# What is Perplexity Computer?

## Метаданные

- **Канал:** Greg Isenberg
- **YouTube:** https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-J8RodcM_A
- **Дата:** 27.02.2026
- **Длительность:** 37:56
- **Просмотры:** 80,457
- **Источник:** https://ekstraktznaniy.ru/video/11041

## Описание

I take Perplexity Computer for its first real spin and test five use cases that founders can use right now to make money and move faster. I connect my Gmail live, let the AI send cold outreach on my behalf, set up daily competitive intelligence monitoring, research 50 VCs for a mock Series A, and kick off a full investment memo on Shopify, all in a single session. By the end, I walk away genuinely impressed and convinced the $200/month Max plan can pay for itself with one closed deal.

Timestamps
00:00 – Intro 
00:35 – What We're Testing Today
02:35 – Use Case 1: Warm Outbound at Scale
15:31 – Use Case 2: Automated Competitive Intel
25:11 – Use Case 3: Investor Pipeline Research (50 VCs)
26:58 – Use Case 4: Turn a Podcast Into a Content Machine
31:39 – Use Case 5: Live Market Diligence (Shopify Investment Memo)
34:17 – Bonus: Additional Use Cases Worth Trying
36:06 – Closing Thoughts and Takeaways

Key Points

* Perplexity Computer runs multiple research tasks in parallel using sub-age

## Транскрипт

### Intro []

Today we're going to take Perplexity Computer for a spin. Now I haven't tried it. So together we're going to basically look at how can we use this? How can entrepreneurs use this to make money and be more productive. We're actually going to ask it to tell us what are the top use cases to use and we're going to test it out and see if it's any good. You've probably seen Perplexity Computer and you might have bookmarked it, but today we're actually going to see if it's super valuable. So let's just get uh right into it.

### What We're Testing Today [0:35]

I'm going to just say, "Hey, I want to know the five best use cases nonobvious for uh founders who want to make money and be more productive using perplexity computer. " like what are the five prompts and use cases I need to be aware of that are super mind-blowing. I'm actually going to share this live on YouTube and Spotify on the Startup Ideas podcast. So, we are going to test it. This is on uh Perplexity computer. Uh, as of now, you need to be on the max plan to get it going. Uh, that's $200 a month. They say it's coming to Pro and maybe free pens. I'm not sure. I'm not affiliated with Perplexi by any stretch. And this is the first time I'm using this. So, uh, just noticing uh, for the first time, you basically have these tasks on the left hand side. Um, and on the right hand side is what's happening uh, with the different agents. So, it says, "Let me load up the relevant skills to give you the best possible answer here. Let me read the key reference files to make sure I'm giving you the most accurate picture of what a computer can do. " And it's running all these tasks in parallel, which is pretty cool. You don't need to open up a bunch of different cloud code instances. It's right there running it in parallel. So, now it says, "Good. I now have a deep understanding of the full capability set since you're sharing this on the Startup ideas podcast. Let me craft five generally non-obvious founder specific use cases that will ma make your audience jaws drop. All right, let's see if perplexity computer can drop the sauce. Uh here are five non-obvious use cases that surprise should surprise your audience. Uh these are built for founders who want to move faster and make more money. Warm

