Limitless Podcast

🌌 LIMITLESS HQ: LISTEN & FOLLOW HERE ⬇️
https://limitless.bankless.com/
https://x.com/LimitlessFT

------
In this episode, we predict the future of AI by 2026, debating AGI breakthroughs and the role of GPU clusters in space.

Get involved. What do you think about the future of AI?

------
TIMESTAMPS

0:00 Predictions for 2026
2:27 GPUs in Space
4:22 Biggest IPO of 2026
5:34 Long and Short Trades
7:36 Industry Predictions
8:42 The Layoff Lotto
10:29 China's Open Source Dominance
14:19 The AI Crash Out
15:37 AI Bubble Implosions
17:11 Breakout Hardware Devices
18:50 Comeback Player of the Year
20:45 Most Valuable Robot
21:53 AI Entertainment Apps
23:36 The Largest Model
25:24 Context Window Records
27:32 Winner Takes Most
29:08 The Biggest Loser
30:44 AI Blue Chip of 2026
31:57 Best Model by Intelligence
34:08 The Hottest Trend for 2026
37:27 Predictions Wrap-Up

------
RESOURCES

Josh: https://x.com/JoshKale

Ejaaz: https://x.com/cryptopunk7213

------
Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here:
https://www.bankless.com/disclosures⁠

What is Limitless Podcast?

Exploring the frontiers of Technology and AI

Ejaaz:
Welcome to our all-knowing predictions episode. As two hosts of an AI and Frontier

Ejaaz:
Technology podcast, it seems fitting to end the year with an episode all about

Ejaaz:
where we think the world is going.

Ejaaz:
We just did an episode that was kind of recapping the biggest winners and losers

Ejaaz:
of 2025. If you haven't seen that, I would highly recommend.

Ejaaz:
But this episode is looking forward into the future.

Ejaaz:
This is where the puck is headed to. This is where we're going to try to predict

Ejaaz:
the most impossibly fast trend that is going up into the right in the world of AI.

Ejaaz:
So everyone, without further ado welcome to the limitless 2026 prediction show

Ejaaz:
this is where we're going to talk about all the things starting with a topic

Ejaaz:
that i think everyone's kind of most excited about hang on

Josh:
What do you got check fit.

Ejaaz:
Oh okay josh and i went

Josh:
Above and beyond i've got my fleece fully zipped up and i've got my tinfoil

Josh:
hat for all my conspiracy theories that you're about to hear i apologize in

Josh:
advance and josh josh has gone with his favorite apple ceo the tim tim cook

Josh:
Steve Jobs look. He's got the turtleneck on. He's got the glasses.

Josh:
You're looking, might I say, Josh, you're looking mighty predicting-able.

Ejaaz:
I feel very sophisticated today. Although I will say these glasses are like

Ejaaz:
a minor prescription and they're hurting my eyes. So we're going to try to get

Ejaaz:
this episode done quick so I can take them off.

Josh:
Okay. Question one.

Ejaaz:
So what we're going to do for those who are watching, we have gold stars we're

Ejaaz:
going to hand out. This is the Limitless Gold Star. If you are a receiver of

Ejaaz:
the Gold Star, congratulations. We are bullish on you in 2026.

Ejaaz:
The first question, the first prediction we're going to reveal EGS is what I

Ejaaz:
think everyone is kind of most curious about is the AGI question.

Ejaaz:
AGI, here's our alarm bell. Are we ringing the bell or are we not ringing the

Ejaaz:
bell by the end of 2026? Will there be AGI or will there not be?

Josh:
Okay. My answer is yes, but it comes with a clause, which is specifically for

Josh:
science. I think we're going to make a major breakthrough.

Josh:
By major breakthrough, I mean, we discover a cure for a major disease by the

Josh:
end of the year. And I'm saying this for two reasons.

Josh:
One, science progress in AI has been frigging amazing.

Josh:
And two, according to Sam Altman's timeline for OpenAI AGI, he's predicting

Josh:
we get a science AGI by the end of 2026. So that's my prediction.

Ejaaz:
Okay. And how would you define AGI in that case?

Josh:
Something that shocks me by the end of the year, Josh, that I'm like,

Josh:
oh my God, we could never have thought of a dread this up by the end of last year.

Josh:
I think if you create a drug that literally saves millions of lives, that's AGI. Quote me.

Ejaaz:
Okay. Okay. I think my prediction for this is going to be no. I

Ejaaz:
don't think we get to agi and for me the the loose definition of

Ejaaz:
agi is is like an intelligence that's more capable than us

Ejaaz:
uh pretty vastly more capable than us in anything that we can do and a big part

Ejaaz:
of that is the physical embodiment of ai like it it shouldn't be limited to

Ejaaz:
just bits it should be also extend out to atoms in the world of robotics and

Ejaaz:
i don't think robotic understanding is going to be good enough by the end of

Ejaaz:
the year to feel like it is a truly

Ejaaz:
it's super artificial general intelligence um so that's why i'm gonna say no

Ejaaz:
on agi for next year we're not ringing the bell or ringing the bell in some

Ejaaz:
categories who knows we will i guess moving on to the next question here okay

Josh:
Houston we have a gpu um over under josh do we have a 25 gpu cluster,

Josh:
in space by the end of 2026? AI data centers in space. Do we have...

Ejaaz:
I was the biggest hater in the world about two months ago. I am taking the over.

Ejaaz:
I think we're going to have more than 25 GPUs in space by the end of next year. Why?

Ejaaz:
Because Starship is going to work and we are going to hopefully go to a launch

Ejaaz:
and watch that thing work.

Ejaaz:
If Starship works, there is no world in which they don't just ship up...

Ejaaz:
Like SpaceX themselves ships up a cluster just to prove a proof of concept.

Ejaaz:
We right now, if I'm not mistaken, have a single GPU cluster in space, which is training.

Ejaaz:
So that would imply a 25 fold increase. I think it's happening.

Ejaaz:
EJS, where do you stand on this?

