【How Logistics Will Change in AI Era】
In the United States, logistics have been divided between each part of the continent - the eastern part, the western part, the central part, and so on.
Depending on this feature of logistics, commerce has also been divided into several parts in one country.
Even with the internet spreading into the world and AI increasing their ability as it is, business is still so restricted by the hugeness of the real world.
You find most Western e-commerce services are not available in Eastern homes - as is also the case on the opposite side.
I would say the time has come to put an end to this situation. Now we got enough technologies to tackle this problem.
The continental logistics will change from the bottom. We know we can change.
Hi, I’m Ryuzo.
I dropped out of Japan’s top high school and am building https://t.co/6GHcDXj5vC.
I’ll share everything I’ve learned so far.【Long story】【Less interesting than Roy Lee】
The most of the U.S. federal government’s employees are Democratic-leaning, and for Republicans, a “government shutdown” can serve as an extremely effective bargaining chip.
The last two Government shutdowns happened under Trump with Republicans holding a majority in the House and Senate.
January 2018: 3 days
December 2018- January 2019: 35 days
Republicans do not know how to govern yet you keep electing them. Makes no sense.
In many domains it's an advantage to have a culture of doing things fast and cheaply. But organizations never shift toward this as they age; if they shift, it's always in the other direction. So the only way to have this culture is to start with it and not lose it.
I'm exploring a stablecoin payments startup @ChainPalHQ .
It could be a great tool for accelerating B2B payments and expanding onchain FX growth in the ecosystem.
To be clear, there are no definitive plans. I'm just updating my philosophy.
As of now, I'm exploring it.
Many ground-breaking companies stay private for years. Soon, everyone will be able to invest in them before they go public.
Stay tuned for more updates on Robinhood Ventures: https://t.co/KExWTkvBUo
Sam Altman on the Paul Graham advice that saved Open AI: “Always make an API”
Four years into OpenAI, Sam Altman and the team realized that they would have to build a really big company to fund the development of their increasingly capital-intensive foundation models.
“We had this model called GPT-3,” Sam recalls. “I was turning up the urgency on the company to try and figure out a product, and we just couldn’t. It was cool, but it wasn’t good enough to make something that worked.”
Then Sam remembered a piece of advice from Y Combinator founder Paul Graham that stuck with him: “You should always make an API. No matter what, you should make an API. Good stuff will happen.”
Out of ideas for a product, the OpenAI team decided to make GPT-3 available as an API.
“Maybe somebody will figure out something to do with it,” Sam thought.
A few copywriting applications like Jasper and Copy AI did take off using the GPT-3 API, but OpenAI also noticed interesting behavior that eventually became a sleeper hit:
“Some people — not a lot — would just chat with that thing all day,” Sam explains. “It wasn’t very good but there was clear user signal that people wanted to talk to the models. And given that that was the only thing besides copywriting that had real traction, we said, ‘Maybe this is just he product we should build.’”
On November 30, 2022, ChatGPT was released to the public as a “research preview” using a model from the GPT-3.5 series. It reached over a million users in five days.
Video source: @khoslaventures (2025)
> be me
> Larry Ellison
> own a database empire, a sailboat, and a disdain for poor people
> OpenAI wants to build AGI
> needs compute
> *a lot* of compute
> like “$300B GPU cluster in a volcano” levels of compute
> "Hello. I own Oracle Cloud. Also, I’m rich."
> sign $300B GPU hosting deal with OpenAI
> nothing ships. no GPUs installed. no fans spinning.
> Oracle stock: skyrockets to the moon
> my net worth: +$100B
> GPUs? still imaginary
> OpenAI raises a $1 TRILLION round
> yes, with a T
> investors lining up like it's a Taylor Swift concert
> I invest
> where’d I get the money?
> from the $300B deal *I signed with them*
> yes.
> OpenAI takes my $300B investment
> uses it to pay *me*
> for the GPU deal *I offered them*
> Oracle stock: skyrockets again
> I make another $100B
> invest it back into OpenAI
> round and round we go
> I pay me to pay me to invest in me to boost me to get paid by me
> call it a "strategic whatever"
> call it “AI innovation”
> call it what it is:
> infinite money glitch
> mfw i built a recursive economy where i am the only customer and vendor
> mfw GPUs are optional
> mfw capitalism is just a well-placed loop with exit liquidity
I never had the mental space to take photos. Building products is fun, and talking with customers is enjoyable. But my mind is always under pressure—seeing myself through a camera lens felt unbearable
If you’re a founder, I’m begging you - take more pictures
Of the big wins. The little moments. Your first all hands. That first customer closing.
Startups are a road trip. Enjoy the ride.
Have you chosen your city after taking enough time to think deeply to bet your life on it, as you would choose your atelier which will determine what you’ll create in this world?
In this article, I evaluate the performance of liquidity providers (LPs) using markout analysis and measure what percentage of LPs are profitable and how much money they actually make.
https://t.co/Wdyw29riVG
I will be in SF starting Sep 9. Can’t wait to network with as many of you building at the frontier of robotics & AI. Let's grab coffee
https://t.co/JdF2hIoNIO