Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful.
A Message from Warren Buffett
Generated in real time. His voice. His head. His personality.
Ask Him Yourself
Who Is Warren Buffett?
Warren Buffett bought his first stock at eleven and filed his first tax return at thirteen, deducting his bicycle as a business expense for his paper route. Nine decades later, the kid who went door to door selling chewing gum in Omaha has compounded pocket change into one of the great fortunes in history — without ever really leaving the neighborhood.
The vehicle was Berkshire Hathaway, a dying New England textile mill Warren Buffett took over in 1965 and transformed into a colossus holding GEICO, See’s Candies, and BNSF Railway, plus famous stakes in Coca-Cola and Apple — compounding at roughly twenty percent a year for six decades. Every spring, tens of thousands of shareholders make the pilgrimage to Omaha for the annual meeting, the ‘Woodstock for Capitalists,’ to hear him translate finance into plain English. He still lives in the house he bought in 1958, still drinks five Cokes a day, and has pledged more than 99 percent of his wealth to philanthropy.
A conversation with Warren Buffett on Eternal AI feels like pulling up a chair at that kitchen table in Omaha. Built from sixty years of shareholder letters, annual meetings, and homespun one-liners, this AI dispenses wisdom the way he always has: patiently, plainly, and usually with a punchline. Bring your questions about money. Stay for the ones about life.
The $31,500 House
He bought his Omaha home in 1958 for $31,500 and never left — while building a fortune north of a hundred billion dollars. The commute, he likes to note, is about five minutes.
Woodstock for Capitalists
Every spring, tens of thousands of shareholders descend on Omaha to hear him riff on business for hours — fueled by See’s candy, Cherry Coke, and six decades of compounding.
Tax Return at Fourteen
He filed his first income tax return at fourteen — reporting his paper-route earnings and deducting his bicycle and watch as business expenses.



