Categories
AI crypto technology

My Christmas request is: help invest in a sustainable solution

We are just before Christmas 2023 and this might be the time for a flashy annual review or an exciting look ahead to 2024. But there is something we can't ignore that urgently needs our attention. Last week, the UN climate conference COP28 concluded with a hollow declaration of compromise. The Guardian wrote this balanced summary about it.

The US position as the world's largest oil and gas producer remains unaffected. China will continue to expand coal production and India's coal industry need not fear either. Saudi Arabia tried to remove any reference to fossil fuels, Russia worked behind the scenes to thwart progress and will try again next year when the climate summit is held in Azerbaijan.

Even as an optimist, the lack of specific CO2 reduction targets stops me from cheering over the agreement reached to move away from fossil fuels. Many countries, especially large CO2 emitters, have not agreed to concrete emission reduction targets. That makes the agreement as empty as children's promises in the weeks before Christmas to be less naughty next year.

It is now up to all of us

In December 2015, my colleague Hans Tobé and I attended COP21 in Paris, where the expectation was that for the first time ever serious plans would be forged to combat climate change and, in short, save the world as we know it.

With colleague Hans Tobé on the doorstep of COP21 in Paris, December 2015

At the time, Hans and I had just started Blue City Solutions with a group of like-minded people in the US and France, which aims to support projects that promote CO2 reduction. For various reasons, one of which was the Covid pandemic, this has been more difficult than we had hoped.

Our thinking at the time was that it was important for government and business to act together. In practice, through unwillingness or incompetence, or an unfortunate combination thereof, politicians around the world are proving unable to come up with a coherent policy to combat global warming.

Meanwhile, promising technological innovations have been developed, such as CSS technology that removes CO2 from the atmosphere and dissolves it in water but there have also been breakthroughs in ocean fertilization. Major breakthroughs are being made in the field of energy efficiency, which has convinced me that the fastest way to save this planet is through innovations from within society, with governments only facilitating and not guiding.

iXora, from The Netherlands

Everyone reading this newsletter, including through LinkedIn, Medium or Marketing Report, uses modern technology in their daily lives. Whether it is cloud services like Dropbox, Google Cloud or Microsoft OneDrive, AI applications like ChatGPT or streaming services like Netflix; modern life is made possible by services delivered from data centers, a market that is currently growing nearly 20% per year!

Those very fast-growing data centers are eating up power, especially to cool the modern, latest generation servers. Thus, together we are part of the problem. In my opinion, the solution is not to trade in our smartphones for old Nokias, but rather to take a leap forward and cool data centers in a better way.

That is what iXora does based on 'immersion cooling', cooling by means of liquid instead of air cooling, a patented technology that allows data centers to save over 30% on their energy consumption and also generates residual heat that can be used by houses and offices, for example. In short, iXora's technology leads to significant cost savings and structural reduction of CO2 emissions.

Netherlands most interesting startup

I have previously explained in detail why I am not neutral when it comes to iXora and why I think iXora is Holland's most interesting startup.

Watch the short introductory video of iXora here

In a nutshell: first of all, the data center industry is a global billion-dollar market that is forced to reduce energy consumption, and thus CO2 emissions, as soon as possible. If only because of energy costs!

Second, the unique technology that iXora employs to cool servers in the worldwide standard 19-inch enclosure is well patented, providing a competitive advantage. And third, I have come to know the founders as knowledgeable, energetic and reliable.

Those three factors together are rare to see in a Dutch startup. iXora offers an investment in accordance with the planet-people-profit principle, where technological advances enable a sustainable world in a profitable way. That approach appeals to me.

I also expect a lot from the R&D project announced this week by iXora to apply iXora's cooling technology to the equipment of NVIDIA, the undisputed leader in servers for AI applications. As a participant in the NVIDIA Inception Program, iXora will have access to NVIDIA engineers in making iXora technology suitable for NVIDIA's CPUs and GPUs.

