GO SF YOUNG MAN

I lived in SF for over two months, and in a way, SF still lives in me. [1] It was my first trip to the US, landing straight into the heart of the tech world. Now that I'm back in Paris, I'm even more convinced: SF isn't just a city. It's a bubble. A dense microcosm - a concentration of incredibly smart, energetic, and driven people.

If you're young, ambitious, and thinking about building something big - especially a tech company - you owe it to yourself to experience SF. It's the kind of place where you feel like the world can be bent to your will [2], and you'll meet others who think the same way. It's where you might find "your people."

This isn't the definitive guide to SF, because there isn't one. It's just what I learned doing it my way, a sort of starter kit for your first dive in.

Breathe the Air: Networking & Events

In SF, high-quality events should feel like the air you breathe. Your main goal, especially early on, is to build a network of smart people. Look for events hosted by names like Microsoft, AWS, Google Cloud, Cloudflare, or connected to Stanford and Berkeley. Use platforms like Luma (lu.ma) or specialized lists like Cerebral Valley's (cerebralvalley.ai/events) to find them.

Sign up early - days or even a week ahead. If you don't get accepted initially, don't just give up. Sometimes an email to the organizer explaining your interest can get you in. Be resourceful.

Don't just passively attend, either. Often, the most valuable networking happens before the talks even start. You could potentially hit the start of two or three events in an evening, meeting people at each, and then heading out. Be strategic with your time.

SF events have this strange non-linearity. You might go thinking you'll just grab a free slice of pizza and chat, and suddenly that brief interaction earns you a direct, warm introduction to a partner at a top-tier firm like Sequoia. That's the kind of serendipity SF thrives on. This is how you get on the radar of the people who can actually fund your vision.

Beyond Events: Deeper Connections

Surprisingly, one of the best networking tools I found wasn't an event at all, but the YC co-founder Matching platform. Even if you're not actively looking for a co-founder right now, it's a pool of incredibly sharp people. I met several people there I'm still in touch with.

It's easy to dismiss a single event or a single conversation. But sometimes, that one connection is the start of a thread that could lead to a co-founder, funding, or a world-changing idea. You never know which one it will be.

Take the Lead: Organize Your Own Thing

After you've been to a few events, why not host your own? I noticed that poker in SF is “the current thing”. Everyone is playing it. So I started organizing low-stakes ($20 buy-in) Texas Hold'em nights. You don't need much - an $40 Amazon poker set works fine for about 8 people; find a chill bar downtown, grab a table, and play. Invite interesting people you meet at other events. Ask them to bring along others they think would fit in. [3] This isn't just about poker; it's about creating your own small node in the network. You could do the same with small discussion groups.

Learn to Tell Your Story

If there's one skill that pays off exponentially for founders, it's learning how to communicate effectively - how to tell a compelling story. I've seen too many founders with brilliant ideas who just couldn't articulate them. They mumbled, they rambled, they lost the room.

Speaking is learnable. I used to be terrible at it. One of the fastest, lowest-risk ways to improve is Toastmasters. In SF, I attended the Golden Gate Toastmasters (56.toastmastersclubs.org) which has a great reputation. Go there. Practice. Also, start pitching your idea at events whenever you get the chance. It's free feedback and gets your name out there. For more structured advice, James C. Humes' book "Speak Like Churchill, Stand Like Lincoln" offers solid, practical tips.

When you talk to anyone, especially potential investors, imagine you're explaining it to a smart 5-year-old. Cut the jargon. Focus on the core idea, the vision, the excitement. Make it a story they can grasp and remember.

Can You Afford It? (Yes)

SF has a reputation for being insanely expensive, and parts of it are. But you don't necessarily need a fortune for a short exploratory trip. I managed about two and a half months for roughly $2.5k. A round-trip ticket from Paris can be found for around $500 if you book early.

Where did I stay? A co-living place called The Hive. I shared a room (a triplet) which cost about $750/month. Co-living isn't glamorous, but it's cheap, and you're instantly surrounded by people - founders, students, cooks, engineers. It's a melting pot and a decent launchpad for a first SF trip.

The SF Bubble

You quickly realize SF operates within a certain set of norms. People often think alike, talk alike, even dress somewhat alike. It feels like a bubble because, in many ways, it is. This homogeneity has a fascinating side effect: good behaviors (like being helpful, driven, curious) get amplified. Just by being in that environment, observing how people interact, how they ask questions ("What are you working on?", "How can I help you?"), you learn a ton. 

The energy is visceral. The density of smart, driven people is unreal. You can meet anyone. In SF, it often feels like only one or two handshakes separate you from Elon Musk. You see this ambition everywhere, sometimes in the most unexpected places. I remember stepping out of a BART station upon arriving in SF, and a homeless person immediately started pitching me his startup idea. Or the guy at an event who casually brushed off his MIT and Caltech credentials before claiming he'd solved AGI. That's the SF paradox: intense drive exists everywhere, right next to everything else.

It's a culture that feels the opposite of "woke" in the conventional sense. It's fiercely driven, challenging, and profoundly meritocratic. It's less about identity and more about "Show me what you've built. Show me you're the best. Show me you deserve it." This can be intense, even hitting you hard sometimes, but it’s why things move so fast there.

