Exploring the frontiers of Technology and AI
Ejaaz:
OpenAI announced they're building their very own AI chip, custom designed for
Ejaaz:
OpenAI models, Codex, ChatGPT.
Ejaaz:
But the craziest part was it was designed by their AI models themselves.
Ejaaz:
Everything from the software stack to potentially even the hardware design itself
Ejaaz:
was made by OpenAI's internal model, as well as Codex, their coding model.
Ejaaz:
It's going live in nine months, which is absolutely crazy. Typically,
Ejaaz:
these things take one to two years to at least design and build the first couple of prototypes.
Ejaaz:
So the fact that OpenAI is entering this market is the first real example of
Ejaaz:
an AI lab owning the entire stack, going from hardware all the way to frontier
Ejaaz:
AI models. Now, in other news, we've seen a few rumors.
Ejaaz:
Fable 5, the most powerful model from Anthropic, might be coming back a lot more on that.
Ejaaz:
And Micron absolutely killed their earnings report, blowing every bare expectation
Ejaaz:
out of the water and expecting to make more revenue than nvidia did in q3 of
Ejaaz:
last year a lot of stuff to go through today
Josh:
Is spicy little jalapeno look at that this is exciting it's it's fun to see
Josh:
the open ai team move into i guess enterprise hardware is what we would call
Josh:
this they're making their own chips
Josh:
and who's the last company that made their own chips we have google who has
Josh:
their tpus incredible amazon has tranium and now
Josh:
open ai has their own jalapeno chips and it's important to note that they're
Josh:
going the same route as amazon and as Google.
Josh:
This isn't a GPU, it's an ASIC. It is a chip specifically designed for a very
Josh:
narrow task instead of something general purpose.
Josh:
Traditionally, when OpenAI was to use NVIDIA's GPUs, the bottleneck isn't actually
Josh:
the compute, but instead it's the memory that sits on the chip.
Josh:
So at any given time, they're paying for 100% of the GPU, but they're maybe
Josh:
using 70 to 80% of the capacity because they're limited by that memory bandwidth.
Josh:
What these accelerators are going to do with this asic chip whatever this jalapeno
Josh:
chip is the idea is that it's going to be used for inference it is going to
Josh:
be purpose built to supply ai tokens very very fast and to be fully utilized and that utilization
Josh:
when vertically integrated creates magical things we always talk about this
Josh:
on the show about apple and their m series chips
Josh:
and how it was such a step function improvement in.
Josh:
Every single aspect of the devices. It was like a day and night difference overnight
Josh:
when they released this chip.
Josh:
There's an opportunity for OpenAI to do that now because owning the stack allows
Josh:
you to squeeze out so much more efficiency than you have anywhere else.
Josh:
And it's very exciting to see them build a chip that looks something like this.
Josh:
I liked the idea that they used ChatGPT to actually accelerate the creation
Josh:
of this chip. I think it was nine months, which is pretty damn fast.
Josh:
And you have to assume that these two things are going to exist in parallel,
Josh:
right? It's like as Chachi Petit gets better, it is able to help with the tape
Josh:
out and the design of this chip.
Josh:
As the chip gets better, it's able to process tokens more efficiently and better.
Josh:
And it's this like kind of cycle that this flywheel that they're starting.
Josh:
And I think this is step one. I mean, it's very exciting to see them getting in the game.
Ejaaz:
I think the entire story for this has got nothing to do with the chip and more
Ejaaz:
so that the models were used to design the chip. So like the way I see it is,
Ejaaz:
The most scarce resource that every single AI lab that's fighting out for the
Ejaaz:
number one position has right now is compute.
Ejaaz:
And where you apply that compute defines whether you're going to win the race or not.
Ejaaz:
Now, for the last nine months, or for the last year, at least,
Ejaaz:
Anthropic has made it very clear that it's coding.
Ejaaz:
So use the compute to train a better model that's better at coding.