Josh:
I'm also going to take the over on this, but it's not going to be a super bullish

Josh:
take because regardless of us having over 25 GPUs in space, I don't think it's

Josh:
going to be better than the clusters that we're going to have on Earth in 2026,

Josh:
but it's going to be a good initial proof of concept.

Josh:
You're right. Star Cloud has already this year launched one GPU up there.

Josh:
It seems pretty feasible with

Josh:
all the SpaceX launches that we're going to get more than that in 2026.

Ejaaz:
Yeah it feels totally contingent on the Starship launch so we're going to be

Ejaaz:
watching Starship and monitoring that and

Josh:
We're going to be buying SpaceX shares when it IPOs just to.

Ejaaz:
Be clear next year for the IPO too oh we should do biggest IPO of

Ejaaz:
2020 all right wait we didn't add this but you just I'm going to break this

Ejaaz:
up right now okay okay let's go biggest IPO of 2026 what's it going to be because

Ejaaz:
wait before you answer we have some rumors of IPOs so we have SpaceX 1.5 trillion

Ejaaz:
we have open AI which is roughly 800 million dollars We have possibly Anthropik going live next year.

Ejaaz:
So like there's a lot in the pipeline. Who's the biggest winner?

Josh:
Okay, it's not going to be what you expect. I'm going for OpenAI.

Josh:
I think OpenAI is going to have the biggest market cap by the end,

Josh:
purely because more people understand the AI play. I'm not saying this makes sense.

Josh:
I'm saying more people believe and understand the AI play.

Josh:
And so that like retail people will buy it as well as long-term investors versus

Josh:
space people are still going to be like, and there's a lot of Elon haters out

Josh:
there. I'm not one of them, but like, I feel like that might play against them.

Ejaaz:
Okay. Well, I'm going biggest IPO of SpaceX for sure. We just published an episode

Ejaaz:
last week about why $1.5 trillion is undervalued.

Ejaaz:
So I expect SpaceX to hopefully eclipse the $2 trillion market cap,

Ejaaz:
put over 25 GPUs into space and be the biggest IPO of the year.

Ejaaz:
But we have a lot of good IPOs to cover. Next year is going to be ridiculous.

Ejaaz:
Anyways, now it's probably time to get to the spread trade of next year.

Ejaaz:
If you're looking to trade markets, if you're looking to make money,

Ejaaz:
we are going to talk about what company or sector is most likely,

Ejaaz:
it's what you're most likely to long next year versus most likely to short.

Ejaaz:
So EJs, where are you starting? on the long front?

Ejaaz:
What category, what industry, what company are you most excited for that you're

Ejaaz:
bullish on that you think will make you the most amount of money?

Josh:
Okay, I'm going to cheat, Josh. I'm going to give you two answers.

Josh:
I'm going to give you a company. That's fine. I'm going to give you a sector.

Ejaaz:
Good thing is this is our show, so we could kind of, you know, go for it.

Josh:
Okay, I think the company to long next year is going to be Amazon.

Josh:
I think Amazon has been incredibly slept on. I think their new trinium chips

Josh:
are going to get used way more than people expect.

Josh:
And I think their AWS spread out for AI specifically because they're creating

Josh:
AI factories is going to be insanely good.

Josh:
And the sector that I'm longing next year, this is going to be unsexy,

Josh:
but I think it's going to be true, is still...

Josh:
Gpus gpus are gonna kill yeah.

Ejaaz:
Okay so that's nvidia are we excited about amd also any other gpu

Josh:
Video amd uh if i could put my asian stock market hound sorry i've run out of

Josh:
headspace i've only got the tinfoil hat uh it would be samsung um i think samsung's

Josh:
gonna absolutely kill next year they've got new chip fabs they're working with

Josh:
elon it's gonna be sick what.

Ejaaz:
About you just today uh samsung announced their two um nanometer microchip ahead

Ejaaz:
of apple for the first time ever which was huge.

Ejaaz:
For me, the company I'm most excited about is Tesla, which should probably come

Ejaaz:
to the surprise of absolutely no one.

Ejaaz:
I am so unfathomably bullish on Tesla in terms of their ability to,

Ejaaz:
one, change the transportation complex of the entire world through autonomy,

Ejaaz:
and two, this humanoid robotic line. It's massive.

Ejaaz:
Tesla also has this gigantic energy sector with batteries and solar panels,

Ejaaz:
and all of those things are required for where we're headed to.

Ejaaz:
I think Tesla has a monopoly on pretty much all of these pillars,

Ejaaz:
and they are going to crush it in the year of 2026.

Ejaaz:
In terms of maybe industry that I'm most excited about, I think the picks and

Ejaaz:
shovels is still the move.

Ejaaz:
The like NVIDIA, TSM, ASML, Avago, like all of those, the compute,

Ejaaz:
the foundry, the lithography, the networking.

Ejaaz:
We are going to be building data centers so fast and the people who are capable

Ejaaz:
of putting those together are probably going to be the winners.

Ejaaz:
But wait, let's go to the losers.

Josh:
Can I, can I, wait, can I, before we go, can I tweak my answer on the industry?

Josh:
I want to update my answer, Josh.

Ejaaz:
Okay, what do you got?

Josh:
I'm going with the energy sector. I just realized none of these data centers

Josh:
or GPUs are going to work if we don't have energy.

Josh:
And I think we're going to make a lot of investment in energy grids next year.

Josh:
So I'm longing the energy sector.

Ejaaz:
Big time. All right. What are you shorting?

Josh:
Okay. I'm going to go with meta. Sorry, obvious, but I don't see them turning

Josh:
around a new frontier model.

Josh:
I think they made the mistake of spending way too much money for the wrong types

Josh:
of people to build the models. So I'm bearish 2025 meta.

Josh:
I'm also bearish 2026 meta. I think it's going to play out similarly to the

Josh:
metaverse, unfortunately.

Josh:
And this conflicts with me because I was super bullish with them earlier on.

Josh:
The sector that I'm likely to short this year is going to be Neo Clouds. I think I'm bullish.

