Mental food, as you rush. Vinit Bhansali's blog

Tag startups

Dry powder in monsoons

Venture capital funds are currently in a robust position, with significant “dry powder” ready for deployment, a trend that has been substantiated by data from the past three years. This availability of capital is a testament to the continued investor… Continue Reading →

Another text-based network? Threads

It seems like Instagram’s Threads is emerging as a strong contender and a potential threat to the long-established Twitter platform. Instagram Threads, the standalone messaging app, has been gaining significant momentum recently, and its unique features distinguish it from Twitter… Continue Reading →

On AI & jobs

AI doesn’t take away jobs.
People using AI do.

Meeting Atty of OpenAI

Speaking with OpenAI’s Atty Eleti about the API and Plugins that are going to massively expand ChatGPTs use cases.

The pace of change: Up, Up and Away

Looking back to the mid-90s, knowing Visual Basic and building GUI apps was suddenly insufficient. Developers like me had to quickly learn HTML, CSS, and other technologies. Soon, the proliferation of PHP and JavaScript (Ajax!) necessitated yet another round of… Continue Reading →

FinTech is the new (startup) oil

In an avg YCombinator cohort FinTech went from 7% to 24% in 11 yrs. I’m intrigued that this growth is exclusive of Blockchain, cleanly sidestepping irrational exuberance My take: While Regulators in India & US are both catching up with… Continue Reading →

Branding ROI on steroids

I had a few people take a quick glance at today’s ET front page. Then asked them to guess the brand. • 2/3 guessed Kajaria Tiles• 1/3 guessed Tata Capital (& Kajaria as the 2nd choice). What a massive (no additional spend) win… Continue Reading →

Using AI to help talk about AI

I used ChatGPT to explain the impact of AI to 1st year students.

Here’s an excerpt of a talk I gave at CMR Institute Of Technology last month

Questioning generative AI

The more I play with various AGI tools (ChatGPT, Jasper, etc), the more I realize the importance of an ability to ask good questions It is getting easier and easier to get answers from machines. It’s framing the question that takes… Continue Reading →

Let’s talk OKRs

Google’s 140,000 employees use OKRs.
As do Amazon. Linkedin. Spotify. Slack. Baidu. GoPro. DropBox. Asana.

The list of startups that have implemented OKRs reads like a list of the world’s highest-performance teams.

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