And admittedly, in the context of full transparency: I also think, as a thrifty Dutchman, that the valuation of iXora, the price per share, for a company in such a global market that already delivers its products to paying customers, is modest. If iXora were based not in the Netherlands but in Palo Alto, the company would be worth at least fivefold. It's as simple as that.

The Christmas spirit in 2023: invest in sustainability

With any innovation, what matters most is what the customer thinks of it. This is precisely why the opinion of Ludo Baauw, CEO of Intermax, is so important. As a Rotterdam native, he makes no bones about it. Watch here his clear presentation on the first installation of iXora at Intermax, in the data center of NorthC. (I hope your version of YouTube has subtitles in your preferred language.)

Because you, as reader of this newsletter, are also strongly interested in innovations that can improve our lives, I am therefore asking you to support iXora. That's my request to you this Christmas.

Participating is possible from as little as €5,000 and all information is available here. There are people who invest in their children's names so that any profits will go to the next generation. A nice thought, but I would carefully consider how savvy your offspring is because it potentially involves serious pocket money.

Be careful anyway, of course: despite my enthusiasm, I want to emphasize that investing in startups is high-risk. Do this only with money you can spare and also assume you will lose it; but if you do start to see a return, it will probably be much more than you put in.

Spotlight 9: technology had a banner year in 2023

Speaking of investing and risk, it remains striking to see that despite the war in Ukraine, the misery in Israel and Gaza, and the uncertainty surrounding China's economy, with the U.S. presidential election looming, tech stocks achieved phenomenal returns in 2023.

NVIDIA, Meta and Bitcoin were the winners of 2023. Looking over the last five years, it was different.

In addition to looking at 2023, I also looked back at the best-performing stocks in the last five years. That leads to a different picture and different conclusions. What stands out the most in 2023 is not that NVIDIA, up 242%, was by far the best investment of the Spotlight 9, because with the explosion of the AI market, that was no surprise.

But I don't know anyone who expected Meta (Facebook, Instagram, Whatsapp) shares to rise 168% this year after the disastrous 2022. The comeback of Bitcoin and Tesla was also remarkable. Investing, especially in technology, remains a strange combination of analytical thinking and belief in magic.

Therefore, it also makes sense not to lose sight of the S&P 500: in this chart it is the slowest kid in class, but in 2023 this index rose 23% and over the last five years the increase was as much as 93%. For the prudent investor, still a return many times better than a savings account.

Looking at the last five years, Ethereum, NVIDIA and Tesla have been the top three investments with staggering increases:

  • Ethereum: 1,841%
  • NVIDIA: 1,409%
  • Tesla: 1,089%

I certainly expected Bitcoin to be on the podium, but this shows once again that when it comes to investing, I'm better off focusing on analysis than predictions. Because I still can't give a single meaningful answer to the most frequently asked question, "what will be the next Ethereum, NVIDIA and Tesla in the next five years?

I want to thank everyone for their interest, tips and feedback and wish all readers and their loved ones a very Merry Christmas, a Happy New Year and all the happiness, love and health in 2024. Until next year!

Categories
AI crypto NFTs technology

Two Dutch startups with a global market

I don't normally write about my own work, preferring to try to share background, tips and insights that I hope will be of use to you as a reader. But because it is often asked for, this time I like to tell you about two investments I am excited about. Of course, I also cover notable things in the tech world, such as the jubilant crypto world about Ripple, Elon Musk's new AI company, traffic jam dodging by drone and Lionel Messi's deal with Apple. But now first, iXora and Unveil.

Ede-based iXora has developed a form of liquid cooling technology(immersion cooling) that allows data centers to save more than 30% in energy and space, because it eliminates the need for fans as with the usual air cooling of computers. And the latest generation of chips gets so hot that air cooling becomes too inefficient and expensive, but also socially unacceptable given the CO2 emissions. That makes the market potential of iXora huge worldwide.