### Use Case 1: Warm Outbound at Scale [2:35]

outbound at scale. So personalized prospect re research and outreach in uh in one shot. So, let's go ahead and try this. Or actually, you can I guess you can press copy right over here. And I guess you want to start a task. So, um, here's a list of 30 companies I want to sell to. For each one, find the founder CEO on LinkedIn. Research their company's recent news, funding, and pain points. And then draft a hyperpersonalized cold email referencing something specific about them. Send each email via my connected uh Gmail. So, we're going to go ahead and do that. So, that's actually pretty cool. You have your tasks over here. You can go back and forth. Um, I think that's pretty clean. Perplexity's always done a good job at doing pretty clean uh UIUX. Sip of cold brew. Let's get keep it going. All right, I'll tackle this step by step. I need a few things to make this effective. Again, load running the task in parallel. I see a couple things I need to address before we could execute on this. Gmail is not connected yet. I need to get this uh set up so I can send emails on your behalf. I need some key details from you to make these emails actually convert. So, this is cool. I mean, connecting your email uh you know, there's definitely obviously some risk associated with that, but I'm going to go ahead and do that. Um, so I've gone ahead and connected it. So, it's super cool that you can just do that pretty easily. Gmail is connected. I'm ready to roll as soon as you share the list of 30 companies. Paste them in your reply. what you're selling, your SAS product, podcast sponsorships, tone, and CTA preferences. Once I have those details, I'll research all 30 companies in parallel. I'll find the right person at each and draft hyperpersonalized emails and send them through your Gmail. So, you know, I'm going to say, uh, I run the Startup Ideas podcast. This is for podcast sponsorships. I want you to research who advertises on TBPN and then I and I'll say take the top let's just say five companies and then you now know I'm selling pod sponsorships and tone and CTA well tone I want to be friend to friend clear calm and CTA, do you want to set up a call with my team? Let's go ahead and do that and see uh you know if it's able to find who advertises oh on TVPN. So it says uh I need to find the first company to advertise on TVPN. So it actually doesn't know what uh does it know what TVPN is? Um, oh, it does. So, it first says the Bitcoin podcast network. It's not called that. I think it's called Technology Brothers Podcast Network, but it still finds the right one over here. You can see uh cuz you can see that it's uh it's finding a bunch of uh like TVPN signs with CA. That's the right TVPN. So, it found it finds them. So, it had a little trip up over there. Um and then it just says um it finds their five Yeah. RAMP, Plaid, Figma, and it's researching all five in parallel, recent news, pain points, and any specific I can reference in email. So, this is really interesting, right? Cuz uh I don't know about you, but I actually don't do any cold email really, unless it's to a cold DM of someone I look up to and I think is really interesting and cool, I'll just cold DM them. But for like closing leads, finding leads, stuff like that, I don't do cold DMs. my approach is really building audiences and communities and having people reach out to me. Um, so this is cool that it, you know, I can do this. Um, but what I've had issues with terms of cold DMs in the past is it just s it sounds lame. It doesn't sound like me. It's a lot of work to actually find the people. Um, and you know, let's just see if this is any good. So, it says, "Excellent research. Let me find the right contact emails and draft the emails. Let me also look up who handles sponsorship and partnerships at these companies since emailing the CEO directly about his podcast sponsorship isn't always the best path. This is what I'm talking about. This is really cool. Um and cuz like obviously Dylan Field, the founder of Figma, isn't going to open a cold DM probably from my email. Um but like the podcast sponsorship people might, you know. Um, so it says, "Good. I have the send email tool ready. " So, what's really cool is, uh, Perplexity computer. You're spinning up a computer. It's like a virtual computer. It has skills. It has tools. Um, and it can actually go and do things. So, let's see if this is any good. Um, okay. So, I here are the five personalized emails each referencing specific details from my research. So, it's actually crazy. So, it found Toby, the founder of Shopify's email. Um that's really cool. Like that in itself is really really crazy, right? Um so good on them for finding that. But we did talk about how we shouldn't uh let me check if these CEOs are reachable. Oh, interesting. So it's actually I wouldn't send it to CEOs personally. So I guess that's something that you know we can adjust. But actually I mean I would probably send it to the CEOs and I would podcast people. So, let's just read the Toby email. Hi, Toby. Been watching Shopify's run lately. 11. 6 billion in revenue. I think it's more than that. I think maybe not actually. 