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@techbyved

@thinkerstable podcast | building | thinker prev @galaxyhq @awscloud @bitpanda

London, England Katılım Temmuz 2021
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Claire Zau
Claire Zau@clairejyz·
I'm beyond excited to announce that I’m joining @Lightspeed as a Partner on the early-stage investing team and helping to build everything they're doing in new media. I've spent the last six years investing in early-stage companies, and the last year building a media platform in parallel. What started as a side quest has reached 350,000+ followers and millions of viewers a month. For me, investing and storytelling have always been two halves of the same job. This work has put me in rooms with incredible founders, researchers, and operators - many of whom have become close friends, collaborators, and early stage bets. There's so much happening at the frontier right now, and the media platform has given me a way to be in those conversations early (and to bring the people I admire most into a wider audience). When Lightspeed reached out, we saw the same opportunity. Venture and media are converging, and the next generation of great firms will need to show up differently: reaching founders and builders before they've even started a company, and being the place where people first get excited about what's happening in tech. With more than $50 billion in AUM, Lightspeed has been building alongside founders at the frontier of technology for decades. It's a firm I've admired for years since I started investing - for its intellectual rigor, its long-term conviction, and the way it approaches company building. I’m excited to join a team that brings real depth and substance to its work, and I hope to bring that same ethos to everything I put out. Thank you to @ravi_lsvp, @bsomaia , and @Machiz for believing in this vision and trusting me to help build it. I’m so excited to see what we do together. If you're an early-stage founder, building or thinking about starting something, or just curious about this ecosystem - please reach out. My DMs are open and I’d love to chat!
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ved luhana@techbyved·
@gregisenberg always delivers a banger. Designing everything for the agent economy is one of the most interesting opportunities. Cooking something up. Will share soon.
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg

