GenAI SF Meetups & Weekly Raffles
- Bond AI’s San Francisco and Bay Area Luma calendar is live this week, listing dozens of April 2026 artificial intelligence meetups, dinners, workshops, hackathons, and mixers. - The page sells Premium access for $10 monthly or $100 yearly, with weekly raffles for conference tickets and credits from AI tools. - The calendar now brands itself as Bond AI, not Luma’s own GenAI SF list. (luma.com)
Bond AI’s San Francisco and Bay Area calendar on Luma is operating this week as a paid community hub for artificial intelligence events, not just a static meetup list. (luma.com) The page at luma.com/genai-sf identifies the organizer as “Bond AI - the largest in-person AI events community (120k+).” It offers a Premium tier priced at $10 a month or $100 a year. (luma.com) Premium members must request approval to join. In exchange, the page says members can enter weekly raffles for free tickets to conferences including HumanX and AI+ Renaissance, connect with other operators, and get credits for AI and software-as-a-service tools. (luma.com) The calendar is active for the week of Monday, April 27, 2026, with events spread across San Francisco and nearby cities. Luma’s event filters on the page show categories including 7 conferences or summits, 4 dinners, 9 hackathons, 1 party, and 6 workshops. (luma.com) Listings visible for Tuesday, April 28, include “Workforce Transformation with AI” at 100 Stockton, “Scaling the Modern Stack” in Mountain View, “Optimizing Modern AI Systems” at KAIYŌ Restaurant, and an Air Street San Francisco artificial intelligence meetup. (luma.com 1) (luma.com 2) Wednesday, April 29, listings include “AI Pitch Night” hosted by TheAgentic and Gopher MCP, a Stripe Sessions side event on financial technology and AI backed by DigitalOcean and Catalyst Bay, and an AI Coffeehouse with Fractional AI marked sold out. (luma.com) The page also pitches the community as a place to help create new events, shape strategy, and grow attendance. It says that work “can evolve into a paid gig,” tying the calendar to community organizing as well as event discovery. (luma.com) That branding is a notable shift from the prompt’s framing. The live page does not present the calendar as a Luma-run editorial product; it presents Luma as the platform and Bond AI as the operator. (luma.com) The result is part event board, part membership funnel, and part giveaway program for Bay Area artificial intelligence founders, engineers, and operators looking for in-person networking this week. (luma.com)