30% growth and the AI catalog tools are generally impressive. The MRI thing you did with Clo was wild. So, I don't know if you saw that he he did like um I think he analyzed like an MRI result and built a tool around it and it was wild. So, it went and checked his ex account and what he's been posting. I run the Startup Ideas podcast. Our audience is founders and builders actively launching companies, many of them choosing their commerce stack right now. We get about X downloads per episode and our listeners skew heavily towards earlystage founders who are making infrastructure decisions. I noticed Shopify is already sponsoring TVPN, which makes a lot of sense or shows a similar demo, but a tighter focus on people who are literally in the process starting companies feels like a natural fit. This is awesome. And then there's another one to ramp. Um, and Plaid. And they have all these people's email addresses. I don't know how they're getting them, but um, assuming those are real email addresses. That's pretty cool. I'm going to say uh, so and by the way, and if I press send email, uh, it would just send the email it's got connected to my email address. I can go ahead and do that. But what I'm going to do, I'm going to do one more thing and then we're going to get to the next use case. I'm just curious if it can do this. So, I'm going to say, uh, CEO's emails are impressive, but realistically, these are busy people. Let's try to get in front of the person in charge of podcast creator partnerships. Doesn't that make more sense? And then I'm gonna just give it a bonus question. I'm gonna say, "By the way, is there something I'm not asking you here that could make me more money in this use case? " Just going to see what it says. Sometimes, you know, we're trying to push it to the limit. This is we're reviewing peroxy computer. So, let's uh let's go and see. You're absolutely right. Co aren't reviewing sponsorship pitches. the person who actually signs podcast deals usually head of brand marketing partnerships and it goes and says let's go what uh you know let's go find those people. So it's going to go ahead and find them. It also says what you're not asking but should be outreach to companies that sponsor TBNN's competitors too. Right? So if a company sponsors TVPN they also sponsor my first million all-in acquired right set up a recurring monitor. I can check TBPN all in and other tech podcasts weekly for new sponsors. The moment a new brand starts advertising a competitor's brand, you get a notification with their partnership context contact. So, you're reaching out while their podcast budget is hot. That is so smart and so cool that you can set it up. That's like, you know, one of the reasons I think people like OpenClaw and Co-work now has some schedule tasks is you can Yeah. schedule a task. So, it's very cool that you can spin up a perplexity computer and have these recurring monitors and go and do that and do things for you in the cloud. Uh, follow-up sequences. One email converts at maybe 10 5 to 10%. Maybe I can or I can schedule follow-ups 3 and 7 days later with new angles if they don't reply. Absolutely crazy. Want me to do any of those after we get these five out the door? Duh. Um, okay. So, let's just see. Um, good findings. Now I have solid leads. Let me compile what uh what I found. So it's gone ahead and found them. It's found Wow. It's found their email addresses. It's Hey George, caught your 20 VC. This is the VP of growth of RAM. The caught your 20 VC episode. The bit about finding alpha and channels. No one else is trying to really resonate. It really resonated. direct mail becoming one of Rand's biggest channels. Such a good example of that. Like these emails are amazing and they're so personalized. Um we're just going to I am impressed here. Uh I'm going to say I'm just going to copy this what you're asking and not should be. Yes, go do those things. And after that, I promise we will get to the new use case. But I will say this is uh better than I expected. a lot cleaner. Um, I like the UI. I like that you can spin up multiple tasks. Um, at the same time, um, it is $200 a month. So, is that expensive or is that cheap? You know, depend if you're I guess if you're using it like this, like obviously this would pay for itself in this actual use case. Uh, it's going and researching sponsors across comp uh across competing pods. It's setting up weekly monitor that checks those pods for new sponsors and sends you a notification. What I like about the Lindy AI assistant, and I'm going to do a video, I think uh just completely on that, is you can text it out using iMessage. So, uh I don't know if you can do that here. I don't think so. Um but I do think that like one of the cool things about OpenClaw has been that you can use iMessage, you can use Telegram, you can use uh Discord. Um, so you know, this is a nice UI, but I do like the idea that like I can just text it um on some of those other platforms. Okay, so Oh, wow. So, the email has been sent, which is scary because I kind of know some of these people, but we'll see what happens. I'll report back and tell you know if you see Ramp Plaid Figma Shopify app lo 11 loven advertising on this podcast. Uh it hopefully came from that uh personalized email. So I'll keep you posted on that. Um what's happening now is it's updating a plan with expanded outreach. It's identifying top five TBNN sponsor companies and their CEOs and founders. It's researching all five companies in parallel. Finding the partnership brand marketing contact at each. It's researching sponsors across tech podcast to build the bigger prospect list and it's doing follow-up sequences and weekly monitoring in parallel. This is literally a marketing email marketing person's old job. Point blank. This is and it's using uh code sonnet 4. 6 which is great. I will say I wish it didn't send those emails without me clicking send. When I went up here uh if we scroll up here it was like do you want to send these emails and I didn't click send. Like I actually didn't think it was going to click the emails. I'm all for it cuz I think it's fun to see like if you know if it converts, but I you know would have loved to have to have double checked that. So this is really cool. It's researching all the sponsors. Um let's go ahead and while