Josh:
I can be bullish GPUs, but bearish, too many cloud, Neo cloud providers that are supplying the GPUs.

Josh:
I think it's kind of bubbly. I think it's kind of pyramid-y.

Josh:
I think they're going to collapse slightly.

Ejaaz:
Okay. I think my choice this year, I'm shorting SaaS companies in general across the board.

Ejaaz:
I am not a fan of like any seat-based software with a weak moat.

Ejaaz:
That's who I am shorting this year. And I'm taking a basket of all of them because

Ejaaz:
the switching costs are not very high to go from something like,

Ejaaz:
and not to single out Slack because I think it's a great product,

Ejaaz:
but to go from something that you pay millions of dollars a month for in something

Ejaaz:
that like AI can probably automate with an engine and a couple of prompts.

Ejaaz:
So I think SaaS companies as a whole who have been sitting pretty,

Ejaaz:
making tons of money per month, selling millions of seats to companies are going

Ejaaz:
to have a very tough time when you're able to build applications so easy with

Ejaaz:
these new AI tools that we're going to have for the next year.

Ejaaz:
So I think that's probably my biggest loser. I'm long, big tech, short SaaS companies.

Ejaaz:
Love it. And let's move on to the next one here.

Josh:
Okay, Cathedral of Compute. What do you think, Josh, will be?

Josh:
Who do you think will have the largest data center or cluster by the end of 2026?

Ejaaz:
I'm taking the cluster part of this because I want to say XAI.

Ejaaz:
Those guys are absolutely crushing it. They have 200,000 coherent GPUs already.

Ejaaz:
They are planning to push to 500,000, then 1 million. if anybody in the world

Ejaaz:
can engineer a solution to do that it is going to be Elon and the hardcore XAI

Ejaaz:
team that stays up all night every day making this a reality I'm team XAI

Josh:
Elon haters won't like my answer.

Josh:
I'm also going with XAI purely because the proof is in the pudding.

Josh:
And you heard it from the man himself, Jensen Huang. He has never met someone

Josh:
who has built and scaled data centers as quickly as Elon.

Josh:
I want to remind you guys of a very famous 2025 statistic that was pulled out

Josh:
this year that it typically takes you about three years to spin up something

Josh:
like a two gigawatt cluster and at least start laddering that up.

Josh:
Elon was able to do it in 30 days that is just insane for the premise of like

Josh:
a year's foundation crazy.

Ejaaz:
Yeah it's it's pretty incredible okay so next one a little a little more bleak

Ejaaz:
maybe this one isn't a fun one this one doesn't get a gold star this one gets

Ejaaz:
a little maybe like a red crossing sign um the layoff lotto you just which industry

Ejaaz:
sees the most layoffs from ai okay

Josh:
So this one kind of my prediction is it's gonna hit close to home i think knowledge

Josh:
workers are gonna get screwed next year.

Josh:
So here's my reasoning behind this. A lot of focus of the new AI models that

Josh:
get released, they're focused on this one benchmark called GDPVal.

Josh:
And that specific benchmark is focused on knowledge work.

Josh:
And it's gotten really good. GPT 5.2 is chosen in 70% of cases right now by

Josh:
human experts versus human experts that can actually perform the same job.

Josh:
So I think this scales. I think by next year, knowledge works.

Josh:
So things like document writing, product strategy, all that kind of stuff,

Josh:
it's going to be done by air.

Ejaaz:
That's a good take. I think my take stems from a post that I saw from Andre Karpathy, actually.

Ejaaz:
And he was kind of describing how anything that can get verifiably measured can be automated by AI.

Ejaaz:
These are things like call centers, like administrative work,

Ejaaz:
like data input and output.

Ejaaz:
Anything that you can create a

Ejaaz:
verifiable answer and then train backwards against, you can replace by AI.

Ejaaz:
So those are the first industries that come to my mind. But basically,

Ejaaz:
if you have a job where there is a very clear outcome that you're guiding to,

Ejaaz:
and there's a reprogrammable set of steps to get there, chances are an AI is

Ejaaz:
going to be able to replace that very, very quickly.

Ejaaz:
So I think that the goal, if you're a human being who's listening to this and

Ejaaz:
not an AI, the goal is to be kind of like a polymath across a lot of industries.

Ejaaz:
The dynamic range of knowledge is going to be very important as we move forward

Ejaaz:
because part of the intuition that AI cannot replace is just understanding lots

Ejaaz:
of different categories very deeply and kind of connecting them together and

Ejaaz:
the connection of those dots dynamically.

Josh:
It's intuition, you set the line. It is intuition, that's it.

Ejaaz:
So yeah if you have an intuition-based job you're

Josh:
Good i want to push you i want to push you.

Ejaaz:
Because i want you to select

Josh:
A specific industry that was a great answer i love it but which industry call centers um.

Ejaaz:
Well yeah the first one is like customer support it would be call centers but

Ejaaz:
also customer support is a very subjective industry depending on the level of

Ejaaz:
it like if you're working in hospitality you're not getting replaced people

Ejaaz:
want human-on-human interaction but if you're just like you know filing support

Ejaaz:
tickets things like that things like administrative data input anything like

Ejaaz:
verifiable is is what i would be a little bit worried about. Okay.

Josh:
I like it. All right. Moving on. Now, China in 2025 has dominated the open source

Josh:
model. It's not even a question.

Josh:
They have the best open source model. So the question now is,

Josh:
will China retain the number one spot in 2026? You over or under?

Ejaaz:
I am slamming the over on this. China is open source world dominance.

Ejaaz:
And the United States has no incentive to make an open source model.

Ejaaz:
Meta tried. They got crushed. There was no benefit from doing it.

Ejaaz:
And now they've pivoted to going closed source.

Ejaaz:
So there's no indication that anybody from the United States will release an

Ejaaz:
open source model. We saw OpenAI do it earlier this year.

Ejaaz:
People used it maybe for half a day and then never looked back.

Ejaaz:
China is innovating via open source. They will continue to maintain that dominance

Ejaaz:
through 2026. What do you think?