Ejaaz:
If you own the best coding model, it can build pretty much the entire software stack.
Ejaaz:
Now, emphasis on the software stack.
Ejaaz:
What good is AGI or an AGI-like model if it runs on sub-optimal hardware?
Ejaaz:
So seeing OpenAI make this move, realizing that they've used all their compute
Ejaaz:
to train a model that can then build or design better hardware,
Ejaaz:
that then potentially makes sure that they spend less money
Ejaaz:
to run the same level of intelligence, means that they have more compute in
Ejaaz:
the future to build whatever model that they want, and it runs on optimal uh
Ejaaz:
inference or whatever hardware stack that they build so this to me is like uh
Ejaaz:
that kind of like mind-blowing moment that i had
Ejaaz:
Uh whatever a year ago when called code went live i was like oh my god
Ejaaz:
coding is the future opening is kind of like strategically made a very cool
Ejaaz:
decision here where they're like
Ejaaz:
no we want to own the hardware as well and we don't want to rely on nvidia and
Ejaaz:
we're going to partner up with broadcom we're going to partner up with mediatek
Ejaaz:
which by the way like these are companies broadcom is publicly traded so this
Ejaaz:
is these are companies that like
Ejaaz:
could potentially rival NVIDIA in the future to build their own chip.
Ejaaz:
And the fact that they're releasing it,
Ejaaz:
by the end of this year, is just a sign of the times that OpenAI,
Ejaaz:
that doesn't have any scaling hardware experience, has been able to accelerate
Ejaaz:
this using their own model. So it's the first real proof that you can do this,
Ejaaz:
not just on the software scale, but on the hardware scale.
Josh:
It's just very cool. Yeah. You know what other chip Broadcom makes?
Josh:
Google's TPUs. It's the same company that makes the TPUs that are actively working today.
Josh:
And Broadcom's CEO actually said these are on par with the NVIDIA Blackwell chips.
Josh:
This is really exciting. I mean, it's cool to see open ai move into more hardware
Josh:
feels like they're becoming this well-rounded entity they have the consumer
Josh:
hardware angle that they're working on with the love from team and johnny ive
Josh:
they have this enterprise hardware that they're using for their vertically integrated
Josh:
stack of like actually generating tokens and then they have this large software
Josh:
pillar that exists both in enterprise and consumer and it's like all right open
Josh:
ai you could like start to see them planting the seeds for these pillars you remember.
Ejaaz:
What our number one critic was for the consumer device right josh we were like,
Ejaaz:
we're excited about this, but like, will they be able to scale this at all?
Ejaaz:
And they've been able to do this for like the hardest technical chip architecture
Ejaaz:
ever. It's just, it's impressive,
Josh:
Man. I'm very excited about it. We also have other news that I must ask you
Josh:
about, EJ, as our resident investing consultant in the world of AI and memory.
Josh:
Because I remember talking about Micron, like, I don't know,
Josh:
maybe a couple months ago, six months ago, maybe 12 months ago.
Josh:
And it was like a small fraction of what it is today. It seems like these memory
Josh:
stocks continue to just go up.
Josh:
Every day, I'm looking at them plus 15%, plus 15% with no end in sight.
Josh:
And Micron just reported earnings and they continue that trend.
Josh:
I think they're up 20% this morning as we're recording this.
Josh:
Yeah, that's unbelievable. 17.5%.
Ejaaz:
What's 2.5%?
Josh:
Like, tell me, Micron, can you just actually zoom out for a little bit on six
Josh:
months maybe? Just so we could see a little bit of the trajectory.
Josh:
Yeah. Like that's crazy. A 10X in six months.
Ejaaz:
Yes, exactly. Yeah, exactly. 10X in six months.
Josh:
Oh, wait, no, sorry. That's a 3X in six months. $1,000 of gain.
Josh:
That's probably the correct.
