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That Was The Week

Author: Keith Teare

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Published weekly as a supplement to the 'That Was The Week' newsletter, this podcast features Keith Teare and Andrew Keen discussing the events in tech that will shape the future of startups, venture and angel investing. https://thatwastheweek.com
146 Episodes
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No Runway

No Runway

2023-12-1033:51

Contents Editorial:  Essays of the Week The modern data stack was never big enough Revisiting The Death of a Venture Fund Calpers’ $4.5 Billion Venture Bet Global Venture Funding In November Slows At Early Stage The Fintech Sector Trotted The Most New Unicorns Onto Our Board In November From Unicorns to Zombies: Tech Start-Ups Run Out of Time and Money Video of the Week The Where, When, and How of AI AI of the Week Learn more about Gemini, our most capable AI model Google’s Gemini Marketing Trick Nope, the Turing Test has not been solved The EU has reached a historic regulatory agreement over AI development X begins rolling out Grok, its ‘rebellious’ chatbot, to subscribers Apple releases Apple Silicon-optimized MLX machine learning framework News Of the Week Everything you know about the podcast industry is a lie Google launches migration tool ahead of Google Podcasts’ 2024 shutdown Carta: Startup Shutdowns Are Up 237% Pilot: 57% of Venture Startups Will Need to Raise More In 2024 The FTC is reportedly looking into Microsoft’s $13 billion OpenAI investment Amazon asks court to dismiss FTC lawsuit that accuses it of ‘monopolistic practices’ Startup of the Week Animate Anyone X of the Week In case you don’t believe anti-semitism is real --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
A Tale of Two Weeks

A Tale of Two Weeks

2023-11-2446:45

It’s Thanksgiving here in Palo Alto, and I should thank all the writers and producers whose work I read each week for the stimulation and provocation they provide. In case you do not all realize it, you are appreciated. I always try to call out the creators of the content I curate at the top of That Was The Week, and I will continue to do so. Many appear every week. Let us start with Brian Chesky, of AirBnB fame, this week. His X post is apt and to the point. I called this week’s newsletter A Tale of Two Weeks. Friends kindly noted that it has only been one week. It felt like two, and to Brian Chesky’s point, we learned a lot. EA and e /acc are now part of everyday conversation in tech circles. And we are starting to understand that ideology (or philosophy) plays a significant role in strategy. People are forced to take sides. Last week, the EA (effective altruism) camp looked in the ascendancy. But this week, over 700 OpenAI employees sided with Sam Altman and Greg Brockman, resulting in their return to lead the company. The e/acc camp won. And that leads many advocates of effective altruism to question its relevance to startups. There are also some new acronyms or labels to learn. Marc Andreessen is reposting @beffjezos on X, mentioning Decels. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
It’s a day late for That Was The Week. In mitigation, what a day it was, with the firing of Sam Altman at OpenAI, and the demotion, then resignation of Greg Brockman, Jakub Pachocki, the company’s director of research; Aleksander Madry, head of a team evaluating potential risks from AI, and Szymon Sidor, a seven-year researcher at the startup. The dust is beginning to settle, and my best interpretation of the events comes from these x posts by Kara Swisher and Elad Gil, focused on effective altruism (e /a) and the e /acc belief in unfettered AI. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Changing The World

