Joined February 2009
496 Photos and videos
I love Elon Musk.. Almost as much as I love Satoshi Nakamoto. #spacex #bitcoin
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I love Elon Musk.
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Tim Draper retweeted
We are super excited to share with you our initial release of Lucky Engine. We are building a robotics engine from the ground up to be what we wished we could find in a simulator before
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Tim Draper retweeted
Congrats to the OpenYield team on the $6M raise led by @levelmarkets Excited to be part of it with @DraperVC Bringing equity-style transparency, speed, and firm pricing to the $150T fixed-income market is exactly the kind of modernization bond trading needs. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Benzinga asked me about quantum computing and Bitcoin. The answer… Bitcoin is more secure than the dollars sitting in your bank account. Quantum will crack the banks long before it touches the blockchain. Everyone's panicking about quantum breaking Bitcoin's encryption while banks are running on legacy infrastructure that makes Bitcoin look like Fort Knox. Even if something happened to the blockchain, the full node operators can roll back to the last secure block. The network survives. The dollar and banks don't have that option. At some point, Bitcoin eclipses the dollar entirely as retailers begin to accept bitcoin, and then they decide they only want to accept bitcoin. Read the full Benzinga interview to see what else we covered. benzinga.com/crypto/cryptocu…
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Tim Draper retweeted
Day one of @proofoftalk in the books, and what a venue: Paris and the Louvre. Gorgeous setup, great lineups from this team. Got to share the three areas VCs are watching: stablecoin rails as an IT upgrade for tradfi, tokenization coming for nearly every asset class, and crypto payments enabling agentic commerce. All spaces to watch.
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Tim Draper retweeted
Atomic heat extractor ready for rock! *Just add uranium*
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We back companies that bend industries. Skype bent telecom. Hotmail bent communication. Tesla bent transportation. The Tadros brothers are bending real estate with Bitcoin. They built three homes in Liberty City and they’re the first Bitcoin-powered homes on Earth. They recycle heat nine different ways and generate revenue with no tenants… just miners converting code into cash and warmth. Excessive money printing priced out an entire generation from homeownership. Homes became something you dreamed about, not something you lived in. Bitcoin-powered homes flip that equation. Heat is free. Revenue flows in and the asset pays for itself. Welcome to funding the rebellion. youtube.com/watch?v=OY-xFNrU…
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Honored to be a part of NewLimit’s journey from the very start. Jacob Kimmel and Brian Armstrong are easy founders to get behind as is their mission to expand human life. I backed Brian Armstrong before with Coinbase, and proud to do it again with NewLimit! Within the next year, we’re expected to see new medicine that target the most pervasive condition there is… aging. Congrats to their team on their recent $435M Series C.
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Thanks to the Bentley University Investment Group for inviting me to give the keynote address! Here’s the advice I gave: 𝗢𝗻 𝗘𝗻𝘁𝗿𝗲𝗽𝗿𝗲𝗻𝗲𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗵𝗶𝗽 → Expect to pivot. No big business grew in a straight line. → Listen to customers and find out what they'll actually pay for. → Look for industries that are fat, lazy, and providing bad service at high cost (often the ones advertising on TV). → Use new technologies to disrupt those industries → Love your first customer, make them happy, then the next. They become your salesforce. → Make lots of deals; every good deal makes both parties better off. → Missionaries (those driven by mission) outperform mercenaries (those chasing money). 𝗢𝗻 𝗣𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗱𝘂𝗰𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗶𝘁𝘆 → Do the hardest thing first every day. → Don't procrastinate, it kills innovation. → Make short-term sacrifices for long-term success. → Strive to be the best. #1 makes money. 𝗢𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴 & 𝗤𝘂𝗲𝘀𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀 → Ask stupid questions. The stupider the question, the more you learn → Go gain knowledge before implementing your creativity. 𝗢𝗻 𝗙𝗿𝗶𝗲𝗻𝗱𝘀 & 𝗖𝗼𝗺𝗺𝘂𝗻𝗶𝘁𝘆 → Want your friends to succeed, even more than yourself because you want to be surrounded by successful, dynamic people. → Cheer everyone around you on. 𝗢𝗻 𝗙𝗮𝗶𝗹𝘂𝗿𝗲 → Failure by omission is often the biggest mistake (missing opportunities). → Even if you fail, you moved the ball forward for everyone. → Keep your ego in check on both success and failure. 𝗢𝗻 𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲 & 𝗕𝘂𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗲𝘀𝘀 → Finance is the difference between success and failure, it's not meaningless. → Don't count your money before you get it. → Give customers a little more than you take. It pays off long-term. 𝗢𝗻 𝗙𝗿𝗲𝗲𝗱𝗼𝗺 & 𝗦𝗼𝗰𝗶𝗲𝘁𝘆 → Free countries enable innovation. Lack of freedom kills it. → The best leaders set clear guidelines and trust their people to innovate. → Competition between governments keeps them accountable.
