Big Technology Podcast

OpenAI’s Superapp Ambitions, Jensen on Jobs, Bezos’s $100 Billion Automation Fund

61 min
Mar 20, 202630 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

OpenAI is pivoting from consumer-focused side projects to enterprise business applications, launching a desktop super app while facing competition from Anthropic. The episode also covers Jensen Huang's comments on AI layoffs, Meta's Metaverse shutdown reversal, and Jeff Bezos raising $100 billion for AI-powered manufacturing automation.

Insights
  • OpenAI's strategic shift to enterprise suggests consumer AI monetization remains elusive despite three years of development
  • Anthropic has captured 73% of new enterprise AI spending, forcing OpenAI to react defensively rather than lead
  • AI layoffs may reflect lack of leadership imagination rather than technological necessity, according to Nvidia's CEO
  • The Metaverse pivot enabled Meta's current AI wearables advantage, showing how failed initiatives can create unexpected value
  • Manufacturing automation through AI represents the next major investment wave, with world models becoming crucial technology
Trends
Enterprise AI adoption accelerating while consumer applications struggle to find product-market fitConsolidation of AI tools into unified desktop applications replacing standalone productsShift from large language models to world models for physical world understandingAI-powered manufacturing automation attracting massive investment capitalConsulting firms becoming essential for enterprise AI deploymentVoice-based AI rehearsal for difficult conversations emerging as consumer use caseVR social platforms declining while AI wearables gain tractionAgentic AI capabilities becoming standard enterprise requirementDesktop AI agents gaining preference over cloud-based solutions for enterpriseAI journalism ethics questions arising from synthetic interview practices
Companies
OpenAI
Pivoting from consumer side projects to enterprise focus with desktop super app development
Anthropic
Capturing 73% of new enterprise AI spending and outcompeting OpenAI in business market
Microsoft
Potential legal tensions with OpenAI over exclusive cloud agreement violations
Nvidia
CEO Jensen Huang commenting on AI layoffs and leadership imagination in technology adoption
Meta
Shutting down then reversing Horizon Worlds VR platform closure decision
Amazon
Jeff Bezos raising $100 billion fund for AI-powered manufacturing automation investments
Google
Maintaining search dominance despite generative AI competition from rivals
Accenture
Partnering with OpenAI for multi-year enterprise AI deployment consulting services
McKinsey
Consulting partner helping OpenAI deploy enterprise AI solutions to business customers
Boston Consulting Group
Multi-year partnership with OpenAI for enterprise AI implementation services
Ramp
Providing spending data showing Anthropic's growing market share over OpenAI
Disney
Previously appointed chief Metaverse officers during the virtual reality hype cycle
Walmart
Integrating internal AI tool Sparky into ChatGPT after shopping feature disappointments
SoftBank
Vision Fund comparison for scale of Bezos's proposed $100 billion manufacturing fund
Roblox
Example of successful virtual world platform without VR hardware requirements
People
Sam Altman
OpenAI CEO involved in strategic shift decisions but notably absent from company announcement
Fiji Simo
OpenAI applications chief leading enterprise pivot announcement and strategy communication
Jensen Huang
Nvidia CEO arguing AI layoffs reflect leadership imagination rather than technological necessity
Jeff Bezos
Amazon founder raising $100 billion fund for AI-powered manufacturing automation investments
Greg Brockman
OpenAI president temporarily overseeing desktop super app product development and organizational changes
Mark Zuckerberg
Meta CEO whose Metaverse pivot enabled current AI wearables competitive advantage
Dario Amodei
Anthropic CEO featured in controversial AI-generated interview by Vanity Fair journalist
Mark Warner
Senator scheduled for upcoming podcast interview about AI job displacement and regulation
Mustafa Suleiman
Microsoft AI head stating 'the model is the product' in recent company strategy shift
Andrew Bosworth
Meta CTO announcing continued VR support for Horizon Worlds after initial shutdown plans
Quotes
"We cannot miss the moment because we are distracted by side quests. We really have to nail productivity in general and predictive and particularly productivity on the business front."
Fiji Simo
"For companies with imagination, you'll do more. For companies where the leadership is just out of ideas, they have nothing else to do, they have no reason to imagine greater than they are."
Jensen Huang
"The model is the product."
Mustafa Suleiman
"One in four admit they dry chat before emotionally difficult tasks."
Email pitch to journalist
Full Transcript
4 Speakers
Speaker A

OpenAI is ditching side quests and building a super app. Nvidia's Jensen Huang comments on AI layoffs the metaverse is dead. Or is it? And Jeff Bezos is raising a massive fund to automate industry. That's coming up on a Big Technology Podcast Friday edition right after this.

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Speaker B

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0:52

Speaker A

Welcome to Big Technology Podcast Friday Edition where we break down the news in our traditional cool headed and nuanced format. We have a great show for you today. We're getting some new direction on OpenAI's products, something we've been advocating for a while. Focus that's coming. Also, Nvidia's Jensen Huang has some comments on AI driven layoffs. We're also going to talk about the end of the Metaverse or whether it actually is. And then finally Jeff Bezos might be raising $100 billion to automate seemingly all blue collar work. Joining us as always on Friday is Ron John Roy of Margins. Ranjan, great to see you.

1:22

Speaker D

Everyone has been listening to us. Alex OpenAI is ready to focus.

1:56

Speaker A

That's right. Finally OpenAI seems like the side quests are over and in fact OpenAI did have a meeting saying especially that now we had been talking about the fact that OpenAI had so many projects going, whether it was video generation with Sora or the browser with Atlas, coding with Codex, I don't know. Not to mention the image generation stuff. It seemed like they were trying to tackle a new multibillion dollar industry every week that might be coming to an end. Here is the Wall Street Journal story that sort of heralded this new era of OpenAI. OpenAI to cut back on side projects and push to nail Core Business OpenAI's top executives are finally finalizing plans for a major strategy shift to refocus the company around coding and business users, recognizing that a do everything all at once strategy has put them on the defensive. BG Semo, OpenAI, CEO of Applications, previewed the changes to employees in an all hands meeting, telling them that the top leaders, including CEO Sam Altman and Chief Research Officer Mark Chen, were actively looking at which areas to deprioritize. They expect to notify staff about the changes in the coming weeks. Here's what Simo said. We cannot miss the moment because we are distracted by side quests. We really have to nail productivity in general and predictive and particularly productivity on the business front. We'll talk about the focus, but I have to say my first takeaway is not focus. My first takeaway is oh my God, they're giving up on consumer.

