logo
Not Content With Rentals, Airbnb Wants to Be the Airbnb of Everything

Not Content With Rentals, Airbnb Wants to Be the Airbnb of Everything

Gizmodo13-05-2025

Airbnb has managed to do its one thing—short-term rentals—quite well. Despite the damaging ripples it has had in the housing market and the annoyance of steep and once-hidden cleaning fees, the company has managed to grab hold of nearly half of the global booking market. Instead of just continuing to specialize in the thing it was made to do, Airbnb's CEO Brian Chesky wants to turn the platform into an Airbnb for everything, allowing users to book services and experiences like chefs, beauticians, and tours, and more.
Chesky went on a bit of a media tour to announce the change, talking to the Wall Street Journal and Wired in the most self-aggrandizing tone imaginable to hype up the shift in vision—but we'll get to the CEO. First, the new Airbnb. Per WSJ, the updated app will now include three icons that will represent homes, experiences, and services. The company has reportedly partnered with over 10,000 vendors operating in 260 cities in 30 countries, according to Wired. They can be booked directly through the app.
The company is also adding experiences, which is actually a path that it's been down before but quickly abandoned. The first iteration was called Airbnb Adventures and launched in 2019, offering 'bucket list worthy' experiences hosted by local experts before pausing the feature in 2023 to focus on its core offerings. Apparently, it's done with that focus and is back into the business of sprawling offerings. According to Wired, the company has secured 22,000 experiences in 650 cities this time, including some celebrity-led ones like a promised option to book a seat next to Conan O'Brien in his podcast studio.
To help guide people through all of these options, the company also reportedly plans to launch an AI-powered concierge that can help people plan a trip that ropes in unique experiences and services along the way.
All of this feels very 2010s Silicon Valley, back when being the 'Uber for anything' was all the rage. That includes the roll out of this announcement, which is centered around Chesky himself, and he has not been shy about leaning into the favored framework of the genius founder who has a singular vision that no one else can capture. Never mind the fact that half of this makeover is a thing Airbnb tried before, and the other half is just the revelation that people sometimes book things other than rental properties.
In Wired, Chesky describes sitting down in late 2023 and writing a manifesto for what his company could be: 'I was basically going from room to room just pouring out this stream-of-consciousness manifesto, like Jack Kerouac writing On the Road.' Which, sure man, you can compare your business plan to the defining work of the counterculture movement. That's a choice you can make.
Over at WSJ, Chesky went on about 'founder mode'—a set of principles that are supposed to guide Silicon Valley executives but largely amount to encouraging tinkerers and tyrants. He also seems to be going against several of his 'founder mode' principles, including: 'Stay small. Stay flat. Stay functional. Have as few people and as few layers as possible for as long as possible.' Hard to imagine going any bigger and broader than being an 'everything' app.
Back to Wired, Chesky declares that he's the spiritual successor to Steve Jobs, a person he never once met: 'I feel like I know him deeply, professionally, in a way that few people ever did, in a way that you only possibly could by starting a tech company as a creative person and going on a rocket ship.' But don't worry, he doesn't see himself at that level yet. He told the Journal, 'I'm more like a disciple. I'm more like a painter who studies Michelangelo. I'm not ever saying I'm going to be Michelangelo, but I believe in that school of thought.'
You may have forgotten for a second that this is not an artist, but rather a rich guy who hit it big on one idea and is now trying to parlay that into even more wealth through a relatively obvious (albeit probably unnecessary) pivot positioned as a revolution. Might be worth booking a therapist to work on your ego, my guy.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nvidia Wants To Build A Planet-Scale AI Factory With DGX Cloud Lepton
Nvidia Wants To Build A Planet-Scale AI Factory With DGX Cloud Lepton

Forbes

time42 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Nvidia Wants To Build A Planet-Scale AI Factory With DGX Cloud Lepton

