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“We had to invent the math before we could build the model.”

That’s how my dad, Clay Marr, describes his early years at the dawn of Silicon Valley, from his time at Lockheed getting the first man on the moon and at Fairchild launching the semiconductor revolution.

Bottom line: AI requires the research discipline that made Silicon Valley what it is.

Would you believe that AI innovation is directly tied to winning World War II?

The technologies that shaped victory: early computing, radar, and the birth of systems thinking also laid the groundwork for Silicon Valley’s rise. It was bold, long-term, and funded by vision, not quarterly targets.

In this Lead The Machine episode, Clay describes how he carried that spirit forward when product research meant creating what didn’t yet exist.

We talk about what that spirit of invention can teach us today as AI goes through its own identity crisis, still a platform trying to figure out its product strategy.

From the era of semiconductors to the rise of AI, Clay’s perspective is a masterclass in how real innovation happens: through patience, accountability, and a willingness to experiment before the path is clear.

Plus, my dad’s story is straight up cool.



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit leadthemachine.substack.com