Épisodes

  • OpenAI's Wearable Problem
    Dec 2 2025

    OpenAI just made a major move into hardware by acquiring Johnny Ive's AI device company, signaling their ambition to create the next generation of AI wearables. But before you get excited about ditching your smartphone, there's a problem: the AI wearable graveyard is already crowded. From Google Glass to Humane's AI Pin, promising devices have crashed and burned despite massive hype and investment. So what makes OpenAI think they can succeed where others have failed?

    In this episode, we break down why AI wearables face an uphill battle against smartphones. The reality is that your phone isn't just a device—it's your wallet, camera, communication hub, and entertainment center all in one. Any new AI device needs to solve a real problem better than your smartphone does, not just offer a slightly different form factor. Add in serious privacy concerns about always-on recording and voice-activated AI assistants, and you've got a recipe for consumer skepticism.

    We explore what it would actually take for AI wearables to succeed, the lessons from past failures, and whether the technology is truly ready for mainstream adoption. If you're an entrepreneur thinking about entering the AI hardware space—or just wondering if you should pre-order the next hyped gadget—this episode will help you separate innovation from vaporware.

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    25 min
  • Dave's Hot Takes: AI Browsers, Creator Gold Rush, NVidia Robotaxi
    Nov 25 2025

    Can AI-powered browsers actually disrupt the market, or are they just incremental upgrades?

    In this episode of Startup Different, David delivers his unfiltered takes on three major tech developments shaking up the industry.

    First up: AI browsers. While everyone's buzzing about ChatGPT-integrated search, David argues this is sustaining innovation, not the disruption many are predicting—but privacy implications could change everything.

    Next, the creator economy gold rush. With projections showing explosive growth, we break down why nano influencers are becoming marketing's secret weapon and why this isn't just another bubble ready to burst.

    Finally: Nvidia's controversial robotaxi ambitions. When a chip maker decides to compete with its own clients in autonomous vehicles, is it genius strategy or dangerous overreach? We explore what this means for the future of self-driving technology.

    Throughout the episode, we examine how these shifts reflect where consumer attention is moving and why adaptability isn't optional anymore—it's survival.

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    27 min
  • Can California Regulate AI?
    Oct 21 2025

    California just passed the nation's first AI safety and transparency law—a landmark moment that could reshape how we regulate artificial intelligence across the country. But is this groundbreaking legislation enough to protect consumers while keeping innovation alive?

    In this episode, Dave and Chris dive deep into California's pioneering AI bill, exploring everything from pre-release safety testing to whistleblower protections.

    We tackle the tough questions:

    • Are current consumer protections sufficient?
    • Should military AI play by different rules?
    • And can global cooperation on AI regulation actually work?


    Whether you're an AI founder trying to stay ahead of regulations or simply concerned about the ethical implications of this rapidly evolving technology, this conversation will challenge your assumptions about the future of AI governance.

    Join us as we explore what California's bold move means for startups, innovation, and the future of responsible AI development.

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    26 min
  • From Calculators to ChatGPT: Why AI in the Classroom Isn't So Different
    Nov 18 2025

    Remember when calculators were going to "ruin" math education? Now it's ChatGPT's turn.

    When Cal State invested millions to give 460,000 students access to ChatGPT Enterprise, it sparked the exact same debate we've had about every major educational technology for decades.

    In this episode of Startup Different, Chris and David break down Cal State's controversial AI investment and ask the hard questions: Is this a game-changer for higher education, or an expensive marketing move? Should we embrace AI tools in the classroom, or are we shortcutting the critical thinking skills students desperately need?

    Drawing parallels between today's AI anxiety and yesterday's calculator panic, the brothers explore why resistance to educational technology feels so familiar—and why it might be misplaced. They debate whether AI will raise the bar for student work or simply give everyone access to sophisticated cheating tools, discuss the financial realities behind the Cal State deal, and tackle what faculty need to do differently when their students have ChatGPT in their pocket.

    Whether you're an educator grappling with AI policies, a parent wondering what this means for your kids, or an entrepreneur watching a massive market shift unfold, this conversation challenges you to think differently about AI's inevitable role in education.

    The real question isn't whether AI belongs in the classroom—it's how we adapt our teaching to make sure students still learn to think.

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    26 min
  • When Money Goes in Circles: Lessons from Dot-Com for the AI Boom
    Nov 11 2025

    Is the AI boom the next dot-com bust?

    While billions pour into AI startups and tech giants race to dominate the space, troubling patterns are emerging that echo the late 1990s—circular funding loops, sky-high valuations with little revenue, and a dangerous concentration of capital in just a few players.

    In this episode, we dig into the warning signs that separate a genuine technological revolution from a market bubble ready to pop. They examine OpenAI's alarming cash burn rate—massive sales but vanishing profitability—and why inflated AI valuations should concern anyone watching the market. Drawing direct parallels to the dot-com crash, they explore how low interest rates may be fueling reckless investment, why extreme market concentration in AI stocks poses systemic economic risks, and how the interconnectedness of global markets could amplify any downturn.

