‣ Interviewing the world's best enterpreneurs 📩

Joined August 2024
183 Photos and videos
AirTrunk entered the market in April 2026 by acquiring Lumina CloudInfra. Then its CEO flew to New Delhi, met Prime Minister Modi, and committed $30 billion to build 5 gigawatts of data center capacity across the country by 2030.  India currently has 1.5 gigawatts total. AirTrunk just pledged to build more than three times that alone. The flagship project is a 3 gigawatt campus in Maharashtra's Raigad district, one of the largest single data center commitments anywhere in the world.  Do you think India will become the next AI superpower?  #airtrunk #india #datacenter
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On June 11 2026, SpaceX went public on the Nasdaq at $135 per share, valuing the company at $1.77 trillion and pushing Elon Musk's personal net worth past one trillion dollars for the first time in human history. No individual has ever held this much wealth. Not John D. Rockefeller, not Jeff Bezos, not Bernard Arnault. Elon's fortune today is worth more than twice the combined net worth of Bezos and Arnault together. The man running all of this simultaneously is overseeing SpaceX, Tesla, Neuralink, xAI, and X at the same time, five companies across space, automotive, neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and social media. It started with a $28,000 loan at 24 years old. It ended with a number no human being has ever reached before. Whatever you think of Elon Musk, the story he has written in a single lifetime has no comparison in the history of modern business. #ElonMusk #Trillionaire #SpaceXIPO #SpaceX
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Google has launched a unique and new app called Dreambeans that turns your everyday life into a small set of illustrated cartoon stories every single morning. With your permission, it taps into your own Google data across Gmail, Calendar, and Photos to understand what is actually happening in your world, then draws it out for you.  If your inbox hints that a new puppy is arriving, it might surface training tips wrapped inside a story. Every illustration is generated by Google's Nano Banana 2 model, which can even paint your own face directly into the scene.  The most refreshing part is how it works against the usual social media playbook. Instead of an endless scroll designed to trap your attention, Dreambeans hands you a few stories and then simply stops. For now it is limited to Google AI Ultra users in the US, with everyone else able to join the waitlist.  This is one of the more human takes on personal AI we have seen so far. #Google #Dreambeans #GoogleAI
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Oura has just released the Ring 5 and the most immediate thing about it is how little of it there is.  The new ring is 40 percent smaller than its predecessor, light enough to forget you are wearing it, and designed to sit on your finger looking indistinguishable from regular jewellery across six finishes ranging from silver to gold.  Despite the dramatically reduced size it still tracks sleep, heart rate, and daily health metrics with the same depth the Oura Ring is known for.  Battery life stretches up to seven days and the fit is comfortable enough to wear through the night without any disruption to sleep. Starting at $399 the Ring 5 makes a strong case for being the most wearable health tracker on the market right now, precisely because it barely feels like one. #OuraRing #SmartRing #FitnessTracker
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Jun 13
Marco Grossi was a design student at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia in 2010 when he got frustrated trying to cut content from a PDF and found no simple free tool that could do it.  So he built one himself over a weekend. That side project became iLovePDF, now one of the top 50 most visited websites on the entire internet, run by a bootstrapped team with zero outside investment.  Adobe, the $200 billion giant that dominates the PDF industry, competes directly with this free tool. Grossi has turned down multiple acquisition offers to keep it free.  Most founders spend years chasing funding. This one spent years refusing it. #ilovepdf #marcogrossi #bootstrapped
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Jun 13
1X just opened a 58,000 square foot humanoid robot factory in Hayward, California. The first of its kind in America. The robot is called NEO. Designed to fold laundry, tidy up, and eventually assist with elder care. Every motor, battery, and electronic component built in-house. No foreign suppliers. The entire first-year production of 10,000 units sold out in five days. Jensen Huang's Jetson Thor chip powers every single one. Priced at $20,000 for early access or $499 a month. Nvidia started by making chips for video games. Now they are running inside the robot folding your laundry. #Nvidia #JensenHuang #Robotics
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Jun 12
Anthropic released Claude Fable 5, the first publicly available model from its Mythos class, the same family it had previously restricted to a handful of vetted organizations due to its cybersecurity capabilities. The headline result came from Stripe, which used Fable 5 to perform a codebase-wide migration across 50 million lines of Ruby code in a single day. The same task would have taken a full engineering team over two months. On SWE-Bench Pro, Fable 5 scored 80.3% against GPT-5.5's 58.6%, a gap that does not look like incremental progress.  Pricing is $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output, less than half of the previous Mythos Preview. Have you tried it yet? Send this to your friend who also uses Claude. #claudefable5 #anthropic #mythos5 #aimodel #claudeai
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Jun 12