Changing The World

2023-11-2441:49

It's Thursday evening, and I have had a busy day in a busy week, and I am not feeling the urge for grandiosity. But OpenAI and its CEO Sam Altman did announce some world-changing technologies this week. The article by Ben Thompson from Stratechery below lists them. Still, a list does not do justice to how much thinking decision-making, and execution OpenAI has accomplished in a short period. The heart of the announcements is a newly scalable architecture that allows anybody to have their own “GPT”. Developers will be able to build both enterprise and consumer GPT applications, often with no code required. Want the world's best chef and recipe source? Build it. Want an excellent tool for fixing a car? No problem. Want the world’s best physics teacher for 10th Grade… done. And so on. Over the next 12 months, we expect to see an explosion of use cases for almost any human endeavor. More interesting is that user interfaces will change dramatically. Form filling, browsing, searching, learning, creating, researching, building, and more will be done simply by interacting with an AI. Productivity is about to explode. And investments, too. Packy McCormick leads this week's Essays of the Week with ‘Tech is Going to Get Much Bigger’. And he means in value and scope. The idea that the world’s biggest company is worth a single-digit $ trillion will be history quickly. When Kyle Harrison, in another essay of the week - Surviving the Death of Venture Capital - says: So if you want to survive in the ever-changing world of funding innovation, there are a lot of things you can do. But one thing is for sure: the only thing that is certain? Change. Get used to it. He could have been writing about OpenAIs developer day announcements. There are many excellent pieces of writing in this week’s edition. The impressive interview with Charlie Munger explains why venture capitalists screw their customers. The videos with Satya Nadella and Lina Khan are great for Sunday listening or viewing. Warner Media CEO Jason Kilar on why Netflix has the upper hand in streaming and what it will take to compete is compelling also (hat tip to Steve Gillmor). Enjoy. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Guilty

Guilty

2023-11-2436:44

Ethics matter. And using them in times of stress matters, too. SBF lost the plot in his defense this week, seeking to blame his lack of attention to detail and his colleagues for the failings at FTX and Alameida. There was a lack of ethics in his decisions and a further lack of ethics in his trial strategy. I have no idea how contrived the entire set of episodes was at FTX, but blaming colleagues seems both a low shot and a long shot simultaneously. It would have been better to tell the truth - I crossed lines due to a frothy market. I thought it would be fine. The market tanked, I panicked and then crossed more lines trying to keep the ship afloat. When I failed, I tried to cover for my mistakes. At least the jury would have heard some honesty and contrition. So, the trial is over, and SBF is guilty. Justice will be done. Given all the evidence, it seems to be the right decision. But this week, AI was also put on trial. Both the Whitehouse and 10 Downing Street held meetings that produced statements and documents. The competition to be the leader who rails in AI seems pervasive across many governments. The full Whitehouse press briefing is below, as is the gist of the UK meeting. The two most interesting responses are Elon Musk’s statement that jobs will become unnecessary (he’s right) and Steven Sinovsky’s thoughtful essay on why AI regulation is premature. The AI section is lengthy this week; Michael Parekh explains why Google is investing $2bn in Anthropic, and Dan Shipper shows why the Apple Journal app has nothing on ChatGPT as a Journal co-pilot. There are four pieces on AI’s use in Venture Capital, focusing on EQT and SignalFire (not to be confused with SignalRank). And Andre Retterath of Data-Driven VC writes about the correlation between alumni networks and who gets funded (ominous). Enjoy. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Capitulation?

Capitulation?