2:01

Speaker D

Oh I think that's definitely feels like it's embedded in the entire announcement. And I have to say a couple of things jumped out at me. One that I should be happy that they're finally focusing and for months on end we've been talking about. You didn't even mention yet I think you said AI cloud. You didn't even talk about the PIN and consumer devices and whatever might come out of that. Like there was so much going on. But I actually was kind of surprised that Fiji Simo is the one that made the announcement according to all the reporting that she's the one who led the all hands meeting and kind of like spoke on behalf of Sand Altman. Cause I think for something that major you would think Sam should be giving that message to the entire team. So that was the first thing that jumped out at me. But the other the more I've been thinking about is like it's as you're saying the one lane I think they still truly have a path to success is consumer and is it because of Google? Is it because they're just looking at anthropic and investors are telling them that that's what's more attractive right now to me this isn't the bet that they should be taking.

3:34

Speaker A

Well let's talk about that because if you think about the consumer bet versus the business bet. Well can we both agree that if you're able it looks like the AI models have gone from this like fun chat interlocutor to something that actually could actually do Real work for you.

4:45

Speaker D

Have they? Have they?

5:01

Speaker A

Okay, this is. All right. So, so folks, listeners, this is an important moment on the show. Ranjan at the end of 2025 predicted that this year was going the year that we were going to see agentic AI enter the mainstream. And he said he was living the future. And I was skeptical and I said we're going to hold your feet to the fire this year. It's March, towards the end of mid March. I am going to raise the white flag on this one. All right. That's all I ask.

5:04

Speaker D

That's all I ask.

5:31

Speaker A

All I ask. I was, I, I, I have been surprised at how quickly AI that does work for you has, has actually emerged this year. I can't believe I'm using it. And it just goes to show you that the progress of this stuff is crazy. So, so, you know, it seems like it would make sense if you're open AI, you have to play there. Given the valuations.

5:32

Speaker D

I think it would make sense. But again, this is like. Is AI Erotica no longer on the roadmap? I'm assuming so. I hope so. I mean like the things you're assuming

5:57

Speaker A

that it's no longer on the roadmap.

6:08

Speaker D

Yeah. In terms of side quests, my God, if, if that one doesn't get put on the chopping block, I'm not sure how they're going to get into enterprise.

6:10

Speaker A

But it is on hold.

6:18

Speaker D

I believe OpenAI has a very, very different perception. There's one of quality and innovation, but there's also one of you know, a more cavalier idea attitude towards data privacy, towards security, towards all these kind of things that, which they kind of, that's the way they pushed themselves. It's, it's. We're going to release a video model. Are we going to use a lot of copyrighted mater? Sure, we'll take it down in two days after Disney complains and then we'll somehow do a deal with Disney. Like, but like to date they kind of leaned into that like break the rules, no holds barred mentality for progress. And I think that's gonna, that's gonna hurt them in terms of trying to actually make this shift. But I also do think when we talk about focus, of course Anthropic has made massive waves. Of course, Enterprise, again, as someone who works in enterprise, AI at writer, like it's a very large, attractive market. I get it. But to shift that massively such like a fast moving business, I just think it's. And they've hired a lot of very, very Talented people. I just think there's a lot of baggage within the company that you can't just make a shift like that that easily.

6:19

Speaker A

Okay, but here's where I'm going with this. So to me, like, there's reason to try to go after enterprise. You, you basically, you can't let it go because it's such a big market opportunity. Even though, and we talk about this on the show all the time, there's potentially a lot of side effects. The question would be, okay, so you're so I think that's a given. You have to do something in enterprise. Now the question would be, is it worth going after consumer. And maybe the answer is no. Maybe the answer is in this. We're three years into this AI shakeout. There's no real consumer play. I mean think about all the consumer plays that people have tried and failed. Whether that's the A.I. girlfriend, the A.I. pendant, the A.I. necklace, the A.I. you know, chat bot friend. Like how, how much, you know, how many consumers are you actually going to get to pay that $20 a month just for, you know, AI companionship? I think this might be a larger indication that, you know, may think about all the meta chat bots that they made. Maybe consumer AI is a thing that's going to happen down the road, but it's just not happening yet. It's not materializing large language models. The stuff we're seeing with agentic stuff is an enterprise thing and it's a very valuable enterprise thing. But we're certainly not seeing the consumer market materialize and that's where you're seeing this shift from OpenAI.

7:36

Speaker D

So a couple of things I think that's still ignore, that's still looking at what current day consumer AI products are, but that's still discounting where they could go. So again, and there was reporting from the Wall Journal or Bloomberg on Friday that I found really interesting that OpenAI is stepping back from ChatGPT shopping, that retailers haven't actually seen results and Walmart is now going to inject Sparky, their internal AI tool to into ChatGPT, which is pretty interesting I think, like, but advertising, shopping in retail, I don't know, streaming entertainment, there's just any take any consumer business and OpenAI could start to own it if they own the kind of access point and interface and intelligence. So I think it's, it's still a big potential market. But one thing I wanted to highlight is to me, the more interesting part of this is what it means with Microsoft. Did you see the potential Microsoft Lawsuit reporting.

8:57

Speaker A

Yes. Wait, before you get to that, can I make one more counterpoint? Then we'll go to the, the Microsoft stuff with, with OpenAI. You know, one of the, the proof points here that AI hasn't worked for consumer is that Google is still, still crushing it. You know, if, if any market that we've talked about generative AI taking it hasn't taken it and certainly hasn't taken search yet. If it had taken search, I would say okay, there's a potential here, but it hasn't.

9:57

Speaker D

Yeah but I think Gemini has certainly shown like a pretty strong competitive element in the, especially in the last like 6 to 12 months. But, but it's still, it shows that it, it's still an attractive market or it's still worthwhile to pursue. I think though, like we don't know what my. I agree. And you can easily argue like if the IPO is this year. We don't know consumer monetization around AI yet. We don't know what it looks like. We don't know what like the real juicy business models are going to be. If it's advertising, maybe Meta is going to figure it out and we talked about that last week that maybe Zuckerberg is going to be make his big comeback because they're going to figure out consumer AI themselves. But, but I think it's premature to discount enterprise. And again, as someone who is very aware of the attractiveness of enterprise AI like to discount consumer as an entire market and like addressable market.

10:27

Speaker A

Okay, I'm not saying there's no way this is going to work. I'm just saying it's clearly not working now. And I will point again to you know, adult mode on chat, GPT not shipping because we know it's delayed.

11:27

Speaker D

That's why it might have been working. They didn't ship my.

11:38

Speaker A

That's. I would say maybe, but that's probably the last sort of the last gasp of like, oh, we need it to work somehow. Let's try adult mode and that. And now that's, you know, if that's delayed, if they're shifting to enterprise, I mean Fiji says it outright. Pretty amazing. Okay, sorry, go ahead. To your point about this lawsuit with Mike.

