Suggestions
Antoine Moyroud
Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners
Antoine Moyroud is a highly motivated individual with a passion for connecting with other passionate people and working on challenging problems. He has a diverse range of interests and is particularly skilled at the intersection of data, design, and developer tools, with a keen interest in climate and fintech topics. Antoine enjoys both offline and online interactions, sustainable travel, and staying updated on climate change issues. He also has a love for Disco House music and live music.
Educationally, Antoine Moyroud holds a Bachelor's degree in English and German studies from Université Jean Moulin (Lyon III), a Master's degree in Big Data Analytics from IE School of Science and Technology, and another Bachelor's degree in Management Science from iaelyon School of Management.
Antoine has an extensive professional background, having been involved in various organizations and roles. He has held positions such as Lead Investor at The Mobile-First Company and Mistral AI, Partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners, and Visiting Professor at EPITA: Ecole d'Ingénieurs en Informatique. Additionally, he has been associated with companies like Liveblocks, EQT Ventures, Onramper, Moralis Web3, Verkor, Vev, Airkit, Luko, Tinyclues, and Dataiku in different capacities such as investor, board observer, principal, vice president, and business intelligence analyst.
Antoine Moyroud has also showcased his entrepreneurial skills as a business owner of antoine-moyroud.com and has engaged in part-time and full-time roles in marketing and business development in various organizations. With his academic background in foreign languages, management, and big data analytics, coupled with his extensive professional experience, Antoine possesses a unique skill set that makes him a valuable asset in the tech and investment sectors.
Highlights
Haha what a flex on the Spotify cache - congrats to the team on the release!
My feed has been full of gstack + LOC debate, so let me coin a term: LOC-maxxing 🤔
Codegen got cheap and agents got better at sifting through slop. Now it seems that code volume is being mistaken for intelligence.
More tokens → More model work → More intelligence → More code volume/LOCs → More value
That feels backwards to me: If code is abundant, LOC should matter less, not more.
Abundance lowers the value of the code itself.
Once code is cheap to generate, the interesting question is not "how much code was generated" but "how much of it was actually worth keeping in the first place".