2023-11-2435:35

Charles Hudson and Manu Kumar are two of the best early-stage investors in the world. This week, they both penned meaningful essays declaring that the fundamentals of early-stage investing have changed, possibly permanently. Charles states: For the past 18 months, the Series A market has been very quiet. Outside of AI-related investments, it feels like deal volume is off 75%. The Series A investors I know don’t feel any pressure to make investments and don’t really seem that excited or interested in much these days. Unfortunately for seed-stage companies, the Series A market can remain on strike longer than most seed-stage companies can remain solvent. He predicts a significant dip in the number of seed-stage companies doing a Series A, a drop in Series As, and fewer extensions or bridge rounds. Manu Kumar of K9 Capital extends the theme and suggests only companies building real businesses with real customers and revenue will survive. He implores companies to understand the following: Early stage venture, particularly Pre-Seed and Seed stage venture, is a different game today than it used to be 10 years ago. LPs and GPs should be aware of this dynamic as they make investment decisions. This follows from Sam Lessin’s theme a couple of weeks ago, declaring that the era of larger checks coming in at later rounds is now over. At Signalrank, we have always distinguished between organic unicorns, built over many years from the seed stage, and artificial unicorns created by a single large check in an early round. Organic is always best and can survive downturns. In this week’s video of the week, Jaimie Rhode doubles down on the theme, explaining that in venture capital, only power-law companies matter. Those companies grow to valuations, enabling an entire fund to be returned or more. The venture capital industry relies on the few power law winners returning invested capital. In the heady days of 2019-2022, it was possible for a power-law company to emerge fast due to a single round of financing. And then quickly go on to do two or three more rounds within a year or two. Charles and Manu correctly point out that this is unlikely, except perhaps in AI. A power law winner will have to be built organically. The implication is that early-stage investing will need to become once again deliberate and patient. I use the word capitulation (with a question mark) in the title, but this is just a recognition of reality. Capitulation to reality is a good thing. So, no, it is not a capitulation. But it begs the question, can venture capital support wealth creation if it is really a lottery for a power law winner? Is there a way to benefit from the growth in venture-backed companies without needing to play the lottery of picking individual companies? --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Marc Andreessen, Sam Altman and Geoffrey Hinton To quote Oscar Wilde:A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at, for it leaves out the one country at which Humanity is always landing. And when Humanity lands there, it looks out, and, seeing a better country, sets sail. Progress is the realisation of Utopias. Now, I have said that the community by means of organisation of machinery will supply the useful things, and that the beautiful things will be made by the individual. This is not merely necessary, but it is the only possible way by which we can get either the one or the other. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
This was a week when it was almost impossible to escape politics, particularly world politics. The barbaric, medieval images coming out of Israel on Shabbat Saturday morning, at the start of the Jewish New Year, were both sickening and, at the same time, sadly, not surprising. This was in a week where my media consumption included the interview Graham Alison did at the All In Summit and a similar couple with Ray Dalio and Larry Summers. All three focus on the current and future world order. The interview with Alison is this week’s Video of the Week. So, it is time for me to stand back and ask some big questions. It is also time to begin to try and answer them. It all starts with Graham Alison’s book “Destined For War” and Ray Dalio’s essay this week - “Another Step Toward International War.” These are two super-intelligent big thinkers focusing on the coming end of US global supremacy, leading to a possible or even likely global conflict. Then there is Noah Smith’s “You're not going to like what comes after Pax Americana,” one of this week’s Essay of the Week. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
AI or Bust

AI or Bust

2023-11-2433:32

Another week when there are many talking points. The Q3 Venture Capital data is out, and both Gene Teare at Crunchbase and Peter Walker at Carta have significant insights this week. In an essay of the week, Kyle Harrison takes a stand back and examines the entire venture value chain - as we have discussed a lot in prior weeks. It is a great effort by Kyle and a very good read, Also, Sam Bankman Fried is not in front of a Jury. Only two days in, the prosecution is mounting a strong effort to undermine his ethical stance, with his former CTO saying he was asked to write code enabling Alameda, SBF’s hedge fund, to take unlimited loads from FTX. It is not yet clear if this is criminal. I will wait for the defense case and consider it. But these two days have been difficult for SBF.Meta is announcing Quest 3, which resembles Apple’s forthcoming approach (see through the mask into the room). Meta also announced the next version of its VR glasses with Ray-Ban. These look promising, to be honest. I might even pony up for a pair (prescription lenses too). But for me, the story of the week is still AI. Open AI announced DALL_E 3 and that it will be included in ChatGPT. ChatGPT is also getting visual acuity - interpreting images and drawings. I have even seen demos of it writing code from paper sketches to make websites. Audio input and output are also now live in the mobile app. Rex Woodbury writes an over-arching piece comparing the mobile revolution to AI. He concludes that AI will be far more significant than the already mighty impact of mobile. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
I had promised there would be no That Was The Week this week, and Andrew decided we needed to record a show. Topics focus on the Bankman Fried trial, Amazon being accused of anti-trust, the Google trial, and developments with OpenAI --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Contents Editorial: Billions: The Venture Asset Class Essays of the Week Innovation Searching for a Breakup The Trouble With Walter: In His Elon Musk Tome, the Writer Shows Us the Perils of Access Journalism AI Regulation Venture Capitalists Will Overpay For Seed Rounds But For Reasons You Likely Haven’t Considered Venture returns vs. public markets : What the data says Unicorn Market Cap 2023: Rise of AI Video of the Week Bill Gurley on Regulation, the State and Tech AI of the Week 4 Key Takeaways from the AI Panel at Saastr 2023 OpenAI Hustles to Beat Google to Launch ‘Multimodal’ LLM How Google taught AI to doubt itself Writer nets $100M for its enterprise-focused generative AI platform Boston Consulting Group (BCG) testing the impact of Generative AI on its consultants News Of the Week Elon Musk says X will charge users ‘a small monthly payment’ to use its service Silicon Valley is still king.  Unicorns Are Thawing Out IPO Plans Sequoia and Andreessen to take a huge hit on their 2021 Instacart investment, after a 75% plunge in valuation Today The UK Parliament Undermined The Privacy, Security, And Freedom Of All Internet Users  Getty Specifically Calls Out Adobe Firefly in Its Latest Rejection of AI Startup of the Week Allocate raises $10 million to open top VC doors to wealth advisers X of the Week What it feels like to build a startup --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Contents Editorial: Why Think Global? China, Chips and Airplanes Essays of the Week The next phase of globalization is going to be awesome It's Never Been More Important to Understand Your Capital Provider's Business Model Apple’s $60 iCloud Service Is the Future of Apple Huawei’s Breakthrough: The Strategic Implications A Look at the IPO Market As Investors Hope for Strong Instacart, Arm & Klaviyo Offerings Arm and a Leg: Arm's Quest To Extract Their True Value The Top 10 Mistakes Founders Make After $10m ARR Video of the Week Walter Isaacson on Elon Musk AI of the Week Life in a Kingdom of Dangerous Magic Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates and other tech leaders in closed Senate session about AI Nvidia’s Been Busy — Real Busy News Of the Week Cendana Capital closes on $470M more to back seed-stage fund managers Seed Market Evolution During A Downturn Haystack VII Google accused of spending billions to block rivals as landmark trial continues The big French fire sale: record numbers of startups are selling at big discounts China's C919 aircraft model begins demonstration flights across Xinjiang Startup of the Week SCOOP: MotherDuck Raising $50M in Felicis-Led Round, Valuing Startup at $350M X of the Week Michael Kim, Cendana --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Searching For Money