11:42

Speaker D

Okay, so. And we hadn't planned on talking about this but I just, this just came to mind and I hadn't connected it before we started talking right now. Like so there's reporting from Reuters that Microsoft may sue OpenAI over their $50 billion investment from Amazon and because it could violate the exclusive cloud agreement that they had set a number of years ago that like all OpenAI products had to be actually served through Microsoft Azure. I even saw there was stuff around like the language they have to use is like we are invoking the model but not we are executing on the model. Like they're really.

12:01

Speaker A

We invoke the model.

12:43

Speaker D

Yes. But we're not actually like deploying or executing the model on our cloud service on Amazon because that would violate the contract. But if you think about it like, I mean, who are you? Anthropic. Yes. Direct competition. Everyone's going. They've made a lot of waves in it. Enterprise is a gigantic market. But Microsoft is the. Is it 800 pound gorilla? What's the, what's the saying?

12:44

Speaker A

That sounds like a nice size for a gorilla to me.

13:11

Speaker D

That's, that's okay. 800 pound gorilla in the room. And already if there's, if they're starting to kind of like make some waves around, they could put a big thorn in the side of OpenAI in the year as they move towards IPO. If you are then going towards their market. I mean that's a whole other thing that awakening to continue on with the 800 pound gorilla metaphor. Like the, the 800 pound gorilla. I'm not sure how to continue on that one. But yeah, if you're. You're gonna piss off Microsoft and they have some leverage over you and you haven't really been a threat to them yet and now you are trying to be. I think that poses a whole other problem.

13:13

Speaker A

Oh yeah, that. I mean that is one of you remember, you know, the relationship started to seemingly maybe not fray but have some distance in there. And they were both like, okay, no, we're still very close. Clearly that something went off the rails. By the way, my favorite Microsoft news of the week, we won't spend too much time on this, but they made some changes with Copilot and Mustafa Suleiman, head of AI there, he said, quote, I think he's going to be focused more on the model. He said, quote, the model is the product. Mustafa Suleiman.

13:58

Speaker D

Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I saw that too. I saw that actually. No, no, he brought us all together. It's no longer product versus model. The model is the product. It all converges. Yeah, convergence theory. I think I also my moment. My other favorite Microsoft news of the week is. I mean, I guess it was last week they launched Copilot Co work which basically is like layering Microsoft Copilot over cloud cowork and somehow multi trillion dollars of corporate value. And they came up with the name Copilot co work.

14:34

Speaker A

But what would you name it?

15:10

Speaker D

Okay, okay. You know what, I would just stick with Copilot. I would just be like own the brand. Own like on the brand. If that's your, if that's your thing. No one needs to make that additional like distinction between like Claude is. It's a name, it's not like a brand name. So you can, you can alliterate on it a little bit. You can add a. But Copilot's already Microsoft Copilot. So yeah, yeah, I would just stick with Copilot.

15:13

Speaker A

Just make it another featuring. All right, I could say I see that. Make another feature in Copilot. All right. So by the way, this is not just like with, with OpenAI's direction. This is not just rumblings. There's actually news that we've seen come out recently or over the past 24 hours that they're actually going to go ahead and make some product changes. And speaking now. So like we talked about consumer enterprise, I think that's the most important thing. Number two, secondarily is focus. And that focus is coming and here's the news that's happened from the Wall Street Journal. OpenAI plans to launch Launch of Desktop Super App to refocus and simplify the user experience, OpenAI is planning to unify its ChatGPT app, coding platform Codex and browser into a desktop super app, a step to simplify the user experience and continue with efforts to focus on Engineering customers. OpenAI President Greg Brockman, who currently leads the company's computing efforts, will temporarily oversee the product revamp and related organizational changes. And Fiji Simo, the chief of applications, will lead the company's sales team as it markets the new product. Very interesting. The strategy change marks a shift from late last year when OpenAI launched a series of standalone products that didn't always resonate with users and sometimes created a lack of focus within the company. OpenAI executives are hoping that unifying its products under one app will allow it to streamline resources as it seeks to beat back the success of its rival Anthropic. One more line. OpenAI is seeking to focus on so called agentic AI capabilities within the new super app. Ranjan, your reaction?

15:40

Speaker D

Okay, so number one reading between the lines, one thing that jumped out at me is Fiji Simo was referred to as Chief of Applications. Do you remember what her title was when they hired her?

17:23

Speaker A

CEO of. Wasn't it CEO of Applications.

17:38

Speaker D

CEO of Applications.

17:43

Speaker A

Oh that's, that's that. I just think that's Wall Street Journal writing it?

17:45

Speaker D

No, I think that's, I think it's telling because already it was very confusing when she was announced as CEO and then it was that she would be reporting. Okay, I'm, I'm saying watch, watch that space. Is she going to remain CEO or is she going to become like Chief Application Officer? Chief of applications should maybe, maybe reading into it.

17:48

Speaker A

That seems. Yeah, I mean, you would. You, in this type of thing, you would write like chief and CEO. Like chief CEO is chief Executive officer, so chief of applications. But whatever. If, if this was the Wall Street Journal's way of signaling that she's getting demoted, which I don't think it is, it would be far from the weirdest thing that's happened in journalism in AI this week, which we'll probably get to in a bit.

18:09

Speaker D

I don't think it's demot because again, she led the, the company all hands to actually kind of like send this message. I just think it's, it's interesting. I'm curious whether the three letter CEO will remain that long, but. Okay, moving on from that complete speculation. I, I found like, it's been odd because I don't know if you did you see, Gemini is now launching a Mac app. They're talking about like merging Browser and Desktop1 using the term super app, which I haven't heard in a while, since the days of everyone wanted to be WeChat and we would hear about Chinese super apps. And it was funny to me that they kind of use that. But I don't understand why that's like that interesting browser experience, desktop app, platform, like the coding platform into just one UI or interface. I don't know, what do you think is interesting or exciting about that? I found it almost like a very mundane product detail that they could have almost just done without announcement. So.

18:32

Speaker A

Well, I have this desktop app on my desktop that has standard chatbot and cowork stuff and coding capabilities in it. Claude app. And having all that together on your browser. Sorry, now on your desktop, you know, and giving it access to use your browser to go do things. That has been an unlock for me and many others. So I do think this might be OpenAI seeing that that system really works and saying, and maybe it's going there and saying, you know, we'll put our models against Anthropic's best and our coding against their best and let's go like, let's have at it.

19:38

Speaker D

See, here's where I will push back cowork and computer control, essentially giving Claude unfettered access to the files on your hard drive, basically like doing local work on your computer. That kind of experience from an enterprise standpoint is terrifying. So if you're really making the shift to enterprise, allowing local file like a open local file access is actually not what you would want to be doing as like a core part of the product. Again Claude Cowork is in Research Preview still. It's not a core part of the platform that they advertise especially to enterprise. So like to me that that's the reason. Like I think the, the desktop part again, it's like that's fine. I want to hear there's no more pin. There's no more like they're not going to hear that. No, no. Jony, I've just walking out the door pissed off, just wearing his pin. That, that's what I think. Then I'll, then I'll believe the focus. Then I will.