It's Not All Sunshine

Let's be honest, SF has serious problems. You can't ignore the widespread homelessness. Certain streets, especially around SOMA or the Tenderloin, can be genuinely shocking. You'll see open drug use. You might have to sidestep human feces on the sidewalk. Public transport feels inadequate for a world-class city. And yes, outside of hacks like co-living, it is expensive. It's a city of stark contrasts: immense wealth often displayed subtly right next to extreme poverty.

Why Bother Then?

Because despite the flaws, there's nowhere quite like it for starting something ambitious, especially in tech. You might hear people talk about building tech hubs elsewhere - look at Saclay Valley near Paris. Governments can pour money in, but you can't engineer the dense network effects and sheer concentration of ambition that SF has organically grown over decades.

Did I find a co-founder or raise money in my two months? No. Did I start a company? Not yet. But I pitched at events, organized poker nights, got invited to parties, drastically changed my startup idea (from AI to space!), built a network, nearly got turned away at the border (that's another story!), and improved my ability to talk about what I'm building. 

If you're that young, smart, ambitious founder in Europe wondering if SF is worth the hype? I think it is. Go see for yourself.

References/Notes:

[1] Inspired by Niccolo Machiavelli, Discourses on Livy, Introduction, Machiavelli and the Renaissance, Translated by Harvey C. Masnfield & Nathan Tarcov

[2] Capturing the spirit of "high agency": the belief you can shape your environment

[3] Idea inspired by Ryan Breslow's thoughts on community building (Fundraising)

Thanks to Max Fomkin and Louis Hart-Davis for reviewing the draft of this and providing their valuable feedback.

AI + 50 Years: An Essay to My Future Self at 80

Do you remember that feeling back in 2005, playing Empire Earth-the game everyone in the neighborhood was obsessed with? Hidden beside your bulky desktop monitor was a tiny note reading "iamgod." The moment you entered it, god mode was activated. For about five minutes, you reveled in invincibility. But soon, the game became dull. The thrill was gone, and you craved the genuine challenge of playing without cheats. So, you reset to normal mode, eager to earn our victories the hard way.

Fast forward to today, and life feels similar. With the advent of advanced AI like ChatGPT, tasks that once brought joy and a sense of accomplishment are now automated. Coding, for instance, was a gradual journey filled with problem-solving and creativity. Each line of code, each bug fixed, was a small triumph. Now, AI can generate entire applications-20,000 lines of code complete with testing-in mere minutes. The thrill of overcoming coding challenges is gone. Programming, as we knew it even a year ago, has transformed irrevocably. There's no going back; we can't unlearn what we've discovered. Instead, we must adapt and build upon this new reality.

In the next two years, programming will evolve even further. Fields like electrical engineering will likely follow suit, and professions will be reshaped one after another like falling dominoes. The further a field is from AI's core, the longer it may take to transform, but change is inevitable.

What's more concerning is how society seems blissfully unaware of the magnitude of this shift. AI and companies like OpenAI are frequently in the news, but there's a stark difference between recognition and true understanding. Many view this as just another technological trend-akin to the transition from 2G to 3G or the dot-com boom. But the scale here is profoundly different. It's like comparing the explosion of a stick of dynamite to that of a thermonuclear bomb; the difference in impact is orders of magnitude apart.

Traditional enterprises, especially those on the periphery of AI, remain clueless. But soon, the veil will lift. People will awaken as if from a dream, suddenly realizing the world has fundamentally changed. Common knowledge will become accepted wisdom. Even those who were skeptical-like our own mother-will grasp the significance. The blindfold will be lifted, and there will be a collective reckoning: "What happened? How did we get here?"

As I write this, I feel an anxious excitement. I'm thrilled about what's coming but also regretful for past inaction. I had the opportunity to delve into AI back in 2017-I still remember taking Andrew Ng's course on Coursera. Yet, I was demotivated by the hype and didn't pursue it further. I can't afford to miss this wave again because, in truth, it's just the beginning. There's still time to make a difference, to be part of this transformative era. The future is ours to shape.

Human psychology remains constant even as times change. My prediction is that by 2075, humanity will long for the "no cheat" mode once more. The past without AI will be told as ancient tales to our grandchildren. Artificial General Intelligence will be ubiquitous, embedded in every facet of life. We'll see AI integrated into areas like:

  • ai and foundational technologies 
    • computing devices
    • neural computing
    • semiconductor design
    • chip manufacturing
  • ai and infrastructure
    • energy
  • ai and knowledge
    • science
    • space exploration
    • learning and education
  • ai and security & defence
  • ai and society & governance
    • government affairs
    • politics
    • economics
    • law
    • society
    • relationships
  • ai(*)

With AGI permeating every aspect of life, what will be left for us? Perhaps it will free us to focus on what truly matters: our relationships, our communities, and the essence of being human. Maybe we'll rediscover joy in the challenges that can't be automated-the complexities of human emotion, the beauty of nature, the pursuit of wisdom.

We'll harness AI to enhance our lives without losing sight of our humanity. Remember the lesson from that game back in 2005: when everything becomes too easy, the challenge-and with it, the joy-disappears. Perhaps the future will compel us to seek new challenges, to redefine purpose in a world where possibilities are limitless-space exploration, colonization of Mars, groundbreaking inventions, infinite computing power, limitless resources.

So here's to embracing the future with optimism and a willingness to adapt. Let's build a world where technology amplifies humanity rather than diminishes it. The future is ours to create. The future is yours.