Searching For Money

2023-09-1037:39

Contents Editorial:  Essays of the Week Least Bad (De-Dollarization?) Only About 10% of VCs Make Money Searching for Unicorn Funds - A Look at Fund DPI Venture Firms Hang the ‘For Sale’ Sign on Portfolios How to Win in Venture Capital: Focus on the Fat Tails What Makes a Good SaaS Company? The Best Founders are over 50 Years Old Meet the YC Summer 2023 Batch Garry Tan AI and the New Digital Cold War Video of the Week Andrew Keen and Ludwig Ensthaler on AI Fareed Zakharia on AI AI of the Week What OpenAI Really Wants - Steven Levy 6 Examples of Doman-Specific Large Language Models What We Can Learn From AI Startups in Y Combinator’s Latest Batch Apple Spending Millions of Dollars a Day on Conversational AI News Of the Week European Venture Funding Halved In Q2 2023 As Late-Stage Investors Dialed Back The End of Airbnb in New York Spotify’s $1 Billion Podcast Bet Turns Into a Serial Drama UK pulls back from clash with Big Tech over private messaging Apple Signs New Deal With Arm to License Chip Designs Beyond 2040 Startup of the Week ‘He Doesn’t Need VC in His Life’: How Midjourney’s Founder Built an AI Winner While Rejecting Venture Capital X of the Week Apple --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Hit Job

Hit Job

2023-09-1032:27

Contents Editorial: Hit Job Essays of the Week VC Returns - The Power Law Down Rounds Are a Nothing Burger? VCs are just middlemen. Realizing Non-Winners Early Drives IRRs Secrecy Harms Startups Fund of funds: why to invest and, more importantly, why not As Venture Market Slows, Fewer Early-Round Unicorns Being Minted Rest - The case for sabbaticals Why Do Investors Care So Much About LTV:CAC? AI of the Week Generative AI applications: an investing framework Early days of AI (and AI Hype Cycle) Meta Releases ‘Code Llama’ Generative AI Model to Assist in Code Creation News Of the Week New SEC Rules Could Hurt VC’s Newcomers Hugging Face Hits $4B Valuation After Salesforce Ventures-Led Round SoftBank’s Arm IPO Win Won’t Make Up for What It Missed Out On Startup World Looks On As Arm And Instacart Set To Test Waters Of IPO Market Cracking Open the IPO Window The IPO Window Is Open. But Are Founders Ready? The Scam in the Arena - Is Chamath a Scammer? New Features For LinkedIn Newsletters Nvidia’s Rocket-Ship Year Startup of the Week Pact VC X of the Week --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Venture is Good