20:16

Speaker A

I'm going to push back on your, on your pushback. I mean Jensen huang, the Nvidia CEO happens to be driving the whole thing. Four and a half trillion dollar company, which is crazy, just said that OpenClaw is the most important thing after ChatGPT. By the way, who acquired the OpenClaw team or Aqua hired them? That would be OpenAI. So if you're going into enterprise, you're making this move. All signs point to this Open Claw style agent. And by the way, Anthropic just launched a version of it with I think it's called Claude Console where you could just kind of text Claude to do stuff when you're away and it will do it for you. So this is, I will go even more in the tank for Agentic than you are. I'll say. This is where it's going.

21:18

Speaker D

The distinction between kind of like launching cloud based operations and accessing kind of like monitored files versus local files and like just like where you can be offline or. I mean it's just such a, it's such a different thing. And, and again I agree like the whole open clothing has taken the industry by storm across the board. Everyone's pushing it, everyone's a jump on it, but it's still like what it represents in terms of like finally doing agentic work. Yes, I get. But I think like if that's the core part of what OpenAI is trying to do, again like everything is reactive right now. As you said, Claude has a good desktop app that combines multiple platforms into one and makes it more usable. So then they're going to do that Claude, we started talking about this last February when people are actually criticizing and showing charts about their drop in consumer usage and joking about it pivoted hard to coding, which then led to enterprise like OpenAI being this reactive. I think again, if they mean it, show it by just smashing the pin. That's all I ask.

22:09

Speaker A

They're not smashing the pin. I'll just say this. I have no inside knowledge on this, but pretty interesting. Greg Brockman's gonna run the super app. Fiji's gonna help market it. Where Sam probably working on the pin. He's just in the back with Johnny, that's my guess.

23:24

Speaker D

Just in the back with Johnny with the pin. And launching the entire AI cloud business and the whole consumer devices arm as well, in addition to the pin.

23:42

Speaker A

Why isn't the PIN the consumer device?

23:52

Speaker D

Oh yeah, that's true. And it's the only device that will exist and the only interface through which we will access AI in a matter.

23:55

Speaker A

Maybe headphones.

24:01

Speaker D

No.

24:02

Speaker A

Okay, so headphones are dead.

24:02

Speaker D

It's only the pin.

24:05

Speaker A

Don't tell that to Tim Cook.

24:06

Speaker D

I pin.

24:10

Speaker A

I pin the eye pin. Oh, God. That's what they're going to call it. I promise. It's going to be yesterday's. Yesterday's vision, today's technology, the ipin simplicity. All right, let's talk about proactivity. Let's talk about our favorite type of proactivity, which is consultants. You know, this stuff is messy. It's going to take your computer over. What do you need? You need consultants. CNBC. OpenAI lands a multi year deal. Multi year deals with consulting giants in enterprise push. OpenAI on Monday announced it was entering into multi year partnerships with four consulting firms that will help the company deploy its enterprise platform, called Frontier. It's going to be working with Accenture, Boston Consulting Group, Capgemini and McKinsey. OpenAI is racing against rivals like Google and Anthropic to win users and market share. And the company has to make an aggressive push to court enterprise customers. Frontier, which OpenAI unveiled earlier this month, acts as an intelligence layer that stitches together disparate systems and data within an organization. It aims to make it easier for companies to manage, deploy and build AI agents, which are tools that can independently complete tasks on behalf of the user. All right, so that's maybe how it works. If it's going to build technology that's going to just take your stuff over, maybe it happens. With the assistance of McKinsey and the Merry band of consultants who've now gone from being potentially displaced to essential in the rollout of this technology. Your thoughts?

24:11

Speaker D

Well, so this is a very delicate balance in turn in these kind of situations in terms of like you have the Palantir model of take technology and for deployed engineer and our people will be in there implementing technology. You have the partnership model in this case. And I think like it's interest. Anthropic has been traditionally more kind of the Ford deployed engineer implementation model. They, they've also launched large partnership efforts very, I think just last week as well. Again, reacting in these kind of ways, like copying what Anthropic is doing in this case, I, I think like giving the relationship to the partner. If OpenAI, if this is truly the priority, rather than just going all in and being like we're building a business around that. I think it's another, it adds another element of risk here. But yeah, I think it's a bet and it's actually going to kind of like be a big judge of the type of success they do have.

25:44

Speaker A

Now, one more idea about why we're seeing this. This is some crazy stuff that came out of Ramp, which is access to enterprise spending. And Axios wrote it up in a story called the AI Spending Flip. Here's the story. Anthropic is now capturing over 73% of of all spending among companies buying AI tools for the first time. 73%. Just 10 weeks ago, the split with OpenAI was 5050 and it was 6040 in OpenAI's favor as recently as December. This is an unbelievable flip where you're starting to see Anthropic be the first choice. Obviously it's related to cloud code among companies who need LM technology and they've surpassed OpenAI, I guess. I'm sure OpenAI has access to this data and it's probably driving a lot of what we're seeing and talked about in the first half of the show.

26:46

Speaker D

I was just. It's funny because I will take my momentary rant that it still shocks me that everyone in the industry is okay that Ramp does release this kind of data. As someone whose company uses Ramp, it's still just kind of weird to me that like, like whatever I'm spending on will be able to be in an anonymized way still kind of advertised to the entire world.

27:41

Speaker A

But I'm all about that Ramp economics lab man over there. Just unbelievable data don't end that party. Ron. John.

28:04

Speaker D

I'm sorry. It's amazing, but it's still kind of weird to me that everyone's okay with it. But that's for another day. I think it's funny if OP let's say OpenAI is looking at this data because Ramp is a really specific company. I work at a high growth technology enterprise AI startup Rytr. We use Ramp. Many people I know who work at cutting edge technology companies use Ramp. It's an amazing product. I love it. As someone who had to file expense reports in the past and it was a pain in the ass, it's still such a specific profile. So their data is going to be heavily skewed in whatever the coolest new so it'll show momentum but like in terms of showing actual like aggregate impact in the economy. Most large companies are not using Ramp. Like I can't imagine especially more kind of like old fashioned companies. So. So I don't know if it's true. It would be surprised to me if it's actually like reflective of the economy at large versus the cool kids are using Claude more than OpenAI right now.

28:12

Speaker A

Yeah, well maybe they're a leading indicator.