Amsterdam-based Unveil links top photographers to collectors through its own marketplace based on blockchain technology. Through a careful curation process, collectors worldwide find new high-quality work in a user-friendly way. Collectors can buy the physical work, a print, a digital version in the form of an NFT, or both. Unveil can play a crucial role in the explosion of AI-generated fakes; it guarantees authenticity.

I have previously worked with these entrepreneurs with great pleasure and success, their companies are forerunners in fast growing global markets and sustainability is an important part of their proposition. And not unimportantly, there is also an opportunity for you to participate as an investor even with a small amount, whereas this is usually reserved only for vc funds with very deep pockets.

Please note that this is not an advertisement for investing in these companies. I explain what my considerations were for investing, but I want to emphasize that investing in startups has the very highest form of risk. Simply put, my advice is: only do it with money you could lose. And above all, do it because you support the companies' goals.

Why does Warren Buffett store in the Veluwe?

Earlier this year at CES in Las Vegas, iXora signed a licensing deal with the American company Lubrizol, a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, the investment company of the legendary Warren Buffett. Why would such a global player license technology from a Dutch startup?

Hypotherm Rack Management (HRM) from iXora. Server in and done. Crucial: fits into a standard 19-inch rack, the standard in data centers worldwide.

The answer is that huge demand for energy-saving solutions has accelerated worldwide since de Russia's invasion of Ukraine the helmeted Russian neighbor visit. On top of that, energy consumption in data centers plays an extremely large role, because next to real estate and equipment, energy costs are the biggest expense. Data centers are still full of energy-guzzling fans, which will become obsolete with iXora's liquid cooling.

When using the iXora solution, a data center can accommodate more servers per square foot, with lower energy costs and therefore a reduced carbon footprint. Add to this the huge increase to cloud and streaming services in recent years and the current explosion of AI applications, making it irreversible that heavy server-intensive applications will dominate the market. Conclusion: immersion cooling is hot.

Own experience with data centers

My personal experience with data centers goes way back, for example, I was a very satisfied customer with Flabber and 925 for many years with the innovative hosting company True. (Jort Kelder and I even shot a lightly humorous movie in their data center 15 years ago.) So when True founder Vincent Houwert, after selling True and some wanderings in the Caribbean, couldn't resist getting back into business and started iXora, I was immediately interested.

With Planet Internet, I have been a customer and reseller of data center services for many years, and in the process I have experienced, through trial and error, how complex data centers operate. Although it is a multi-billion dollar business, it is one in which every dime is turned over. I always compare data centers to drinking water from the tap: everyone needs it and uses it, but every penny spent on it is a penny too much so the margins are thin.

Data center owners hate risks and opaque investments. This is precisely why I find iXora so interesting: it is the only party in the world that enables immersion cooling in the existing infrastructure of a data center.

In a billion-dollar market, of course, there are plenty of competitors, but they either only cool the chip, leaving the rest of the motherboard to give off heat and fans remain necessary, or their solutions require the installation of entire jacuzzis into which the servers are submerged.

But I know from experience that data center owners have a huge aversion to this kind of geekiness, because there is a chance of leaking fluids into their data centers where miles of cables run under the raised floors. And no one wants to use robotic arms to hoist a server out of such a bathtub, which is necessary just to replace a simple hard drive.

iXora's solution is deliberately designed for easy installation and maintenance. Nothing robotic arm or bathtub: an iXora chassis fits into the globally common 19-inch rack, and anyone who can lift a computer can slide a server into an iXora HRM.

The team knows the customer

That simplicity in the solution is rooted in the experience of the iXora team, which has literally and figuratively grown up in data centers. Besides inventor Vincent Houwert, who previously founded hosting company True, iXora's founders are CEO Job Witteman, previously founder and 17-year CEO of the Amsterdam Internet Exchange AMS-IX, and CCO Vincent Beek, who has decades of commercial experience in the international technology world. And Erwin Bleeker joined iXora in February as Compute Specialist after spending a few years at Dell explaining how a data center works ;-).

iXora webinar Thursday, June 20

More information about the opportunity to participate in iXora is in this two-page summary. Investing is possible from as little as €5,000 and depending on your contribution there is a bonus of up to 30%. If you want to know more about iXora, I recommend watching the webinar next Thursday, July 20 at 8 p.m. in which CEO Job Witteman explains what iXora does with immersion cooling. why it is important for the world and how you can contribute to .

