Brian Chesky on loneliness:
> > As I became a CEO, I started leading from the front at the top of the mountain, but then, you know, the higher you get to the peak, the fewer the people there are with you. No one ever told me how lonely you would get, and I wasn't prepared for that. I had this guilt about not working because so much of my life was about being successful, probably if I were to dig deep because I thought that would make people love me
> > And the day of our IPO, we reached a hundred billion dollar valuation. I remember after going public, it was like, 'Oh my God, there's this like amazing exaltation.' It was amazing like I'd gone to the mountain and then I wake up the next day, and my life is exactly the same. I'm alone. I wake up, I put on sweatpants, I go onto iMac, and I have like 10-12 hours of Zoom meetings and I just don't really have much of my life outside of work. My work was my life.
> > I didn't know at the time that I was lonely. I knew I was isolated, but I didn't know that that also meant loneliness. And I thought I have all these people around me, how could I possibly feel this way? And there were a couple people that entered my life that gave me some awareness and consciousness, one at the deeply personal level and one more at the professional level.
> > And the other person I met is the now and former Surgeon General of the United States, Dr. Vivek Murthy. We hired him during the pandemic because a lot of people were afraid to go into Airbnbs and they were worried about germs on surfaces. I remember having a conversation with him, and he said something to me. He said, 'Brian, do you know what the number one killer in America is?' I'm kind of paraphrasing our conversation. And I said, 'I don't know, is it like heart disease? Is it cancer?' And he goes, 'No, the number one killer in America is loneliness.'
Kian Sadeghi on X: "On this point actually, Open AI setting the AGI narrative has properly driven hundreds of billions in market cap People do not realize that industries are MADE with communications" / X
People do not realize that industries are MADE with communications
tuhin on X: "this is all great advice from @joulee! some thoughts. 1) my hot take is that if you are a good founding designer material (0-1 product, not post-PMF), and thats what you are interested in doing then you should seriously consider doing your own thing/co-founding. similar risk," / X
some thoughts.
1) my hot take is that if you are a good founding designer material (0-1 product, not post-PMF), and thats what you are interested in doing then you should seriously consider doing your own thing/co-founding.
similar risk,
Venture-backed startups are failing at record rates | Hacker News
wow - this blew up! i really appreciate the support ❤️
i keep getting rate limited sending DMs, so i’m declaring bankruptcy since i gotta get back to writing code and talking to customers for 😅
if you work in product, CX/GTM, or are a founder overwhelmed with…
— Frank Lee (@frankdotlee)
Patrick McKenzie on X: "Startups are (by necessity) filled with generalists; big companies are filled with specialists. People underestimate how effective a generalist can be at things which are done by specialists. People underestimate how deep specialties can run. These are simultaneously true." / X
— Patrick McKenzie (@patio11)
Patrick McKenzie on X: "The chief products of the tech industry are (in B2C) developing new habits among consumers and (in B2B) taking a business process which exists in many places and markedly decreasing the total cost of people required to implement it." / X
— Patrick McKenzie (@patio11)
(3) Tyler Bruno on X: "Brian Chesky on loneliness https://t.co/6vu7A7RUWE" / X
— 🪓BK🪢 (@bradkelly)
Reggie James on Twitter / X
With Hardware, you have to really live with the decisions you make Those decisions get transferred over to consumers that subconsciously realize they have to live with it tooThat’s why people complain about devices more than software & with the prestige of the Humane team…… pic.twitter.com/0rlni7dL0r— Reggie James (@HipCityReg) March 28, 2024
Email is in. They said no.
experience applying to Y-Combinator
AI phone agents are here.
