DM Paul Fang recommended
Sales guidance from the briefing calls for reps to DM/follow Paul Fang at Bay Area Founders Club to get BFC intros and route founders to the MissionX 32×GB300 program — presented as a high‑value channel for seed→Series B AI teams. The play is listed as a top immediate action for reps. (x.com)
Dr. Paul Fang is listed as the founder and president of Bay Area Founders Club (BFC), which the organization’s public profile advertises as a community spanning tens of thousands of members and thousands of startups and VCs. (bayareafoundersclub.com) BFC’s public “about” pages state that many member startups typically raise between $1 million and $10 million and that some firms in the network have raised more than $20 million. (bayareafoundersclub.substack.com) A provider named Mission X advertises configurable GPU compute offerings and a waitlist for upcoming hardware generations (the site’s product page explicitly references GB200-era reservations and GPU instance options). (missionx.net) Mission X’s pricing page claims performance and cost advantages compared with generalized public cloud options, including promotional language such as “up to 35x faster and 80% less expensive” for specialty instances. (missionx.net) NVIDIA’s GB300 (Blackwell Ultra) is documented as a next‑generation accelerator with up to 288 GB HBM3e per GPU and significant FP4 inference performance gains over the prior GB200 generation. (nvidia.com) Rack‑scale GB300 NVL72 configurations pack 72 Blackwell GPUs plus 36 Grace CPUs in a single liquid‑cooled cabinet, and NVIDIA publishes DGX GB300/DGX SuperPOD reference architectures for enterprise deployments. (nvidia.com) Using NVIDIA’s published per‑GPU memory, 32 GB300 GPUs would provide 32 × 288 GB = 9,216 GB (≈9.2 TB) of HBM aggregate (calculation based on the GB300 spec), while major cloud vendors have also introduced ND GB300 v6 instance families for GB300‑class access. (nvidia.com)