Andy Dunn app uses AI app uses AI to help you make friends
“We are far from the pants,” Andy Dunn, founder of the online retailer Bonobos, told TechCrunch. The former CEO is now taking on a completely different challenge: he wants to help people make friends.
Dunn’s most recent venture, Pieis a social application focused on unifying people into real life.
With Increased from Serie A of $ 11.5 million and the means of paying the organizers to host events, Pie has grown to over 130,000 monthly active users, although it is only available in San Francisco and Chicago. But more users meant that personal events hosted through the application are also becoming more crowded, making it difficult to connect people.
The young company was facing a problem: if hundreds of people appear at an event, how do guests know who to talk to? How can they befriend when they enter a busy room surrounded by strangers?
“This is the beauty of building a startup,” Dun said. “The solution creates a problem.”
Fortunately, a possible solution to this problem was not difficult to find.
Two PIE event organizers have already worked together to build an instrument called Spared Connections, a quiz with AI trying to predict who people will understand with the best of a social event. Pie acquired the two founders, Samir Mahafza and Sam Stubs, and folded the test at certain gatherings, which were marked as “Pie”.
During the Pie Coffee Coffee event, for example, every person who RSVPS will take a short person’s test where respondents evaluate how much they agree with a given mood on a scale of 1 to 5. These prompts are diverse and include things like: Are you ready to sacrifice stability to pursue passion? Do you believe in astrology? Are you praying? Do you vote? Do you have toxic traits?
Prior to the event, the quiz algorithm divided the respondents into groups of six, based on who AI thinks it is most likely to be understood. These six people are then accommodated in a group chat on pie where they can get to know each other before the event.
“We start to feed it (Chatgpt). And then, when we get the feedback contours of who connects with who and who invites people to pound, we will start to see, well, why do people hit it? ” – said Dun. “And I think it’s such a dark art that without the folded point of II, I think it would be almost an insoluble problem.”
Increasing anxiety Around the level of loneliness of Americans, it may seem depressing that we need algorithms to help us make friends. But if you have ever contacted a new friend via Instagram or have met at one of Bumble, then you have already released AI in your social life.