logo
Biggest NY Tech Week ever shows Gotham's AI and robotics poised to challenge Silicon Valley's dominance

Biggest NY Tech Week ever shows Gotham's AI and robotics poised to challenge Silicon Valley's dominance

New York Post30-05-2025

The Big Apple is getting bigger when it comes to artificial intelligence and robotics.
Those growing industries will be the center of attention at NY Tech Week 2025, running June 2–8. It's set to be the largest iteration of the conference yet, with more than 1,000 events — more than half of which deal with AI — spread across all five boroughs and a total of 60,000 RSVPs.
3 A sign advertises the 2024 iteration of NY Tech Week, presented by Andreessen Horowitz (a16z). Last year, there were about 730 events across the city. This year, there's over 1,000.
Courtesy of Andreessen Horowitz / Tech Week
'It's an enormous milestone,' Julie Samuels — president and CEO of Tech:NYC, a nonprofit network of companies and entrepreneurs that is hosting multiple events — told NYNext. 'It's amazing how diverse our tech ecosystem is and that so many people will be here exchanging ideas.'
The week's standouts include 'Next Play,' led by IBM and centered on the intersection of sports and AI, on June 2; Tech:NYC's 'Decoded Futures Social Impact AI Showcase' on June 6; and panels and salons hosted by the likes of Anthropic, OpenAI, Mistral and Perplexity.
For the first time ever, robotics will be the focus of over half a dozen events — a leap from zero last year.
3 Tech Week is a decentralized conference made up of meetups, panels, and demos, effectively turning New York City into an open platform for innovation.
Courtesy of Andreessen Horowitz/ Tech Week
On June 2, New York Robotics and the NY Tech Alliance will host 'Exploring Embodied and Physical AI' at Civic Hall in Union Square. The event will feature NYU researcher Anya Zorin and her project RUKA — a robotic hand developed with Professor Lerrel Pinto at the General-purpose Robotics and AI Lab — which can sense and respond to touch. 'AI's all the buzz, right, but not everyone realizes that robotics is such a huge part of the AI story,' said Randy Howie, co-founder and managing partner of New York Robotics. 'Robotics is AI in the physical world.'
Elsewhere during the week, founders will pitch their startups in a literal moving elevator at Hudson Yards and swing racquets at a 'Pickleball and Tech Pals' tournament in Central Park. And the city's biggest players — including Amazon Web Services, JPMorgan Chase, and Google — will host panels and private mixers.
Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) first launched Tech Week in Los Angeles in 2022. In 2023, it expanded to San Francisco and New York City.
3 Google is joining industry heavyweights including Amazon Web Services and JPMorgan Chase as hosts for events during NY Tech Week.
Christopher Sadowski
While Silicon Valley still paces the nation in terms of venture capital, NYC is increasingly carving out its own tech identity — particularly in the realm of hard tech, which includes robotics, advanced manufacturing and other engineering-heavy ventures that demand more than code.
This story is part of NYNext, an indispensable insider insight into the innovations, moonshots and political chess moves that matter most to NYC's power players (and those who aspire to be).
Tech now accounts for more than 10% of the city's GDP (up from 6% in 2013) and has driven 14% of all job growth in the past decade, according to Samuels.
'New York is uniquely positioned,' said Ryan Musto, senior associate at Alumni Ventures and host of the 'America Assembled: Robotics & Trade' event on June 4. 'You don't have to go far back to remember when New York was the manufacturing headquarters of North America. It's in our DNA.'
For most Tech Week events, admission is free but attendance is capped.
Send NYNext a tip: nynextlydia@nypost.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's TikTok Buyer Is the Same Group Behind a Previous Stalled Bid
Trump's TikTok Buyer Is the Same Group Behind a Previous Stalled Bid

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's TikTok Buyer Is the Same Group Behind a Previous Stalled Bid

(Bloomberg) -- The prospective buyer of TikTok's American operations cited by President Donald Trump is the same investor consortium including Oracle Corp., Blackstone Inc. and venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, whose bid for the app had stalled amid US-China trade tensions, according to a person familiar with the matter. Struggling Downtowns Are Looking to Lure New Crowds Philadelphia Transit System Votes to Cut Service by 45%, Hike Fares Squeezed by Crowds, the Roads of Central Park Are Being Reimagined Sprawl Is Still Not the Answer Sao Paulo Pushes Out Favela Residents, Drug Users to Revive Its City Center Trump said in an interview aired on Sunday that he had identified a contender to purchase the popular social media app from its Chinese parent ByteDance Ltd. but stopped short of naming the winning bidder. He also said that completion of any sale would be contingent on the Chinese government, including President Xi Jinping, dropping its longstanding opposition. 'We have a buyer for TikTok, by the way. I think I'll need probably China approval and I think President Xi will probably do it,' Trump said in a pretaped interview with Fox News's Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo. 'It's a group of very wealthy people.' A person familiar with the discussions confirmed that the buyers group cited by the president was the one involving Oracle and Blackstone that had come close to reaching agreement with ByteDance in April but was halted when China withheld its approval following the US president's decision to impose sweeping tariffs. That potential agreement would have granted new outside investors 50% of TikTok's US business in a unit that would be spun off from ByteDance. ByteDance's existing US investors would also own about 30% of the business, cutting the Chinese firm's stake to just below 20% and allowing it to meet the ownership requirements of the US security law. Oracle would take a minority stake in the operations and provide security assurances for user data. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday that discussions were continuing 'at the highest level' with China. 'We have another 90-day extension, and it's just to continue to work out this deal and make sure that TikTok stays on for the American people,' she told reporters. Blackstone declined to comment, while representatives from Oracle, Andreessen Horowitz, ByteDance and TikTok didn't respond to requests for comment. Trump addressed the fate of the video-sharing platform days after the US and China signed an agreement to ease trade tensions that had flared since he imposed tariffs of as much as 145% on Chinese imports. Under the accord finalized last week, the US dropped those tariffs to 30% and promised to resume shipments of ethane, jet engines and chip-design software as long as China honored a pledge to remove some barriers on rare earths exports. That deal, though, left unanswered whether China might drop its objections to a sale of TikTok by ByteDance. When asked about the buyers mentioned by Trump, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning told reporters at a regular press briefing in Beijing earlier Monday that on TikTok-related issues, China 'has reiterated its principled position,' saying she had nothing further to add. Under a law signed by then-President Joe Biden last year, ByteDance was directed to divest TikTok's US unit by Jan. 19 or face a ban of the app over national security concerns. The company has balked at selling a lucrative business valued from $20 billion to as high as $150 billion depending on the proposed terms and technology included. Trump has since extended the deadline three times to allow more time for a deal to take shape that would spare TikTok's US operations from a shutdown. His latest extension carries through mid-September, and Trump said during the interview aired Sunday that he would reveal the buyers group 'in about two weeks.' --With assistance from María Paula Mijares Torres, Brody Ford, Dawn Lim, Lizette Chapman and Kurt Wagner. America's Top Consumer-Sentiment Economist Is Worried How to Steal a House SNAP Cuts in Big Tax Bill Will Hit a Lot of Trump Voters Too Inside Gap's Last-Ditch, Tariff-Addled Turnaround Push Pistachios Are Everywhere Right Now, Not Just in Dubai Chocolate ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

