Welcome to Stewart Squared podcast with the two Stewart Alsops. In this episode, the conversation ranges across the years that saw Apple shift from a struggling personal computer company to the launch of the iPhone, marking a deeper convergence of mobile technology and cloud infrastructure. The Stewarts explore how the so-called "Web 2.0" years—deceptively quiet between the dot-com crash and the smartphone boom—were in fact the foundation for the modern Internet, with fiber laid during the crash powering today's broadband-dependent innovations. From Apple's cautious approach to third-party apps to the implications of subscription economics born partly out of mobile gaming and cloud SaaS, the discussion weaves technical detail with personal anecdotes—like a missed investment opportunity in Elon Musk's x.com, or the early struggles and eventual transformation of Justin.tv into Twitch. For listeners curious about Apple's trajectory post-Steve Jobs, Stewart Alsop II references a relevant article, “Dear Tim Cook, Maybe You Should Consider Retiring”.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation!Timestamps
00:00 Apple’s transition from personal computers to the iPhone, Web 2.0’s rise, and early broadband limitations.
05:00 The iPhone as a pocket computer, initial app limitations, and the creation of the App Store pushed by Scott Forstall.
10:00 Investing dynamics of the early 2000s, the dot-com crash aftermath, and a missed opportunity with Elon Musk’s x.com.
15:00 AI comparisons to past tech waves, cloud computing’s economics, and the rise of the subscription model.
20:00 Claude as a developer’s tool, DIY infrastructure, and the economics of replacing SaaS like Descript.
25:00 The emergence of the cloud via AWS, SaaS adoption, and enterprise migration toward 40% cloud usage.
30:00 Infrastructure’s silent buildup during the bust years, fiber-optic backbones, and Tim O'Reilly’s Web 2.0 framing.
35:00 Investment in Justin.tv, the origin of Twitch, and early challenges in monetizing live streaming.
40:00 Legal issues with content rights, programming for dollars, and the pivot to gaming as Twitch.
45:00 Differentiating investor influence vs. founder-driven execution, social media’s emergence, and missed deals like Twitter.
50:00 Regrets around early venture decisions, rationality vs. intuition, and the limits of journalistic thinking in VC.
55:00 Reflections on truth, timing, and the impact of historical perspective in investment thinking.