Ejaaz:
Either way, they're up a lot. So the question then becomes, what's going on
Ejaaz:
with Micron? What's changed? Has something novel broken through in the AI memory
Ejaaz:
trade? We've spoken about this a lot on the show before.
Ejaaz:
It goes something like this. If you have an AI chip, if you're using AI models,
Ejaaz:
if you want it to understand you, if you want it to remember stuff about you.
Ejaaz:
Guess what? You need memory for it to store all the information about you.
Ejaaz:
Now, there's two ways to store it.
Ejaaz:
You can have memory on the chip itself, or you can have memory that's live in
Ejaaz:
the session that you basically need a lot of memory.
Ejaaz:
Micron is one of the key suppliers. They're actually number three,
Ejaaz:
believe it or not, but they're the number one American supplier of memory chips.
Ejaaz:
And they had their earnings report go live after market trading hours yesterday.
Ejaaz:
And I'm not kidding. They blew it out of the water.
Ejaaz:
$41 billion in quarterly revenue. For context, that is around 15% more revenue
Ejaaz:
than NVIDIA, the largest, most valuable company in the world,
Ejaaz:
made this time last year.
Ejaaz:
Their projected revenue for the next quarter is going to be around $55 billion,
Ejaaz:
making $38 billion profit off of that, which is, again, record-beating,
Ejaaz:
way more than NVIDIA made this time last year.
Ejaaz:
To provide context, they make one component for the entire GPU or chip architecture.
Ejaaz:
So the reason why the stock is rallying is not just because it beat its earnings, believe it or not.
Ejaaz:
It's because it disproved a very important theory that a lot of bears have on
Ejaaz:
the AI memory trade, which is the memory trade has topped. There's too many people in it.
Ejaaz:
This week, literally two days ago, the Korean Stock Exchange had to shut down
Ejaaz:
because too many people were over-levered. they were borrowing money and buying
Ejaaz:
into this stock and buying into like Korean memory stocks, SK Hynix and Samsung.
Ejaaz:
And basically, they said like, this is too much. The trade is overcrowded.
Ejaaz:
What the earnings report from Micron revealed yesterday is that the demand hasn't even started yet.
Ejaaz:
This week, they signed a very important partnership with, you might have heard
Ejaaz:
of this company, Anthropic.
Ejaaz:
They signed a pretty huge deal with Anthropic, basically saying that they're
Ejaaz:
going to be the prime memory provider for all Anthropics GPU co-partnerships going forward.
Ejaaz:
And maybe if they build their own ASIC in the same way that OpenAI just released
Ejaaz:
or announced Jalapeno, they will also use Micron.
Ejaaz:
So the idea here is memory demand is going up way, way, way more exponentially
Ejaaz:
than memory optimization can happen in models. So let's say you create a new
Ejaaz:
model that demands less memory.
Ejaaz:
It doesn't matter because the demand for more people using more agents etc that
Ejaaz:
require even more memory is there and micron is going to be the primary provider
Ejaaz:
of that that's why the stock is up almost 20 this morning it would disprove in the best
Josh:
In the case that like the even the ai train stops there are other use cases
Josh:
for memory it's like everything is requiring memory and that next thing is that
Josh:
physical ai the robotic demand it's like all the the physical infrastructure
Josh:
that's going to be built with ai
Josh:
all of these things need memory all of the autonomous robo taxis that are on
Josh:
the road need memory all of the future optimists and humanoid robots that are going to be deployed.
Josh:
They all need memory. Everything needs a tremendous amount of memory to process.
Ejaaz:
Josh, you have a Tesla, right?
Josh:
Yes, I do.
Ejaaz:
Guess how much more memory your Tesla requires than the average car that has a smart system.
Josh:
Oh, that's a great question. I have no idea. Do you know the number?
Ejaaz:
Five to eight X, depending on the model. And guess what? The later models need
Ejaaz:
more memory. So the trend basically is as these autonomous vehicles go live
Ejaaz:
and improve version over version, you need way, way more memory.
