In this episode, Stewart Alsop III sits down with Stewart Alsop II to unpack Google’s sudden return to the front of the AI race—touching on Gemini 3, Google’s Anti-Gravity IDE, the shifting outlook for OpenAI, Nvidia’s wobble, the strategic importance of TPUs, and the broader geopolitical currents shaping U.S.–China competition. Along the way, Stewart II reflects on leadership inside Google, the economics of AI infrastructure, SpaceX’s role in modern defense, and how new creative tools like Popcorn (
https://popcorn.co) and Cuebric (
https://cuebric.com) signal where digital production is heading.
05:00 Conversation shifts to Google’s resurgence: Gemini 3, Anti-Gravity, Nano Banana, and Google’s new integration advantage.
10:00 Sundar Pichai as a quiet wartime CEO; Google unifying LLM, imaging, and code teams while OpenAI shows strain.
15:00 Deep dive into TPUs vs GPUs, ASICs, matrix multiplication, neural networks, and why Google’s hardware stack may matter post-LLM.
20:00 Nvidia’s volatile moment, bubble signals, and the ecosystem’s dependence on GPU supply.
25:00 U.S.–China dynamics, open-source advantage in China, Meta’s stumble, and whether AI is truly a national-security lever.
30:00 SpaceX, Gwynne Shotwell’s role with government, Starlink’s strategic impact, and how real power sits in hardware.
35:00 Cultural influence, AI content tools, Hollywood production economics, and emerging platforms like Popcorn and Kubrick.
40:00 Long-term bets: Google vs OpenAI by 2030, strategic leadership, Jensen Huang’s unseen worries, and competitive positioning.
Key Insights
- Google’s reversal of fortune emerges as a central theme: after years of seeming sluggish, Google suddenly looks like the strongest strategic player in AI. Gemini 3, Anti-Gravity, and product-wide integration suggest not just a comeback but a consolidation of advantages OpenAI hasn’t matched.
- Sundar Pichai demonstrates wartime leadership, quietly unifying fragmented internal teams—LLM, imaging, coding—into a coordinated push. His earlier track record with Chrome and Android looks, in hindsight, like evidence of a CEO built for high-stakes inflection points.
- OpenAI faces structural and momentum risks as its valuation soars while adoption plateaus and organizational complexity slows integration. The episode frames Sam Altman as highly driven but unsure whether he sees the full strategic map needed to counter Google’s cohesion.
- Hardware becomes a decisive battleground: Google’s TPUs, optimized for neural network operations and real-time learning, may matter more in the post-LLM era. Nvidia’s GPU dominance is powerful but possibly fragile as markets signal bubble anxiety and competitors reposition.
- The geopolitical lens complicates AI narratives. The U.S.–China rivalry is not just about models but about open-source ecosystems, industrial capacity, and control over compute. China’s open-source strength pressures Meta, while U.S. companies remain unevenly aligned with government interests.
- SpaceX illustrates how real power flows through hardware and infrastructure, not just algorithms. With Starlink and Gwynne Shotwell managing government interfaces, Musk’s unique model shows how private actors can reshape national capabilities without being state-defined.
- AI’s cultural and creative impact remains early and messy, with most output still “slop,” but emerging tools like Popcorn and Kubrick hint at a shift in production economics. The hosts argue that value still accrues where humans meet content—technology accelerates creativity but doesn’t replace its center.
What is Stewart Squared?
Stewart Alsop III reviews a broad range of topics with his father Stewart Alsop II, who started his career in the personal computer industry and is still actively involved in investing in startup technology companies. Stewart Alsop III is fascinated by what his father was doing as SAIII was growing up in the Golden Age of Silicon Valley. Topics include:
- How the personal computing revolution led to the internet, which led to the mobile revolution
- Now we are covering the future of the internet and computing
- How AI ties the personal computer, the smartphone and the internet together