Sam Legge

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Sam Legge

Sam Legge

@d0b0

curious, building products, capturing landscapes / AI Products @jetson_home / past @Android XR, @focalsbynorth (acq.), Thalmic Labs, @communitech / always 🇨🇦

Waterloo & Yellowknife 🇨🇦 Katılım Aralık 2009
356 Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
Excited to be joining the @google team ✨
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Max Brodeur-Urbas
Max Brodeur-Urbas@MaxBrodeurUrbas·
attention all Canadian builders (in SF and in 🍁) -we're hosting a 🇨🇦 demo night at our new SF HQ -we're picking 2 Canadian builders to fly out for free if you want a free trip to sf comment what you're working on, i'll dm you march 26th nice people, nice food and nice demos
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defo
defo@yuoeauyeouaeou·
@lucyhargreaves4 @srlake oh another canadian startup that doesn’t work in canada and is being talked about “how we build canada” 💀
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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
Exciting times at @jetson_home . We are pushing the boundaries on how easy it is to electrify your home + how much better your at home experience is once electrified. We're growing the team with many PM and software roles open now. DM me or check out jetsonhome.com/careers if you want to help everyone electrify their home.
Sean Silcoff@SeanSilcoff

Jetson raises $50-million as Stephen Lake’s home heating disruptor expands across U.S. theglobeandmail.com/business/artic…

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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
The Beverly caribou herd has been in near-terminal decline since the 90s for undetermined reasons. They're one of few large herds whose habitat intersects with consistent human activity (winter roads to diamond mines north of Yellowknife). There've been rumours of a comeback, but we're finally seeing numbers that confirm it! Given the pressure on arctic ecosystems, it's great to see signs of resilience instead of the typical slow decay. cbc.ca/news/canada/no…
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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
+100 Our greatest explorative achievements (e.g. Mackenzie) were done with fewer people (9-10 people), less money and earlier than the American's large (45+ people) & expensive trip completed many years later at a much slower pace. There's more to Canada's history than stability and safety.
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daniel debow
daniel debow@ddebow·
this entire post from @EliotPence is just... perfect. "Our choice is clear. We can remain the Canada of 1867 — safe, stable, and secondary. Or we can become once again the Canada of Mackenzie and Simpson — a country that ventures farther, builds faster, and dreams bigger than anyone expects. The latter is harder, riskier, and more uncertain. But it is also more faithful to who we are." -------------------- The Canoe and the Crown: Canada’s Past — and Its Path Forward October 6, 2025 By Eliot Pence Canada has always been a country of two stories. One is written in Hansard debates and legislative preambles, etched into marble in Ottawa and celebrated every July 1. The other is told in logbooks, oral histories, and fading maps — a history of canoes cutting through blackwater rivers, of trading posts rising in remote forests, of men and women pushing beyond the known. Both are true. But only one can guide us into the century ahead. The official story of Canada begins in 1867. It is the story of Macdonald and Cartier, of the Fathers of Confederation gathered in Charlottetown and Quebec City to design a country that would be safe, stable, and enduring. These were men shaped by the failures of 1848 revolutions, by the trauma of America’s Civil War, and by a pervasive fear of mob rule and republican excess. They built Canada as a bulwark against chaos — a Dominion under the Crown that prized order over passion, gradualism over rupture, and compromise over conviction. The Dominion they designed reflected those instincts. It was federal but cautious in its decentralization. It preserved monarchical symbols as ballast against populism. Its economy was anchored to imperial trade routes and British capital. Its motto, peace, order, and good government, spoke volumes about priorities. And for a century and a half, this constitutional conservatism has served us reasonably well. We are a safe, predictable country. We muddle through. We avoid extremes. But this is only half the story. The deeper Canada — the one that predates Confederation and transcends it — was built not in parliamentary chambers but in the wilderness. It was forged by coureurs de bois and voyageurs who paddled thousands of kilometres into an uncharted interior. It was shaped by Indigenous guides like Thanadelthur and Matonabbee, who taught survival and navigation long before surveyors arrived. It was financed by bold commercial enterprises like the Hudson’s Bay Company, whose charter predates the country itself by two centuries and whose fur brigades were, in effect, the first continental supply chains. These were not bureaucrats but builders. They were risk-takers and deal-makers, often operating at the edge of law and empire. Alexander Mackenzie reached the Arctic Ocean by canoe in 1789 and the Pacific in 1793 — twelve years before Lewis and Clark set out from St. Louis. George Simpson, the “Little Emperor” of Hudson’s Bay, ran a commercial empire that spanned a continent from Labrador to the Columbia River. Catherine Parr Traill and Susanna Moodie chronicled the raw, improvisational struggle of settlement, while entrepreneurs like John Molson and Timothy Eaton turned colonial outposts into thriving markets. This Canada — restless, ambitious, commercial — is too often treated as a footnote in our national narrative. It shouldn’t be. It’s too easy to see our current challenges as similar to those that shaped the confederation debate — fending off an American invasion and stitching together jurisdictions and colonies. The reality is we are confronting a far more fluid, competitive, and unforgiving world — one defined by technological upheaval, geopolitical realignment, and existential tests of sovereignty in the Arctic, in cyberspace, and beyond. In such a world, caution and incrementalism will not suffice. They risk consigning us to irrelevance. What will matter instead are precisely the qualities embodied by those early explorers and entrepreneurs: speed, ingenuity, risk tolerance, and a willingness to operate far from familiar ground. We need more Mackenzies — Canadians willing to strike out into the unknown, whether that’s in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, or resource development in the North. We need more Simpsons — leaders who build continental-scale businesses and global supply chains. And we need governments that understand their role not as guardians of the status quo but as catalysts for ambition. This does not mean rejecting the achievements of 1867. The institutions the Fathers of Confederation built remain essential. But they must now serve as platforms for dynamism rather than obstacles to it. Our regulatory regimes, procurement systems, and public-sector risk appetites were designed for a different era. They must be re-engineered to support rapid experimentation and decisive action — the modern equivalents of loading a canoe with trade goods and pushing west. There is, ultimately, no contradiction between these two Canadas. The explorers and the legislators, the traders and the constitutionalists, were all nation-builders in their own ways. But if the first century of our history was defined by the architecture of order, the next must be defined by the spirit of exploration. The future will not reward the most cautious country. It will reward the boldest. Our choice is clear. We can remain the Canada of 1867 — safe, stable, and secondary. Or we can become once again the Canada of Mackenzie and Simpson — a country that ventures farther, builds faster, and dreams bigger than anyone expects. The latter is harder, riskier, and more uncertain. But it is also more faithful to who we are.
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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
@tcosta I love the card. Almost makes me want to use physical cards again...
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T. Costa
T. Costa@tcosta·
We now have one of the best (and most beautiful) credit cards in Canada. ✨
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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
Only a month ago, we launched Jetson Air. Today, we were recognized by @TIME alongside companies like @Figure_robot & @AnthropicAI for transforming the experience of heating & cooling your home. Jetson Air is more than an always-connected, fully integrated heating and cooling system. We're continuously rolling out improvements so your home's efficiency keeps getting better over time. Plus, customers can upgrade to a Jetson system at lower cost and less hassle than any traditional HVAC replacement. Making the switch to all-electric has never been easier. Check us out @ jetsonhome.com & @jetson_home. time.com/collections/be…
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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
@internetvin Living Yellowknife, engineer from Waterloo. Can confirm the Vietnamese food here is good.
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internetVin
internetVin@internetvin·
My little intro during a16z at New Stadium in Toronto. Thank you for everything so far.
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toki
toki@tokifyi·
IF YOU’RE CANADIAN IN TECH, HAPPY TO FOLLOW YOU
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daniel debow
daniel debow@ddebow·
“For Canada to survive and thrive in the 21st century, it needs to see itself as a global leader of the future – and dual-use space investments provide one of Canada’s best opportunities …”. 🚀🇨🇦 ⁦@Cmdr_Hadfieldtheglobeandmail.com/opinion/articl…
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Lucy Hargreaves
Lucy Hargreaves@lucyhargreaves4·
You can just do things! In under 48 hrs we went from @jimmurphy asking in a comment when @build_canada was coming to Waterloo to date, location, and hosts locked in 💪 Thanks to Jim and @jrodgers for co-hosting! Sign up in thread.
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Max Brodeur-Urbas
Max Brodeur-Urbas@MaxBrodeurUrbas·
gumloop is opening a Vancouver office to help slow the brain drain in Canada 🇨🇦 - exceptional Canadians shouldn’t have to leave home to pursue work at high growth AI startups - we started in Canada and want to reinvest our HQ is still in SF—but we're hiring. Apply today.
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Eric Lombardi (EricForOLP.ca) 🇨🇦🚀
🌆🏗️ BIG NEWS🚀 I am thrilled to take on a new (volunteer) role as Chair of @build_toronto, the first municipal project of @build_canada We’ll be working with civic & business leaders to push for ideas that improve governance, growth, prosperity, and opportunity in Toronto.
Build Canada - Toronto@build_toronto

