Vladimir Tenev
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think there's kind of two worlds.
One world is the AI companies who own all these big data centers and all these GPUs and build the models are going to be creating all the products and benefiting from the products in a first party way.
So they'll centralize and control all the value.
The other world is they'll actually give AI tools to everyone, and those people will create products that capture value.
And so in that world, it's much more distributed and kind of decentralized.
I think what we're seeing now is it's more the latter.
And I think the latter is more interesting.
I think it's going to be a better business opportunity.
So I think one thing nobody expected is we have such amazing AI tools on our phones, and it's cheaper than a cell phone plan.
right um so yeah i think even with harmonic like when we rolled out aristotle public we saw people using crazy stuff with it not just the air dish problems we were talking about earlier but solving problems and computing and linguistics stuff that you know if we manage centrally and we were doing ourselves we wouldn't do as good of a job of but if you if you open the tool to the public people will do really amazing things so
That's the world that I believe in and that we're pushing to build.
And I think if we end up in that world, which I believe and hope we will, it'll be an optimistic rather than dystopian experience.
just AI teachers that... I mean, I don't know, would you want your kid to be going to a place where
An optimist robot is like teaching them.
10 years from now and more software engineers.
Back when I was a kid, my parents would tell me, you don't want to be a software engineer.
All those jobs are getting shipped off to China.
We didn't hear that tenure.
You know, back in 1996, the first AI victory over humans was Deep Blue, IBM's AI model, AI chess model, beating Garry Kasparov.