The Manhattan Project by Andrea Camiolo. Unveil guarantees the creator and the number of copies, in this case a series of three.

Unveil cures what is real, in the age of fake

I write a lot about AI because it is the market in which the most progress is currently being made, with the largest potential market, which is virtually every earthling. At the same time, I worry about how AI will make it possible to manipulate all forms of sight and sound.

As you may know, I have a great love for photography, a passion that unfortunately comes with a commensurate lack of talent. My former colleague Alexander Sporre with whom I worked at business site 925, though, is a talented photographer. But Alexander is also a talented entrepreneur, and he and a number of partners have jumped into a big hole in the market with Unveil.

I believe in Unveil's proposition, in the explosion of AI-generated photos, to act as a beacon and marketplace of originality and authenticity.

What makes Unveil unique?

The developments in the field of AI are so rapid that there is a huge need worldwide for an independent party to guarantee the authenticity of digital work. Without such an independent party as Unveil, it is already no longer possible to tell whether a photo is real, or generated with AI.

Third generation marketplace

I see Unveil as a third-generation marketplace. In the first form, marketplaces were generic, think Marktplaats in the Netherlands and Craigslist in America, with a large unfiltered supply. (Both, by the way, bought by eBay for hundreds of millions.) The second generation marketplaces were a curated part of a large generic offering, think Uber Black and Airbnb Plus, or the Dutch Catawiki, effectively a curated version of eBay. 

In the latest generation of marketplaces, of which Unveil is a forerunner, you will only see a carefully curated, high-level offering with a select small group of providers, who are often exclusively affiliated with a platform. Unveil has already attracted over 1,500 photographers, including a large number of top international photographers such as Bastiaan Woudt and Paul Cupido.

Global market, always traceable

Unveil connects digital art with physical prints on the blockchain, making art photography traceable as a globally tradable product, with the goal of providing royalties to the creator on the one hand and guaranteeing to the collector that the work purchased is authentic, with guarantees about the number produced. This solves a huge problem worldwide.

Proven business model: marketplace

From a financial perspective, it is crucial that the business model of a marketplace is proven and highly profitable, especially in this market, based on a 12.5% commission. Such a solid commission combined with the prices that renowned photographers receive for their work offers very good prospects for Unveil.

The team

Besides Chief Product Officer Alexander Sporre (ex-Richemont, co-founder Stories, art photographer), Unveil's founders are also Chief Commercial Officer Titus de Jong (ex-Salesforce, ex-HP) and Chief Creative Officer Julian Mollema (award winning designer, Ex-Build in Amsterdam). All entrepreneurs with a solid track record in their respective fields. Crucially, there is also a lot of interest in Unveil from the art world. For example, the Head of Photography at Sotheby's EMEA has joined Unveil's Advisory Board.

Participating in Unveil

More information about the opportunity to invest in Unveil is in this two-page summary. If you would like to learn more about Unveil, I would be happy to put you in touch with the founders.

Spotlight 9: Judge finds XRP is, oh no it's not, an investment

Every week in this column, I go over the highs and lows of the most important assets in technology. Never before has the financial world been so dominated by crypto news as it was Thursday, when an early global happy hour erupted in the cryptoscene following a U.S. judge's incomprehensible ruling in the case brought by the SEC against Ripple Labs.

Imagine if XRP had won the case outright....

The judge ruled that Ripple Labs' sale of the XRP cryptocurrency to institutional investors violated securities laws. But, the judge said, there was nothing illegal about the sale of XRP by Ripple Labs to individual traders on crypto exchanges. As if professional investors need information, transparency and protection but consumers don't?

