Pietro Bezza

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Pietro Bezza

Pietro Bezza

@pietrobezza

Founder ➡️ VC Pre-Seed/Seed in product companies built by few and loved by many @aikidoSecurity, @Dusthq, @HeyOyster, @plainsupport @typeform, @TrueLayer

London 가입일 Şubat 2008
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Pietro Bezza
Pietro Bezza@pietrobezza·
💥 We are thrilled to unveil today our new visual identity and website 💥 tl;dr  Same love for product, more love for product founders and a ...toggle. connectventures.co
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Doruk
Doruk@dorukkavcioglu·
That line hit me: “Transitioning from Sketch to Figma was a no brainer because all of a sudden we went from working in local files to web based collaboration” People frame the current moment as “designers will code now”. I think the bigger story is simpler. We are quietly going back to local again. We already lived through local pain once. In the Photoshop era, a design file was a thing that lived on your machine. Big files, messy versions, “who has the latest” and collaboration felt like passing a large file from person to person. Even later, in a large company, we used Sketch with a semi cloud setup. Basically: shared storage, a versioning workflow, and rules everyone had to learn. We used Abstract for branching and merging. It worked, but it came with onboarding cost. New designers did not just learn the product, they learned the system. UI kits made it heavier. Consistency depended on process. Sync depended on discipline. Prototyping was also split across extra tools. If you wanted “real”, you learned a separate craft: After Effects, Principle, Origami, ProtoPie, or even React with early @Framer. It was doable, but it was not flowing. It was tool switching. Then Figma happened and it was obvious. Not because it was prettier, because it moved the work into shared space. Collaboration became the default, not an add on. AI coding tools are bringing back the same old friction Now designers are building “coded prototypes” with Claude Code, Cursor, and similar tools. They are powerful, but the workflow pulls you into local reality again: repos, env vars, local DBs, running servers, PRs, deployment, and “it works on my machine” That is what the report calls “we’re back in local space” And I agree. The problem is not capability. The problem is location. ⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯ Why I keep reaching for Figma Make? My current workflow at @diffusionhq is simple: we design in @Figma, and if needed, I prototype in Figma Make. Not because it's magically better than Cursor or v0. Because the setup cost is almost zero, and the output is easy to share. Click, prompt, iterate, send a link. That matters more than people admit. I mostly use it for one thing: previewing the experience at true scale, in the browser, at 100% zoom, with real interaction. Since we are building a browser tool, that feedback loop is gold. It helps me catch issues early, make decisions faster, and reduce back and forth before handoff. Big prototypes still take time, sure. But the difference is the collaboration stays online, which keeps the team moving. ⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯ The real “next switch”? Photoshop to Sketch was a productivity jump. Sketch to Figma was a collaboration jump. This next jump will be the same type of collaboration leap, but for coded prototypes. This is not “designers can code now”. It is about keeping design work shareable and close to production. The teams that win will not be the ones with the fanciest local setups. They will be the ones who keep making, testing, and reviewing work in the same shared space. That idea is a big part of how we think at Diffusion. A browser based video editor where work stays shared, friction stays low, and iteration stays fast
Ridd 🤿@ridd_design