### Use Case 2: Automated Competitive Intel [15:31]

it's sort of running here, let's go ahead and do some more use cases. Um automated competitive intel. The second one here, automative competitive intel on autopilot. Recurring monitoring with push alerts. Every morning at 8 a. m., check these five competitors websites for pricing changes, new feature announcements, and any new blog posts. Also, search X for any mentions of them. If anything has changed since yesterday, send me a push notification with a summary. And if nothing has changed, stay quiet. Why is this mind-blowing? This turns a computer into a persistive competitive intelligence agent that runs every day without you touching it. It browses their actual websites, compares it what I found yesterday. Okay, let's go and see if this works. We're going tohead and start a new task. I'm going to go ahead and you can see what's cool. You can also just dictate here, but we don't need to. And I could see myself getting used to this. I don't know about you, but I can definitely see myself getting used to this. Which competitor should I moni uh monitor? Okay. So, you know, let's just say we're let's go with the podcast stuff. So, let's just say my first million. Um, what other podcasts? Allin podcasts. These are the top three and you figure out the other two. My pod is called the Startup Ideas Podcast and I'm Greg Eisenberg. Okay, let's yeah, let's get Perplexi computer to do some of the work. Why do I have to do all that work? So, I'm just testing it a little bit. Um, says remembering Greg's podcast and identity. So, it's updating memory. So, that's really cool. Um, just loving I'm loving this. Uh, how just watching it cook it. It feels really good. Based on my research, two strong competitors are 20 VC and acquired. Both target the same entrepreneurial audience and frequently overlap with your listener base. Cool. Now, let's set up the daily 8 a. m. monitoring task. I need to convert 8 a. m. Eastern to UDC first. So, it's going ahead and like coding, which is really cool. Um, so it's going ahead and coding. Um, and that's why, you know, it's a computer with access to, you know, 16 I think it's 16 different models. we saw before was using sonnet 4. 6 six. Um, and it's supposed to be using the best model for the best task. And, uh, it, you know, it's just interesting. It's interesting watching it how it thinks. So, every morning I'll automatically check these five competitors, what I'm watching for, pricing responses, changes on their sites, new feature announcements or product launches, new blog posts or content, new episode drops, guest announcements, notable X activity and mentions. If anything has changed, you'll get a push notification with a summary and links. If nothing has changed, you won't hear from me. First run is tomorrow morning at 8:00 a. m. Uh, I picked a 20 BC and acquired as the two additional. Yeah, we know that. Okay. So, I'm going to say that's cool, but what would today's report look like? I want to see it so I can give feedback. So, because you're not going to be there with me at 8 a. m., I just wanted I want you to see what you know what it's capable of. So, Perplexity computer goes, "Good call. Let me run the full check right now so you can see exactly what tomorrow's report would look like. So if this worked and you're a founder of or you want to be a founder, you want to build something, there is no reason why you shouldn't be having something like this going, right? Um I wonder if you can I wonder like here. So let's scroll up a bit. My question is, so you're going to run this, but can you email it to me? Right. I'm going to ask that. Like, I would love for it to be emailed. I don't necessarily want to like go and check Perplexity every morning at 8 a. m., but I much rather it just be sent to my email or communicated to me. And, you know, like I said, I what I liked about Lindy is you can use something and Open Clause, you can use iMessage. So, it's using Sonnet 4. 6. six. Again, it's looking at all the latest uh episodes of the podcast, doing research, compiling the reports, and then uh oh, that's cool. You can go and click and see all the subtasks. This reminds me a lot like of Manis. Um Manis does a really good job at that. And I actually think Manis is just like underrated as a platform. I really need to go back in there and do another episode on Manis. Um but yeah, they it's going ahead and doing that. It's cooking. It's cooking. Um and uh yeah, I think this uh I mean I would open this, you know, I would open this and and not because I want to do what like quote unquote competition is doing on any business I'm starting, but it does help like get your creative juices flowing. And you know, I'm all about getting uh creative juices flowing. I find it helpful even if you want to be the anti version of them, right? Sometimes a competitor will