Josh:
I'm going on to for one. simple reason and it's political.

Josh:
I do not think the US government and the US in general wants US founders building

Josh:
on Chinese open source models.

Josh:
It's no secret that this is already happening in Silicon Valley.

Josh:
In fact, Brian Chesky of Airbnb,

Josh:
integrates AI features into Airbnb, guess what? He's used a Quen derivative,

Josh:
a Quen model from Alibaba, right?

Josh:
I think this trend is going to get increasingly worse and people are not going

Josh:
to want that for fear of China implementing a backdoor in one of their open source codes.

Josh:
So with all of that said, I think there's going to be an additional focus on

Josh:
open sourcing, just not all, but certain US models and they're going to take the lead.

Ejaaz:
Okay. Well, next up we got the crash out catastrophe. Ejas, this was actually your suggestion here.

Ejaaz:
The AI founder most likely to crash out. For example, publicly insults appear

Ejaaz:
or even go to jail. Who's it going to be?

Josh:
Yes. Yes. I had a specific individual in mind and it's going to surprise you

Josh:
listeners because you always call me an Elon fanboy. It's Elon Musk.

Josh:
I think Elon's going to crash out. I didn't say it was going to be a good or

Josh:
bad crash out, but I think he's going to crash the hell out because he's going

Josh:
to be super annoyed by something Sam Altman or Trump says.

Josh:
And by definition of a crash out i mean he's going to yell insult or crash out

Josh:
on public news on a public forum probably x um so i've got him i'm doubling down on elon.

Ejaaz:
Okay i'm taking sam altman on this one uh he had a little issue yeah yeah yeah

Ejaaz:
if you remember the episode with brad gerstner a few weeks ago it was fairly

Ejaaz:
recently where he just kind of had like he was like hey listen dude if you hate

Ejaaz:
this like i could sell your shares and he got very like snippy with him and

Ejaaz:
he's he's got a lot of pressure on his shoulders.

Ejaaz:
They have a lot of debts and a lot of payments that need to be made.

Ejaaz:
And things are going to get stressful. And I'm not sure how well he's going

Ejaaz:
to be able to deal with stress in the public eye. So I'm going to take Sam Altman on that one.

Josh:
All right. All right. Next up, we have Bubble Buster.

Josh:
This category is the AI bubble most likely to implode.

Josh:
And note that I didn't say the entire AI bubble because I don't think that's

Josh:
how it's going to work. But I think they're going to be implosions with smaller bubbles.

Josh:
Josh, What's your bet here?

Ejaaz:
I think my bet is going to be

Ejaaz:
open source models is what I'm going to pick here. And I think the reason behind

Ejaaz:
that is because China is starting to develop an advantage when it comes to chips for the first time.

Ejaaz:
And part of the reason they've maintained their open source nature is because

Ejaaz:
they have wanted to kind of, you know, accelerate things.

Ejaaz:
And when things are open source, you could build on top of each other, like building blocks.

Ejaaz:
Now that China has started to get like Blackwell chips, they have very clearly

Ejaaz:
defined, like very good models.

Ejaaz:
It makes sense for them to close the door and to shut things down.

Ejaaz:
And if China shuts down the open source models and the United States don't have

Ejaaz:
any incentive to do so, I think the open source model industry probably gets crushed.

Ejaaz:
There's going to be no leading models that are really excellent to use.

Ejaaz:
It's all going to be closed source, closed gated in the race to AI.

Ejaaz:
So that's my bubble buster.

Josh:
I like that. I like that. I'm going to go with open AI partnerships.

Josh:
I think that bubble is going to burst.

Ejaaz:
Oh, the circular economy?

Josh:
The circular economy, specifically for open air who have signed to the tune

Josh:
of $1.4 trillion in payments.

Josh:
I think there is no way they're going to meet their targets next year or the

Josh:
year after that, unless there's something written in the contract,

Josh:
which in some cases they are.

Josh:
But for example, the $300 billion deal with Oracle, no way they're paying $100

Josh:
billion next year when they're losing $12 billion and generating that.

Josh:
So we're going to see some collapse there. Whether they've IPO'd in that time remains to be seen.

Ejaaz:
We'll see. Okay, well, next we have what topic that's very close to my heart,

Ejaaz:
which is the breakout hardware device.

Ejaaz:
Do we get a breakout AI device that people love, not including a phone?

Ejaaz:
It cannot be an iPhone because, well, Apple can't even ship.

Ejaaz:
But even if it was, do we get a breakout AI device?

Josh:
Um yes and i know this

Josh:
is gonna get under your skin josh but i fully believe it google glass 2.0 project

Josh:
aura as they're gonna make me sick i think it's i think it's gonna i think it's

Josh:
gonna slap because it can't be worse than google glass v1 they've watched meta

Josh:
do the ray-ban display and absolutely

Josh:
flop they're not gonna put out something that people hate that's.

Ejaaz:
Like saying going to one prison is worse than the other like they're just they're

Ejaaz:
both suck like being better Nothing is not a good place to be.

Ejaaz:
I think those devices still do not get to a place where they're actually useful.

Ejaaz:
Who have you got? My breakout hardware device, which may be off by a few months

Ejaaz:
in terms of timing, but it's the OpenAI Johnny Ive device.

Ejaaz:
I am so excited. I think this is going to be the biggest...

Ejaaz:
Event of the year next year in terms of how it's

Ejaaz:
going to change the way that we interface with ai this is the first time a

Ejaaz:
company's rethinking the way that we engage with computers as

Ejaaz:
a whole is the person who designed the most popular handheld

Ejaaz:
device in the world the iphone and now he's doing it again for open

Ejaaz:
ai the biggest company with the most amount of users and i think whatever device

Ejaaz:
whatever product they ship next year is going to actually impact a tremendous

Ejaaz:
amount of people and really alter the way that we use hardware where you will

Ejaaz:
not need to be reliant on a cell phone in your pocket to navigate the worlds

Ejaaz:
of the internet and AI. So I'm excited about that one.