This schizophrenic statement was not understood outside the crypto world. "Securities laws are designed specifically to protect individual investors, based on the idea that they cannot stand up for themselves," James Carlson, an adjunct professor of securities regulation at New York University, told The Information. "Large institutional investors don't need the protection of securities laws. This ruling effectively turns that philosophy on its head," Carlson said.

"Securities laws are designed specifically to protect individual investors, based on the idea that they cannot advocate for themselves. Large institutional investors don't need the protection of securities laws. This ruling effectively turns that philosophy on its head."

James Carlson, New York University

Chance of 'boiler room' fraud

The implications of this part of the ruling are troubling. As Carlson said, "The potential for 'bucket shop' or 'boiler room' fraud is alarming." Think of the Wolf of Wall Street in a black crypto t-shirt. Carlson outlined a scenario in which a crypto company issues tokens to large institutional investors, who are given detailed information required by securities laws, but then resells them through crypto exchanges to individual traders, who are not given this information. The decision is likely to be appealed, so this may not be the end of the story. 

XRP rose nearly 80% within a day, gave back some of the gains over the weekend but still rose nearly 50% in the last week.

It remains a madhouse in AI

It had been coming for a while: Elon Musk has entered the AI battlefield with x.AI and has become CEO of his third company, in addition to Tesla and SpaceX, Musk's space company that was valued at a whopping $150 billion in a private sale last week. The man may have driven on a few blocks past the "eccentric" exit, but it's still mind-boggling how he combines it all. The goal of x.AI is "to understand the true nature of the universe." Musk talked more on Twitter about the goals and possible collaboration with Tesla, shared few details. To be continued, no doubt.

That doesn't head nicely, but with Code Interpreter, ChatGPT can analyze data, create graphs, solve math problems and edit files, among other things. It also supports file uploading and downloading, which previously was not possible in ChatGPT. Wharton professor Ethan Mollick, author of an excellent newsletter by the way, says Code Interpreter can do things he used to spend an unimaginable amount of time on.

I did a little test by downloading a .csv file of XRP price data on Friday and asking Code Interpreter to display the key information from it in a graph. I found the result amazing, especially since Chat GPT is text-based and until recently the output was also limited to text. So not anymore because Code Interpreter spit out three relevant graphs within seconds!

Code Interpreter from ChatGPT generated these graphs from a .csv file I had uploaded. Saves a lot of time and effort!

Anthropic, which raised just under half a billion dollars from investors in May, launched a new version of their Chat GPT competitor Claude.ai. Decrypt makes a good comparison between Claude.AI, ChatGPT and Google Bard. Officially, Claude is only available in the US and UK, but with a good VPN it works fine. I'd love to hear who experiences major differences between ChatGPT and Claude, personally I see little difference in quality.

In conclusion

My favorite guru Gary Vaynerchuk doesn't think Threads is a Twitter-killer either, but points out that it could attract a new audience. Just try it, he advises. For now, my feed on Threads is still filled with second-hand posts from Instagram.

In 2014, I got to know Taco Carlier of VanMoof when we spent a week together walking around SXSW. Apart from being an incredibly nice guy with whom I have a pleasant contact to this day, I find the news about a possible bankruptcy of VanMoof very sad because the company was the big booster of the e-bike as a replacement for the car.

In my experience, integration of all components into a hardware product is extremely complex, Taco and I talked about that several times. He mentioned Tesla as an example of almost complete vertical integration. But crucially, what do you do at the moment when a product continuously fails and you experience quality problems to such an extent that customers become dissatisfied and the service department is overwhelmed. I won't bore you with stories from the old box about the woes called ISDN that I had to contend with, in the transition era between modems and broadband, but sometimes you have to dare to kill a product to survive as a company. Hopefully Vanmoof will survive the current malaise.  