launch a new feature or do something, launch a brand campaign and it's not about, hey, I want to do what they want to do. It's like actually like I, you know, I want to be different than them. Great example of that is uh, you know, Open AI announced they're doing ads. anthropic announce, they're not doing ads. They're the anti- version of each other. And I think that uh I think having a competitor analysis report, having agents go ahead and doing this for you, uh sending it to you could be really cool just to help you, yeah, get those creative juices flowing, um and get the most out of your day that way, right? Like if you can I think that's like a big part of what you know why a lot of us want to use AI agents is like if we can get unfair advantage in terms of information help us frame that information help to get the most out of that information then uh you know we'll be ahead. So let's see what's happening here. So, it's actually saved um it saved it as an MD file into uh home/ user MFM. Well, I guess the report for each of the different uh podcasts, the all-in tbn um the 20VC and so it creates those files and then it's done. And this is what so this is what the notification would look like. A new episode drops today. Uh, so it says new episode. This is Harry Stebings. Anthropic wipes billions off the market. Um, it's the new episode. Published a European micro funds report. Confirmed as a speaker. I mean, I'm just scrolling through this and like it's interesting. My First Million, Ryan Smith, you know, from the Utah Jazz is on there. That's really cool. Um, Pat Walls, dumb iPhone apps making money. That's cool. Andrew Wilkinson best worst business in 26. Very cool. Sampar pivoting YouTube channel away from personal finance towards founder content. His second video already hit 100,000 views. Like that in itself is interesting, right? No format or pricing changes to MFM. It's like these are this is interesting. Um and then says that's the format on quiet days when nothing is meaningful or changed across all five you get no notification at all. What do you think? Anything you'd want added, removed or formatted differently? How are you going to send me this report? So, I like these reports, but like how am I going to get them right now? It's a push notification through Plexity. Interesting. So, you have to download the app. Um, so what is the best way? Yeah, I guess you could um could you send via email? Is that even possible? Can you send via iMessage? I don't think it's going to be able to send via iMessage, but you know, let's A man can dream. You know, we can dream. We all can dream. Let me check what's messaging and email tools are provide are available. So, let's going to go ahead and do that. Email's ready to go. Emails already connected. I can send the full report to your inbox every morning. iMessage isn't available. So anyways, uh it it gives the you know it it could send via email which is really cool. Um okay, don't send emails for now. All right, so let's go ahead and see what our cold email stuff is up to. Wow. This is crazy, man. Oh my god. So, it's researching uh sponsors across competing pods. It's setting up a weekly monitor. Checks those pods for new sponsors. Send you a notification with partnership contacts. And it's scheduling the follow-up sequences at day three and day seven. Who doesn't reply? It's re It's just doing it all. It's found 96 sponsor pro prospects found. This is crazy. I bet you this can I mean this is this is something that could definitely work. All right

### Use Case 3: Investor Pipeline Research (50 VCs) [25:11]

let's go back and do another use case. Uh, investor pipeline research. Deep dive 50 VCs before you fund raise. Here are 50 VC firms. I'm considering raising four for my series A. For each one, find their most recent fund size. Partner, blah blah. Put it all into a spreadsheet. Why? It's interesting. Competer runs batch research across 50 firms in parallel. Web search, social, and X, LinkedIn. Uh, you get back a structured spreadsheet with everything. I'm kind of I'm not that interested in raising money from VCs, but I am interested in seeing how this could work and how you can create spreadsheets. So, we're just going to test to see how this is able to do some research and throw things into spreadsheets. Um, so it says I need to clarify a few things before diving into this research. So, it says, "I need some details to make this actually targeted and useful. Which company you raising series A for? Uh, let's just do um let's pretend I'm the CEO of well I'll just say I'm the co-founder of idea browser. com the number one website for people to find great startup ideas trends and how to build them with AI. Hi, I'm at Series A level. So, I'm just giving it the name of the company. Um, and it's going to go ahead and hopefully create that spreadsheet. While it's doing that