DGX Lepton Cloud In April 2025, Nvidia quietly acquired Lepton AI, a Chinese startup specializing in GPU cloud services. Founded in 2023, Lepton AI focused on renting out GPU compute that's aggregated from diverse infrastructure and cloud providers. While the deal value is unknown, the founders of Lepton AI, Yangqing Jia (former VP of Technology at Alibaba) and Junjie Bai, joined Nvidia to continue building the product. Lepton AI had previously raised $11 million in seed funding from investors such as CRV and Fusion Fund. Nvidia has rebranded Lepton AI as DGX Cloud Lepton and relaunched it in June 2025. According to Nvidia, the service delivers a unified AI platform and compute marketplace that connects developers to tens of thousands of GPUs from a global network of cloud providers. How Does DGX Cloud Lepton Work DGX Cloud Lepton serves as a unified AI platform and marketplace, bringing the global network of GPU resources closer to developers. It aggregates the GPU capacity offered by cloud providers, such as AWS, CoreWeave and Lambda, through a consistent software interface. This enables developers to access GPU compute through a centralized interface, regardless of the cluster's location. Lepton Cloud While leveraging the underlying GPU compute, Nvidia is exposing a consistent software platform powered by NIM, Nemo, Blueprints and Cloud Functions. Irrespective of the cloud infrastructure, developers can expect the same software stack to run their AI workflows. DGX Cloud Lepton supports three primary workflows: Dev Pods: Interactive development environments (e.g., Jupyter notebooks, SSH, VS Code) for prototyping and experimentation. Batch Jobs: Large-scale, non-interactive workloads (e.g., model training, data preprocessing) that can be distributed across multiple nodes, with real-time monitoring and detailed metrics. Inference Endpoints: Deploy and manage models (base, fine-tuned, or custom) as scalable, high-availability endpoints, with support for both NVIDIA NIM and custom containers Apart from this, DGX Cloud Lepton delivers operational features such as real-time monitoring and observability, on-demand auto-scaling, custom workspaces, security and compliance. Developers can choose the region of their preference to maintain data locality and comply with data sovereignty requirements. DGX Lepton's Growing Network Nvidia has partnered with major cloud providers and infrastructure providers worldwide. Andromeda, AWS, CoreWeave, Foxconn, Hugging Face, Lambda, Microsoft Azure, Mistral AI, Together AI and Yotta are some of the listed partners for DGX Cloud Lepton. At the recently held GTC event in Paris, Nvidia announced that it is working with some of the leading European cloud providers to enable local developers to meet the data sovereignty needs. It also announced a partnership with Hugging Face to deliver training clusters as a service. Nvidia collaborates with European venture capital firms, Accel, Elaia, Partech, and Sofinnova Partners, to provide up to $100,000 in GPU capacity credits and assistance from NVIDIA specialists for eligible portfolio firms via DGX Cloud Lepton. While the pricing varies based on the cloud provider, the service is currently in preview. Developers can sign up at to apply for early access to Lepton. With DGX Cloud Lepton, Nvidia aims to make GPU computing accessible to global developers. Instead of launching its own cloud platform that competes with the hyperscalers, Nvidia has chosen to partner with them to deliver aggregated compute resources to developers.

How Powerball winner could best spend $100 million
How Powerball winner could best spend $100 million

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How Powerball winner could best spend $100 million

One lucky winner has snapped up the entire $100 million Powerball jackpot, more money than anyone could ever need in a lifetime. The world's best-known philosopher, Australia's own Professor Peter Singer, spoke to Yahoo News and shared a frank admission overnight about what he'd hypothetically do if he won a large lottery prize. 'I'm pretty comfortable at the moment, I'd probably give all of it, or at least 99 per cent of it away,' he said last night. 'But if somebody has less, I'd understand wanting to keep $10 million. I can't understand why anyone would need more than that.' The Princeton University ethicist is a pioneer of altruism — selfless acts that benefit others. He famously doesn't just preach on the subject, he follows through with action. By 2020, he was already donating 40 per cent of his income to charity, and when he won the Berggruen Prize for philosophy a year later, he gave the entire sum away. Related: 🤖 Peter Singer: Can we morally kill AI if it becomes self-aware? When it comes to who the $100 million Powerball winner should help, he has some basic guiding ideas. 'They should give it to the most effective causes they can — fighting global poverty, maybe something to do with reducing the suffering of animals in factory farms, climate change, are possibly things to do with it,' he said. Advocacy group A Life You Can Save lists charities to support where your donations will make the biggest difference. It was founded by Singer and former business executive Charlie Bresler, and has so far raised over US$120 million ($183 million) to help charities achieve specific goals like spending US$300,000 to distribute antiretroviral drugs to treat HIV in Zambia, and US$100,000 to provide life-saving treatment for 800 children with malnutrition. 🚨 ATO, Centrelink warning over $100 million Powerball lottery win 🌏 Secret hidden beneath Australia's 'most important' parcel of land 🏝️ One thing a $100 million Powerball win could buy you that's better than holidays, homes, and cars Singer's ideas are thought to have influenced billionaire philanthropists, including Warren Buffett, who is giving away 99 per cent of his wealth through his charity The Giving Pledge, and Bill Gates who is aiming to do the same. The best option would be to take a well-considered approach, rather than just giving everything immediately away. This could mean setting up a trust or bank account that allows it to have a continued impact over the years. Singer argues it's a 'misconception' that smaller donations can't make a difference. 'The more you have the bigger the difference you can make, but together with others, everybody can make a difference,' he said. When it comes to those of us who don't have millions of dollars, Singer believes we should be reconsidering our spend on non-essential items. 'If they're in Australia, they're very fortunate to be growing up in a country that has good social security, free education and health care,' he said. 'So I think when they spend money on things that they don't need, luxuries, frivolities, items that are more fashionable, things of that sort, they should think about what else they could do with the money. And think about how much of a difference it could make to people in extreme poverty, or how it could restore sight against somebody who's blind and can't afford to get their cataracts removed… or help people who get malaria because they don't have mosquito nets, and children may die from that when they get ill. 'There are just so many things in low-income countries that people are deprived of. Educating children, particularly girls in poor countries, is another thing that often doesn't happen. But I think we can all play a part.' Love Australia's weird and wonderful environment? 🐊🦘😳 Get our new newsletter showcasing the week's best stories.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store