Ejaaz:
There's only three suppliers. Micron is number three. You do the math.
Josh:
That's unbelievable. What a great opportunity for Micron. And they're also doing
Josh:
stuff outside of just publishing great earnings. They're signing deals with
Josh:
pretty large companies. The most recent one being Anthropic,
Josh:
you might have heard of them.
Josh:
It sounds like they are now officially working together. What is the capacity
Josh:
of this deal? What does the deal actually consist of? Do you know? Yeah.
Ejaaz:
So basically, Anthropic has a ton of investments in data centers in general,
Ejaaz:
and a lot of it is to do with GPUs.
Ejaaz:
But in order to kind of make sure these GPUs work well together and
Ejaaz:
in the future where Anthropic wants to create their own inference chip in the
Ejaaz:
same way that OpenAIR's created Jalapeno, they need to design the perfect memory
Ejaaz:
architecture and the custom racks to be able to suit the memory implementation
Ejaaz:
into all these different chips.
Ejaaz:
What better way to do that than not hiring a staff team on your own,
Ejaaz:
but partnering up with the number one memory or the number three memory company,
Ejaaz:
but the number one memory company in the US that is like completely beating earnings.
Ejaaz:
So now what Micron is going to do is they're going to form a team,
Ejaaz:
they're going to place it in Anthropic, and they're going to work very closely
Ejaaz:
with the Anthropic team on any chip architectures that they build in the future.
Ejaaz:
And you might be wondering, well, isn't this a conflict of interest?
Ejaaz:
Well, actually, Micron put in a pretty large check into Anthropic's recent Series H round, I believe.
Ejaaz:
So they're also part owners of Anthropic. So it's all kind of like this symbiotic
Ejaaz:
kind of like thing that they're in right now.
Josh:
Well, there's also another fun news update that we have to share because there
Josh:
is a Mythos class model that is coming. And it's not from where you would expect.
Josh:
It's from Meta, who claims they are on the way to their Mythos class model.
Josh:
This sounds amazing. This is very exciting on paper.
Josh:
The problem is the timeline of the Mythos class model.
Josh:
It seems like there is no timeline at all to what it's going to be.
Josh:
Is it nine months? It's nine months.
Josh:
Okay, so in the time it takes to birth a human child, Meta will somehow figure
Josh:
out how to create a Mythos class model.
Josh:
And it begs the question, it's like, well, if you're getting to Mythos in nine
Josh:
months from now, then what is the future Mythos class model going to look like in nine months?
Josh:
And that seems like a bit of a problem for them. I mean, that essentially puts
Josh:
them behind the open source labs, right? Because the open source labs are six months behind.
Ejaaz:
It's going to look worse than an open source model. So the irony is you have meta that went from
Ejaaz:
building and releasing models in an open source fashion to then becoming closed
Ejaaz:
source because they had this super special model that they were training only
Ejaaz:
to get outcompeted by all the Chinese AI labs that have a better open source model.
Ejaaz:
Definitely in nine months time this is crazy it's
Josh:
Crazy time yeah so i mean is meta cooked i don't know we do have some good news
Josh:
at least on the meta front in the sense that they they revealed some glasses
Josh:
they have some glasses now um which i thought were actually great it's.
Ejaaz:
Already low josh come on
Josh:
So here on the right we have evan spiegel's glasses from snapchat that were released earlier,
Josh:
this week last week i think and uh they were horrendous they were nothing short of just an abomination,
Josh:
zuck tried his own version of this which we know meta has been working on these
Josh:
smart glasses and you know what
Josh:
i think it's a home run for what this is i think they did a great job they partnered
Josh:
up with kylie jenner who we're seeing on screen to do the i guess promotion
Josh:
to be the face of it she has a voice when you talk to the ai and what i like about these,
Josh:
is the lack of ambition within them and i think they have kind of grounded themselves
Josh:
in reality here where a lot of people are trying to do the heads-up display
Josh:
like the virtual display that requires a lot more technology baked into it
Josh:
these glasses they look reasonable they don't look any different than normal
Josh:
glasses which is great they have a microphone built in they have the speakers
Josh:
built in and they have two cameras on the sides and it's enough to be that,
Josh:
like intermediary interface with ai that isn't quite your phone,
Josh:
but it still exists on your face and you could still engage with it so i think
Josh:
like from a product standpoint this is the most exciting offering to date as
Josh:
it relates to smart glasses how useful are they not super useful maybe they're
Josh:
just a fun gimmick now but I thought they did a really nice job.