My 30+ observations on the greatest opportunities in AI agents right now: And some ideas that are keeping me up at night. 1. The new buyer on the internet is an AI agent. Imagine billions of new customers showing up with money to spend but they only shop via MCP. That's what's happening. No MCP server means you're invisible to the fastest growing buyer on the internet. 2. Every franchise system in America (30,000+) needs an agent layer and none of them have one. One founder per franchise vertical. That's 30,000 businesses waiting. 3. Everyone said "distribution is the only moat" a year ago. Now I'd add that the only moat is distribution plus memory. The company that has your audience AND your agent's accumulated context is impossible to leave. 4. Consumer mobile is more interesting than it's been since 2012. Apps can finally DO things for you instead of showing you things. The next wave of $100M apps are being built right now. 5. The most interesting startup nobody has built is an agent marketplace where you rent access to someone else's trained agent. A recruiter spent 6 months training a sourcing agent on healthcare hiring. That agent is worth renting to every other healthcare recruiter on earth. The agent itself becomes the product. 6. A sorta strange phenomenon that's happening right now is agents are developing preferences. Give the same agent the same task 100 times and it starts developing patterns in how it approaches it. Nobody is studying this yet. But the agents that develop good patterns are worth more than the ones that don't. That's a new kind of asset. 7. Dead internet theory is about to become dead SaaS theory. Half the apps you use will quietly replace their support team, their onboarding team, and their content team with agents. You won't notice for months. Then you'll realize you haven't talked to a human at that company in a year. 8. The most valuable data in the world right now is sitting in the support tickets of small or mid tier SaaS companies. Every ticket is a customer telling you exactly what to build next. Mine this. 9. The most interesting pricing problem nobody has solved is how do you price a product when your costs change every time OpenAI or Anthropic updates their model pricing? Your margins can swing 40% overnight based on a decision made in San Francisco. The company that builds dynamic pricing infrastructure for agent-based businesses solves a problem every AI company has. 10. The best AI products feel like they're reading your mind. The worst ones feel like filling out a form with extra steps. 11. An interesting arbitrage I've noticed lately is hiring a human VA for $20/hour to supervise an AI agent that does $200/hour work. The human just checks the output. 12. The managed AI agent business is becoming the new agency model. $5k/month per client. You build it, run it, maintain it. The client gets a digital employee they never have to think about. This will be a $50 B+ category. 13. The first "shadow agent" scandals are about to drop. Employees running personal agents on company infrastructure without telling anyone. Using company API keys. Agents accessing internal docs. IT departments have little visibility into this right now. Lots of opportunity to build companies here. Definitely a painkiller not a vitamin type of business. 14. Right now there are probably millions of agents running on autopilot that their creators forgot about. Still burning tokens. Still sending emails. Still scraping websites. Still costing money. The "find and kill your zombie agents" tool is a product that writes itself. 15. Companies are starting to hire based on someone's agent portfolio instead of their resume. "Show me 3 agents you built that are running right now." It's REALLY early but it's starting. 16. Your Slack archive is a product. Every company's internal Slack has thousands of messages explaining how they actually do things. The company that lets you point an agent at your Slack history and auto-generate SOPs and agents from it will be enormous. 17. We're watching the cost of intelligence fall faster than the cost of distribution. Which means distribution is now the expensive thing. 18. The most underrated asset a human can have in 2026: the ability to sit in a room with another human, make eye contact, and have a real conversation. As AI handles more of the transactional stuff, the humans who can do the relational stuff become disproportionately valuable. The soft skills people used to dismiss as fluffy are becoming the hard skills. The hard skills people spent decades acquiring are becoming the soft ones. 19. There are MANY huge companies to be built around the fact that most people's agents are running on their personal laptops which they also use to browse the internet, check email, and download random files. The attack surface is enormous. One compromised Chrome extension and your agent's API keys, customer data, and workflows are exposed. 20. There's a new type of burnout forming that doesn't have a name. It's not from working too hard. It's from context switching between human work and agent work 50 times a day. Reviewing agent output, correcting it, approving it, reviewing again. The mental load of supervising agents is different from the mental load of doing the work yourself. Some founders are telling me they were less tired when they did everything manually because at least the cognitive pattern was consistent. 21. The cheapest form of market research: search "[your industry] spreadsheet template" on Google. Whatever people are tracking manually is your product. 22. Half the YC companies pivoted within 8 weeks of demo day. Not because they failed. Because agents let them test 5 ideas in the time it used to take to test one. The concept of "committing to an idea" is dissolving. Serial pivoting is becoming the default because 1) AI lets you move fast 2) the world is moving fast. 23. The loneliest job in tech right now is being the only person at your company who understands what the agents are doing. You can't explain it to your boss. You can't hand it off to a colleague. If you leave, everything breaks. You've become a single point of failure for an entire automated system. That person needs a title, a team, and a backup plan. Most companies haven't figured this out yet. 24. Your browser history is the most valuable training data you own and you're giving it away for free. Every site you visit, every product you research, every competitor you study, every pricing page you screenshot. That behavioral data, structured and fed to an agent, would make it understand your business better than any onboarding call. The company that lets you turn your browser history into agent context builds something nobody can replicate. 25. Everyone is building AI wrappers. Nobody is building AI unwrappers. The tool that takes an AI-generated document and tells you which parts a human wrote and which parts were generated. 26. Stripe just became the most important company in the agent economy and they barely had to do anything. Every agent that sells something needs Stripe. Every agent that buys something needs Stripe. They're the payment rail for the entire agentic internet by default. 27. The most undervalued API in the world right now is the US Postal Service address verification API. It's practically free. Every local business lead gen agent needs it. Every real estate agent needs it. Every direct mail agent needs it. Boring government infrastructure is quietly becoming the backbone of agent-native businesses. 28. The concept of "business hours" is for humans. Your agent closed a deal in Tokyo at 3am, processed the payment, sent the onboarding email, and updated the CRM before your alarm went off. 29. What happens when agents start recommending other agents? Your research agent finds that a competitor's sales agent is better and suggests you switch. Agent referral networks are forming organically. The first agent affiliate program is probably 6 months away. 30. Cal dotcom closed their source code. That's the canary. When open source companies start closing up, it means agents were cloning their product too easily. Every open source company is quietly asking the same question right now. 31. "AI for pet groomers" sounds like a joke and that's exactly why it will work. 150,000 of them in America. Zero tech. All scheduling by phone or IG DMs. The joke ideas always win. 32. The thing that will seem most obvious in hindsight: we spent 2025-2026 arguing about which model is best while the entire value was in the orchestration layer. The model is the CPU. Nobody buys a computer based on the CPU anymore. They buy it based on what they can do with it. Makes so much sense in hindsight. What else will be obvious in hindsight? I'll share more notes soon. I can't sleep with all that's going on. Maybe you too. What an incredible time to be building.