🚀 Announcing Build Toronto Toronto is Canada’s largest city, its economic engine, and its greatest opportunity. If Toronto thrives, Canada thrives. But we all know the city faces deep challenges: unaffordable housing, strained infrastructure, governance gridlock, and a lack of urgency. That’s why Build Canada is proud to launch Build Toronto – the first municipal project of Build Canada – to raise the level of debate and spotlight bold, practical ideas that can move this city forward. We are equally proud to welcome @ericdlombardi as Chair. Eric is a civic leader and housing advocate whose work with More Neighbours Toronto has made him one of the city’s strongest voices for change. He will help guide Build Toronto as we put forward ideas that support growth, prosperity, and ambition for Toronto’s future. Over the weeks ahead, Build Toronto will publish frequent memos from entrepreneurs and civic leaders on Toronto’s biggest challenges and opportunities. From housing and transit to governance and economic growth, these memos are meant to push all of us – citizens and leaders alike – to think bigger about what Toronto can be. Toronto has the talent, energy, and openness to lead. What we’ve been missing is urgency. Build Toronto is here to help change that. 👇 Sign up for updates on our website

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Sam Legge
Sam Legge@d0b0·
@Kalshi JUST IN: Kalshi doesn't know what GDP is.
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Kalshi
Kalshi@Kalshi·
JUST IN: Nvidia is now worth more than Canada
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