29:22

Speaker D

I guess that's the question is what a Silicon Valley startup is using today, is that going to be an indicator of what's going to happen to the rest of the economy? Do you think it's a good one or do you think it's actually almost like counterproductive because it's such a different personality and consumer?

29:25

Speaker A

That's a good question. I mean I think category yes it is a leading indicator but maybe not specific vendor and we're going to find out later this year. I don't know if you've seen this. Morgan Stanley of all entities has warned, according to fortune, that an AI breakthrough is coming in 2026 and most of the world isn't ready. A massive AI breakthrough is coming in the first half of 2026. I guess we're halfway through and Morgan Stanley says most of the world isn't ready for it. In a sweeping new report, the investment bank warns that a transformative leap in artificial intelligence is imminent driven by an unprecedented accumulation of compute at America's top AI labs. Executives at major AI labs are telling investors to brace for progress that will shock them. What do you think they could be seeing? I mean what does Morgan Stanley know that that we don't or we do?

29:46

Speaker D

Well, you did. There is also the part that says Researchers specifically highlighted a recent interview with Elon Musk citing his belief that applying 10x to compute LLM training will double the model's intelligence. So, so that's one of their citations. Like I think I. Beyond that I don't know, like, yeah, I genuinely don't know. And this is against. As someone who is very bullish and some somewhat thinks we need to be thoughtful about how smart and fast this technology can move, I'm still, it's still funny to me, this kind of curiosity gap style research report from a Morgan Stanley versus just say, what is it? What is it? Just what's going to happen. Take a bet, Take a bet, give a prediction.

30:39

Speaker A

Was very bizarre. Anyway, that's another interesting note on the bottom of the story. It says for this story, Fortune journalists use generative AI as a research tool. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. I thought that was interesting, but it wasn't to me the sort of weirdest use of generative AI in tech journalism or journalism. This week I don't know if you saw the Vanity Fair story about Dario Amaday. It was initially titled Dario Amade has a Cold. And it was, it seems like this reporter got some decent access into Anthropic and then like towards the end of the story, he's been building up the whole story about getting to meet Dario Amade, CEO of Anthropic. And then he writes this whole long interview that he had with Dario. And then afterwards he's like, oh, I actually didn't interview Dario and ask these like biting questions to him. I like uploaded a lot of Dario's talks into Claude and I interviewed him that way. And that's what you've just read?

31:29

Speaker D

Yeah, this was. Would you do that and call it an interview?

32:33

Speaker B

No.

32:39

Speaker D

Okay.

32:39

Speaker A

I wouldn't think about doing that. It's so disrespectful.

32:40

Speaker D

I.

32:43

Speaker A

To the reader, to the companies. It's especially to the reader. I mean, that's awful.

32:43

Speaker D

Yeah, I think. I mean, yeah, it's more. Was it like performance art or something?

32:49

Speaker A

I hope that that's the best possible explanation. I mean, I think it wasn't just the interview. It wasn't like this person seems like they actually did real reporting and then just wrote the put the fake interview at the end. Truly a puzzling situation.

32:56

Speaker D

I mean, like, I guess we hadn't planned on talking about it, but in terms of what is real and what's not anymore, I'm sure you've been following good old BB Netanyahu and these videos this week.

33:12

Speaker A

I have, yeah. So that. Go ahead, you can introduce it.

33:25

Speaker D

I mean, I almost have to imagine every listener would have crossed paths with the rampant speculation that Benjamin Netanyahu is deceased and has been putting out AI videos of himself at a coffee Shop. And then even today there was a press conference, but still endless speculation that it was AI generated. And honestly, like this, like, again, this kind of like Dario interview and then it was AI like the Netanyahu stuff is actually, I think, the most scared I've been around the impact of, like, AI and video and people trying to understand what is true, that, like, just how absurd and crazy it is, that if we're actually living in an era where world leader somehow. And are they. Is he trying to troll us by putting out a coffee, weird coffee shop video rather than just showing up live with, like a bunch of people? But yeah, this one has gotten me pretty rattled this week.

33:28

Speaker A

I don't know. I think you're on Blue sky too much. I, I saw those videos. I didn't have any question about the veracity of them. Maybe I'm.

34:34

Speaker D

No, but no, no, no, no, no. This is X. This is, this is. I feel you're getting both sides on

34:41

Speaker A

X. Yeah, I feel like this is one of the unifying things on all

34:48

Speaker D

this is horseshoe theory loves AI generated Netanyahu.

34:52

Speaker A

That's true. It's like the epitome of it.

34:57

Speaker D

Yeah.

34:59

Speaker A

All right, we. Let's, let's go to break before this really goes off the rails. But if you're interested in the political story, folks, Senator Mark Warner is going to be on the show on Wednesday. We're going to talk about AI job loss. We're going to talk about the anthropic and the Pentagon thing. And yes, we'll talk about one of my favorite topics, which is why do members of Congress continue to conduct seemingly insider trading? And they, they will not stop. They can't stop. And Senator Warner and I will discuss that next week on Wednesday. All right, Ronja and I will be back right after this to talk about Jensen Huang's comments on AI layoffs, a little bit about the Metaverse, and then, of course, really interesting.

35:00

Speaker D

Who did you say? Who did you say is going to be on the show for discussing insider trading?

35:43

Speaker A

And Mark Warner.

35:47

Speaker D

Jesus, man. The guests you get, I love for listeners. I love that Alex, with no heads up, just casually drops these names right before we go to break. Sorry.

35:49

Speaker A

Okay. I have to.

36:00

Speaker D

That was a compliment. That was a compliment. Yeah.

36:01

Speaker A

All right, I guess. I guess we're leaving this in Ranjan. I was just making my, my pitch for the second. All right, we'll be back after this with a conversation about Jensen Huang's AI. Jensen Huang's comments on AI layoffs, the metaverse, and then Jeff Bezos fund. We'll be back right after this. I've interviewed a lot of great tech founders on this show and one surprisingly universal challenge comes up again and again. Finding the right domain name it's something I ran into myself when launching big technology. The names you want are often taken and it's tempting just to settle and move on. But the founders I respect most don't settle on fundamentals, and your name is one of them. It should immediately signal what you actually built. That's what I appreciate about tech domains. It just makes sense. It tells the world, your customers, your investors and anyone googling you that you're building technology clean, direct and no qualifiers. And I'm seeing more serious startups leading into it. Nothing Tech1x Tech, Aurora Tech, CES Tech, PI Tech, and so many more. If you're building something tech first, don't settle. Secure your tech domain from any registrar of your choice and make your positioning obvious from day one. Starting something new isn't just hard, it's terrifying. So much work goes into this thing that you're not entirely sure will work out, and it can be hard to make that leap of faith. When I started this podcast, I wasn't sure if anyone would listen. Now I know it was the right choice. It also helps when you have a partner like Shopify on your side to help. Shopify is the commerce platform behind millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e commerce in the US from household names like Allbirds and Cotopaxi to brands just getting started. With hundreds of ready to use templates, Shopify helps you build a beautiful online store that matches your brand style. Get the word out like you have a marketing team behind you. Easily create email and social campaigns wherever your customers are scrolling or strolling. It's time to turn those what ifs into with Shopify today. Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.com bigtech go to shopify.com bigtech that's shopify.com bigtech

36:04

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38:41

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38:44

Speaker A

and we're back here on Big Technology Podcast Friday Edition. Yes, as you heard before the break, Senator Mark Warner is going to be on the show next week. We have an Amazing. Honestly, I think the strongest lineup we've had in a very long time, if not in the show's history, coming up on some of these Wednesday shows. So stay tuned for that. All right. Maybe Jensen Huang will come on, maybe not. But he certainly was speaking with Save AI.