In other electric transport news, it was noticed that Lee Soo Man, founder of Korean K-pop institution SM Entertainment, invested $23 million with partners in passenger transport via drones. The EH216 can carry two passengers and flies without a pilot, leading to extraordinary videos. Just too bad about that bombastic music, therefore here, from SM Entertainment's stable, Red Velvet with Future, theme song from the popular Korean series Start-Up - yes, about Internet startups.

The high-quality sports site The Athletic (acquired last year by the New York Times, which last week dissolved its entire sports editorial staff) produced a nice long read about Lionel Messi's transfer to Miami, made possible by Apple. It remains extraordinary that Messi is the only player to benefit from the growth of subscribers to Apple TV+'s MLS subscription. The question looms as to when Apple will move more seriously into sports entertainment and move to acquire more sports rights, such as the Premier League, the NFL and the Olympics. And whether there will be more athletes then who will directly share in subscriptions to streaming services, separate of their clubs or leagues.

I want to reiterate that investing in startups carries the very highest form of risk. However, I did want to share my considerations for investing in iXora and Unveil. But simply put, my advice is: always do it only with money you can afford to lose and only in companies whose mission you support, then you will enjoy it the most. Profits remain uncertain.

I can't resist playing with MidJourney. This image is a combination of a photo I had uploaded, with an image generated by MidJourney.
Result of the prompt in MidJourney to put an iXora HRM in a room like the final scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark. Looks more like a Transformer on steroids.
Categories
technology

Just the finest bank went bankrupt

It probably hasn't escaped your notice that there is a lot going on right now at the intersection of technology, economics and innovation. With the fall of Silicon Valley Bank, my favorite bank where I was once a customer, being the recent low point. But precisely because there are many great things going unexposed, I started a weekly newsletter about what has caught my eye in the tech world. Below is the content of the first newsletter, dated April 10, 2023.

You can subscribe to this weekly newsletter here.

Silicon Valley Bank was my favorite bank
What kind of banks are Silicon Valley Bank and First Republic? There has been much media coverage of Silicon Valley Bank's pike dive, with its counterpart, First Republic Bank, often mentioned in the same breath. But there are fundamental differences between these San Francisco Bay Area banks. Early this century, I was a very satisfied Silicon Valley Bank customer with a startup that later failed ingloriously. As soon as you were accepted as a client at a good law firm in San Francisco, the lawyer would normally grab the phone and call his relationship at Silicon Valley Bank. That's how we ended up in a far too small cubicle opposite a jovial account manager at Silicon Valley Bank the very same day our firm was founded. The work instruction there was clear: "any customer can be the next Apple or Microsoft, so even though 98% of companies don't survive the first five years, treat your customers as if they were that successful 2%. Every Dutch bank could learn from the way Silicon Valley Bank treated customers. SVB's failure also has nothing to do with creative accounting or strange products as in the banking crisis, but with treasury management failures and rising interest rates. In short: watching one's own pennies carefully. Already it appears that Silicon Valley Bank is being missed, for example in financing climate tech companies, the very startups needed to combat climate change.

First Republic does something very different
First Republic Bank, on the other hand, excels at lending money to founders and C-level management of successful startups. So not in lending money to startups, as Silicon Valley Bank did. People like Mark Zuckerberg were offered particularly low mortgages, for example. Why does a billionaire need a $6 million mortgage? Founders of successful companies prefer to hold on to all their shares as long as possible, as long as the prices are rising. So they borrow money from banks with shares in their own companies as collateral. For example, there is still a persistent rumor in Silicon Valley that Zuckerberg even borrowed a few billion, yes, billion, from First Republic, in part to finance his own charitable foundation. Rather pay a percent interest than sell shares that, until last year, rose many times faster than interest.
Spotlight: iXora immersion cooling

I often get asked which Dutch startups are interesting. That the driving solar car Lightyear received so much media attention made sense, because everyone understands what cars are and where the sun is, but there were two reasons why few professional investors believed in a solar-powered car.
First of all, it costs not millions but billions to set up a car company, let alone on a new energy source, see Tesla. No investor in the Netherlands puts the roulette ball on red or black at that kind of sum. Perhaps more importantly, a regular sized car cannot carry enough solar panels to provide enough propulsion, range and some geeky extras like headlights and brake lights with the current generation of solar panels. I like to be surprised but don't see Lightyear doing well.