Here are 8 startups enabling this you should know about + funding:
1. Bland AI - undisclosed
- available as an API
- $0.09/minute
— Chief AI Officer (@chiefaioffice)
GREG ISENBERG on X: "28 founder rules that they never teach you: 1. Cash-flow is like an "exit" every year 2. Networking events are 99% a waste of time 3. Your mental health is always at risk 4. You most likely won't make life changing money but will probably make "car changing" money or "house… https://t.co/ZAKuRvmzST" / X
1. Cash-flow is like an "exit" every year
2. Networking events are 99% a waste of time
3. Your mental health is always at risk
4. You most likely won't make life changing money but will probably make "car changing" money or "house…
— GREG ISENBERG (@gregisenberg)
Enrique Allen on X: "Great to see @lil_dill demystify how design, craft and beauty create business value at @stripe, from significantly improving email engagement (20%+) to increasing revenue on average by 11.9% with Stripe’s Optimized Checkout Suite 🪄🤑 https://t.co/TnMByMO0Kw" / X
importance of design and example of a company being design-driven
Anna Monaco on Twitter / X
Things this founder did in her preparation for Y-combinator approving her startup
Carmen Gutierrez on X: "this is the most accurate take on why humane is failing to capitalize on their moment in the spotlight they communicate features instead of lifestyle. hardware specs instead of philosophy. their name is humane, and yet they haven't even mentioned what that means for their…" / X
this is the most accurate take on why humane is failing to capitalize on their moment in the spotlightthey communicate features instead of lifestyle. hardware specs instead of philosophy. their name is humane, and yet they haven't even mentioned what that means for their… https://t.co/zbttM9jDa6— Carmen Gutierrez (@carmguti) April 3, 2024
Jared Friedman on Twitter / X
(0/25) Here's a list of 25 YC companies that have trained their own AI models. Reading through these will give you a good sense of what the near future will look like.— Jared Friedman (@snowmaker) March 28, 2024
Jackson Dahl on Twitter / X
a great articulation for something I’ve struggled to verbalize.many great products are less about technology enabling something that wasn’t previously possible than they are about culturally normalizing a behavior@anuatluru calls this a good premisesee examples below. my… https://t.co/xBq0RqISQq pic.twitter.com/7ko4e8y3N8— Jackson Dahl (@jacksondahl) February 23, 2024
Lulu Cheng Meservey on X: "A lot of people dunking on this, but going on TV is hard. Most founders have had interviews they flubbed. Usually for the same 3 reasons: (1) weak elevator pitch (below I suggest a better one) (2) didn’t prep for the TV format (3) forgot the audience Quick points on each:…" / X
Scott Stevenson on Twitter / X
ari dutilh on Twitter / X
what’s the cool, well-designed startup alternative to goodreads— ari dutilh (@aridutilh) December 18, 2023
anton (𝖜𝖆𝖗𝖙𝖎𝖒𝖊) 🏴☠️ on X: "good morning from san francisco. now that the dust has settled on the first round of the openai debacle, it’s time to start asking some questions two of the board members who voted altman out, helen toner and tasha mccauley are deeply enmeshed in ‘effective altruism’" / X
critiques and pitfalls of the effective altruism movement
James Rosen-Birch 🕊️ on X: "WHAT PATTERNS OF BEHAVIOUR KILL COMPANIES? we set out to answer this question as part of our work a little while ago, did a few hundred interviews, and built out a network model -- which revealed seven interconnected loops! (h/t to @visakanv who convinced me to share results!)" / X
Ryan Broderick on Twitter / X
The emphasis on altering how our memories work with AI is probably the most dangerous and insidious thing I've ever seen. Luckily, no one involved with any of these projects has any real concept of what people might actually want from AI, so, at least for now, we're safe. https://t.co/9NrovtGazc— Ryan Broderick (@broderick) December 6, 2023
Yatú on Twitter / X
jamie on X
I told the Arc team (on a feedback call) that one of my biggest barriers to using Arc is their lack of Apple Keychain integration
I only ever used Arc for specific situations when I wanted a small window for a website
now, I can stay in Safari.
long live competition
Kevin Naughton Jr. on X
typical engineer traits
Ariel from Appfigures on X
advice on SEO optimizing App store searches
Andreas Klinger 🏝 on X
“Hot take:
Almost every hosting startup (vercel, supabase, fly, render, etc) can only exist because AWS console is such a mess.”
Mike McGuiness on Twitter
A theory of risk for startups
noisebody on Twitter
Theres a startup trend now of “building in public” or just make the growth / beta stages more visible to get early and frequent user feedback, along with having a head start on cultivating a community