David Chen
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked thisI didn't walk into a16z speedrun with a moonshot. I walked out with one. Orbital - Data Centers in Space is building AI data centers in space. This is one of the most important infrastructure bets of this generation: compute is hitting physical walls on Earth that are solvable in space. Launch costs are collapsing, solar is free, space is an infinite heatsink. Before Orbital, I founded Spin to build and deploy physical infrastructure at speed - 250,000 vehicles across 100+ cities, garage to $100M+ in revenue, 1,800 employees, acquired by Ford. I recruited the engineering team, led hardware design, stood up manufacturing, and navigated city-by-city regulation at a pace most people told me was impossible. After I left, I kept coming back to the same question: what's the next physical infrastructure problem this big, this inevitable, this early? I didn't have the answer when I applied to speedrun. a16z speedrun backed me anyway - a founder chasing the next problem. Deep gratitude to Andrew Chen, Andrew Lee, Jonathan Lai, Lester Chen, Joshua Lu, Macy Mills, Troy Kirwin, Lejla Johnsen, Jordan Carver, Jordan Mazer, Marcus Segal, Tom Hammer, Samira Behrouzan, and Emlyn Thompson for being the earliest believers. And to the broader Andreessen Horowitz network - media reach, advisor bench, and peer group that unblocks problems in hours, not months. A slice of that reach this week - thanks to Forbes, The Washington Post, The Register Fortune The Wall Street Journal, Axios, and StrictlyVC for telling the story. If you're a founder looking for your version of this moment: the next speedrun cohort (SR007) starts in July, applications open this week.
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked this🏅 This past week, I received the Stanford University Governor's Award in recognition for decades of exemplary volunteer service to the university. It was especially meaningful as the nomination came from Andrea Apodaca at the Stanford University Graduate School of Education and Dean Dan Schwartz who presented the award At my core, I am an educator. Always have been. It's not just what I do. It's who I am. And it goes back further than Stanford. 🌱 As a young immigrant, my first grade teacher in Michigan went out of her way not only to help me learn English and succeed academically, but also gave me a sense of belonging by inviting me to teach my classmates Chinese characters and even cook ramen in front of the classroom for show and tell. (Back then, ramen wasn't sold in stores yet) So even though I came to Stanford for chemical engineering, what I really wanted was to teach. 🎓 I stayed, got my masters to teach high school math and chemistry through the Stanford Teacher Education Program (STEP) Program, which opened up more doors to support K-12 systemic change through the Stanford Educational Leadership Institute, at Google, and with Edtech founders. Staying connected with Stanford meant more than membership to the Stanford Alumni Association. There were many opportunities to volunteer and contribute to a vibrant community. SAPAAC. FLAN. GSE. School of Education. The O'Donohue Family Stanford Educational Farm. Beyond the Farm. Stanford BEAM. And so many more. 🙏 Each community taught me something. Each one gave back more than I ever put in. Thank you to everyone who has volunteered alongside me over the years. This one is for all of us. The weekend concluded with the Gold Spike Dinner, where Ruth Porat, President and CIO of Alphabet/Google and Ron Spogli were honored. Being in that room was a reminder of what's possible when you commit to something bigger than yourself. ✨ The best part was when my mom who made great sacrifies to send two daughters to Stanford, got to meet President Jon Levin. (Thank you for introducing us Henry J. Brandon, III! And if my Dad were still here, I know he would be just as proud. Congratulations to my fellow Governor's Award recipients: James Barton, Dixon R. Doll, Natalie Fair, Stefanie Huie, Vinita Kailasanath, Marc Mitchell, Leila Ettefagh Nami, Gabriela Franco Parcella, Eli Reinhard, Kit Rodgers, Jeff Small, Carole Solomon, Delia Casillas Tamayo, and Naomi Waltman. 🌟 And congratulations to the Stanford Medal honorees: Melissa Fetter, Srinija Srinivasan, and Jorge Tapias. Thanks NaSun Cho, Denise Peck, Bill Chu, Marly Solebello, Ivy Chiu, Aaron Hallmark, Tom Byers, Jennifer Telschow, Marc Thompson for your support. Marcus Aurelius wrote, "𝑳𝒆𝒕 𝒚𝒐𝒖𝒓 𝒐𝒏𝒆 𝒅𝒆𝒍𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒓𝒆𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒔𝒉𝒎𝒆𝒏𝒕 𝒃𝒆 𝒕𝒐 𝒑𝒂𝒔𝒔 𝒇𝒓𝒐𝒎 𝒐𝒏𝒆 𝒔𝒆𝒓𝒗𝒊𝒄𝒆 𝒕𝒐 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒄𝒐𝒎𝒎𝒖𝒏𝒊𝒕𝒚 𝒕𝒐 𝒂𝒏𝒐𝒕𝒉𝒆𝒓." 👇 What is your one delight? And who sacrificed for you to get where you are today?