Cooling is cool
One startup that did successfully develop a relevant product for a huge market is Ede-based iXora. The company led by CEO Job Witteman (founder and for years CEO of the Amsterdam Internet Exchange AMS-IX, I know him from his time before that at British Telecom) has developed a solution where data centers can save a lot of space and energy. iXora's liquid cooling technology eliminates the need for space- and energy-consuming air cooling (fans). Warren Buffett's company Lubrizol bought a worldwide license and it would not surprise me if iXora reaches unicorn status within three years (cliché alert!), or becomes worth more than a billion Euros. Because energy consumption of data centers must be reduced and it is in their best interest to cut costs and reduce CO2 emissions. iXora's solution is as simple as it is effective and can easily be fitted into standard data centers, which is why it seems logical that the company will eventually be acquired by a party such as Dell, for example, in order to be able to offer an iXora chassis to all its data center customers, as an extra box to check on the order form. Similar to how EMC once acquired VMWare and even took it public a few years later. A startup on its own could never reach that global customer base so quickly.

Friends & family investment round
iXora is currently holding an investment round and from 5,000 Euro you can participate. I'm not giving advice, but my maxim is that you should think of an investment in a startup as money that you are definitely losing now and that very possibly one day will come back - but hopefully a bit more than you put in. I do like this kind of low-stakes opportunity, usually the minimum entry point is many times higher. Note that this is not investment advice and you are investing outside AFM supervision, there is no licensing and prospectus requirement. And the founders of iXora are friends of mine, so I am far from neutral in this.
iXora HRM closed-1
The iXora HRM chassis can house multiple servers. HRM, by the way, does not stand for good old Personnel in a new guise, but for Hypotherm Rack Mount. It is so named because these liquid-cooled cabinets fit into standard 19″ racks common worldwide. This allows data centers to quickly fit them into their infrastructure, unlike competitors' open tanks full of liquid.

Good event calendar

Where are the events and conventions you absolutely must attend? That always remains tricky and I have felt at many a congress that I had ended up at the wrong party. That is why the event calendar of Luna PR from Dubai is so handy, it lists all the important congresses, parties and meetings in the field of crypto and Web 3. The sisters Nikita (CEO, right) and Nisheta (COO, left) Sachdev usually know where it is happening. 
Sachdev
Fine links
Are you also inundated by a glut of podcasts and newsletters? There are very few that I never skip. But the newsletter from former journalist, now investor, Om Malik I always read. Through Malik, I came upon this sharp analysis on why ChatGPT means the Gutenberg moment for software. Another recommendation: this article on the "give, to get back" model for AI startups. Also applicable for other companies that need user data to function better. And neat that the author mentions that he had used Chat GPT4 to write the article.
Geek Sentiment
Finally, a look at the major share prices in tech. Google is the winner of the week with 7.5% rise. Viewed from the beginning of this year, we don't yet have to tip our hat to Mark Zuckerberg, who just last year lost $30 billion in assets in one day, because his Meta is now up 76% after the annus horribilis 2022. And you don't hear much about it, but those who bought Bitcoin and Ethereum on Jan. 1 would also have experienced 69% and 56% increases by now:
frackersnerdsentiment7april2023
Next Week
Among other things: why the U.S. government's lawsuit against Binance is important for the future of crypto as part of the mainstream economy. I wrote about the ongoing problems at Binance exactly a year ago. And spotlight on Unveil, an Amsterdam-based startup focused on the intersection of two huge markets: the art world and the market for NFTs.