“The value of what you are building is the sum of all the problems that you solve” – Daniel Ek
Periodically, I’ll read or hear an idea where my brain stops, goes into reverse, and idles on the concept for an extra minute. I found myself doing that several times throughout this audio interview (with transcript) with Daniel Ek, founder/CEO of Spotify. Ek touches on a range of topics, from technology-led exponential growth, to the grand vision of Spotify’s quest to reinvent streaming audio, to self-reflections on his approach to management, research, and innovation. “The single biggest virtue that I probably have,” Ek says, “It’s not that I’m smarter than anyone, it’s not that I’m more driven than anyone, but I have one super trait—and that is that I’m insanely patient.”
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The Contrarian: An exploration into the life of investor Peter Thiel
My friend Max Chafkin, a features writer for Bloomberg Businessweek, has just published a biography of Peter Thiel. (Its apropos title: “The Contrarian.”) The book—excerpted here by Bloomberg—is a detailed foray into Thiel’s early rise in 1990s Silicon Valley and, increasingly, his political and ideological incursions around Capitol Hill. Thiel is a fascinating, enigmatic, and occasionally controversial subject to unpack—an investor who always seems to be a couple steps ahead of the pack, even as he largely operates as a power broker behind the scenes. As Max writes, “Thiel isn’t the richest tech mogul, but he has been, in many ways, the most influential.”
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The quest to genetically resurrect the woolly mammoth
I thoroughly enjoyed this story about Dr. George Church’s quest to resurrect the woolly mammoth — a real-life spin on the central conceit of Jurassic Park. Church is longtime Harvard geneticist (and now recent entrepreneur) whose work on the gene-editing tool CRISPR was featured in last year’s Netflix excellent documentary, “Human Nature.” To me, the most intriguing element of this story is how Church and his co-founder, tech entrepreneur Ben Lamm, plan to commercialize their methods in ways that could—theoretically—help extend and improve life for humans down the road.
In case you missed it: This week, we published a long-form memo: It’s an inside look at our firm’s culture, our values, and our structured strategy around concentrated, long-term investing during periods accelerating change and technology-driven disruption. Link here.
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A few more links I enjoyed:
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