Ejaaz:
You know what? I would buy this product if Apple released it because,
Ejaaz:
okay, if you're not going to give me a visual display on my lens,
Ejaaz:
if it's just going to be basically speakers and a microphone,
Ejaaz:
it should feed into some sort of device.
Ejaaz:
I'm not pulling up the Meta app on my iPhone. Like that, ew.
Ejaaz:
Like I will just use whatever Apple creates in the future.
Ejaaz:
Now, is it sleeker and is it cheaper than their Ray-Ban display,
Ejaaz:
which was ironically their flagship announcement from their hardware conference?
Ejaaz:
Less than probably nine months ago last year um like yeah cool that's better
Ejaaz:
um but is it actually going to be practical and useful to me
Ejaaz:
uh i'm not entirely convinced by it but is it better than snaps glasses and
Ejaaz:
will i more likely wear it yes um i heard a hilarious rumor that
Ejaaz:
uh can leon's is happening right now it's like a big kind of advertising influencer
Ejaaz:
type thing in france and apparently evan spiegel is over there trying to convince
Ejaaz:
robert downey jr to become one of his ambassadors for Snap Specs.
Ejaaz:
He's offered him $100 million.
Ejaaz:
And the fact that there hasn't been a confirmed headline out there just tells
Ejaaz:
you how bad some of the Snap Gosses is. So the bar is low.
Ejaaz:
But one of my major critiques of Zuck in the past for his hardware specifically
Ejaaz:
is he has not got the supply chain infrastructure to build it himself.
Ejaaz:
And he's proven me wrong. So, you know, I raise my hands.
Josh:
I hope they can pull it off. I really do. There's another unlikely combination
Josh:
of Ergus collaboration, we could call it, that is a little bit even more out
Josh:
of left field and Kyla Jenner and Meta.
Josh:
And that is A24 and Google.
Josh:
And yes, A24, the film production agency and Google, the technology company,
Josh:
they have announced a partnership to now work together.
Josh:
And it seems like they're going to work together on using these AI tools to
Josh:
further develop the storytelling ability of A24.
Josh:
And when I first heard the news, I was like, that doesn't really make sense.
Josh:
What does Google AI and Google DeepMind have to do with A24?
Josh:
And then I started thinking through like okay well they have the world models
Josh:
we know that they are excellent at world models we know that they have
Josh:
their vo class models the video generation models they have the music generation
Josh:
models that generate pretty good songs and generate lyrics they have nano banana
Josh:
which generates the visual images
Josh:
and then i'm like oh okay well actually yeah like all of the core pillars of storytelling
Josh:
can be made by these google deep mind models and they're actually like all pretty
Josh:
much sitting along the frontier in their respective capabilities so i think
Josh:
this is That's a pretty exciting news update that 824,
Josh:
people that make a lot of the movies that I think we all enjoy,
Josh:
they are now getting DeepMind models at their disposal. And I think that's, that seems pretty cool.
Ejaaz:
It's important to point out that this investment deal doesn't mean that Google
Ejaaz:
gets access to all the video content or copyright IP that A24 has.
Ejaaz:
In fact, there's a strict line that's been drawn that you can't train any future
Ejaaz:
Google VO or video models on A24 content.
Ejaaz:
That's not the goal of this deal. The goal of this deal is we want to be thoughtful
Ejaaz:
in Hollywood about not replacing human producers and directors, etc.
