StrictlyVC San Francisco 2026 Signals Where AI Capital and Infrastructure Collide
The AI cycle is shedding its excess and tightening around execution. Capital is no longer entertaining broad narratives without proof of deployment. Operators are being measured on systems that hold under pressure, not demos that impress in isolation. The startup ecosystem is moving from experimentation to expectation, where performance, reliability, and economic clarity decide who stays in the game.
That is why StrictlyVC San Francisco 2026 lands with weight on April 30 at the Sentro Filipino Cultural Center in SoMa. TechCrunch and StrictlyVC are compressing signal into a single evening with roughly 200 attendees. One room, one track, and a concentrated read on where capital and conviction are actually moving. This is not a conference built for exposure. It is built for calibration inside a tightening startup ecosystem.
Replit co-founder and CEO Amjad Masad represents the shift in how software gets built, where coding becomes orchestration and leverage compounds faster than headcount. Eclipse founder and CEO Lior Susan brings a different gravity with roughly $1.3B behind a physical AI thesis that moves intelligence off the screen and into factories, logistics, and real-world systems. That capital is not chasing trends. It is underwriting infrastructure.
TDK Ventures president Nicolas Sauvage enters with corporate precision, backed by a firm sponsoring the event and actively shaping how strategic capital integrates with early-stage risk. Connie Loizos, TechCrunch editor in chief and StrictlyVC founder, drives that conversation with editorial pressure rather than promotional ease. Forum AI co-founder and CEO Campbell Brown brings the tension around trust and veracity, a problem that scales faster than any model improvement. Uber CTO Praveen Neppalli Naga grounds the room in operational reality, where AI at scale is less theory and more constraint management across millions of users.
The extended speaker orbit including Pat Gelsinger, Jay Graber, Max Hodak, Nicholas Kelez, Daniel Lurie, and Tekedra Mawakana expands the frame across semiconductors, decentralized networks, biotech, optics, civic infrastructure, and autonomy. This is not a narrow conversation. It is a layered systems dialogue that reflects how interconnected the startup ecosystem has become when AI touches everything at once.
The structure matters as much as the names. A single-track format forces shared context. When the room hears the same insight at the same moment, the conversations that follow carry more precision. Networking here is not volume-driven. It is proximity-driven. The distance between a thesis and a transaction gets shorter when everyone is operating from the same information baseline.
For founders, the signal is clear. Capital is concentrating around teams that can translate AI into durable systems. For investors, the edge comes from understanding where infrastructure bets intersect with application velocity. For operators, the decision is less about chasing AI and more about choosing where within it to build.
StrictlyVC San Francisco is not trying to explain the moment. It is capturing it in motion. On April 30, SoMa becomes a checkpoint where capital, code, and policy intersect under one roof. The startup ecosystem will keep expanding, but rooms like this decide which parts of it actually hold.









