We are building the first affordable private chef.
and hundreds families already trust us
Not because it’s healthy to eat fresh,
but also it saves you a lot of time and money
Live demo in San Francisco on May 1
@eatwithposha ranks as hands down one of the top three best discretionary purchases of my life, alongside LLMs and Tesla’s FSD.
For the first time in seven years of marriage, my wife loves the food I cook.
Insanely polished. I expected FSD V1 and got V14 straight out the gate
"My sister told me she thought the robot was stupid, and I was offended. My mom called it my “little helper,” and I didn’t disagree. The company asked me if I wanted to give the test unit back, and my response was hell no." - @andyvasoyan at @esquire
https://t.co/Mqch51cTy7
My first meal with @eatwithposha shows where humanoid robots, human, Robotaxis all fit together in the home.
My wife is away this weekend so had to make food for me and the kids.
I tried a Chicken and Sausage Gumbo.
First, the kids loved it. And they are very picky eaters. So huge success.
But the tasks broken down show how robots are about to change our homes deeply.
First I had to go shopping for the ingredients.
My closest grocery store is a 10-minute drive from my home. Then when in the store it took me about 25 minutes to find everything for the meal and wait in line to pay.
That is 45 minutes out of my Saturday.
Then once I got home, preparing all the food, mincing garlic, cutting chicken and sausage, took me about 20 minutes.
Loading the Posha and setting it up took another five.
Then it worked for almost two hours while my friend and I watched Formula 1. If I had to stir and cook I wouldn’t have been able to have nearly as much fun.
Then cleaning up and loading the dishwasher took another 15 minutes.
Once Robotaxis (humanless ones are just starting in my neighborhood) and humanoids arrive (I expect them in 2027 in this context) then the buying and cleaning steps will be automated and some of the preparation steps.
So cooking this meal will go from multiple hours to maybe a few minutes to help cut and mince things that maybe a humanoid will struggle with.
Which means I get to spend a lot more time to spend with my friends and family.
Which is why I am an early customer of @1x_tech, and Tesla Robotaxi, and a variety of AI tools, like @genspark_ai (an optional ingredient was Okra that my Safeway and Walmart did not have so in the future I will have an app I built in Genspark call around to find).
Doing things with AI lets you do less of the things you hate (I hate going to grocery stores and having to stand over a hot stove making a decent sauce) and more of the things I love (watching Formula 1 with friends).
Who will be the company that puts this all together in a way most humans can understand?
Some Chinese company? @sundayrobotics ? Or @tesla?
My bet is on Tesla.
We will see by 2030 whether I am right.
Great day today. Got a new robot. This one by @eatwithposha, which made me lunch. Great Chicken Masala. Will have a video up tomorrow of it.
The home is changing due to robots and this will make it far easier for my @1x_tech Neo robot to make me meals next year.
They go together like peanut butter and jelly.
We’re excited to announce our $3.8M funding news today, led by @KindredVentures with participation from @btv_vc, Karman Ventures, Pythia Ventures, Coughdrop Capital, and our awesome angels.
We are fixing the economics of small business lending for lenders with our agentic AI credit intelligence platform.
We have raised $3.8M led by @KindredVentures with participation from @btv_vc, Karman Ventures, Pythia Ventures, Coughdrop Capital, and our awesome angels
Our agentic AI credit intelligence platform converts raw messy loan packages into decision ready analysis in 3 minutes
Posha, a new “private robot chef” that can prepare complex, multistep dishes, is among the first A.I. products to take aim at revolutionizing the kitchen. The creamy Tuscan chicken isn’t bad, either.
@ikrietzberg digs in: https://t.co/UxFhYhvBlj