    But here's where it gets interesting: what if the promise of AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) actually changes everything? The hosts dissect whether this technological leap could justify today's valuations or whether we're seeing the same old hype cycle dressed up in new algorithms.

    Learn the specific red flags savvy investors watch for—from insider selling patterns to predatory financing terms—and why retail investor euphoria is often the canary in the coal mine. Whether you're investing in AI startups, building one, or just trying to separate signal from noise, this conversation reveals what history teaches us about boom-and-bust cycles.

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    27 min
  • Why Amazon's Robot Revolution Might Not Kill Jobs
    Nov 4 2025

    Is Amazon's Automation Revolution Coming for Your Job? The Truth About AI, Robotics, and the Future of Work

    Amazon plans to automate 75% of its operations by 2027—avoiding the need to hire 160,000 workers. But what does this warehouse automation revolution really mean for the workforce, the economy, and startup opportunities?

    In this episode, we dive deep into Amazon's aggressive robotics and AI automation strategy, examining whether job displacement from technology is different this time. With unemployment at 4.3%, history shows that technology creates as many jobs as it destroys—but the speed of AI adoption is unprecedented.

    We explore:

    • Amazon's $750M+ investment in warehouse robotics and automation technology
    • Why job quality matters more than job quantity in the automation debate
    • The competitive pressure forcing companies toward AI and robotics
    • Real opportunities for logistics startups in warehouse automation
    • How blue-collar workers can navigate the future of work


    Whether you're worried about job losses from automation or excited about the next wave of innovation in logistics technology, this conversation breaks down what Amazon's automation plans mean for workers, competitors, and entrepreneurs.

    Plus: Why we still need teleportation technology (seriously?)

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    29 min
  • Top 5 Startup Trends - Dave's Hot Takes
    Oct 28 2025

    Navigating the startup world in 2025 means confronting hard truths and making difficult choices.

    In this episode of Startup Different, hosts tackle five of the most pressing and controversial topics shaping tech startups today—from the rise of grueling work schedules that promise productivity but deliver burnout, to the surprising ways compliance is becoming a founder's secret weapon.

    Whether you're building in AI, eyeing defense tech opportunities, or just trying to keep your startup alive in a brutal funding environment, this conversation cuts through the hype to explore what really matters.


    Key Takeaways:

    AI's commodification dilemma: Why being "AI-powered" is now table stakes rather than a differentiator, and what this means for your competitive strategy

    The 996 work culture debate: How the controversial 72-hour workweek is spreading through Silicon Valley—and why it might destroy more startups than it saves

    Compliance as competitive moat: Why getting SOC 2 or ISO certified early can boost your win rate by 30% and actually help you close enterprise deals faster

    Defense tech's moment: Understanding the record-breaking funding flowing into defense startups and the ethical considerations founders face

    The zombie unicorn crisis: What billion-dollar valuations mean when exits evaporate, and the tough choices founders must make between down rounds and shutdown


    Whether you're a founder wrestling with these decisions, an investor trying to spot the next wave of innovation, or simply fascinated by the evolution of startup culture, this episode delivers candid insights and hot takes you won't hear in the echo chamber.

    The hosts don't shy away from controversy—they dive straight into the tensions between growth and sustainability, innovation and regulation, ambition and ethics.

    Tune in to challenge your assumptions about what it takes to build a successful startup in 2025, and discover why the old playbook might be leading you straight into failure.

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    27 min
  • Should We Kill Canada Post?
    Oct 14 2025

    Canada Post is hemorrhaging money—over $5 billion in losses since 2018, with no end in sight. As postal workers walk off the job for the second time in a year, the Crown corporation is effectively insolvent, surviving only on a $1 billion government bailout.

    But this isn't just a story about a strike. It's about an institution designed for 5.5 billion letters per year now delivering less than half that, while still maintaining the same infrastructure, the same costs, and the same workforce.

    The world has changed. Canada Post hasn't. Can it be fixed, or is it time to let it go?

    Key Takeaways:

    The brutal math: Canada Post has lost over $5 billion since 2018 and is currently losing $10 million every single day, with labour costs of $50-60/hour compared to private competitors at $20-50/hour

    Digital extinction: Letter mail has dropped from 5.5 billion pieces annually to just 2 billion, even as the number of Canadian households has grown—a trend that's irreversible and accelerating

    The rural dilemma: Three-quarters of Canadians already use community mailboxes, but eliminating door-to-door delivery or privatizing threatens to leave remote communities without affordable service

    In this episode, David and Chris cut through the rhetoric from all sides—union demands, government talking points, and business frustrations—to explore what it would actually take to save Canada Post, whether Canadians still need universal postal service in 2025, and what happens to workers and communities if we get this wrong.

    Whether you're a small business owner tired of unreliable delivery, a postal worker fighting for your livelihood, or simply someone wondering why your mail keeps getting more expensive and less reliable, this conversation will challenge your assumptions about what Canada Post should be—and whether it has a future at all.

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    27 min