TikTok Buyer Cited by Trump Is Same Investor Group as Before
TikTok Buyer Cited by Trump Is Same Investor Group as Before

Bloomberg

time6 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

TikTok Buyer Cited by Trump Is Same Investor Group as Before

By and Hadriana Lowenkron Save The prospective buyer of TikTok's American operations cited by President Donald Trump is the same investor consortium including Oracle Corp., Blackstone Inc. and venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, whose bid for the app had stalled amid US-China trade tensions, according to a person familiar with the matter. Trump said in an interview aired on Sunday that he had identified a contender to purchase the popular social media app from its Chinese parent ByteDance Ltd. but stopped short of naming the winning bidder. He also said that completion of any sale would be contingent on the Chinese government, including President Xi Jinping, dropping its longstanding opposition.

Why a16z VC believes that Cluely, the ‘cheat on everything' startup, is the new blueprint for AI startups
Why a16z VC believes that Cluely, the ‘cheat on everything' startup, is the new blueprint for AI startups

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Why a16z VC believes that Cluely, the ‘cheat on everything' startup, is the new blueprint for AI startups

When Cluely, a startup claiming to be building a product that helps people 'cheat' on everything, announced that it raised a $15 million Series A financing from Andreessen Horowitz, some people on X criticized the VC firm for backing the controversial company. After all, Cluely isn't just offering a product that may have questionable uses, but the startup has become famous for using what many people call rage-bait marketing. But Cluely's ability to grab attention is precisely what attracted a16z to the startup. Even before meeting Cluely's founder Roy Lee, Andreessen Horowitz's partner Bryan Kim thought that startups need new marketing tactics in the AI era. Kim, like many investors, previously thought that building a superb 'artisan' product with highly desired features was the key to a startup's lasting success, he explained on the latest a16z podcast episode. But shortly after the emergence of GenAI, he noticed that offering an exceptional product might not be enough. 'If you craft this thing and OpenAI or someone builds a new model to include that part in their product, you're done,' Kim said. 'So, it couldn't become this highly thoughtful, slow-build product. It needed to be something where founders moved extremely quickly.' That realization has led Kim to believe that speed, whether in marketing or product building, is paramount to creating a successful startup. Earlier this month, Kim published a post explaining his theory of why, for consumer-facing AI startups, 'momentum is the moat.' When Kim met Lee and saw that Cluely had been able to convert awareness into paying customers, he instantly knew that he had discovered a founder he had theorized about. 'It's been so hard to pierce through the noise of everything AI, especially in consumer, and to do that consistently is actually near impossible,' Kim said. How does Lee explain why his polarizing marketing approach has generated so much buzz? 'Most people don't know how to make viral content,' Lee said on the podcast. 'Everyone on X is trying to [sound] like the most intellectual, thoughtful person. But this just lacks viral sense.' Lee, instead, had studied why some posts on TikTok and Instagram blow up. 'Algorithms promote the most controversial things,' he said. 'I'm just literally applying the same principles of controversy on X and LinkedIn.' What many people don't know, Lee said, is that Cluely barely had a functioning product when the startup launched in April with its slickly produced video of Lee using its hidden AI to a lie to a woman about his age and knowledge of art while on a date. Despite having some semblance of a product, the startup has yet to unveil the solution it has been hyping. 'The internet is up in storm saying, 'Where's the product?'' Lee said. 'We're earlier than the latest YC batch of companies. Yet, we're generating more views than every single one of them.' Lee is convinced that once the product launches, it will generate even more excitement than if Cluely introduced it without 'marketing' the company for the last two months. (The official launch is set for Friday, June 27, he posted on X.) Kim sees Cluely's approach as a perfect embodiment of his 'momentum as a moat' theory. Since time is of the essence in AI, the a16z partner is convinced that Cluely can figure out its product on the fly. 'What's important is to try to build a plane as it's falling down the cliff,' Kim said. We'll all see soon if that plane soars or crashes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store