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ved luhana@techbyved·
@FranS199 @carolecadwalla Agree! Politically he shouldn’t be anywhere near peace deals, but Americans are more overt with their cronyism. VC’s should be VC’s.
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Carole Cadwalladr
Carole Cadwalladr@carolecadwalla·
Her full name - according to her - is not Suzanne Ashman. It’s Suzanne Ashman Blair. She’s just been appointed head of UK govt-funded Sovereign AI & her father-in-law - Tony - has a ton of skin in…you’ve guessed it, the sovereign AI game.
Carole Cadwalladr tweet mediaCarole Cadwalladr tweet media
Sovereign AI@UKSovereignAI

🔔Announcement🔔 Suzanne Ashman, former General Partner at LocalGlobe and Latitude, is joining Sovereign AI as Managing Partner. Suzanne, who has spent a decade backing founders who have come to define a generation of British technology, from Tessian to Open Cosmos, is one of the most respected venture investors in the UK.

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Sam
Sam@Discoplomacy·
Already seeing a cohort of pundits who have never worked in technology or investing chime in to share how ‘this is corruption guv!’ because Ashman is Tony Blair’s daughter in law. Crabs in bucket take.
Sovereign AI@UKSovereignAI

🔔Announcement🔔 Suzanne Ashman, former General Partner at LocalGlobe and Latitude, is joining Sovereign AI as Managing Partner. Suzanne, who has spent a decade backing founders who have come to define a generation of British technology, from Tessian to Open Cosmos, is one of the most respected venture investors in the UK.

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ved luhana@techbyved·
Ok but what does that actually mean? I think many people in the space are hoping we develop a sovereign AI policy. And we need the best people to run it, with Suzanne being highly qualified. Explain what you think will happen with Suzanne in seat? Tony Blair will be making the investment decisions? LOL
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West Ward 🇬🇧
West Ward 🇬🇧@lithologuy·
@Discoplomacy Midwit take. Dumb and smart people alike can see that this is just nepotism. Only a midwit would overlook this. I mean, Tony Blair's institute has *literally* pushed for a so-called 'Sovereign AI' policy and now his daughter in law leads it? Only a midwit could overlook it.
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Andrew Yeung
Andrew Yeung@andruyeung·
Which AI company should you work for if you want to optimize for career success? I used Claude to research career frameworks from 6 prominent entrepreneurs – @eladgil @pmarca @paulg @naval @rabois – and asked it to rank every single AI company into a tier list. The process: I had Claude pull each person's most iconic essay on career decisions, extract the first principles from each framework, and then score every major AI company against all 8 criteria simultaneously. The criteria: 1. Wave Riding – Is this company at the epicenter of the most important market shift happening right now? 2. Talent Density – Will your coworkers be the best people you've ever worked with, and will this alumni network compound for decades? 3. Stage & Optionality – Is the company small enough (20-200 people) that you'll wear many hats, with equity that can still appreciate 20-100x? 4. Compounding Learning – Will your rate of learning stay high year after year, and can you become a "barrel" who takes ideas from zero to shipped? 5. Specific Knowledge + Leverage – Will you build skills that feel like play to you but look like work to others, with access to code, media, or capital leverage? 6. Curiosity & Mission – Does the work excite genuine intellectual curiosity, and is the company's mission real – not just a recruiting pitch? 7. Equity & Ownership – Do you own a meaningful piece of the outcome, or are you just renting your time for a salary? 8. Brand Signal – Will this name on your resume open every door afterward, and are you building a public reputation through accountability? What am I missing? Do you agree with this list?
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ved luhana@techbyved·
Data is the moat right now, which is how this German AI startup proved that LLMs might not be the winning form for AI. Watch the next 90 seconds to learn how this insight netted a team of 3 founders over €2bn within 18 months. Shoutout to all the sources mentioned especially @etn_show
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ved luhana@techbyved·
@zck This is why we need to ensure companies are mindful about model flexibility rather than hive mind behaviour. Gov needs to step in to enable healthier competition between model providers. I would propose an open tender process for port co's after 1-2 years with a lab.
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Zak Kukoff
Zak Kukoff@zck·
How we might accidentally regulate AI: 1/ DeployCo embeds AI agents across 1,200+ portfolio cos and needs insurance for AI risk 2/ All portfolio cos run on the same few models, so AI losses are correlated across the entire insured base simultaneously 3/ Primary insurers can't get reinsurance capacity behind AI tail risk because there's no model that Munich Re, Swiss Re, or Berkshire will defend 4/ A high-profile loss event triggers a TRIA-style federal backstop demand from the commercial insurance industry 5/ Federal backstop arrives with mandatory deployment standards baked in as the political price of public underwriting
OpenAI@OpenAI