Most prosthetic feet are flat and rigid. Built for stability. Terrible at adapting to real surfaces. SoftFoot Pro works differently. No motor. No battery. It bends, flexes, and changes shape on uneven ground the way a real foot does. Built by researchers at the Italian Institute of Technology, it replicates the actual bone structure of a human foot. 450 grams. Supports up to 100 kilograms.The most natural prosthetic foot ever built has no electronics inside it at all. Just smart engineering that finally caught up with biology. #SoftFootPro #Prosthetics #MedTech
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Jun 12
Researchers at Leiden University have 3D printed a robot so small it makes a strand of hair look massive. Measuring just five micrometers in length, the device has no motor, no battery, and no onboard computer of any kind.  It is built from a flexible chain of microscopic segments connected by joints too small to see with the naked eye. When exposed to an electric field it begins swimming through liquid on its own, moving like a tiny snake navigating its environment.  When its path is blocked it twists and reroutes itself around the obstacle without any external instruction. What makes this particularly significant is where it could eventually go.  Robots at this scale could one day travel through the human body and deliver medication directly to tumours with a precision no conventional drug delivery method can match. This is nanotechnology moving from theory into something that actually swims. #Nanorobotics #MicroRobot #FutureMedicine
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Jun 12
A New York City startup called Shift has come up with one of the more unusual business models to emerge from the AI and robotics space.  The offer is straightforward on the surface: a vetted cleaner shows up at your home, cleans it entirely for free, and leaves. You pay absolutely nothing. The catch is that the cleaner arrives wearing a camera device that records every single task performed throughout the visit.  That first-person video footage is exactly what Shift is actually after. The recordings are collected and fed directly into training systems for the next generation of household robots, giving those models real-world data from real home environments that would otherwise be extremely difficult and expensive to gather at scale. Since launching on May 28, 2026, Shift has already received thousands of booking requests, suggesting there is no shortage of people willing to trade their home's footage for a free clean.  The company is already planning to expand the model beyond New York City, with San Francisco, London, Zurich, and Munich all on the roadmap. And cleaning is just the beginning. Shift has indicated that future services will include plumbing and cooking, all recorded, all free, and all feeding the robots that come next. #ShiftStartup #AIRobots #FreeHomeCleaning
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Jun 11
Pemba is a modified Unitree G1 built by Geologic Dome, a US nonprofit led by Pablo Berlanga, with one mission to prove that humanoid robots can survive the real world, not just a lab floor.  On June 7, 2026, Pemba summited Chimborazo in Ecuador at 6,200 meters, the furthest point on Earth's surface from the planet's core, in a 16-hour push.  The robot had already been cold-tested in China's Altay region at minus 47 degrees Celsius across 130,000 steps. They targeted Mauna Kea as the next stop. Working with Google DeepMind on reinforcement learning systems for unstable terrain. The goal is waste collection, glacier monitoring, and rescue operations in places humans struggle to reach safely. Would you hike with a humanoid? Send this to your hiking friend. #pembarobot #humanoidrobot #unitreeg1
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Jun 11
Hans Wilsdorf, the founder of Rolex, was 12 when he lost both parents. With no family support and nothing to fall back on. At 22 he moved to London, got a job at a watch company, and spent years studying the industry from the inside. At 24 he made one bet with his brother-in-law, Alfred Davis, that wristwatches would replace pocket watches. The problem was that men found them embarrassing. Only women wore them back then. But Wilsdorf understood something most people miss even today. Perception is a product feature. He repositioned the wristwatch as a precision instrument for professionals, not an accessory. The same object, completely reframed.  Rolex did not win because of better engineering alone. It won because Wilsdorf understood that what people believe about a product matters as much as what the product actually does.  The boy who had nobody built the brand everybody recognizes. #rolex #hanswilsdorf
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Jun 11
Anthropic just raised $65 billion in a single round. Valuation now at $965 billion. For the first time ever, that puts them above OpenAI. Led by Altimeter, Dragoneer, Greenoaks, and Sequoia. Amazon wrote a $5 billion check on its own. But the valuation is not even the most interesting number. Anthropic's annualised revenue has crossed $47 billion. Nearly three times what OpenAI last reported. This is not just a valuation story. It is a commercial one. The company was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI employees who left over concerns about AI safety. They walked out of the most powerful AI lab in the world to build something more carefully. Five years later they sit above it in both valuation and revenue. The race is not over. But the lead just changed hands. #Anthropic #Claude #OpenAI
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Jun 11
