Welcome to Stewart Squared podcast with the two Stewart Alsops. This episode navigates the arc of the Internet’s transformation from the promise of an open network to the reign of closed platforms, tracing roots from AOL to mobile Facebook. The Stewarts debate algorithmic influence on user agency, reflect on early computing culture through anecdotes about VisiCalc and orthogonality, and critique the rise of AI devices like the Limitless pendant—linking it to Sam Altman's tangled investment trail and speculative visions of screenless tech. Their dialogue touches on Silicon Valley's philosophical shift—from engineering pragmatism to fantastical thinking—and asks whether companies like Google and Apple have the institutional structures to evolve meaningfully in the AI era.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversationTimestamps
00:00 – Discussion opens on the
walled garden concept, contrasting early
open Internet ideals with Facebook and AOL's closed models.
05:00 – Shift to
Facebook mobile and how the app's design deepened platform control, suppressing outbound links via
algorithmic downgrading.
10:00 – Exploration of what
algorithms are, including foundational insights from
VisiCalc and
orthogonal programming logic.
15:00 – Critique of
fantastical thinking in Silicon Valley:
effective altruism,
Singularity, and
AI determinism vs. randomness.
20:00 – Deep dive into
AI devices, focusing on the
Limitless Pendant, its
usability issues, and
Sam Altman's conflicted role as early investor.
25:00 – Speculation on
hardware innovation,
Raspberry Pi and
Arduino, and ethical concerns around investing in competitors.
30:00 – Analysis of
Google’s product culture, its failure in
product management, and
DeepMind's limited integration.
35:00 – Reflection on
monopolistic behavior,
moonshot divisions, and overfunding as a source of
magical thinking.
40:00 – Final thoughts on
institutional IT, comparing
Apple,
Netflix, and
Chinese firms like
Huawei in real-time
software integration.