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked thisYesterday, Elementum AI signed new deals to replace ServiceNow and Veeva and received a new commit to replace Ariba. The signals from the field are clear: 1) G2000 CIOs want to replace legacy SaaS with AI-first alternatives (even if they’re not saying it out loud) 2) No CIO wants their data and business logic locked into a single application/model/ecosystem 3) Speed kills; quick wins on initial use cases earn the right for transformational change All of these are big factors why Elementum’s Open Orchestration Platform is gaining so much traction: - Enterprise-grade workflows driven by people, rules, and agents - Customers retain their data and their business logic, always - No mixed incentives to maximize tokens, credits, or seats - 20 initial use cases that create the path to a full SaaS replacement - Day 1 go-lives (the work is done during the discovery cycle) Congratulations to the Elementum teams, who’ve delivered the results our customers need to go all-in. Thank you to our partners at Snowflake, Deloitte, and USEReady for opening doors and bringing their expertise to the table. The CIOs making these calls aren't just buying software. They're building coalitions and making statements. We're honored to be part of their journeys. If you're a true innovator and builder with deep expertise in ServiceNow, Salesforce, Veeva, Workday, Coupa, or Ariba — reach out. We'd love to talk. #EnterpriseAI #SaaSpocalypse #hiring
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked thisWe’re excited to announce that Ondo has partnered with Franklin Templeton one of the world’s largest asset managers with $1.7T AUM. Together, we’re bringing exposure to Franklin Templeton-managed investment products onchain through Ondo Global Markets. Read the full story in Bloomberg ↓ https://lnkd.in/g6TsdzB6
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David Chen liked thisReplit just raised $400M at a $9B valuation — and IronArc Ventures doubled down with a sizable investment. We first backed Replit because we believed software creation should be accessible to everyone, not just engineers. That thesis is playing out faster than anyone expected. 50M+ users. 85% of the Fortune 500. On track for $1B in run-rate revenue by year-end. And today they launched Agent 4 — 10x faster than its predecessor. But the numbers aren't what excite me most. It's watching a CMO prototype partnership ideas on game day. My kids building their own video games. Employees spinning up internal tools in hours instead of weeks. Thanks to Amjad Masad Alexander Bibic Robert Kohse and the Replit team for pursuing the mission to bring a billion creators online. Every quarter, that vision looks less ambitious and more inevitable. Congrats to the entire Replit team. We're proud to be part of this journey. CC: IronArc Ventures #Replit #AI #VibeCoding #VentureDavid Chen liked thisWe’ve raised $400M at a $9B valuation. Investors include Georgian, G Squared, Prysm, 1789, YC, Coatue, a16z, Craft, and QIA, with strategic investments from Accenture, Databricks, Okta, and Tether. We’re also lucky to have incredible individuals backing us, including Shaq and Jared Leto. This funding will help us scale our ambition and expand beyond coding into AI systems that center human creativity. Replit is now used at 85% of the Fortune 500. We have an opportunity to help shape the future of work. One where AI abstracts away the boring parts and humans shine as creative directors. We’re also investing more globally, particularly in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Innovation can come from anywhere in the world, and we want to help unlock it.
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked thisBig news — Joshua Yuan has joined Opal Security! Josh comes to us from 4+ years at Meta, where he worked on Facebook Messenger. We’re excited to have someone who deeply understands what great product experiences look like at consumer scale. He’s now channeling that into making access reviews something teams actually want to use. Fun fact: Josh is a passionate advocate for public libraries. We love people who believe in making important things more accessible — it’s kind of what we do. Welcome, Josh!
