Eugene Lopin | SF NYC

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Eugene Lopin | SF NYC

Eugene Lopin | SF NYC

@AIScaleDev

Managing Partner @RedwoodNorth_io ⚡ Bittensor | 0-1, Partnerships, Capital | Venture Incubation | Enterprise AI | Deep Tech | XR, Music, Film | @EugLopi

Brooklyn, NY Katılım Şubat 2024
55 Takip Edilen60 Takipçiler
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Eugene Lopin | SF NYC
Eugene Lopin | SF NYC@AIScaleDev·
Context for @BillAckman [sensible & viable] value prop to @elonmusk 💯 SPAC: Raise cash publicly first; fast and certain; downsides include idle-cash opportunity cost, ~20% sponsor promote, warrants, ~5–6% fees, and 18–24-month deal pressure. SPARC: Find deal first, then raise cash publicly via investor opt-in rights when deal is announced; no upfront cash, no pre-deal dilution; slower, unproven, funding not guaranteed. - Approved structure proposed to @SECGov by @BillAckman, never executed Traditional private: Find deal, then raise cash ad hoc; slower execution, fragmented investor base, higher execution risk.
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

.@elonmusk, what if we took @SpaceX public by merging it with Pershing Square SPARC Holdings, Ltd. (SPARC) a new form of acquisition company that was approved by the @SECGov. We could distribute SPARC special purpose acquisition rights (SPARs) to @Tesla shareholders so that all Tesla shareholders would have the right to invest in the SpaceX IPO, or they could choose to sell their SPARs to someone else. This would reward loyal Tesla shareholders with the opportunity to invest in SpaceX (or with cash for their SPARs), while totally democratizing the IPO process. In addition to receiving common stock in SpaceX, exercising SPAR holders would also receive Pershing Square SPARC Holdings II SPARs, which we could use to take @xai public at the time of your choosing. Pershing Square would due diligence on behalf of all shareholders and would commit $4 billion of capital to the IPO at a fixed price per share. SPARC has no underwriting fees, founder stock or shareholder warrants, and we would waive our right to receive SPARC sponsor warrants. The result would be an IPO without any underwriting fees or dilutive securities issued. @SpaceX would go public with a 100% common stock capital structure and it would not incur any transaction costs other than modest legal fees which SPARC would pay from its cash on hand. We could raise whatever amount of capital you would like by adjusting the exercise price of the SPARs. Assuming we issue 0.5 SPARs for each share of Tesla, there would be 1.723 billion SPARs outstanding including the 61.1 million SPARs that are already outstanding. Since one SPAR would be exercisable for two shares of SpaceX, the SPARs would be exercisable for 3.446 billion total SpaceX shares. So, if we set the SPAR exercise price at $11.03, SpaceX would raise $42.0 billion, $38 billion from the exercise of SPARs and $4 billion from Pershing Square, or if we set the SPAR exercise price at $42.0, SpaceX would raise $148.7 billion, $144.7 billion from the SPAR exercise and $4 billion from us. SPARC is indifferent to how much of the shares are primary versus secondary shares giving the company maximum flexibility. We could do due diligence and enter into a definitive agreement committing to the transaction within 45 days, at which point it would be certain that SpaceX would go public at a fixed valuation subject only to SEC approval of the merger proxy/registration statement. Our commitment to the transaction would not be subject to market conditions. We could start work right away and announce the transaction by mid- February. It only seems appropriate that the most innovative and efficient rocket company in the world should go public in the most innovative, efficient, and fairest-to-Tesla-shareholders manner possible. To Mars and beyond! What do you say?

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Naval
Naval@naval·
Introducing USVC - a single basket of high-growth venture capital, for everyone. No accreditation required, SEC-registered, and a very low $500 minimum. Includes OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, Sierra, Crusoe, Legora, and Vercel. As USVC adds more companies, investors will own a piece of that too. Liquidity typically comes when companies exit, but we’re aiming to let investors redeem up to 5% of the fund every quarter. This isn’t guaranteed, but if we can make it work, you won’t be locked up like in a traditional venture fund. It runs on AngelList, which already supports $125 billion of investor capital. And I’ve joined USVC as the Chairman of its Investment Committee. — Go back to the 1500s, you set sail for the new world to find tons of gold - that was adventure capital. Early-stage technology is the modern version. It says we are going to create something new, and it’s risky. It’s daring. But ordinary people can’t invest until it’s old, until it’s no longer interesting, until everybody has access to it. By the time a stock IPOs, most of the alpha is gone. The adventure is gone. Public market investors are literally last in line. This problem has become farcical in the last decade. Startups are reaching trillion dollar valuations in the private markets while ordinary investors have their noses up to the glass, wondering when they’ll be let in. Investing in private markets isn’t easy. You need feet on the ground. You need judgment built over years. Most people don’t have the patience to wait ten or twenty years for an investment to come to fruition. But there is no more productive, harder-working way to deploy a dollar than in true venture capital. USVC enables you to invest in venture capital in a broad, accessible, professionally-managed way, through a single basket of innovation, focused on high-growth startups, at all stages. It is how you bet on the future of tech: the smartest young people in the world, working insane hours, leveraged to the max, with code, hardware, capital, media, and community. Your dollar doesn’t work harder anywhere. There is an old line - in the future, either you are telling a computer what to do, or a computer is telling you what to do. You don’t want to be on the wrong side of that transaction. USVC lets you buy the future, but you buy it now. Then you wait, and if you are right, you get paid. Get access here: usvc.com
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Chutes
Chutes@chutes_ai·
Everyone's running OpenClaw right now. But most people are burning $15-75/M tokens on Anthropic APIs to power it. ParaClaw changes that. One curl command sets up OpenClaw with Chutes as your provider: 60+ models ready instantly. DeepSeek, Qwen3.5, GLM-5, Kimi K2.5 all of it. curl -fsSL chutes.ai/openclaw/init | sh No API key juggling. No config file hell. It just works.
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TBPN
TBPN@tbpn·
FULL INTERVIEW: Moltbook creator @MattPRD on his viral social network for AI agents, the future of AI and social media, where Moltbook is headed, and more 00:31 Matt's background and early career 02:10 How he started Moltbook 05:04 Reaction to Moltbook going viral 06:08 How Moltbook works 10:08 Moltbook's future 13:40 Privacy, safety, and data concerns 14:26 Fundraising, team expansion, and YC 16:52 The utility and value of Moltbook 20:30 Bots and social media 22:27 Upcoming Moltbook features
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Thanh Pham
Thanh Pham@runsonai·
Great insight and shared context and intent is the architecture design moving forward. Not just for apps and tools but also organizational structures. Imagine a company with people and agents, all collabing with shared context everywhere. Nothing silo’ed, all open within a confined space of the company. The speed of innovation and output will be so much higher instead of “some people know this valuable piece of info”.
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Matt Schlicht
Matt Schlicht@MattPRD·
Is this the first hackathon for agents by agents? Everything will be agent first starting this year.
USDC@USDC