### Use Case 4: Turn a Podcast Into a Content Machine [26:58]

let's go ahead and see another use case. Turn a podcast episode into a full content machine. Whoa, that's cool. So, here's my latest podcast recording. transcribe it with speaker labels. Uh, write a 50word 100word blog post. Pull out the five most tweetable quotes. That's really interesting. So, it's cool that you can do that. I'm not going to do that because I don't have uh an audio file handy. But basically what you can do is you can set up uh so that every you know every time like you can set up a recurring workflow I guess like every time you launch uh a new podcast uh you can extend it to you know blog posts, tweetable quotes, LinkedIn carousel and just like based on how this is working it just feels like it would do a good job. Um, okay. So, the status here, if you see the left, it shows that it needs something from me. Um, and now it's just asking me, can you share the VC serums? I don't know who would fund this. You do the research on the best ones. So, we're just going to make it do a lot of the work. Um, and and let's see. Fair enough. Let me find the best fit VCs for idea browser series A. I'll load the relevant skills and build a targeted list based on your profile AI powered platform and yeah so it's going ahead and says idea browser sits at the intersection of several hot sectors AI powered tools creator uh economy community platforms and I'm researching across those vectors. So that's exactly how like a human being would go and uh actually reach out to venture people. Of course, if you know them, um you would just be like, I'm going to reach out to Jimmy because Jimmy is works at this venture fund. But if you don't, you the way you would do it is you would say like, okay, what are VC firms that have are investing in this, you know, genre or type of company? Um, so it's going ahead and doing it for us. It's using Sonnet 4. 6. Uh, I just expanded this. It says it's, you know, looking at Bessemer and Union Square Ventures. Um, it's researching, it's just going through tons and tons of different articles. Um, saving the final curated 50 VC firms to Workspace. Um, let's see here. If you click files, what happens? Okay, nothing here really. you know these are all the connectors I guess so this is where you can use uh yeah we've already connected Gmail calendar but you can connect you know Google drive one drive Dropbox slack um hrefs you know um cloudflare I'm just looking at the ones that are interesting to me Google Gemini HubSpot is really interesting um yeah cuz imagine like your CRM, right? Your CRM has all the data, whatever you use. Even if you use like Google Sheets as your CRM, if you have all the data and you can load it up into here and you have a computer that can go and access this, that's really cool. PayPal, uh, sending money, that's crazy. Reddit, that's cool. Um, you know, how do you find pain points and stuff like that? I got to get, you know, ide. com on here. All right, waiting for your response. So, it's gone ahead and identify them. Um, interesting. This will search far and wide across the internet to get you fund sizes, sector, recent investment, best partner. This will consume a significant amount of credits. Do you want to proceed? At least it asks. Um, I'm not sure how many credits you get with um your max plan. So, uh, you know, I've been using this for now like 30 minutes. Um, so far so good. But we'll see, right? I will say that even like if this cost $200, like this session, it would have been worth it for me. Um, because again, like if you close a sponsorship and it works out, that's worth it. Okay, so it's going ahead and researching all in parallel and it this is Wow, this is crazy. These are all like Yeah, these are people I would reach out to if I was raising money. So