38:49

Speaker D

Yeah.

39:15

Speaker A

Oh yeah. So this was. So he did do this tour around GTC similar to what we thought, which was basically making the case for artificial intelligence. And part of it was Jim Cramer asking him on CNBC about his impression on weather. Companies will continue to lay people off with AI And Jensen, I think captured what I was feeling about this pretty well. Here was what he's, what he said in response. For companies with imagination, you'll do more. For companies where the leadership is just out of ideas, they have nothing else to do, they have no reason to imagine greater than they are. Then when they have more capability, they don't do more. And this has kind of gone to my, my thought on the whole AI layoff thing, which is that, yeah, if you have no imagination, you'll just lay off and take profit. But if you do have imagination, you're going to do more with these tools. And there's so many things that ambitious CEOs want to do. And that's why I'm a little bit skeptical whenever I hear this AI will cause mass unemployment. You know, sort of line like we heard, you know, I don't know, we've heard from multiple places. It doesn't mean that the government, we shouldn't be prepared. That's what I'm going to speak with Senator Warner about. But it also means like, let's look at this in context and with some nuance like we tried to do on Wednesday with Andrew Ross Horkin. So what do you think about this line from Jensen? I think it captures it so well.

39:16

Speaker D

I think Jensen is slowly cementing himself, as we talked about on last week's episode, as the good guy of AI and he, he's got a shot. He's people are going to like the leather jacket, the drinking beer and the fried chicken. I think he's, this is a good line. When you have imagination, you can do more, that you can use this to just try new things and like scale more quickly and just, yeah, it just opens up. I saw one thing I think I'm starting to buy into. It's like it could mean fewer SaaS giants, but it could mean many, many more medium sized SaaS businesses of like smaller teams, but still just more software is created, more technology is used in new kinds of Ways like I think that's definitely the, the optimistic scenario I think where again we saw with Block we've seen a lot of time and we're going to get into the rumored the reported potential meta layoffs like people are going to be attributing these to AI directly. People might even use AI as the excuse like we saw with Jack Dorsey. But in a lot of these companies maybe they don't have much to do. They over hired, they were bloated and they potentially wouldn't need to cut anyway and they couldn't just reinvest those people into more interesting things.

40:42

Speaker A

Yeah, exactly. I, I really, I, I'm a believer in the bull case here. Not to say there won't be any disruption but it also means that like I, I won't discount the fact that there's a percentage chance that like their things will go bad and that's why you have to plan for that that but I think Jensen really captures it. If you have imagination you're gonna do more. If you don't have an imagination you're gonna lay off.

42:11

Speaker D

Do you think by the summer is Jensen has he cemented his role as the good guy of AI? It's clear he's, he's pushing well.

42:32

Speaker A

I don't know if good guy is the, the sort of framing I would use but I, I think friendly face. He has a chance to be sort of the Steve Jobs of AI and maybe he's already there but he can be the visionary that explains and makes the like we were saying last week someone's got to make a case for this technology and do it well because the polling numbers are bad. So I think he could be if maybe that Steve Jobs was a great marketer and salesman. Jensen is a great marketer and salesman different products. But I think that he can fill that market or salesman role for sure.

42:44

Speaker D

No, that's a good point. Okay, so maybe it's not like you don't have to be even friendly face or good guy. You just have to try to like make the optimist case for the industry. And, and again like I feel there's a lot of times where it's almost like the, there's this tone of even when you're trying to couch it as optimism like people still, it's like you have to deal with it otherwise you're dumb or you, you know, like it's, it's still being shoved down your throat rather than making people want to actually just be excited about what's possible. And we, we certainly need that let's see.

43:20

Speaker A

Because the implications of where this AI thing is going are, are, you know, I think you, you're also someone who's like, let's not believe, you know, fully in drink the AI Kool Aid on this because if you go all the way in, you can end up having, you know, shocks and disappointments on the way, you know, if things don't go the positive way. Right.

44:00

Speaker D

Well, there's two types of shocks you can have. One is it, it doesn't work as advertised and that's just its own kind of shock and disappointment, or it works just in a very scary way and just causes mass disruption, as many in the AI community talk about, and its own, its own kind of shock. So I think it could be either of those. But there yet that narrow path through the middle of those two, no one has outlined in any kind of like, decent way.

44:22

Speaker A

Well, I mean, yeah, the numbers, the numbers tell the story, right?

44:55

Speaker D

What was it they were below? AI was pulling lower than ICE and Yeah, yeah.

44:58

Speaker A

The only above Iran in the Democratic Party.

45:04

Speaker D

Yeah.

45:07

Speaker A

Just not, not exactly the things that people are most into right now. By the way, I, you know, I just. One more plug on the Warner interview. I do speak with him about whether this negative polling can lead to delays in data centers. And coming from Virginia, which has the most data centers in the US certainly knows a thing or two. So something to look out for. All right, Meta and the Metaverse. Should we call this segment? Is it Schrodinger's Metaverse? Is it alive or is it dead? This is from, let's see, cnbc. Meta is shutting down VR social platform Horizon Worlds and further pivot away from the Metaverse. Meta announced Tuesday that it was shutting down Horizon Worlds, the virtual reality social network for quest VR headsets that was once a key piece of, of the pivot to the metaverse. Horizon Worlds, by the way, was this kind of VR world where you would start hanging out with people. No one really used it. Maybe some people did, but not many. Then here's the next story from Mashable. Meta isn't or I'm sorry, Engadget, Meta isn't shutting down its VR metaverse after all. Meta is backtracking on its plans to shut the VR Meta version of its metaverse. The company now plans to support Horizon Worlds in VR for the foreseeable future. According to Andrew Bosworth, CTO of Meta, we will keep it working in VR for existing games to support the fans who've reached out. Ranjan is is the Metaverse alive or The Metaverse dead.