Josh:
Is my tinfoil hat on? I don't think they ship next year, Josh. I don't think they ship.

Ejaaz:
They might not, but I'm going to be bullish and optimistic.

Josh:
All right, moving on. Comeback player of the year.

Josh:
This is someone who has been beaten down on in 2025, but they're going to make

Josh:
a big 180, similar to how Google did this year. Josh, who you got?

Ejaaz:
I got Apple, man. I'm stoked for Apple. I'm so excited for them.

Ejaaz:
I think they're going to absolutely no i

Ejaaz:
shouldn't say that i don't think they're going to crush it next year i think

Ejaaz:
they're going to do much better than they did this year why well

Ejaaz:
because they're outsourcing their intelligence to google

Ejaaz:
and that's what they that's what they've always needed to do they did this with

Ejaaz:
their search results where apple didn't create a search browser they just put

Ejaaz:
google default and safari on the iphone they're doing the same with gemini i

Ejaaz:
think edge compute is a huge thing to be wary of because if you can run ai on

Ejaaz:
your phone the inference charges are free to people who are building there.

Ejaaz:
So there's a strong incentive for developers to build on iPhones.

Ejaaz:
There's a strong incentive for Apple to offload their intelligence to Google

Ejaaz:
and just focus on the experience that they're exceptionally good at.

Ejaaz:
So I think if those things happen,

Ejaaz:
Apple will have a really home run year next year as it relates to AI.

Josh:
Yeah, I think that's a good take. My take, and again, I'm wearing the tinfoil hat for this one.

Josh:
Cursor. Cursor has been beaten down on this year because things like Anthropic

Josh:
Claude Code and a bunch of other competitors are just better vibe coding apps.

Josh:
But Cursor has a crazy customer mode and so many people still use it.

Josh:
They still might use Claude via it, but they love the Cursor UI.

Josh:
So my conspiracy theory, Josh, is Cursor runs on VS Code.

Josh:
That is a fork of Microsoft. Microsoft is currently bleeding AI users.

Josh:
I think Microsoft acquires Cursor and remolds Cursor for their enterprise audience. And it slams.

Ejaaz:
You have some big takes. We haven't mentioned Microsoft a whole lot in these episodes. We have not.

Ejaaz:
Okay, so this one's totally not biased at all. Please ignore the humanoid robot

Ejaaz:
to the left of this prompt.

Ejaaz:
That is the Tesla Optimus. Most valuable robot, Ejaz. Which one is it going to be?

Josh:
I know what answer you're going to give. So I'm intentionally going to give a different one here.

Josh:
And also because I believe they might actually pull it off. Figure.

Josh:
Brett Adcock, I think, is an awesome CEO. I have seen so many demos of this figure robot.

Josh:
And in my opinion, it's the only one that can go toe-to-toe with Tesla Optimus.

Josh:
I think because of the fact that they've been focused 100% on this for years

Josh:
now, they've got a good chance of scaling this next year. I'm excited.

Ejaaz:
Okay. My answer for most valuable robot actually is not Optimus. It is the CyberCab.

Ejaaz:
I think Optimus will not reach the production scale required to actually create a lot of value.

Ejaaz:
And they would likely just have like early prototypes. By the end of next year,

Ejaaz:
we will have cybercabs rolled out, hopefully across the country,

Ejaaz:
that are genuinely self-driving cybercaxes.

Ejaaz:
And that is going to be such a mind-bending reality for a lot of people who've never sat in one before.

Ejaaz:
So in terms of value generation, in terms of shock and awe, in terms of acclimatizing

Ejaaz:
the average person to the world of AI that we're headed towards,

Ejaaz:
I think the cybercab is going to be the most valuable robot. of next year.

Josh:
Love it.

Josh:
Okay, moving on. Most popular AI entertainment app.

Josh:
Now, the idea of this is not the model, not necessarily ChatGPT's app,

Josh:
but what kind of new breakthrough AI feature or product do you think people will be consuming?

Josh:
What's the TikTok of 2026? Josh, who you got?

Ejaaz:
I think the most popular AI entertainment app next year is just going to be YouTube.

Ejaaz:
I think it's a continuation of what works, I think YouTube is actually leaning

Ejaaz:
into AI very heavily in addition to supporting short form content built around

Ejaaz:
AI in a way that I don't see a lot of other companies doing.

Ejaaz:
There's probably more hours spent on YouTube than just about any other internet website on the planet.

Ejaaz:
And them signaling that they're planning to lead hard into AI means that we

Ejaaz:
probably get a natural extension. They're building where the people are.

Ejaaz:
I think YouTube next year will be the most popular AI entertainment app.

Josh:
Josh vo3 youtube videos next year dude it will save us a lot of time it's.

Ejaaz:
All it's all there all the parts are there

Josh:
Maybe some ai avatars of us people already in the comments think that we're how.

Ejaaz:
Are you going to verify that we're not

Josh:
Yeah that's true that's true i might lean into it all right my big bet is it's

Josh:
going to be a big year for the gooners i think adult ai content is going to

Josh:
absolutely slap. I'm not saying it's good.

Josh:
I'm just saying Sam's already indicated that they're going to have an adult

Josh:
version of ChatGPT releasing very soon.

Josh:
He said end of year. I don't think that's going to happen. I think it's going to happen in 2026.

Josh:
And I think that video models are getting just good enough for the AI adult

Josh:
industry to really kill it next year.

Josh:
Um i'm not happy about it i just think that that's exactly what's going to happen

Josh:
grok companions are going to get the next level up it's all going to get.

Ejaaz:
Crazy oh god that's a scary future i'm not looking forward to agreed okay so

Ejaaz:
here we have the largest model um like

Josh:
Victoria,

Josh:
that's funny i hope you guys get that joke that is.

Ejaaz:
Yeah that's a deep cut for anyone who's around in 2021 on the internet anyways

Ejaaz:
um yes the largest model not the one walking down the runway the one that is

Ejaaz:
powering your AI tokens to your computer, which do we have for largest model?