Ejaaz:
How do we build tools that amplify the work and taste that they have,
Ejaaz:
the vision, the ideas that they have?
Ejaaz:
That's the whole vision behind the tweet that you're seeing from Scott Belsky,
Ejaaz:
who is a partner and I think founder of A24 Labs, which is their kind of like research division.
Ejaaz:
And they decided that Google was the best partner to work with.
Ejaaz:
Google has the capital, they have all the data to kind of like feed into like
Ejaaz:
what the best tool might look like.
Ejaaz:
And they have the time, they have the patience, right?
Ejaaz:
You know, they have YouTube, they have a wealth of resources that they can pull
Ejaaz:
from that might help and aid A24.
Ejaaz:
Now, A24 has a pretty impressive roster of investors at this point,
Ejaaz:
Josh, they have Thrive Capital on their cap table.
Ejaaz:
And now they have Google, they're valued after this recent investment from google
Ejaaz:
at around 3.4 billion dollars making them probably one of the most valuable
Ejaaz:
producing uh hollywood studios there is out there
Josh:
Pretty crazy speaking of hollywood studios did you know that there is a film
Josh:
that was made already and completed about sam altman he has a biopic named
Josh:
artificial and i had no idea like today i learned that there has not only been
Josh:
a movie about him but it's already been made filmed produced edited and it is ready to be,
Josh:
is that the company that made it is not quite ready to reveal it to the world
Josh:
because I assume it does not show Sam under the greatest light, perhaps.
Josh:
We saw this happen once before with Zuck and the Social Network movie.
Josh:
I assume this is kind of generally along those lines. And it appears as if they've hit a roadblock.
Josh:
Why is there a roadblock, Ejaz? Why is this deal getting stopped?
Josh:
Why can I not watch this movie?
Ejaaz:
Well, that little company that produced this film goes by the name of Amazon.
Ejaaz:
They spent hundreds of millions. Ah, yeah, that one.
Ejaaz:
They spent hundreds of millions of dollars. You know, you might have heard of
Ejaaz:
Amazon Prime. They distribute to, you know, millions and millions of people all over the world.
Ejaaz:
So this was a big investment for them. They hired Andrew Garfield.
Ejaaz:
They put in a ton of money to make this film.
Ejaaz:
And then they signed a $50 billion enterprise relationship, cloud computing
Ejaaz:
specifically with OpenAI, to serve their models through Petrock.
Ejaaz:
And so they were thinking, hmm, if we release this movie that shows Sam Altman
Ejaaz:
in a bad light, that might damage our enterprise relationship.
Ejaaz:
So what we're going to do is we're going to cancel the release of the show,
Ejaaz:
and we are going to start shopping it out to other name labels,
Ejaaz:
other producers, one of which was A24. And they said, you know what?
Ejaaz:
We can't do this because Thrive's on our cap table and Thrive is one of the
Ejaaz:
biggest investors in open air.
Ejaaz:
So it's interesting to see the politics over here. Like these AI labs are getting
Ejaaz:
involved in a very meaningful way with these Hollywood producers and it restricts
Ejaaz:
what they can actually make.
Josh:
Okay, and to round out this week, there is a new feature from the Anthropic team named Claude Tag.
Josh:
Now, Claw Tag is a brand new way of working with the AI in a way that I think
Josh:
surprises a lot of people. We have this traditional LLM infrastructure,
Josh:
an interface that you can work with it.
Josh:
We have this claw, similar to like an open claw operating system.
Josh:
And this is now a new third way of engaging with AI, where it's built right
Josh:
into the place that you do your work, into Slack channels.
Josh:
And what's funny about this is it creates this multiplayer way of engaging with
Josh:
the AI and actually writing code and accomplishing tasks as a coherent workforce.
Josh:
A cool thing that I picked up from the launch video was that 65% of all of the
Josh:
code that Claude teams are producing is actually made through this new tool
Josh:
that was previously internal and is now made public named Claude Tag.