45:07

Speaker D

I. I'm gonna pivot from Schrodinger's Metaverse because it's dead. It's a. This isn't a dead or alive question to me. I would like to pivot to a very nostalgic, kind of, like, wistful look at. I. I liked. I was seeing people share just those ridiculous. Like, I think it was Mark Zuckerberg interviewing Gayle King in the Metaverse. There's like, just. Just remember that time.

46:38

Speaker A

I mean, I don't know if this is true or not, but I saw someone share that someone paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to live next to Snoop Dogg in the Metaverse.

47:06

Speaker D

Wait, is it. Remember Metaverse? Real estate Metaverse. Like, ah, what a time.

47:14

Speaker A

What a time that was from the New York Times. They highlight some of it, some of the madness around it. Disney and Crate and Barrel and other companies were quick to appoint chief Metaverse officers. And this is from McKinsey. With its potential. With its potential to generate up to 5 trillion in value by 2030, the metaverse is too big for companies to ignore.

47:20

Speaker D

So question. Did you ever go into the Metaverse?

47:47

Speaker A

I think I did.

47:52

Speaker D

Like, what do we consider the meta. Did you own an Oculus Quest? Or I guess you tried. I mean, you tried the Vision Pro. I don't even know if that counts as Metaverse.

47:54

Speaker A

Like, no, that was spatial computing. No, I never owned one. Oh, I did. I did have an Oculus. You know, I had an Oculus when I was. It was a test device when I was at Buzzfeed back in the day. And then I lent it to a co worker because I wasn't using it very much. And then Covet happened, and I never saw that person again. I would have loved to have that, you know, Metaverse with me in Covid, which, by the way, it ended up being mostly a Covet fever dream.

48:06

Speaker D

Well, I think because. So I played, like, games with the Oculus Quest, but I didn't interact with other people also. Certainly never like a Horizons World or anything like that. Yeah, no, I don't think I ever made it to the Metaverse. I. I kind of am regretting it now. Maybe we should go find ourselves some quests on Facebook Marketplace pretty cheap. And go see who's hanging out on Horizons World right now. If any listeners are, let us know. We'll come find you.

48:34

Speaker A

If you're the person that gonna. It's gonna go meet someone to pick up a quest on to go. That's a whole other Facebook marketplace. They're just Gonna hit you in the head with a crowbar and take your money.

49:09

Speaker D

You should be robbed. Sorry, sorry, Rajan.

49:20

Speaker A

Decorum.

49:24

Speaker D

No, no.

49:25

Speaker A

But on a serious note, maybe the Metaverse was never just virtual reality. I think this for Matthew Ball, the Metaverse is misdescribed as virtual reality. In truth, virtual reality is merely a way to experience the Metaverse. To say VR is the Metaverse is like saying the mobile Internet is an app. Note too that hundreds of millions are already participating in virtual worlds on a daily basis and spending billions of them without VR, AR, Mr. Or XR devices. He's talking about Roblox. As a corollary to the above, VR headsets aren't the Metaverse any more than smartphones are the mobile Internet. So maybe.

49:26

Speaker D

Actually, you know what, here's the comeback. So world models, I think are going to be like the, you know, like AI models that instead of are being based on language or being based on actually understanding the physical world. And we're going to get into Bezos's new fund. I think they keep the Metaverse alive and reality labs and then slowly, quietly pivot to the whole world model space. And then suddenly it all comes back and Zuck was right the whole time as he figures out AI LLM based advertising and comes back with world models and gets on his hoverboard thing with an American flag and just wins again.

50:06

Speaker A

Yeah. Oh, by the way, that thing is called a foil. I called it a skin foil. Yeah, sorry, something.

50:51

Speaker D

Yeah, one of my. Yeah, yeah, apologies to listeners. Like, we should have done that one.

50:57

Speaker A

We regret the error. But the funny thing would be if they do pivot to world models, guess who the perfect person to bring back to run that would be Yann Lecun.

51:02

Speaker D

That's. That would. Oh, wait, isn't that his new startup?

51:12

Speaker A

I think it's like, is a big part of it is understanding the world.

51:17

Speaker D

Yes, yeah, yeah, world models. But it is, I think it is interesting to me because like you take your Fortnites and Robloxes and people are still spending ungodly amounts of money for like skins in those games and interacting everywhere. And those are, those are virtual world experiences. So, so yeah, Metaverse is alive. Just not, not legless avatars while wearing a virtual reality headset and sitting in a meeting. Because I still wish I did that once, but never got around to that.

51:20

Speaker A

Yeah, I, unfortunately, I think I was just not working in a company for when the time that came around. Oh, one last thing we should say. I think that this conversation about the Metaverse is incomplete without talking about what it led to, which is like if there is a hope for consumer AI, which we debated in the beginning, it's probably through some form of device. And Meta certainly has a head start on that. I mean, the Ray Ban metas, which you and I both really like, and these newer projects are direct results from this VR move and the VR headsets live on just the Metaverse.

51:54

Speaker D

No, take the win. I think like if they just said openly like these technologies gave us a head start in wearables in the entire new world world of AI, no one would question it. It's. It's right. So you don't have to just shut down Horizons world. It's okay. You don't have to pretend to keep it open. You don't have to. You guys.

52:35

Speaker A

No, no, I was, I was just saying I. To myself. I think they are basically saying that that version of what you just said, which is like this was. It's almost like, you know, like the fire phone led to the echo or something like that.

52:57

Speaker D

Exactly, exactly. There's a, there's a hero story here. There's a definite hero story.

53:13

Speaker A

And now that they don't have to spend all that money supporting it, they can actually work to build. Build AI. So. All right, speaking of Amazon, there's this really interesting story that I don't think we should leave without talking about, which is that Jeff Bezos, according to the Wall Street Journal, is in talks to raise 100 billion for an AI manufacturing fund basis is in early talks to raise 100 billion for a new fund that would buy up manufacturing companies and seek to use AI technology to accelerate their path to automation. The Amazon founder is meeting with some of the world's largest asset managers to raise funding for the project. A few months ago, he traveled to the Middle east to discuss the new fund with sovereign wealth representatives in the region. More recently, he went to Singapore. The fund, described in investor documents as a manufacturing transformation vehicle, is aiming to buy companies in major industrial sectors such as chip making, defense and aerospace. It would dwarf the size of some of the world's. Dwarf the size of some of the world's largest buyout Funds and rival SoftBank's 100 billion tech focused Vision Fund. Couple of thoughts on this, if I may. Number one, why is Bezos raising this money? Doesn't he have it? I don't know. Maybe you don't always want to use your own money, but if you believe that much in the idea, why don't you just put your own towards it? Number Two, it is somewhat horrifying that Jeff Bezos is going to after. Well, I guess Amazon did increase its employees in the fulfillment centers after it brought the robots in. But it is somewhat horrifying that Bezos, who wants to automate everything he can lay his hands on, seems like he's ready to automate, you know, real, you know, blue collar jobs with this push. And third of all, you know, knowing, knowing Bezos the way I do, and that is of course reading about him and speaking to people who know him, he just tends to be right about these things all the time. And I, I really do believe that he's onto something here. That manufacturing transformation with AI is, is already in underway but is about to make a major, major leap and there's real opportunity there. So I think Bezos is on the money and I have a lot of these feelings. What do you think, Rajan?