Josh:
Josh, I have a general hot take on this. Are you ready? Okay.

Ejaaz:
And also, how are you going to define the largest model too?

Josh:
Okay, so in my opinion, largest model is like how many parameters the model has.

Josh:
So we started off with models with like 10 billion parameters,

Josh:
and then we scaled all the way to a trillion parameters.

Josh:
If you're asking yourself what the hell a parameter is, think of it as like

Josh:
the genetic makeup of a model.

Josh:
You're giving it the characteristics, what its eye color is,

Josh:
how intelligent it is, what its tone is, stuff like that, you know,

Josh:
stats, characteristics.

Josh:
I think parameters will not matter next year.

Josh:
I think the thing that matters next year is post-training.

Josh:
2025 has been all about pre-training. Oh my God, the most amount of compute

Josh:
that we give a model, the smarter the model is going to be.

Josh:
It's pre-training, pre-training. I don't think that matters at all.

Josh:
I think we're going to have a breakthrough in 2026 for post-training.

Josh:
I think people are going to spend more time with reinforcement learning and reasoning.

Josh:
And that's what's going to give the level up for the model. So the resulting trend will be,

Josh:
Models will still get slightly larger, but it won't matter. The resulting intelligence

Josh:
that comes from a slight model increase will be exponential because of post-training stuff.

Ejaaz:
Okay, that's a pretty good take. I think in terms of, I'm just going to throw

Ejaaz:
an arbitrary number for parameter count. I feel like 15 trillion is a good number.

Josh:
15?

Ejaaz:
So XAI with Grok5 is planning to release a 7 trillion parameter model,

Ejaaz:
and that is coming in Q1 of next year.

Ejaaz:
It's going to be a massive gargantuan model. so

Ejaaz:
for them to double that in a year seems possible

Ejaaz:
feasible because when you think about how quick i mean

Ejaaz:
i mean even from this year we went from oh three to five point

Ejaaz:
two and it was just like these unbelievable model jumps yeah and i suspect we'll

Ejaaz:
get the same thing whether or not that matters is probably the more interesting

Ejaaz:
question like you were mentioning is like do we even need a higher parameter

Ejaaz:
count than that or is it just more on the like more niche post training stuff

Ejaaz:
uh that remains to be determined we will see uh but anyways next okay

Josh:
Um context window world records sticking

Josh:
along the theme of like size of model what matters

Josh:
a lot is how many tokens or how many words you can

Josh:
prompt the model with the more tokens you can prompt the model with the more

Josh:
context it has the smarter the answer it gives now um 2025 was a record-breaking

Josh:
year they hit i think million tokens in some cases on unofficial 1.5 million

Josh:
tokens josh who do you think what do you think the record's going to be.

Ejaaz:
I think the limit does not exist i think

Ejaaz:
the context window expands to infinity and this is a very bullish take very

Ejaaz:
optimistic take but there are a lot of researchers like safe super intelligence

Ejaaz:
with ilia's company and um thinking machines who are attempting and even google's

Ejaaz:
trying to do this to remove the constraint of the context window altogether.

Ejaaz:
And I don't know what type of magical moon math they're doing,

Ejaaz:
but I suspect that next year will be the year where possibly we can get that.

Ejaaz:
And what does that imply? Well, it can get this

Ejaaz:
gigantic understanding of the

Ejaaz:
world around you and refer to it precisely without a lot of fuzzy loss.

Ejaaz:
So there's going to be a lot of breakthroughs, but my hope is that the context

Ejaaz:
window world record will be infinity by the end of next year. Okay.

Josh:
Wow. That's, I mean, that is a crazy prediction. I love it.

Josh:
I don't have a strong take on a particular number, but what I will say in accordance

Josh:
to my previous answer, which is,

Josh:
I think post-training is going to be really important context window is going

Josh:
to matter a lot here so i'm bullish large large large context windows next year okay.

Ejaaz:
Big context window year next up we have winner take most ejs does one model

Ejaaz:
become the default for greater than 50 percent of the usage

Josh:
Yes. Okay. So I'm measuring this, Josh, on amount of tokens processed.

Josh:
So purely mathematical, how used is the model?

Josh:
And I'm going with whatever the latest version of Anthropics Claude is going to be.

Josh:
Maybe it's Opus 4.5, but they're probably going to release Opus 5 or Opus 6 by the end of next year.

Josh:
Coding is the most used content. If you look at any of the coding measurements

Josh:
it's like 50 of the tokens that are being processed right now i think they gain

Josh:
a market dominance on that i'm going.

Ejaaz:
I'm gonna take open ai and chat gpt as the model with greater than 50 of the

Ejaaz:
usage because they have this dominant monopoly where it's like something like

Ejaaz:
80 of the users and i guess i'm kind of thinking more on the user front where

Ejaaz:
it's slowly decreasing but the

Ejaaz:
question is how quick is that rate of decrease or

Ejaaz:
how quick are other companies able to eat their market share

Ejaaz:
and it's been accelerating we've seen Gemini take over some

Ejaaz:
of it we've seen Anthropic take over some of it but I think ChatGPT

Ejaaz:
and OpenAI can sustain 50% for at least the next year and then it makes sense

Ejaaz:
that they eventually find a resting spot around like 25-30% maybe slightly less

Ejaaz:
depending on how many big winners there are But I'm going to take OpenAI as

Ejaaz:
the model that becomes the default for greater than 50% of the usage,

Ejaaz:
as it relates to users, at least.

Josh:
Okay. Next up, we have the biggest loser. Can Meta keep the lead? Josh, who have you got?

Ejaaz:
Can Meta keep the lead? I...

Ejaaz:
I think they can, but I don't want to bet against them because one thing that

Ejaaz:
I learned as I've invested in these companies or considered investing in a lot

Ejaaz:
of these companies is you want to let the winners ride.

Ejaaz:
And there's only so many companies that can win when it comes to the scale that's

Ejaaz:
required the amount of compute, the amount of money.

Ejaaz:
And I think Meta has a chance. They have a ton of resources.