x.com/i/article/2013…

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Pietro Bezza
Pietro Bezza@pietrobezza·
AI = trajectories. "Fifth, trajectories are the basis for optimizing AI models through reinforcement learning. Smaller specialized models trained on high-value paths replace massive generalists. tomtunguz.com/ai-trajectorie…
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Stanislas Polu
Stanislas Polu@spolu·
"9 months later but 9 times better" We're releasing a deep-dive agent that has access to your entire company data (structured and unstructured) and all the MCP tools connected to a Dust workspace to perform high level tasks on longer time horizons. It has taken over a number of weekly multi-hours tasks that used to be done by humans including our team.weekly meeting preparation as well as aggregation of user testimonials and feedback from call transcripts. I used it last week during a call with an investor to generate a specific retention graph they were asking for, sharing the results before the call was ended instead of going to our data team. Yes it's 9 months after deep research. But this is definitely 9 times better if your goal is to get things done at work. It has access to all our unstructured data presented as a file-system (notion, slack, drive, ...), all our data-warehouse with discoverability capabilities, and all of the MCP servers connected to our Dust workspace. The team has been using it increasingly shifting from custom agents accomplishing tasks to deep-dive based-agents accomplishing outcomes. 7 different technical initiatives went into enabling deep-dive in Dust. We're diving into the detail of each of them in the blog post below. A great read if you're looking to use or build long-time-horizon agents. blog.dust.tt/building-deep-…
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Oriol Vinyals
Oriol Vinyals@OriolVinyalsML·
The secret behind Gemini 3? Simple: Improving pre-training & post-training 🤯 Pre-training: Contra the popular belief that scaling is over—which we discussed in our NeurIPS '25 talk with @ilyasut and @quocleix—the team delivered a drastic jump. The delta between 2.5 and 3.0 is as big as we've ever seen. No walls in sight! Post-training: Still a total greenfield. There's lots of room for algorithmic progress and improvement, and 3.0 hasn't been an exception, thanks to our stellar team. Congratulations to the whole team 💙💙💙
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Zhenwen Dai
Zhenwen Dai@ZhenwenDai·
Excited to team up again with @lawrennd and Eno Thereska on a new venture: @TrentAIHQ. We're building specialized agents to make AI robust, production-ready, and truly collaborative—boosting human productivity. Always keen to connect with those who share the vision.
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Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin
Within a year, an AI sales rep will join every human sales rep on every Zoom and call 🤖 95% of “I don’t knows” and “Uh I’ll get back to you” will be gone Within a year, an AI BDR will answer all inbound sales questions 🤖98% of humans setting up appointments with AEs will be gone Within a year, an AI CSM will handle 70% of renewals. 🤖No reason for this to be such a headache and friction-full experience anymore We’re already close on all of this
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Andrew Wilkinson
Andrew Wilkinson@awilkinson·
Men: you dress like shit. Seriously, most of you look like dopes. I'm not any better. For years, I'd wear the same uniform: hoodie, Patagonia jacket, and some dorky but comfortable shoes. After getting divorced though, I knew I needed to get my shit together. I hired a "Personal Stylist" (actually not that expensive) and had her send me a whole bunch of outfits. And I started getting compliments daily! It felt amazing! Because after all: the outfit makes the man. We think we need to get ripped. But honestly, wearing a well-layered and color coordinated outfit and nice shoes is 90% of the battle. Women care way more about what you wear than whether or not you have a six pack. It was awesome, but kind of annoying having to depend on this woman to not look like a schmoe. But then something crazy happened: I started just asking ChatGPT instead. Every day, I'd upload a photo of whatever pants I was wearing and say "complete this outfit". I was amazed by how good it was. And it got better over time, as I trained a custom GPT on my wardrobe. Suddenly I didn't need my personal stylist—I had an AI one. But my ChatGPT based system was kind of fiddly. It required prompting and uploading lots of photos and messing with instructions to produce something good. So, I saw an opportunity. I called up my friend @humza_j and told him I wanted to turn this into a thin wrapper app. That was about 4 months ago, and now we have a beta that uses @OpenAI and a few other APIs to achieve the same thing in a beautiful app. TLDR: it's called Vibe and here's how it works: 1. Take photos of all your key wardrobe items (t-shirts, pants, overskirts, jackets, watches, etc). 2. Tell it what kind of outfits you need (date, work, etc) as well as the season (summer, winter, etc). 3. It generates beautifully layered and coloured coordinated outfits utilizing your wardrobe items and then renders an image of what that outfit looks like. It's really cool. We have a beta live on the iOS App Store called (Vibe - AI Stylist) . It's still kind of rough, but you can see where it's going and play with it. But I have a problem: I don't know what to do with it. I don't know the first thing about scaling an app like this. I need someone to take it over, go raise some money for it, and turn it into something. I actually think it's a great idea and a really well built app, but now I need someone young and hungry to turn it into a real business. I'm down to give someone 50%+ of the equity. Who should run it?
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Simon Rohrbach
Simon Rohrbach@simonrohrbach·
I'm really happy to say that Plain now powers support for @meetgranola - one of the most remarkable, and most loved productivity tools I've seen in a very long time. Few products go from launch to a daily essential this fast. When you see it as both partner and user, you know it's special. ❤️ Thrilled to work with their wonderful team. They're the most talented, smart and humble people. And yes, they're hiring!
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Pietro Bezza
Pietro Bezza@pietrobezza·
and the best use @detailapp 😘
Abhivendra Singh@abhivendra

