Alex Wagner
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
massive data centers as much as they needed to, like in a dream scenario. So I think everybody's pretty stoked about that. They might still end up using all the power in the world to build the next iteration, but at least this iteration we know can be built with less. And Marc Andreessen is such an interesting case.
You always have to look a little bit deeper into what he's saying to try to find his true motivations. And I think one of the interesting things is he thought about participating in the OpenAI $6.6 billion round last year. And ultimately didn't.
You always have to look a little bit deeper into what he's saying to try to find his true motivations. And I think one of the interesting things is he thought about participating in the OpenAI $6.6 billion round last year. And ultimately didn't.
You always have to look a little bit deeper into what he's saying to try to find his true motivations. And I think one of the interesting things is he thought about participating in the OpenAI $6.6 billion round last year. And ultimately didn't.
And, you know, might've seen something like this coming around because for him, and I think for a lot of Silicon Valley, it's what you can build with the technology that's going to create the most value and not like the models that underlie that thing. Like this is basically going to take the cost of intelligence, as they like to say in Silicon Valley, down by an order of magnitude.
And, you know, might've seen something like this coming around because for him, and I think for a lot of Silicon Valley, it's what you can build with the technology that's going to create the most value and not like the models that underlie that thing. Like this is basically going to take the cost of intelligence, as they like to say in Silicon Valley, down by an order of magnitude.
And, you know, might've seen something like this coming around because for him, and I think for a lot of Silicon Valley, it's what you can build with the technology that's going to create the most value and not like the models that underlie that thing. Like this is basically going to take the cost of intelligence, as they like to say in Silicon Valley, down by an order of magnitude.
And now the rubber is going to meet the road. We're going to see like what applications can be built, what programs can be built. what type of experiences can be built in a much more efficient way, in a way that maybe the expense of building these things might have been holding back the companies previously. So for anyone that's interested in building... Time to build.
And now the rubber is going to meet the road. We're going to see like what applications can be built, what programs can be built. what type of experiences can be built in a much more efficient way, in a way that maybe the expense of building these things might have been holding back the companies previously. So for anyone that's interested in building... Time to build.
And now the rubber is going to meet the road. We're going to see like what applications can be built, what programs can be built. what type of experiences can be built in a much more efficient way, in a way that maybe the expense of building these things might have been holding back the companies previously. So for anyone that's interested in building... Time to build.
Time to build is Marc Andreessen's thing. It's a pretty exciting moment.
Time to build is Marc Andreessen's thing. It's a pretty exciting moment.
Time to build is Marc Andreessen's thing. It's a pretty exciting moment.
A moment also to reflect on failures to build. Oh, he doesn't do that. He doesn't do that.
A moment also to reflect on failures to build. Oh, he doesn't do that. He doesn't do that.
A moment also to reflect on failures to build. Oh, he doesn't do that. He doesn't do that.
Yeah. Did you see he was on Lex Friedman and he was talking about like Andrew Uberman's protocols of like, you know, you got to put your phone away before bed. And he's like, the most masculine thing you can do is stare at your phone for three hours before bed and fall asleep. Like Mark Andreessen's got some problems and put it that way.
Yeah. Did you see he was on Lex Friedman and he was talking about like Andrew Uberman's protocols of like, you know, you got to put your phone away before bed. And he's like, the most masculine thing you can do is stare at your phone for three hours before bed and fall asleep. Like Mark Andreessen's got some problems and put it that way.
Yeah. Did you see he was on Lex Friedman and he was talking about like Andrew Uberman's protocols of like, you know, you got to put your phone away before bed. And he's like, the most masculine thing you can do is stare at your phone for three hours before bed and fall asleep. Like Mark Andreessen's got some problems and put it that way.
Oh, yeah. Those red sirens are blaring where I am as well. I think that like one of the interesting things about the blockchain innovation was that it was supposed to enable like a new web built on top of decentralized protocols. And what have we gotten instead? A speculation machine. We haven't seen anything built on top of this.