It's been fun. Thanks for having me.
Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just one more thing before you take off. And that is Five Bullet
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