53:19

Speaker D

Well, if you continue reading the next two paragraphs on this. Bezos was recently appointed co CEO of Project Prometheus, a new startup that is building artificial intelligence models that can understand and simulate the physical world. While much of the AI revolution has been focused on large language models, billions of dollars have begun to flow to companies that are seeking to apply spatially focused AI systems towards industries including robotics and manufacturing. So yeah, I had not even seen that in the, our prep doc here before. World models, that's going to be the next big thing. And again, I like the point. Not only is Bezos someone who is often right about this kind of thing again, like what Amazon did to the entire warehouse space, bringing in more people and, but still the level of automation is what led to us all getting addicted to two day delivery and one to instant delivery. Like, like the, the technological innovation that they were able to push. Like he gets it, he, he's shown it time and time again. So I think he will definitely. This is, this is something we will watch very, very closely.

55:35

Speaker A

No, totally, I agree. I mean the thing with Bezos is he knows that there is like there are going to be companies that will implement this and companies that don't. And I think he's making a pretty sizable bet of course with others money, but he's going to make this big bet and, and probably be right. All right, Ron, John, before we leave, I have a question to ask you. It's somewhat sensitive. I just need to ask, do you dry chat?

56:49

Speaker D

I have dry chatted. I have dry chatted.

57:19

Speaker A

So Wall Street Journal reporter Megan Bobrowski tweets, what the. And this is a seemingly a pitch that she got. She goes, one in four admit they. What she do. The email goes from Mandy, Poor Mandy, getting put on blast in front of everybody. One in four admit they try chat before emotionally difficult tasks. What is dry chatting? Here's the pitch. Hi, Megan. Jittery before a tough conversation. Have you tried jai chatting? Dry chatting. Apparently it's a trend. As over half of adults admit they find it hard to articulate their emotions during tense conversations. Many are turning to AI to rehearse. Enter dry chatting. Rehearsing emotionally challenging conversations with AI before having them in real life. I. I guess we found it. This is the use case AI consumer.

57:22

Speaker D

This is the consumer use case dry chatting. I kind of, when I saw this, obviously the term dry chatting is just like, I don't know, it's something. It's just something that gives you the icks. But. But then when you start to see it, you're like, wait, this is so. I have admit, like, if you have to write a tense email, running it through an AI and asking for some pointers and saying like, what you want out of it is a pretty good thing I think most people should do. I. I haven't gone straight for the. The voice dry chat. I'll admit. Like, I haven't. I haven't talked to chat, GPT, Gemini, Claude, whoever else, and tried to rehearse the conversation in full. But maybe it's. Maybe it's worth it. Maybe I might try dry chatting soon. It's. It's like it. You know what? If it helps you actually resolve the situation in a. In a much more amicable way, shouldn't we all be dry chatting?

58:12

Speaker A

First of all, I will say I have used voice to dry chat you.

59:19

Speaker D

Voice. Right.

59:24

Speaker A

Some of my, some of my interviews before I like, I have like a rundown and, you know, I want to anticipate what the interviewee is going to say. So I role play with the bot sometimes and I'm like, you're this person and I'm me.

59:25

Speaker D

So I'm gonna separate dry chatting from like role playing, like, rehearsing, because this, this is specific. I feel dry chattingly applies to like, really, like, emotionally challenging conversations. It could be if you're about to fire someone. If you're like, like, you know, you have to break up. You have to like, deliver some really bad news to me. I'm gonna, I want to keep dry chatting. Make sure we all understand.

59:37

Speaker A

Oh, my God. This is just the, the sycophancy and the dry chatting. I don't think it goes well together. It's like, all right. It's all right. Chat GPT. You're going to be my girlfriend, and I'm going to be me. And I have some news to. To share with you and ChatGPT, like, okay, go ahead. And you'll be like, baby, we need a breakup. And Chat GPT will be like, great idea. They're always coming up with the smartest ideas.

1:00:05

Speaker D

Well, so. But. So does dry chatting work better? What's like the eval. What's the dry chat benchmark? Because the 4O sick infancy would. Then when you go to deliver the actual bad news, you'll get ripped apart because sycophantic gpt4o told you. You're right about everything. Maybe that. That's my. That's the new benchmark we need to come up with.

1:00:30

Speaker A

Well, you have. It has to be this, like, sort of reinforcement learning where you reward conversations that don't get the person slapped in real life.

1:00:55

Speaker D

That's the. So there's some poor scale AI guys who have to go through.

1:01:04

Speaker A

Gotta go. All right, listen, your. Your test this week, I'm ready for it. You gotta break up with your girlfriend for science. We gotta see if she's getting slapped. I'm telling you, man, this could be. It could be a reality. Reality TV series.

1:01:11

Speaker D

Dry chat, actually.

1:01:30

Speaker A

Yeah.

1:01:31

Speaker D

You go, wait, wait, this. You go. You dry chat, and then you go have the real conversation and everyone gets to watch how it actually plays out. This is not a bad. Not a bad pitch.

1:01:31

Speaker A

Have you seen Nathan Fielders the rehearsal?

1:01:44

Speaker D

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

1:01:47

Speaker A

So it's just like that, Nathan. Yeah. Just dry chatting with all these people.

1:01:48

Speaker D

Yeah.

1:01:52

Speaker A

Put comedians out of business now.

1:01:53

Speaker D

All right, well, I think on that

1:01:57

Speaker A

note, well, this has been a lovely. I don't even want to say it. Oh, is this a wet chat? If that's a dry chat, still don't.

1:01:59

Speaker D

Don't.

1:02:07

Speaker A

I think we should go.

1:02:09

Speaker D

I specifically refrained this entire time,

1:02:11

Speaker A

folks. Don't miss my interview with Mark Warner on Wednesday. Thank you, Ron, John. Thank you, everybody for listening and watching. We'll see you next time on Big Technology Podcast.

1:02:16

Speaker D

Working across teams is tough, but Asana helps you handle it. Asana AI can spot roadblocks and assign work to keep everything on track. That's how work gets handled.

1:02:25

Speaker A

Visit us@asana.com Asana.

1:02:36