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Yesterday was OpenAI’s DevDay, and ICYMI, Dan Shipper published his first impressions right out of the gate. His overall takeaway: The company behind ChatGPT has made important incremental progress on the path to GPT-5. Watch out for more analysis from Dan later this week. In the meantime, we’re revisiting his essay from 11 months ago, shortly after OpenAI’s first-ever developer conference, in which he captured San Francisco’s unique blend of innovation, contradiction, and relentless optimism.—Kate Lee
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San Francisco's climate always makes me feel like I have a fever. It's warm and pleasant in the sun, but if you have the misfortune of walking into the shadow of a building you're suddenly shivering like you've got the flu. So I've come to follow a singular rule for visiting the tech capital of the world:
Layer up.
Once you have wrapped yourself to the gills in Patagonia paraphernalia, as I now do, you can truly experience the city—its delights, terrors, and idiosyncrasies.
The East Coast jet lag means you can wake up easily at 6 a.m. You can take a Lyft to Sightglass coffee, where the air is redolent with the smell of beans roasted by master coffee makers. You can drink your latte in the rose-colored San Francisco morning as a cable car trundles by. You can’t walk around; you’re not sure if SOMA is dangerous at this hour.
You can experience the electric atmosphere at OpenAI Dev Day, hob-nob with the celebrities of your field, get excited about the future, and do off-the-cuff food reviews. You can jump at the chance to get a gray OpenAI sweater size medium as an extra buffer against the vicissitudes of the city’s mercurial clime.
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You can visit the Archimedes Banya, where men and women roam naked together between saunas, steam rooms, hot tubs, and cold tubs. You can listen to the owner, completely derobed, explain that the sauna you are sitting in is the best in the world. You can sit, wearing a bathing suit, as New Yorkers do, on a hot cedar bench and marvel at the hidden complexities of sauna design, of the skill it requires to balance the contrasting forces of temperature and humidity. You can find that another person sitting next to you in the sauna, as naked and unashamed as Adam before the fall, is someone who you have followed on Twitter for 10 years. You can say hello, and ask how he is.
You can be invited to dinner in a private room at a sushi restaurant. You can muse aloud between bites of uni about ideas for ChatGPT posts you want to write and projects you want to build. You can get feedback from people who have forgotten more about machine learning and business building than you will ever know. You can leave dinner feeling like you cannot wait to get home and write.
You can instead find yourself at a house party. You can lovingly admire the large bookshelf on display, relieved that even in the center of our techno-utopian AI-enabled future, people still love books.
You can observe a man in a blue velvet suit ask a French woman with her brown hair in a tight bun: “Are you an AI person?”
“Yes, but I think of AI as merely a tool to have an impact,” she says.
“What are you trying to have an impact on?” he says.
“Helping enterprises better serve their customers,” she says.
You can laugh quietly to yourself.
You can turn to leave and sheepishly run into friends from New York. You can share an unspoken sense of embarrassment to be here, which is to admit that maybe, in at least this one dimension, New York is not the best city in the world.
You can sit on the stoop of this house party and reflect that it is not just the weather in San Francisco that runs hot in the sun and cold in the shade. It is also the town itself. It is the sumptuously appointed demo days held under warm lights while a homeless man is doubled over on the dark pavement outside.
This, you realize, is true—and troubling. But it is not the whole story. Because what San Francisco is is largely a matter of what it will be.
Walt Whitman wrote, “America…counts…for her justification and success…almost entirely on the future. . . For our New World I consider far less important for what it has done, or what it is, than for results to come.”
San Francisco, too, counts for its justification entirely on the future. It is a synecdoche for America. The future is what is important. This is its sin and its charm, its peril and its undeniable promise.
In San Francisco, the future, too, is hot and cold. When the next round closes, the sun is on your face. When the acquihire falls through, the shade is cold as ice. On Monday, AGI and universal prosperity are at hand. On Tuesday, apocalyptic doom looms, or worse, stagnation—progress’s dreaded asymptote. Feast or famine. Fever is the nature of the future.
To see rightly in this town is to try to layer yourself against the vicissitudes of what comes next. To at once be swept up in the hope that everything might change, but also hold on to the knowledge that it will all stay—in some important ways—the same. To know that you overestimate what can change a year down the line, and underestimate what can change in 10.
It is to hope for the sun and prepare for the shadow. It is to dream of making a new sun one day, and feeling like it might be possible.
It’s a great time to be a founder.
Layer up.
Dan Shipper is the cofounder and CEO of Every, where he writes the Chain of Thought column and hosts the podcast AI & I. You can follow him on X at @danshipper and on LinkedIn, and Every on X at @every and on LinkedIn.
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Great, creative and evocative way to cover the event!