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So excited about my latest investment in education with Edvisor (edvisor.ai)! They're shaking up higher ed at institutions like Berkeley, Duke and 50 others! The $200B educational materials market has barely changed in decades, and there is an enormous opportunity to transform the industry. When an industry operates as a monopoly or oligopoly and provides poor service at a high price, there is an opportunity for a startup to take new technology and have a forcing function that makes the customer (the student) receive a better service for a lower cost. Edvisor is doing just that.
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I found Skype in a newspaper article. The two guys who started Kazaa were building something new using the same file-sharing technology, but for a completely different purpose. I asked Howard Hartenbaum to have a look for me. He did and told me I should get out to London to meet them. I met Niklas Zennström in a London pub. He walked me through his plan to build a network of shared Wi-Fi. The business was called Shyper. I was impressed enough to offer to fund him and his partner, Janus Friis. He called a week later with a change of plans… "Change of plans. We are going to go after the long-distance carriers. Do you still want to invest?" I said yes. My partners had concerns about the file-sharing history, so I passed the seed to my dad, Bill Draper. I eventually funded Skype through DFJ ePlanet Ventures, our first international fund. When Skype had three million audio users, I flew to Tallinn for a board meeting. I asked Niklas to set up video conferencing equipment so I could interview him for a Tony Perkins event in Palo Alto. After the interview, Niklas laughed and said: "That was the first Skype video call ever." I hadn't even known they were working on video. Skype sold for $4.1 billion to eBay in 2005.
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See this article. I am a big fan of Gurudev. He spoke at our annual meeting. His breathing techniques have become standard practice at Draper University survival training. newsweek.com/gurudev-and-the…
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Before I was an investor, I was a guy carrying someone else's pitch deck around town. The company, Tasvir, used a computer to work with 2D mechanical CAD. We couldn't get investors to bite, but I learned a lot about mechanical CAD and the customers’ need for a new kind of MCAD. I asked Ian Edmonds, the marketing VP at Apollo Computer, what software mattered most for Apollo hardware. He pointed me to Polygen and SPG Consulting. I funded both, and while Polygen worked out ok, SPG Consulting became a bonanza. I met Sam Geisberg, and he showed me what he called, “reflexive technology,” the ability to flip between 2D and 3D mechanical drawings easily. As a software engineer myself, I couldn't figure out how he did it. It genuinely blew my mind. I introduced Sam to Don Fedderson, who was an MCAD expert, and Don brought in Steve Walske a fresh bright MBA. They added supersalesman, Richard Harrison as employee, and Parametric Technology Corporation (PTC) was born. PTC went on to become the dominant MCAD company in the world. More than 10 million mechanical designs have been created on their products including your cars, your hair dryers, probably the chairs you're sitting in right now. When PTC went public, I was able to pay the entire SBIC loan and paid my family back, with interest.
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Bitcoin is the largest idle asset in the world. I backed Zest Protocol because they're the team putting BTC to work. BTC-backed lending is a trillion dollar market and @ZestProtocol has the track record to win it.
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Tim Draper retweeted
$1.5T in BTC sits idle. Borrowing against it without giving up custody changes that. Zest Protocol lead investor @TimDraper on what the team means for the Bitcoin economy.
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I met Jim Hornthal in a pool. He swam over and started talking so fast I had to ask him to slow down just so I could follow along. Genius-level ideas, but coming out at 100mph. Jim was building something around video and travel. He called it Preview Travel. Jim wasn't building a travel company, but rather he was building a media company that happened to sell travel (right as the internet was about to make bandwidth cheap enough to make it work). The company went through major pivots, went public, and eventually sold to Travelocity. Jim had conviction and the ability to pivot without losing the thread. The lesson? I like to keep my ears open everywhere. Great entrepreneurs can happen in conferences, in airports, on the street, and even in water.
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Thanks to Antoine Santi for having me on SantiTV. We covered my personal story, the Draper family legacy and my vision for crypto and the future of innovation.
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52 pitches in 52 minutes. All below 40 degrees. I've sat through thousands of pitches over 40 years inside conference rooms, coffee shops, Zoom calls, and pretty much any venue you could think of. The ones that stick out are the ones where a founder is so convicted they'll pitch through anything. So… I took 52 pitches in 52 minutes sitting in an ice bath at below 40 degrees. What I was watching for was the founder. How do they carry themselves when conditions are uncomfortable? When the circumstances aren't ideal and the room (or in this case, the water) is working against them? Pitching through stress is practice for everything that comes after. For the moments, where inevitably, everything is harder than they thought it would be. Great founders push through it all to find success, and that's why founders are heroes. I'm not a frequent cold plunger, but it was a fun experience! Next time, we need the Guinness Book of World Records there. Have an idea you want me to hear? Meet me in the ice bath. 🧊 Thanks to Business Insider for covering: businessinsider.com/tim-drap…
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I loved my conversation with Ilana Golan on The Leap Academy Podcast! I joined Ilana and broke down how to spot world-changing ideas before they make sense, why most people miss their biggest opportunities, and how listening to your gut can be more powerful than logic alone. I shared the lessons behind massive wins like Hotmail, painful misses like Netflix, and the mindset required to navigate uncertainty, fear, and reinvention. Listen here: us01.z.antigena.com/l/5UqAwb…
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