Josh:
So this is something that I think a lot of people who are in the workforce are
Josh:
going to be excited to try.
Josh:
It's a very novel way of kind of multiplayer tag teaming tasks and goals that
Josh:
are required through just general day-to-day work in Claude.
Josh:
And I think it's really fun.
Josh:
It's like you tag in Claude as if I were to tag in you, Ejaz.
Josh:
Like, hey, we need to get this agenda done for the show today.
Josh:
You just tag in Claude instead. And it has all the context. It knows everything
Josh:
from within the internal company database and is able to actually go off and
Josh:
complete tasks. It's pretty cool.
Ejaaz:
Yeah, just to be clear, this isn't a Slack update. This is a new way to work
Ejaaz:
with Claude code and Claude itself.
Ejaaz:
What I like most about it is it treats Claude like an actual person.
Ejaaz:
We go from this LLM chatbot to now a person that you can trust to independently do work.
Ejaaz:
That stat that you just quoted, the 65%, this is real product people with ideas
Ejaaz:
of things that they want to build, tagging an LLM, and the LLM gets what they want to build.
Ejaaz:
And they're like, okay, I'm going to go away and build this POV.
Ejaaz:
And I'll bring you back the mock up, I'll bring you back the kind of functioning model.
Ejaaz:
And you let me know if you like this, and then I'll go away and do it again.
Ejaaz:
So completely hands off, like most of the software engineers that are getting
Ejaaz:
paid hundreds of thousands of dollars, now don't actually handwrite code anymore.
Ejaaz:
It's Just very impressive. And I look forward to seeing the best ways to kind
Ejaaz:
of like use a specific tool. But that brings us to the end of the docket today.
Ejaaz:
We have one final announcement, which is equally as important as every other
Ejaaz:
thing that we're talking about on today's episode, which is we have a newsletter.
Ejaaz:
It goes out to 100,000 of you. And Josh just wrote a banger of an essay that's
Ejaaz:
going to go out. And we also include the five weekly highlights,
Ejaaz:
the top news items that you need to hear about every single week that goes out on Friday.
Ejaaz:
There's also one other final thing, which is
Ejaaz:
Josh, myself, and producer Luke are in the market for a sponsor.
Ejaaz:
So far, we've been keeping the lights on ourselves, funding it ourselves.
Ejaaz:
And we've been trying to figure out another way to kind of like work with brands
Ejaaz:
and partners that can, you know, kind of have a symbiotic relationship with
Ejaaz:
us and keep the lights on and produce the content that we have every single week, four times a week.
Ejaaz:
So if you are out there and you listen to this and you think you can help us,
Ejaaz:
or if you know of anyone that might be able to help us, please reach out on
Ejaaz:
our emails or via X. We'd love to hear from you.
Josh:
Yeah feel free to reach out to us on x we'll leave an email linked in the description
Josh:
that you can find leave a comment we can reach out to you whatever it may be
Josh:
um but we are very much in the market and very much appreciate your support
Josh:
if you have made it all the way through to the end of this video congratulations
Josh:
you are now fully caught up thank you uh one last update i just want to shout
Josh:
out the valor atomics guys real quick isaiah taylor he was on the show he was
Josh:
an early guest the show very bullish on them just earlier today or yesterday
Josh:
they actually got their nuclear reactor up and running for 24 hours straight and it works
Josh:
the damn thing works so Congratulations to them. That's crazy.
Josh:
We were early on this guy. If you were an early day one Limitless supporter,
Josh:
you knew all about this company over a year ago, probably. And now they're at
Josh:
the frontier of energy creation. So it's very exciting. It's cool to hear.
Josh:
Thank you all so much for watching. As always, if you enjoyed,
Josh:
share it with your friends, give us a five-star rating, all the good things.
Josh:
And we'll see you guys next week. Thank you so much. See you guys.
Ejaaz:
Bye.