we needed two...
we needed two Palm Pilots, one for the receiving and one for the sending. I was
fully prepared. They were marked, “Sender A, Sender B, Sender C, Receiver A,
Receiver B, Receiver C.” So I had this stack of Palm Pilots, I hopped in a car,
drove to Buck’s, and it was like 9:50 a.m. Peter was getting very anxious about
the whole thing. That’s where everything becomes very blurry, because I was so
tired by then.
There were about a dozen TV cameras and journalists—there was really big
coverage. We did the beaming, and some group showed up late and said, “Well,
can you do it again?” I said, “No, I just slaved away for 5 days straight—for
5 months straight. The whole point of the security is that you can’t replicate the
transaction. Once it’s done, the money has changed hands.” So these guys actually
made Peter pretend like it was going to happen and turned away the
screen—because the screen was actually saying, “Security breach! Don’t try to
resend the same money again.” Which was a triumph for me, but a pain in the
ass for the camera.
As I was getting interviewed by the Wall Street Journal, or some big pub
guy, all I remember was that he went off to the bathroom for a second, and they
brought out my omelet. The next thing I remember, I woke up, and I was on
the side of my own omelet, and there was no one at Buck’s. Everyone was gone.
They just let me sleep.
Livingston: What did you do first after you got this new funding?
Levchin: As soon as we got funding, we started hiring aggressively, and we built
this app for the Palm Pilot, which was getting pretty good growth. We were getting
300 users a day. Then we built a demo for the website, which was functional,
so you could do everything on the website that you could do on a Palm
Pilot, except the website was unsexy and we didn’t really care. It was like, “Go
to the website and download the Palm Pilot version. It’s really cool.”
Livingston: Three hundred people were downloading it per day? For fun?
Levchin: Well, there are lots of geeks. It slowed down pretty quickly too, but
initially we got a lot of publicity about it.
Sometime by early 2000, we realized that all these people were trying to
use the website for transactions, and the growth of that was actually more
Max Levchin 5
impressive than the growth of the handheld device one, which was inexplicable,
because the handheld device one was cool and the website was just a demo.
Then all these people from a site called eBay were contacting us and saying,
“Can I put your logo in my auction?” And we were like, “Why?” So we told
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