Ejaaz:
They have a ton of people that support them. I think the biggest loser of next

Ejaaz:
year is going to be the bears.

Ejaaz:
As a broad category, anyone who is bearish on the industry who thinks this bubble

Ejaaz:
is going to pop in the next 12 months they are going to find themselves sadly

Ejaaz:
mistaken and very badly hurt if they attempt to short this huge wave that we have coming up

Josh:
Okay i'm gonna give a

Josh:
specific company and that company is microsoft

Josh:
they have already given revised numbers uh before the quarterly report which

Josh:
shows that they have less customers using their ai models in general and their

Josh:
ai features this isn't a dig at ai in general it's a dig at microsoft's capability

Josh:
to ship good AI products.

Josh:
I think Mustafa Suleiman, the head of AI, kind of does a bad job at what he's

Josh:
doing, which might be a crazy take, but it's just like, I don't hear about his

Josh:
updates. I hear about Demis's.

Josh:
And I think that the best thing that Microsoft has and will ever do in AI for

Josh:
now, at least, is their investment in open AI. Nothing to do with their company in general.

Ejaaz:
Big time. Yeah, Microsoft has sadly been absent from a lot of these conversations

Ejaaz:
we've been having. There's just not much going on over there.

Ejaaz:
Anyways, the AI blue chip, EJAS, Who is the most valuable AI company by the end of 2026?

Josh:
Anthropic.

Ejaaz:
This is Anthropic. Wow, that's a big one.

Josh:
I think Anthropic IPOs, I still think...

Josh:
I think Anthropik IPOs, I think Anthropik IPOs, they're already rumored to do

Josh:
it. They're engaging investment banks to set it up.

Ejaaz:
You realize how big some of these companies are, right? Like Google and NVIDIA

Ejaaz:
is a $4 trillion company.

Josh:
Oh, okay. I guess the way that I'm looking at it is like most ROI that you could

Josh:
get from like a public perspective.

Josh:
That was the way I was thinking about it. Not the largest market cap.

Ejaaz:
Okay, well that counts too. Is that allowed? Is that okay?

Josh:
Yeah, I'm going to go.

Ejaaz:
These are our rules, man.

Josh:
Okay, okay, okay. So I'm still going to go with Anthropic. I think they're going

Josh:
to IPO at a crazy valuation, but that valuation is only going to get higher

Josh:
as more and more people realize that coding AI is the ultimate intelligence

Josh:
that you kind of want to own and Anthropic dominates.

Ejaaz:
Okay. I'm going to say the most valuable AI company in the world by the end of 2026 will be Google.

Ejaaz:
They will, they're already close. They're right there. They will continue their dominance.

Ejaaz:
They will continue to not only build CPUs for their own in-house compute,

Ejaaz:
but we'll start selling them.

Ejaaz:
They have such a head start across so many pillars they have

Ejaaz:
the best models they have unbelievable rate of execution and if

Ejaaz:
they just continue along this pathway they're already trillions of dollars ahead

Ejaaz:
of companies like open ai and there's no reason in my mind that they won't be

Ejaaz:
able to outpace a company like nvidia when it comes to just growing pure market

Ejaaz:
cap like what a incredible business for me ai blue ship of the year is google

Ejaaz:
and that brings us to the crown

Josh:
Who has the best model measured by intelligence?

Josh:
So this is kind of the way we've been ranking the top number one AI models throughout the entirety of 2025.

Josh:
I'm split on this. Josh, I'm curious to hear your answer.

Ejaaz:
Okay, I could give my answer first. I think, and this is probably a hot take,

Ejaaz:
but I'm feeling optimistic.

Ejaaz:
The answer to this question by the end of 2026, and I'm giving them two gold

Ejaaz:
stars, is going to be XAI.

Ejaaz:
I think they will have the best model measured by intelligence by the end of next year.

Ejaaz:
The reasoning is because they have been in pursuit of

Ejaaz:
truth and they have been in pursuit of synthetic data where

Ejaaz:
they are really trying to hone in the quality of

Ejaaz:
intelligence that they use to train these models and that

Ejaaz:
is paired with the fact that they're able to build these clusters larger and

Ejaaz:
just faster than everybody else so it seems like their lead is going to start

Ejaaz:
to make itself clear towards the end of next year because they're honestly they're

Ejaaz:
going to be the ones with enough compute to actually run something that powerful

Ejaaz:
it's not that other companies won't get there they'll just be the only ones that can actually run it

Josh:
Okay okay i see it um i'm gonna

Josh:
go with google gemini and i

Josh:
think i have a very strong case for this uh it's funny

Josh:
you mentioned synthetic data i'd say google are

Josh:
the leaders in world models and i think world models are going to be the

Josh:
most important thing kind of next year and it to help simulate kind of intelligence

Josh:
um they're winning that with genie 3 i think they have nailed multi-modality

Josh:
uh they've got the best video model they've got the best audio model uh if you

Josh:
combine all of those things into the number one LLM, which is Gemini,

Josh:
and it all feeds back, you end up with the smartest model.

Josh:
That's how they were able to catch up so quickly. I think Google takes the ground.

Josh:
And the final one, trendsetter.

Josh:
What's the hottest trend that isn't so hot right now, but will be hot next year in 2026?

Ejaaz:
My answer is going to be the death of the text box.

Ejaaz:
I think the trend that we're going to see next year, and this is an optimistic

Ejaaz:
thing that I really want to see, is LLMs or AI companies in general moving away

Ejaaz:
from the LLM, from the text box, from the way that we actually engage with these AI models.

Ejaaz:
Basically, the entire interface is that of Google's in the early 1990s.

Ejaaz:
It is a single text box. you write something, you expect answers.

Ejaaz:
I think one of the hottest trends is going to be removing that friction from

Ejaaz:
the experience when people engage with AI and creating more of a

Ejaaz:
like fully embodied ambient intelligence system where it predicts more of what

Ejaaz:
you want. It kind of understands the context better.

