As the tech world clamors around generative AI tools like OpenAI's ChatGPT the trends of last year like crypto and the metaverse have fallen by the wayside.
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Last year, crypto, big corporate jobs, and the metaverse were hot in the tech industry.
This year, with layoffs, an explosion in generative AI and spiking interest in living forever, the list looks a little different.
Here's Insider's definitive list of everything that's in— and not— in the tech industry.
Here's what's in…A green light to the tech trends of 2023.
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Artificial IntelligenceThe boom in generative AI has revitalized Silicon Valley's tech scene.
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The tech industry has been rocked by a revolution in generative AI over the past few months.
Ammaar Reshi, who works at the SF-based fintech company Brex, said he's overheard some "insane" remarks amid the AI frenzy sweeping Silicon Valley, including recently: "I really believe you can recreate the human soul with AI."
San FranciscoThe AI boom is helping to bring San Francisco back after the pandemic.
Now, founders are rushing back to build startups that capitalize on generative AI. The neighborhood of Hayes Valley, in particular, has become such a hotspot for new AI startups that it's jokingly been renamed "Cerebral Valley."
Venture capitalists and those with more corporate tech jobs also are heading back to the office.
Four Bay Area-based tech workers told Insider that they're going in to meet colleagues, grab coffees, or just get out of their apartments. Their overall consensus is that working from home is on its way out and working from the office is back in.
Venture capitalists previously told Insider that the popularity of pickleball speaks to a broader shift away from clubby forms of socializing to more accessible ones in the venture community.
"A lot of the things that used to be in vogue I probably wouldn't do anymore, like golf outings or whiskey nights or cigar tastings," Rak Garg, a principal at Bain Capital Ventures, and pickleball enthusiast, previously told Insider.
"It's not very inclusive. That's why I think that pickleball and all these other things are better. It just makes everybody feel more at home."
Cold plungeTech workers are taking cold plunges to increase productivity or improve the effects of aging.
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Jack Dorsey may be as famous by now for co-founding Twitter as he is for his fastidious health regimen—which includes regular ice baths.
While Dorsey said he began taking ice baths in the evenings in 2016, the rest of the tech industry has since caught up.
Four tech workers told Insider that cold plunges have become ubiquitous as a productivity and anti-aging hack.
Dr. Anant Vinjamoori, chief medical officer of Modern Age, a New York-based healthcare company focused on longevity, previously told Insider that a plunge into an ice cold bath results in "a surge in the production of neurotransmitters such as epinephrine and dopamine" which have immediate rejuvenating and energizing effects, he said.
Another telling sign that cold plunges are in? Venture capitalist Turner Novak recently joked about a founder who didn't take "5am cold plunges."
In January, Brianne Kimmel, a venture capitalist who founded the firm Worklife Ventures, tweeted about metformin use across San Francisco, saying "surely everyone is on it" but "no one talks about it."
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman also said his personal anti-aging regimen includes metformin.
HackathonsHackathons are becoming the trendiest way to socialize in Silicon Valley these days.
Salesforce
The hottest weekend event in San Francisco right now might be a hackathon.
Hackathons are social coding events where programmers (and others in the industry) collaborate on a project with a tight deadline.
The revolution in AI heating up across Silicon Valley has turned hackathons into an effective way for people to network their way into the industry.
Worklife's Kimmel previously told Insider "It's so early in the AI ecosystem, where a lot of the conversations being had are mostly either dinners with less than 10 people or self-organized and self-funded hackathons that happen on weekends."
And on the East Coast, tech mixers are growing in popularity.
What's out…A farewell to the tech trends of last year…
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Drinking alcohol“The bottom line is (researchers) continue to show that excessive alcohol use is a big problem in the US,” one expert not involved in the study said.
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Last October, Ada Yeo, principal and chief of staff at venture firm Khosla Ventures, tweeted that "not drinking" had become a new "tech status signal."
CryptoCrypto was hot last year. This year? Not so much.
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At the beginning of 2022 the crypto world was on fire— in a good way.
Prices for major cryptocurrencies like Ethereum and Bitcoin were high, well-heeled clients were rushing to collect digital art backed by NFTs, and the founder of a well-known crypto exchange called FTX was a multibillionaire.
But then, FTX collapsed, ushering in a cold crypto winter that continued into 2023.
Big corporate jobsTech giants and small startups alike have cut significant numbers from their workforce this year.
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It's hard to talk about the tech industry in 2023 without talking about layoffs at tech companies, including Meta and Microsoft as well as smaller startups.
Reshi told Insider that those who still have jobs have stopped going to the gym because their company has cut wellness stipends. Others, he's observed, are cutting back on ordering food from DoorDash, citing the "macroeconomy."
Moving to MiamiMiami Beach's tech industry was blossoming last year, but many workers are moving back to California now.
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Whether it was for lower taxes, the thriving crypto scene, or the nightlife, tech workers and investors alike were flocking to Miami last year.
This year, moving to Miami has fallen to the wayside among the tech crowd, the therapist Annie Wright told Insider.
"It's all about chasing the hottest job opportunities and right now, it seems like those are in California again because of AI," Wright said.
"Those who moved to Miami to take advantage for tax breaks from crypto are moving back to Silicon Valley, based on what I'm hearing and seeing," she added.
The metaverseMeta seems to have fallen out of love with the metaverse and people across the tech industry are taking note.
Meta
Mark Zuckerberg's love affair with the metaverse is on the rocks.
Keith George, co-founder of the e-commerce marketplace platform Cortina, told Insider that one of his biggest takeaways from this year's Shoptalk— a major retail industry conference —was that the metaverse was "out."
There is "still no existing use case with a real ROI" for the metaverse, George wrote in his conference notes, which were seen by Insider.
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