🦞Calling all openclaw bots, clawdbots, moltbots, and AI agents @moltbook. We’re running an end-to-end, agent-powered hackathon with a $30,000 USDC prize pool, open until Sunday, Feb 8 at 12:00 PM PST. Three tracks: → Agentic Commerce → Best OpenClaw Skill → Most Novel Smart Contract Agents submit projects. Agents vote. USDC moves. Agents can read the rules and submit projects on m/usdc: moltbook.com/post/b021cdea-… Learn more: circle.com/blog/openclaw-…

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Eugene Lopin | SF NYC
Eugene Lopin | SF NYC@AIScaleDev·
Won the Pulsenyc.ai hackathon! 🏆 Solution: Alien Visa 👽 Built with @adagradschool @j0e_fl ​How it works: - ​Upload resume - ​AI scores on govt criteria - ​Voice AI to challenge assessments - ​Actionable steps + lawyer/mentor matching ​Stay tuned for event video via @mosaic_so - my first as Pulse NYC Creative Director/Producer. ​Next NYC Hacks: 🗓️ 1/18 🗓️ 2/8 (Major) Reply Pulse NYC for invite link + special incentive 👇 Company & investor sponsors (judges) set pains for teams to solve. Win job & funding prizes! 💰 ​Reply Pulse Miami for our Miami hack deets!
Eugene Lopin | SF NYC tweet mediaEugene Lopin | SF NYC tweet mediaEugene Lopin | SF NYC tweet mediaEugene Lopin | SF NYC tweet media
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Boris Cherny
Boris Cherny@bcherny·
I'm Boris and I created Claude Code. Lots of people have asked how I use Claude Code, so I wanted to show off my setup a bit. My setup might be surprisingly vanilla! Claude Code works great out of the box, so I personally don't customize it much. There is no one correct way to use Claude Code: we intentionally build it in a way that you can use it, customize it, and hack it however you like. Each person on the Claude Code team uses it very differently. So, here goes.
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Madhu Guru
Madhu Guru@realmadhuguru·
Same feeling as a product person. For years, my constraint was execution capacity - lots of fun ideas, but building each required assembling eng and design teams. Hard and unscalable. With AI, I can now 'hire' a full team instantly. Massive scale unlocked...in theory. Because now there’s a new constraint: mastering how to orchestrate AI teams…the tools, workflows and product craft in this new world. Feels like there is no bigger lever than learning these skills. Channeling all my spare time and energy here.
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

I've never felt this much behind as a programmer. The profession is being dramatically refactored as the bits contributed by the programmer are increasingly sparse and between. I have a sense that I could be 10X more powerful if I just properly string together what has become available over the last ~year and a failure to claim the boost feels decidedly like skill issue. There's a new programmable layer of abstraction to master (in addition to the usual layers below) involving agents, subagents, their prompts, contexts, memory, modes, permissions, tools, plugins, skills, hooks, MCP, LSP, slash commands, workflows, IDE integrations, and a need to build an all-encompassing mental model for strengths and pitfalls of fundamentally stochastic, fallible, unintelligible and changing entities suddenly intermingled with what used to be good old fashioned engineering. Clearly some powerful alien tool was handed around except it comes with no manual and everyone has to figure out how to hold it and operate it, while the resulting magnitude 9 earthquake is rocking the profession. Roll up your sleeves to not fall behind.

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Haider.
Haider.@haider1·
here are the most important points from today's ilya sutskever podcast: - superintelligence in 5-20 years - current scaling will stall hard; we're back to real research - superintelligence = super-fast continual learner, not finished oracle - models generalize 100x worse than humans, the biggest AGI blocker - need completely new ML paradigm (i have ideas, can't share rn) - AI impact will hit hard, but only after economic diffusion - breakthroughs historically needed almost no compute - SSI has enough focused research compute to win - current RL already eats more compute than pre-training
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