At 15 I trained my first machine learning model and landed an internship at a U.S. company. At 16 I launched my first startup and promptly ran it into the ground. I learned more from that failure.
At 17 I launched Pleep, an AI sales rep that lets any business owner integrate AI into their sales workflow in under five minutes. Four months later I quit my job to work on it full time.
Why bother? I kept asking myself: Why isn t there an AI sales monopoly yet? My take: because most competitors deliver AI consultants that talk like robots and kill revenue. We focused on building a real rep that:
Doesn t ask you to prompt or pick an LLM you just tell us about your business and we do the rest.
Talks like your top salesperson, not a bot.
Books meetings and pushes data back into your CRM.
At 15 I trained my first machine learning model and landed an internship at a U.S. company. At 16 I launched my first startup and promptly ran it into the ground. I learned more from that failure.
At 17 I launched Pleep, an AI sales rep that lets any business owner integrate AI into their sales workflow in under five minutes. Four months later I quit my job to work on it full time.
Why bother? I kept asking myself: Why isn t there an AI sales monopoly yet? My take: because most competitors deliver AI consultants that talk like robots and kill revenue. We focused on building a real rep that:
Doesn t ask you to prompt or pick an LLM you just tell us about your business and we do the rest.
Talks like your top salesperson, not a bot.
Books meetings and pushes data back into your CRM.
I've read a lot of conflicting views on this ... I'd love some advice.
We're about to relaunch our news platform ... which has been locked behind an "invite code" for a few months in ~beta state ... and we'd like to create some buzz!!..
I spend a lot more time on PH at the moment to see what indepedent makers are spending their time on. I've noticed some patterns and also want to share a little bit about my journey at South Park Commons. Most startup stories begin at zero when there s already a team, an idea, maybe even a prototype. But at South Park Commons (SPC), the philosophy is different: people gather in the -1 to 0 stage. That liminal space where you don t yet know what you re building or even if you should build at all. It s a place for exploration, experimentation, and being brutally honest about what s working and what s not.
A hallmark of SPC is how often industry leaders drop by to share what they ve learned in the wild. Recently, I was in a small chat with Tyler Payne former Google and LinkedIn AI lead, startup builder, who has spent the last decade helping teams actually ship real-world ML systems. We're always talking about what's being launched at SPC.
Ask AI can now combine information from your inbox, your calendar, and the web. You can then draft emails in your own voice and tone, schedule events when you re free, and send all in one ask!
Gravitas Dark Matter is (as far as we can tell) the first controller-free, eye-gaze space arcade shooter for Apple Vision Pro. You stand inside an e.g. 10 10 100 ft play volume, look to lock, pinch to fire. It runs in Room, Arena, and Immersive Galaxy modes, with a headset-anchored HUD and a custom gravity solver for smooth, readable motion.