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Srinivasa Reddy Kandi: Get a Glimpse of the Deep Tech Future at StrictlyVC Palo Alto on December 3

December, 03, 2025-04:48

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Srinivasa Reddy Kandi: Get a Glimpse of the Deep Tech Future at StrictlyVC Palo Alto on December 3

Get a Glimpse of the Deep Tech Future at StrictlyVC Palo Alto on December 3:

Tomorrow evening, some of the brightest minds in cutting-edge technology will gather at Playground Global in Palo Alto to explain the breakthroughs shaping the future — the kind of innovations most people won’t understand until they’ve already changed the world. This marks the final StrictlyVC event of 2025, and the speaker lineup is nothing short of extraordinary.

StrictlyVC, presented globally in partnership with TechCrunch, has traveled everywhere from Washington, D.C. — where Steve Case once rented an entire theater — to Athens, where the team interviewed Greece’s prime minister, and to San Francisco’s Presidio, hosted by Kirsten Green. Regardless of the venue, the mission remains consistent: bring together pioneers working on world-changing technologies before the rest of the world realizes their impact.

One unforgettable moment came in 2019, when Sam Altman casually told a StrictlyVC audience that OpenAI’s monetization plan was to “build AGI, then ask it how to make money.” The crowd laughed — he wasn’t kidding.

This year’s lineup includes Nicholas Kelez, a particle accelerator physicist who spent two decades at the U.S. Department of Energy building machines that defy expectations. Today, he’s tackling a critical semiconductor crisis: every advanced chip relies on a $400 million laser-powered lithography machine produced by just one company in the Netherlands — using technology originally invented in the U.S. Kelez is now developing a next-generation, American-built alternative using particle accelerator tech. It’s niche, it’s intensely technical, and it’s vital. Competition for this breakthrough is heating up fast.

Another highlight is Mina Fahmi, who has developed a ring capable of capturing your whispered thoughts and converting them into text. Skeptical? Fahmi and co-founder Kirak Hong spent years working on neural-interface concepts at Meta after their startup was acquired. Their new device, the Stream Ring, isn’t about companionship — it’s about extending human cognition. Backed by Toni Schneider — known for scaling WordPress and investing through True Ventures in hits like Peloton, Ring, and Fitbit — Fahmi’s company, Sandbar, has just emerged from stealth and could be on the verge of something transformative. Schneider himself will also be at the event next week in Palo Alto.

Author: Kandi Srinivasa Reddy, Srinivasa Reddy Kandi, #KandiSrinivasaReddy, #SrinivasaReddyKandi



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