Today we’re launching the OpenAI Deployment Company to help businesses build and deploy AI. It's majority-owned and controlled by OpenAI. It brings together 19 leading investment firms, consultancies, and system integrators to help organizations deploy frontier AI to production for business impact. openai.com/index/openai-l…

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Brett Harrison
Brett Harrison@BrettHarrison·
Compute futures have arrived: quarterly, monthly & yearly contracts on Nvidia H100/H200 prices trading on Architect. Purpose-built for companies with exposure to GPU price volatility. Intuitive trading interface, instant settlement, our team online 24/7.
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ved luhana@techbyved·
@FerdiDabitz LFG - excited to see all the shipping in the next few months
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Ferdinand Dabitz
Ferdinand Dabitz@FerdiDabitz·
1/ There is so much to be said about the bank charter, the approval and how we’re re-thinking clearing for the AI era. But first, I wanted to take 2 minutes to talk about why “Augustus”.
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Andy T
Andy T@Andy_AJT·
Announcing the first OpenAI Codex Community Meetup in London. This Thursday 14th May @ Kings Cross we've got some special guests & surprises in store for this launch event get ready for some hardcore goblinmaxxing link below
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ved luhana@techbyved·
Why being curious will make you a billionaire .... In an AI-driven world, technical skills are becoming a commodity. The real alpha? Curiosity. It’s the only asset that allows you to: - Spot opportunities X years before the market does. - Bridge the gap between different industries to create something new. Think of this page as a gym for your mind by building your Curiosity Capital. It’s the most valuable thing you can invest in right now. If you look at the world’s most successful founders—from Musk to Gates—their billion-dollar ideas were the result of a relentless, trained curiosity. Here is the roadmap: - Watch & Learn: My content is designed to trigger your "How does that work?" reflex. - Apply First Principles: We strip away the noise to see the truth. - Build Curiosity Wealth: Use those insights to find leverage.
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Shannon Yang
Shannon Yang@shannonyangsky·
in the uk, what are the traditional foods eaten on early may bank holiday
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Andy T
Andy T@Andy_AJT·
I’m now the OpenAI Codex Ambassador for London 🇬🇧 I am loving engineering with Codex & GPT-5.5 If you’re already using Codex or coding agents, building AI agents, or working on ambitious AI products in London I’d love to connect & see you at the next event!
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ved luhana@techbyved·
@victorcardenas @grok summarise this. imagine you are a first-time founder who is thinking about raising in the coming months.
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oscarama
oscarama@oscarfalll·
it was an absolute pleasure hosting @vercel Zero to Agent London yesterday! thanks to everyone who attended, as well as my helpers, judging panel, partners, the venue, and the catering, for making the day one to remember.
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