@HarryStebbings The video growth engineer role is a game-changer. In today's digital landscape, leveraging short-form video to engage audiences and drive growth is not just smart—it's essential. Investing in this position can create a ripple effect across customer acquisition and team building.

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Hugo Amsellem
Hugo Amsellem@HugoAmsellem·
15/ Want to dive deeper into this thesis? Read the full article here: hugo.pm/p/consumerplus And if you're building in this space, my DMs are open.
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Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin
So a big theme of 2023 and 2024 was “work-life balance”.  Moderation in growth, in spend, and in time spent on work and the journey.  😄 That a start-up maybe growing 40% but that is profitable might be better than a start-up growing 400% but addicted to venture capital. 🤽‍♀️ That maybe hitting 80% of quota but working 20 hours a week is better than killing yourself to hit 120% of quota and getting that big bonus check. 🏠 That everyone would be just as productive working 20-30 hours a week from home than 40+ in the office plus commute time. Well look, 2025 is the year to be honest here.  The ones that work twice as hard, that grow twice as fast, that even … work in the office … are often thriving. And the ones that grew slowly, and in their minds, more sanely for 2 years are now being eclipsed by a new generation, often AI-fueled. It is tough to have balance when the competition is working 6 days a week, 10 hours a day, often half of that in the office. In fact, across the @saastrfund portfolio, I see the top-performing start-ups working harder than ever.  Harder than in my entire career. 2025 is the year to be honest: for most of us in tech, if you want to do great things, there is no balance. There is nothing wrong for looking for an easy job, a 20-hour-a-week role, a fractional life.  Just be honest with yourself where it may lead.  Likely not to a big success. The world is more competitive than ever.  And AI has fueled 10,000 new hyper-competitive start-ups. The lifestyle job and start-up in many cases has become the terminal start-up and career.
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Andreas Klinger 🦾
Andreas Klinger 🦾@andreasklinger·
Imho: AI (LLMs) replace glue jobs. Most jobs in the corporate world are glue jobs. Glueing things together from different areas. Most are transformations/translations - eg translate from X to Y. This is where LLMs come from and are great at. Take a long book - create a short summary Take 100 emails - create one report Take UI specs - create code out of them Take customer care complain - create answer All of these are glue tasks. Stuff that you have to do to make one system work with another. The scary truth is that in most companies (esp larger ones) most of the jobs are glue jobs. A frontend engineer doing UI is also just doing a glue job.
Paul Graham@paulg

Hard to say if it will be this extreme, but if you average this together with the people saying that all the programming jobs will disappear, you have a reasonable estimate of what we know for sure about the future of programming as a career: nothing.

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Pietro Bezza
Pietro Bezza@pietrobezza·
💥Thrilled to welcome @MoltenVentures to our Fund I, as they’ve acquired 97% of the fund’s positions. Secondary is an excellent way for LPs to fully realize their gains, w/o divesting the portfolio. We’ll continue to manage Fund I with @typeform and @Soldo ://bit.ly/3Buu2Yc
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Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin
"Founder mode" I worry will be completely misunderstood in sales You can't scale sales without a Head of Sales / VP of Sales There are no real efficiencies of scale in a sales-led model Ultimately, to add +$10m of ARR, you'll need 10-20 sales execs You can manage them at first yourself, but after that ... it becomes impossible
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Packy McCormick
Packy McCormick@packyM·
There are Boeings everywhere for those with the eyes to see.
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Rob Moffat
Rob Moffat@robmoff·
$1.3bn in new @balderton funds to back Europe’s best founders! 25 years since we started we remain as excited as ever about the innovation coming out of Europe. The $615 million early fund and $685 million growth fund marks our largest fundraise to date. lnkd.in/er2tKaEb
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