Ejaaz:
And it's not just limited to text in a box. And I'm expecting that to really

Ejaaz:
evolve pretty rapidly as companies kind of fight to onboard more users.

Ejaaz:
They're going to be inclined to want to give them more value.

Ejaaz:
And in order to give them more value, you got to kind of tell them how to extract it from these models.

Ejaaz:
And that's the trend that I think is going to be hot and that I'm very excited

Ejaaz:
and looking forward to in the new year. EJ, what do you got?

Josh:
I like that take. I am going to double down on something I mentioned previously, which is world models.

Josh:
I think it is going to be the single most important type of model that goes

Josh:
viral next year purely because it creates a bunch of synthetic data.

Josh:
Why is that important? We're running out of data.

Josh:
All these models are trained on the same data. They're not going to get any

Josh:
more intelligent using the same data. We need new data. What is the best way to do that?

Josh:
Well, what if you could create a simulated environment of the earth and stick

Josh:
in your AI model there? It's how agents are going to get smarter.

Josh:
It's how AI models in general are going to get smarter.

Josh:
And Josh, it's how robots are going to get smarter. Tesla's already using it

Josh:
for their full self-driving AI model, right?

Josh:
They're using it to simulate car accidents so that, you know,

Josh:
they can figure out how to keep people safe. So I think world models are going to be crazy.

Josh:
I kind of cheated because Demis was really bullish on this on a podcast episode

Josh:
that I listened to recently. But hey, he's the godfather of AI.

Ejaaz:
So could we maybe do the inverse of this too is what was the hottest trend in

Ejaaz:
2025 that will absolutely not exist in 2026. Do you have any off the top of your head?

Josh:
Okay, you go first. I got to think about this.

Ejaaz:
Okay, because my answer, the reason why I'm asking is because I feel like death

Ejaaz:
to the agentic browser is certainly a trend that we will consider to see.

Ejaaz:
And that's one that I like a great amounts of joy from because the agentic browser

Ejaaz:
just seems like an unnecessary complexity when I could have an AI go off and do the hard thing for me.

Ejaaz:
And we talked about this with the CEO of Perplexity, Arvind,

Ejaaz:
who was on the show earlier this year. And he was talking about

Ejaaz:
how he thought it was important. But the reality is that there's two buckets.

Ejaaz:
There's leisure and there's productivity. And I don't need a browser for productivity.

Ejaaz:
And I think that's going to be the trend that kind of goes away and never returns.

Josh:
Okay, Josh, I'm going to be hyper specific on my answer because it really friggin annoys me.

Josh:
Reservation agents. I don't need you to book me a restaurant reservation.

Josh:
I don't need you to find flights for me.

Josh:
I'll do that myself. but if you

Josh:
can give me an amazing health stack or supplements based on my blood types and

Josh:
everything go ahead if you can automate 50 of my day job go ahead i don't care

Josh:
for the reservation agents that got released by open ai uh google this year

Josh:
kill them i hope they never make it i love it i love it and.

Ejaaz:
I think that probably concludes our our 2026 prediction show

Josh:
No no no there's one more josh what more and this is the most important.

Ejaaz:
One a surprise one

Josh:
You and I have strived to keep episodes on average to 20 to 25 minutes this

Josh:
year. What's your over under on this episode?

Ejaaz:
We are absolutely taking the under. Every episode will be under 25 minutes no matter what.

Ejaaz:
That is a hard cutoff and we will absolutely not sway.

Ejaaz:
Any higher than that yeah there's

Josh:
No way that's not going to happen right yeah.

Ejaaz:
Certainly not no this is this is this is very serious this

Ejaaz:
is a a hard deadline we want to deliver

Ejaaz:
the best 60 minutes of content every week and that comes

Ejaaz:
in the form of three episodes and they will not be any longer including this

Ejaaz:
episode which is probably already at minute number 40 or something

Ejaaz:
like that we've been going on for a long time so maybe we should end

Ejaaz:
it here i think this has been the predictions episode

Ejaaz:
um the task for anybody who's listening this is

Ejaaz:
very important is you need to put your predictions in

Ejaaz:
the comment section that way we can time stamp them and

Ejaaz:
reference them next year if you want to be top dog

Ejaaz:
if you want to be the oracle who sees the

Ejaaz:
future in a way that we don't or no one else does then drop your comments underneath

Ejaaz:
this video or this podcast episode you could even post on x tell us what your

Ejaaz:
predictions are make a nice little thread we'll share it with everybody what

Ejaaz:
do you think is going to be you can even answer these questions what are your

Ejaaz:
predictions for next year i want to hear it let us know what you think

Josh:
Definitely. And I'm going to let my ego enter the video for a second, Josh.

Josh:
We are less than a thousand subscribers off of 30,000.

Josh:
And listen, I hold no allegiance to the number 30,000, but it's a really nice

Josh:
round number that I would love to reach by the end of the year.

Josh:
So if you enjoy our episodes, if you enjoy our content, if you've enjoyed our

Josh:
predictions, if you think we're going to be at least 50% right,

Josh:
I would call you crazy, but I appreciate it.

Josh:
Please like, please subscribe, please turn on notifications give us a rating

Josh:
if you're listening to on spotify or apple music and we will see you josh in the new year.

Ejaaz:
I don't we'll see we're gonna see when all this comes out

Ejaaz:
there was one last point i wanted to make which is for the love of god if you do

Ejaaz:
anything please watch this video because e-jazz is wearing the most

Ejaaz:
ridiculous hat and if you're listening to audio only you are missing out

Ejaaz:
and i'm boiling head over here it's um

Ejaaz:
yeah so it's worth it's worth um watching spotify is my preference youtube

Ejaaz:
is great but yeah we'll see what the calendar plays out if this is the last

Ejaaz:
year um the last of the year well we're gonna in for a pretty mighty 2026 but

Ejaaz:
if it's not yeah we'll be back again at least one more episode before the year

Ejaaz:
is now so as always yeah like you guys were saying thank you so much for watching

Ejaaz:
for being here with us and we'll see you guys in the next one peace guys