Venture is Good

2023-09-1039:43

Contents Editorial:  Essays of the Week Institutionalized Belief In The Greater Fool New Unicorn Creation Has Dwindled From 2 Per Day To 2 Per Month Even a Down Round is Hard to Get Tech Valuations Q2’23 Report Advice to Venture Fund Investors State of pre-seed fundraising: Q2 2023 Venture capital funds are mostly just wasting their time and your money Video of the Week Dave Winer and Andrew Keen on Blogging, Podcasting and More AI of the Week The AI Power Paradox What if Generative AI turned out to be a Dud? Insight Partners Has Invested More Than $4B Into AI. What’s Next? Google DeepMind testing ‘personal life coach’ AI tool News Of the Week Blackbird Ventures Sells Stake in Canva at $25.5 Billion Valuation Biden administration restricts US investment in tech China's military might employ Startup of the Week MTN, African Fintech X of the Week Emotional Investing is Bad for Your Wealth --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Dry Powder?

Dry Powder?

2023-08-1129:49

Contents Editorial: Dry Powder? Essays of the Week Dry Powder is not About to be Invested Down Rounds Should Be Led by Entrepreneurs Why Bill Gurley & Josh Wolfe Think VCs Won't Deploy All Their Dry Powder Anytime Soon ‘Tidal Wave’ of Down Rounds Hits Startups Global Venture Funding In July Was Second-Lowest This Year As Seed Startups Are Hit Hard   VC Optimism Returning But More Pain Ahead In Their Portfolios AI of the Week OpenAI Shoots To No. 1 Spot On Private Cloud Startup Ranking, Underscoring AI’s Sudden Ascendency Generative AI Is Making Companies Even More Thirsty for Your Data Money on Autopilot: The Future of AI x Personal Finance Apple seeks to bolster expertise in generative AI on mobile devices AI Won’t Replace Humans — But Humans With AI Will Replace Humans Without AI Cloudflare as a Leader in AI? + Q2 Results News Of the Week Yaccarino Says Advertisers are Coming Back to X in First Major Interview as CEO Five months ago Crunchbase vowed to try and avoid layoffs. Since then A.I. has changed everything WeWork’s going concern warning is a reminder that VC and low-margin business don’t mix Startup of the Week A better internet for readers X of the Week Twitter for Sale by X --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Contents Editorial: Bonfire of the Unicorns Essays of the Week Historical Futurism Venture Capital and the Retail Investor Raising a fund in a downturn Fundraising in Confusing Times Fundraising is Hard - Fund of Fund Fundraising is Harder Unicorns Hobbled Amid VC Pullbacks The Unicorn Fire Sales Ahead Hopin, the struggling virtual conference unicorn, sells events and engagement units to RingCentral Reset & Rethink – Assessing Venture Capital with Gené Teare of Crunchbase Video of the Week LK-99 - Room Temperature Super Conductor AI of the Week SEC Proposes New Conflict of Interest Regime for Predictive Technology Where Will AI Have the Biggest Impact? Healthcare. News Of the Week State of Private Markets: Q2 2023 Early-Stage Venture Capital Investment Down 54% Coatue Raises $331 Million for Early-Stage Fund, 34% Below Target Alphabet Stands Out in a Trio of Unimpressive Earnings Meta Posts Strong Q2 Results as Facebook Crosses 3B Monthly Active Users AngelList expands into private equity with the acquisition of fintech startup Nova Venture Capital Firm Sequoia Cuts Crypto Fund by 66% Volkswagen takes 5% stake in XPeng as part of Chinese EV deal Tuesday Capital, a Silicon Valley firm that moved to Austin during the pandemic, captures $31M for its newest seed-stage fund Startup of the Week LK-99 Tweet of the Week Stripes New CFO --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Contents Editorial:  Essays of the Week Venture Capital — We’re Still Not Normal - @CoatsDavid Seed investing can’t turn back on - @lessin The Broken Venture Value Chain - @fintechjunkie Here Are The Venture Capital Firms That Are Investing Much Less - @ericnewcomer Indexing Venture