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked this18 years ago, I left Cisco to learn the art and craft of venture capital at an emerging firm called Lightspeed. The years go slowly, and then they go fast. Looking back on my tenure at Lightspeed, it’s humbling and inspiring to see what the team here has achieved and how much we have grown. Now, I’m embarking on a new adventure of my own. I’m excited to start and build a new, early-stage venture firm. I will remain a Venture Partner at Lightspeed, serve on a number of my existing boards and continue to collaborate with my partners here. I’m incredibly grateful to Lightspeed’s Founders - Ravi Mhatre, Barry Eggers, Chris Schaepe and Peter Nieh - for taking a shot on me back when I had black hair. Thank you for the mentorship, for the opportunity to come and do my best work, and for the trust and responsibility you gave me over the years. And thank you to Bejul Somaia for the guidance, partnership and advice. I’m appreciative of my partners and teammates at Lightspeed who over the years have become friends and family. And I’m very thankful to the Founders who I’ve been fortunate to partner with over the past two decades, many from the earliest stages of their company journeys. It’s been a privilege to serve you as a thought partner and to join you on your adventures. I’ve spent the majority of my career serving entrepreneurs. And now I’m excited to be one myself. More to come soon!
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David Chen liked thisDavid Chen liked thisWe need some white hat hackers to unredact all the predator names. #EpsteinFiles
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Harvard University
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Joint program offered by Harvard Business School and Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
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Lakshmi Shankar
Together • 3K followers
Thrilled to announce that Together Fund is investing in Sentra, alongside a16z speedrun! You track results in Jira. Decisions in Notion. Conversations in Slack. But the reasoning, the debates, trade-offs, and context behind why you chose A over B, disappears into what we call "Dark Matter." A decision made in March looks insane by July because no one remembers the constraints that made it smart. I lived this firsthand at Twitter scaling from 800 to 8,000 employees, and at Google while launching AI Overviews to billions at planet scale. The problem isn't process. Process is compensation for something deeper: organizational amnesia. An organization’s "Systems of Record" doesn’t solve this, they encode it. They store what happened, never why. That's why we are investing in Sentra. Sentra is the always-on collective memory that eliminates organizational amnesia by maintaining accurate context for all members and agents, functioning as an operational nervous system. It connects to every channel where work happens, meetings, Slack, email, code commits, docs, calendars, and treats them not as artifacts to search, but as living signals to synthesize. The fleeting and the permanent, unified into a memory that understands. The founding team is built for this: - Jae Gwan Park (CEO): Product-first founder, memory systems research at UofT and MIT - Ashwin Gopinath (CSO): Former MIT professor, created "Reflexion" (NeurIPS 2023), agents that learn from mistakes, 2x founder - Andrey Starenky (CTO): Early Vapi engineer, ex-IBM, built to process enterprise-scale data firehose Together is an operator-led fund. We invest in problems we've lived. This is one of them. Many congrats Jae, Ashwin and Andrey, we are so excited to partner with you! Read the full thesis: https://lnkd.in/gixj9cE4 Book a demo: https://www.sentra.app/ #OrganizationalMemory #AI #Sentra #TogetherFund #a16z #ContextGraphs
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Jordan Steiner, CFA
Developer Capital • 3K followers
"Build the event you wish existed" That's what we at Monadical did last week at #NYTW. We wanted an AI Engineers discussion for Engineers. There's always a lot of events out there for VCs to network, or for startups to learn about G2M, but very little on lessons learned from actual engineers in the field. So that's the event we hosted. Big thank yous to our awesome panel, Roy Pereira, Ben Cohen and Corey J. Gallon. Here's the key takeaways and the AI tools we're using. 🚀 All three panelists independently called AI Agents the most transformative LLM application they’ve used. They specifically called out Claude 3.5 Sonnet for its accuracy and reliability. 🪨 We dug into how LLMs are “jagged”, not general. They can be shockingly good at some tasks and completely fail at others. Everyone agreed: good evaluations are critical (and hard.) 🧪 Corey noted how public benchmarks and reality are two different things. Most public evals are saturated or gamed. ♊ Ben emphasized that AI projects are actually two projects: building the tool and building the evaluation process. 🧱 We explored how falling dev costs may impact startup defensibility and labor demand. Roy shared that founders are already shifting strategies in response. ⚒️ In a world of daily AI launches, the panel discussed how they decide what’s worth attention, and what’s just noise. They called out tools like Goose, Aider, Claude Code, and Monadical’s own Cubbi, which helps run agentic workflows safely in dev environments. (links in the comments). CTA: What would you want to hear in an AI Applied Engineering talk you attended?
