Alexis Kendrick

Alexis Kendrick

Bridging gap between business and tech
53 points

Forums

Ruxandra Mazilu

8mo ago

What's one thing that makes you reach out to a startup showcasing their product at a tech event?

We've been invited to take part in our first physical event to showcase Lifetoon with a stand - Bucharest Tech Week.

We're already preparing some must-haves (stickers, roll-up, demo), but I'm curious to find the things that make a startup stand out for you at events. I know things that can be consumed (coffee, sweets) attract people, but I'd love to find out about other things that caught your eye while exploring the startup area at bigger events.

Hunters who are visible and active on Product Hunt – Short List

I usually get a few messages from makers during the week asking if I could hunt them.

Short answer: I don't currently hunt (but maybe in the future)

Nika

8mo ago

How do you reduce churn rate? (Your best practices)

I assume I'm not the only one dealing with this problem, so I'll seek advice from those more experienced and perhaps those who have a proven track record.

Whenever a user reaches the payment gateway, they often suddenly leave, either by uninstalling the app or closing the page.

Abhinav Yadav

12mo ago

Will Deepseek REALLY shake the AI market? (Any views??)

The new AI model selloff cost the world s 500 wealthiest people $108 billion, whipping out $2 trillion worth of US stock market capital. On Monday, Nvidia alone lost $589 billion in market capital. Deepseek is China s new and very first AI model, and it made headlines within a week of its release. Now, we all see new AI models heading up, but Deepseek is what most of us didn t see coming. Instead, I am intrigued by its cost-efficient model, which is shaped using reduced-capability chips compared to its predecessors, Chat GPT and Gemini. Within a week of its launch, this Chinese app has become the most downloaded free app in the US. While OpenAI s GPT-4 incurred a training cost of $600M DeepSeek s V-3 model is claimed to have been created within a budget of $6M. Interestingly, what took tech giants like Open AI and Google years to build is now claimed to have been achieved in 2 months, in a thousandth fraction of its cost. If we compare the infrastructure, DeepSeek is comparatively stronger. With over 685 parameters and a cluster of Expert MoE architecture, it seems like a better choice at first glance. The investors in panic mode are getting communities buzzing about how investors never think long-term. As in this case, most of Nvidia s sales come from selling server systems, GPUs, and entire data centers with racks, networking, CPUs, etc. The panic mode among investors from a single release doesn t make much sense. Whatsoever, the AI revolution has come to another level and is evolving at a much faster pace! Here are some of my takeaways. Firstly, since Deepseek has attached a number against its development, do we need 500 Billion funds to achieve this? The answer is somewhere in the middle. While the infrastructure will continue to become cheaper and better, the race to the bottom is inevitable. However, this doesn t mean we can skip the cost of developing and figuring out the background architecture. A simplistic explanation is to treat AI as just another progressive step in Software. It's something David Friedberg has been advocating for a while. Second, even before we know what AI can do, the point of AI regulation seems like an overkill, and I think Deepseek's innovative development has somewhat made the point. (It doesn t matter which side of the fence you are on or whether it s a Sputnik moment triggered by sanction or just another AI meltdown) Lastly, we all should remember that it s a tool rolled out by a hedge fund, which by nature is known to bias the market in its favor. Only time will tell whether they want to run it as a business or it s just a way to short on US AI giants to win some extra IRR. I leave the politics for the journalists to figure out. Let me know what you all think. -Abhinav