### Use Case 5: Live Market Diligence (Shopify Investment Memo) [31:39]

this is really cool. All right, let's while it's doing this, let's go ahead and check our last uh use case. Live market diligence on a deal. A full investment memo from a single tip ticker. Build me an investment research memo on shop. Pull their latest. It's Shopify. Pull their latest financials, earnings, transcript highlights. Compare their margins and growth to Big Commerce and Wix. Check what analysts and finance Twitter are saying and compile into a polished PDF. But charts I want bulk bare case and your assessment. I've been seeing I will say I've been seeing on X a lot of people using perplexity computer with the use case of um using it as like a financial analyst. Um I saw uh I think it was Morgan Linton who built like a Bloomberg terminal uh use like vibe code using perplexity computer uh which is really cool. So, it seems to be like really primed for financial um financial uh advice. Wow, this is actually this is cool. So, it says I'll build a comprehensive investment research on Shopify. Let me load the data visualization and research assistance skills. So, it's cool. You don't have to like install the skills, right? It's going ahead and doing that for you. Um it knows, so I do use Perplexity. knows that uh I like value investors and Bill Aman is a value investor. So, it's gone ahead and like brought that in. So, it looks at your old searches on Perplexity and even though I've never used Perplexity computer, it knows a little bit about me, which is interesting. For people who use uh Perplexity, that context will already be loaded. So, it says, "I have all the data I need. Let me get the shop estimates and analyst research. Then build the PDF. I have plenty of data. That's a what? It's a little flex there for Plexi Computer. Let me now update the task and build a comprehensive PDF with charts. Let me download the price history and CSV and build a complete PDF with charts using a sub agent. So what's cool about, you know, what I'm learning, what's cool about computers is sub agents, skills, tools, that's all built into this. And people thought perplexity was dead. Here we go. The CSV downloaded uh as single lines. Let me save the data properly from the content I already have. All right. So you can see the status here. It's working. While it's working, let's just

### Bonus: Additional Use Cases Worth Trying [34:17]

ask it. Um, do you have any more use cases people should try? I'm live right now. I'm just curious if it has any of them. Uh, but this is something that you should totally do. Just, you know, ask it for use cases. Uh, five more different angles we won't have time to do today, but just, you know, could be really interesting for you. Steal your competitor's SEO strategy. Autogenerate a branded pitch deck from a loom video. That's pretty cool. Shadow CFO weekly financial sanity check on autopilot. Amazing. Hiring sourcer. Find and rank 50 candidates a minutes. The deal room due diligence package on an acquisition target. More. Give me a few more. Those are all really interesting. I think the hardest part of a lot of this is like figuring out, okay, which agents recurring flows should I have? Uh, reverse engineer any SAS pricing page. Wow, that's cool. You instantly see exactly where you underpriced. That's really cool. Customer discovery on autopilot. Free customer research. Clone your best performing ad copy. Wow, this is crazy. So, yeah, let's check in on this. So, okay. So, here's what we got. It's got the name, the fund of this is the VC, the VC list, the partner's name, recent tweets, recent interviews, the different sources. That's crazy. And it's building a Yeah, it's just building an Excel spreadsheet with all that data. Literally building an Excel spreadsheet. It's an analyst. All right.

### Closing Thoughts and Takeaways [36:06]

safe to say this out this exceeded my expectations. I don't know about you, but this is really cool. Something I'm going to be playing more with. I'm really interested in sort of the open clawification of the internet. So, this whole world where now you can spin up these machines uh with agents, sub agents, tools and skills, have it access files and get them to do things for you. Um I think a lot of us want to start these oneperson 1 billion dollar companies uh want to start small teams or even a small team and building these small companies software companies agent companies SAS companies and uh that's why I like playing with these tools and you know I'm just I'm grateful that you know you come and and you and you watch these videos you listen you like you comment and you know I'm sharing everything I'm learning in real time. Um, and I just find this just such an exciting moment in in entrepreneurial history. Um, I've built and sold, you know, three startups, advisor to Tik Tok and Reddit. I've invested in a ton. Um, been doing this since I've been a kid. And, um, yeah, just I just find like right now just to be so fun to tinker, have fun, and build assets. So, I'm excited to see what you think of this uh Perplexi computer, and I'll be reviewing and checking out more of these uh in the future um because I think uh it's an unfair advantage. So, um hope this has been helpful. Um send it to a friend if it has been and I'll see you next time on the Startup Ideas podcast. Um, have a creative day, my