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Matt Rappaport
Future Frontier Capital • 9K followers
Don't Build a Better Wheat Farm" - Why Defensibility Stakes Are Higher in Deep Tech Just published a new piece on my "Ignore the Confusion" blog, building on thoughtful insights from Eric Ver Ploeg at Tunitas Ventures about startup defensibility. Eric's core thesis: Too many startups pitch like wheat farmers - "huge TAM, slow incumbents, growing market, domain expertise" - but fail to think through long-term defensibility until it's too late. From a deep tech perspective, the stakes are even higher: ** Unlike software, deep tech founders must commit to defensibility strategies from day one - their funding depends on it ** Patent vs. trade secret decisions are often difficult to reverse and shape your entire competitive strategy ** Even "picks and shovels" providers (the tools that make industries more efficient) become commodities without proper moats The key insight that resonates: Defensibility can't be retrofitted. Whether you're building software or deep tech, your moat must be architected into the business model from the start. Thanks to Eric Ver Ploeg for sharing these insights on startup strategy and letting me build on his framework from a deep tech lens. Read the full post: https://lnkd.in/dEj_iF-Q #DeepTech #StartupStrategy #Defensibility #VentureCapital #Innovation
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Peter OBrien
Digital Finance HQ • 4K followers
Every hire, product feature, and GTM experiment is a capital allocation decision, most teams just don’t call it that. I’m kicking off a 3-part series on capital allocation for founders, operators, and finance leaders with a simple question: ➡️ Will the next $1 you deploy become worth more than $1? Series overview Part 1: defines the core concept + the math Part 2: where capital goes + how to measure whether it’s working Part 3: AIMS framework for communicating allocation decisions to management teams and your board Part 1 (attached here) lays the practical foundation: 🔹 The $1 invested test and ROIIC vs. hurdle rates (scoreboard vs. decision lens) 🔹 A lightweight “investment brief” to evaluate bets (GROW / BUILD / BUY) 🔹 The small metric toolkit that translates finance into operating decisions (NPV / payback / ROIIC / incremental margin) 🔹 Early-stage proxies when DCF inputs are unknowable (burn multiple + revenue quality) 🔹 Operator “vital signs” to spot drift early (profit engine, leverage, cash conversion, optics) Series Roadmap ✔️ This series (Parts 1–3): breadth-first. shared, lightweight framework to define value creation, choose decision-grade metrics, and communicate tradeoffs clearly ✔️ Next series: depth-first. momentum drivers + operational decisions that need near real-time measurement to spot drift early and course-correct fast Read Part 1 here and Part 2 and 3 on substack. Next Series will be out next week. 💰 What’s one bet you’re funding right now, and how will you prove it’s working?
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Erin Price-Wright
Andreessen Horowitz • 5K followers
Honored and excited to partner with Drew Baglino and the incredible team at Heron Power as they re-imagine the electric grid for the modern world. Power in America is not zero sum. We deserve access to cheap and abundant electricity and we should win the AI race. And we must build the capacity to manufacture critical technology here at home. When faced with existential challenges, we deploy technology against them. And we win.