and Other Fool's Errands - @jordsnel Manager Selection in Venture Capital - @scotthartley The meeting that showed me the truth about VCs - @tomerdean All-In Podcast on the venture business - @jason, @chamath, @DavidSacks, @Friedberg In Defense of Strategy - @packym The creator economy was already exploding. Then Hollywood went on strike. - @drewharwell, @TaylorLorenz Video of the Week:  Marc Andreessen on Why Elon is Special - @pmarca AI of the Week A Case for Heuristics: Why Simple Solutions Often Win in Data Science - @HollyEmblem OpenAI, Google will watermark AI-generated content to hinder deepfakes, misinfo - @ashleynbelanger Fact Sheet: Biden-⁠Harris Administration Secures Voluntary Commitments from Leading Artificial Intelligence Companies to Manage the Risks Posed by AI - @WhiteHouse News Of the Week Sam Altman's biometrics-based cryptocurrency Worldcoin is now live - @Fauza4IR How Sam Altman’s Worldcoin Engineered Its Token Launch - @aidanfitzryan Elon Musk Says the Twitter Brand Will be Retired, Renamed ‘X’, Very Soon - @adhutchinson Almost 70% of Israeli startups act to shift funds, relocate due to judicial shakeup - @SharonWrobel1 Startup of the Week:  Cafe Cyberia - @restofworld Tweet of the Week:  Not the X Designer - @anothercohen --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Contents Editorial: Data-First Venture is Coming Essays of the Week The Future of Venture Capital? Insights Into Data-Driven VCs Has persistence persisted in private equity? Evidence from buyout and venture capital funds Why more is less in investing Symposium: The unique uselessness of business advice VCs make mistakes too. And LPs need to be aware of them. How This Ends (Part Three) Video of the Week Producing Charts with AI - Tomasz Tunguz AI of the Week ChatGPT update allows it to remember who you are and what you like Teaching Programming in the Age of ChatGPT The AI craze will implode faster than #Threads (🫢) if folks can't figure out how to make money from AI. Apple is reportedly developing its own generative AI chatbot to rival ChatGPT Microsoft launches vector search in preview, voice cloning in general availability News Of the Week Silicon Valley start-ups explore sales as funding runs dry Venture debt deals decline 38%, led by SVB's core market Meta unfriends the news industry in growing rift with publishers BlackRock's Larry Fink says crypto will transcend any one currency Court denies FTC’s last-ditch attempt to stop Microsoft buying Activision Blizzard Startup of the Week Sequoia Capital Tweet of the Week Entitled Employees? --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
Do You Like My Threads

Do You Like My Threads

2023-07-0839:05

Contents Editorial:  Essays of the Week How to Do Great Work Paul Graham How Analytics Wins - Ergest Xheblati The Modern Data Stack - Muji Twitter and Threads Twitter's Final Boss: Zuckerberg Wages War You can’t post ass, Threads is doomed Meta’s New Threads App Reaches 30 Million Users in Less Than a Day Twitter threatens to sue Meta over its new Threads app Video of the Week Vinod Khosla - The Trillion $ AI Opportunity AI of the Week AI and the automation of work - Benedict Evans Why Generative AI is such a "Nuclear" Force OpenAI makes GPT-4 generally available Artificial Intelligence firms flock to SF, “AI capital of the world” News Of the Week Nutrition, sleep and mental health advice offered to tech founders at risk of burnout First Cut — State of Private Markets: Q2 2023 VC Exit Value Sags to Lowest Level Since the GFC US venture capital spending drops sharply in 2Q Unicorns face mass extinction as funding plummets Khan Rewrites the Merger Rulebook Startup of the Week SoftBank backs Japanese robotics startup Telexistence in $170M funding round Thread weet of the Week Bluesky, Twitter, Threads and Mastadon as clothing styles --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatwastheweek/message
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