Microsoft has unveiled Scout, an always on AI assistant that works simultaneously across Outlook, Teams, and OneDrive without needing to be switched between apps. Announced at Microsoft's Build developer conference, Scout runs across cloud, desktop, and web with a persistent identity that users can actually name themselves. Over time it learns individual working styles, manages calendars, drafts meeting agendas, and handles routine tasks proactively without waiting to be asked. Scout is built on OpenClaw, the open source autonomous agent framework that gained significant attention earlier this year. Microsoft has described it as the first genuine personal assistant the company has ever built, a meaningful claim from a company that has been trying to crack this problem for decades. #MicrosoftScout #Microsoft #AIAssistant
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Jun 10
Serve Robotics has made its first move beyond food delivery and it is a smarter expansion than it might initially sound. The company has partnered with NoScrubs to pilot laundry pickup and drop off services in Los Angeles, using their existing fleet of 2,000 robots during non meal hours instead of building any new hardware.  The economics make sense given that the online laundry market is projected to grow from $40 billion to $130 billion by 2030, and the robots are already on the streets with nothing to do between breakfast and lunch. Maximising every trip with a second revenue stream is exactly the kind of operational thinking that turns a delivery company into a logistics platform.  Food was just the starting point and Serve Robotics is now making a clear case that their robots are built for much more than your dinner. #ServeRobotics #DeliveryRobots #LaundryDelivery
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Jun 10
Oura has just released the Ring 5 and the most immediate thing about it is how little of it there is.  The new ring is 40 percent smaller than its predecessor, light enough to forget you are wearing it, and designed to sit on your finger looking indistinguishable from regular jewellery across six finishes ranging from silver to gold.  Despite the dramatically reduced size it still tracks sleep, heart rate, and daily health metrics with the same depth the Oura Ring is known for.  Battery life stretches up to seven days and the fit is comfortable enough to wear through the night without any disruption to sleep. Starting at $399 the Ring 5 makes a strong case for being the most wearable health tracker on the market right now, precisely because it barely feels like one. #OuraRing¸ #SmartRing #FitnessTracker #TechNews
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Jun 10
Ollie started as a meal planning app in 2023 and expanded into a full family AI assistant because users kept asking it to do more. That alone tells you something. It did not get there through marketing. It got there because people who used it for meals started trusting it with everything else. Tell Ollie what your family likes, what restrictions exist, and what the week looks like, and it builds the full meal plan, groups the grocery list by aisle, and connects directly to Amazon Fresh or Instacart for delivery. It recognizes household patterns over time. Taco Tuesdays, Friday leftovers, the one meal nobody actually finishes. It learns and adjusts without being told. The Washington Post and Forbes have both covered it. One user put it this way: she felt foolish saying an app changed her life, but it did. The mental load of running a household is invisible until something takes it off you. Would you hand this over to an AI? Comment "Family" and I will send you the link. #ollieai #familyassistant #ai
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Jun 10
A New York City startup called Shift has come up with one of the more unusual business models to emerge from the AI and robotics space.  The offer is straightforward on the surface: a vetted cleaner shows up at your home, cleans it entirely for free, and leaves. You pay absolutely nothing. The catch is that the cleaner arrives wearing a camera device that records every single task performed throughout the visit.  That first-person video footage is exactly what Shift is actually after. The recordings are collected and fed directly into training systems for the next generation of household robots, giving those models real-world data from real home environments that would otherwise be extremely difficult and expensive to gather at scale. Since launching on May 28, 2026, Shift has already received thousands of booking requests, suggesting there is no shortage of people willing to trade their home's footage for a free clean.  The company is already planning to expand the model beyond New York City, with San Francisco, London, Zurich, and Munich all on the roadmap. And cleaning is just the beginning. Shift has indicated that future services will include plumbing and cooking, all recorded, all free, and all feeding the robots that come next. #ShiftStartup #AIRobots #FreeHomeCleaning
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For 60 years every rocket that ever flew worked the same way. Launch. Crash into the ocean. Gone forever. In 2015 SpaceX launched a Falcon 9, brought the booster back down to Earth, and landed it standing straight up. Then refueled it. Then launched it again. Some of those same boosters have now flown to space 33 times. The cost of reaching orbit dropped by up to 90 percent. Nobody thought reusable rockets were possible. SpaceX made it routine. #SpaceX #Falcon9 #ElonMusk
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Space travel was too expensive. He built SpaceX, made rockets reusable, and cut costs by 90 percent. Electric cars were boring. He took over Tesla and made every major car company chase him. Paralyzed people couldn't use a computer. He built Neuralink so they could control a phone with just a thought. Three industries. Three problems everyone else avoided. One person. Elon Musk doesn't build companies. He picks the world's hardest problems and refuses to leave until they're solved. #ElonMusk #SpaceX #Tesla #Neuralink
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