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This Week in European Tech with Dan Bowyer, Mads Jensen & Lomax Ward

In this episode of Upside, Dan Bowyer, Mads Jensen of SuperSeed and Lomax Ward of Outsized Ventures unpack a week where geopolitics, AI arms races and Europe’s tech momentum took over the headlines.

A new oil shock triggered by tensions around the Strait of Hormuz threatens global energy flows and raises the spectre of another inflation cycle with direct consequences for venture capital and startup funding. At the same time, the economics of modern warfare are shifting rapidly, with cheap drones and fast-iteration defence technology reshaping how conflicts are fought and who builds the tools.

Against that backdrop, Europe delivered a surprisingly strong week for tech: France produced the continent’s first $1B seed “Instacorn”, Revolut finally secured its UK banking licence, and new proposals could finally push Europe closer to unified capital markets.

Meanwhile in AI, the race for chips, coding platforms and infrastructure continues to accelerate, from Nvidia’s looming announcements at GTC to Meta building its own inference silicon and the meteoric rise of AI coding startup Cursor.

This isn’t just a tech news cycle.

It’s energy markets, AI infrastructure, and European innovation ecosystems moving at the same time.


What’s covered

• The Strait of Hormuz oil shock and its ripple effects on venture markets
• Ukraine’s emergence as a real-time defence innovation ecosystem
• The shifting economics of warfare: cheap drones vs expensive missiles
• Europe’s first $1B AI seed round and the rise of frontier labs in Paris
• Yann LeCun’s new “world models” bet and the next frontier in AI
• Capital markets integration and whether Europe can finally unify funding
• Cursor’s $50B trajectory and the future of AI coding platforms
• The AI chip war: Meta’s inference silicon vs Nvidia’s dominance
• AI layoffs and whether productivity narratives are masking pandemic over-hiring


Key themes from the episode

▪️ The oil shock could ripple directly into venture markets. A disruption to energy supply raises inflation risks, which in turn could keep interest rates higher for longer — tightening capital across the startup ecosystem.

▪️ Ukraine has quietly become a defence innovation hub. Rapid iteration in drone technology and battlefield software is turning the country into a real-time R&D lab for next-generation warfare.

▪️ The economics of warfare are shifting. Cheap drones costing tens of thousands can disable infrastructure defended by systems costing millions, pushing militaries toward faster, cheaper innovation cycles.

▪️ Europe’s AI scene is gaining momentum. Paris produced the continent’s first $1B seed round, signalling that Europe can now generate “instacorns” in frontier AI.

▪️ World models may be the next AI frontier. Yann LeCun’s new venture is betting that understanding physical reality — not just language — is the path toward general intelligence.

▪️ Capital markets integration in Europe may finally move forward. New proposals from the EU’s largest economies aim to simplify public market supervision and make it easier to raise capital across the bloc.

▪️ Cursor’s meteoric rise raises hard questions about AI aggregation. The AI coding platform is targeting a $50B valuation — but if coding agents eliminate the need for traditional IDEs, its long-term moat may be fragile.

▪️ The AI chip war is heating up. Meta is developing its own inference chips, potentially challenging Nvidia’s dominance as AI infrastructure spending accelerates.

▪️ AI layoffs may be narrative as much as reality. Tech companies from Block to Atlassian are framing restructuring as AI-driven productivity gains — though pandemic over-hiring may explain just as much.


🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify — and if you’re building in AI, defence, energy or deep tech, this one’s worth queueing with chapter markers.

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