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James Green
CRV • 10K followers
CRV Security: Request for Startups I never know if this actually works for our friends over at YC but figured we'd try. Here's what we want to fund in 2026! 1. Golden Artifacts: Think Chainguard but more broad. Artifact attestation exists for open source. Almost nothing exists for internal software — especially the vibe-coded tooling now running in production. We want the company building cryptographic proof of secure software delivered from secure artifacts: who built it, how, and whether it was reviewed. If more things are being yeeted into the world via Claude Code (myself included), this feels like an issue. 2. MCP & Agentic Security: Agents are getting real credentials and taking real actions. The security posture of most orgs around this is basically zero. That changes fast. You'd never give an employee hardcoded API keys or write access to your email without supervision/trust. Why give it to agents? 3. AI Governance: Boards are asking CISOs to account for AI risk. CISOs have no good answer other than "Palo has a module" 4. Next-Gen Endpoint: CrowdStrike was built for a world of static binaries and human operators. AI workloads, cloud-native infra, and AI-assisted attackers need a new architecture. The category is ready to be reinvented. 5. Networking in the AI Era: Zero trust was designed for humans. What does network security look like when the entity requesting access is an agent? Nobody's really solved this. 6. Email Security + Next-Gen Phishing: LLMs have made spear phishing infinitely scalable. I've never truly understood why Abnormal and KnowBe4 aren't one company. Maybe this time it's different. 7. Frontier Security Lab: We'd back a credible, well-staffed lab focused entirely on red-teaming models and setting the evidentiary standard the industry needs as LLM built apps become the norm. 8. Dependency Security: That Actually Remediates Malicious and vulnerable dependencies are a top attack vector. The tooling is mostly noise — scanners that don't close the loop. The winner here ships fixes, not just alerts. 9. Critical Infrastructure Cyber: Data centers, satellites, power grids, undersea cables. The physical backbone of the internet is increasingly exposed and wildly under-defended. We have data centers in space, for God's sake. Surely we need better cyber for critical infrastructure? 10. PAM for the Modern Era Legacy: PAM was built for static roles, human users, on-prem directories. Cyberark was founded in 1999.....Agents, ephemeral workloads, and cloud-native infra have broken all of those assumptions. Is anyone rebuilding this from scratch? If you're building in any of these areas — or something we haven't thought of — reach out. james@crv.com
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Jos White
3K followers
Today Isembard announced a $50m Series A fundraise led by Union Square Ventures, less than a year after Notion Capital led their Seed round. 💥This is a company right at the intersection of AI & supply chain sovereignty & they’re exceeding even our most optimistic expectations. By the end of the year they will have 25 factories across the UK, US, Germany, France & Ukraine. 💥Isembard is rapidly scaling its network of AI-first factories for precision manufacturing at the same time as market demand is accelerating. Macro forces (reshoring, rising defence spend, concentration risk in Asia, and the growth of neo-primes) are structurally increasing demand for fast, local, flexible manufacturing that the current industry is unable to deliver on. 💥The innovation is in the way the company builds and franchises factories as a product with tightly integrated units of machines, software, robotics, & process intelligence that turn design files into certified components with speed & reliability. 💥Their AI software platform, MasonOS, connects all sites into a single operating system, replacing fragmented shops with standardised, high-performance industrial nodes & enabling real-time quoting, predictable delivery, & low defect rates. By owning the full production stack, Isembard delivers premium manufacturing performance with the scalability & flexibility of a software platform. 💥We are at the top of the AI hype cycle and there are understandable concerns about the ROI on the vast sums of money being invested into this new super-cycle. But, the ROI for Isembard is both clear and compelling. They will deliver components 10x faster and at 50% of the cost of current suppliers. They will also build a de-centralised, global network of factories to meet the growing demand for national or regional sovereignty. 💥This is a company with a clear vision to disrupt a massive, fragmented $1.8tn component manufacturing market. Today marks another huge stride towards that vision. And they are only just getting started. We’re thrilled to be on this journey with Alexander Fitzgerald & the team & we’re also excited to welcome Rebecca Kaden & USV into the investor base. Notion Capital Union Square Ventures Alexander Fitzgerald Rebecca Kaden Maximilian Eichler Stephen Millard Britt Mulder
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Aviel Ginzburg
Founders Co-op • 4K followers
While there has never been a more exciting time to be a founder building dev tooling or next-gen infra, it has also never been less investable at seed/pre-seed. I'm either really missing something or a lot of my peers are lost. As someone who has not just written, but also SHIPPED, about 75k lines of code in the past 6 months I can tell you that the evolution of how to build products has changed as much in the past year as it did in the entirety of 2007-2017. The complete rise and fail of frameworks, platforms, methodologies, etc... paved over and forgotten... that is of course except for the 1 company that gets a 1000x return from a wildly overvalued hyper-scaler or drunken growth stage investor obsessed with compounding at scale. Imagine a world where any seed investor in trends like Openstack, Hadoop, PaaS, etc all took a full loss on their investment. That's what we're looking at right now. I personally know of over a dozen well-funded seed-stage companies building in these spaces, with years of runway, scrambling to get acquired for a return of capital + several million personally while they're still relevant. If you're not seeing this unfold in front of you, you either aren't paying attention or you're satisfied playing the lottery instead of investing.
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