Kan Open AI bli nästa techgigant?

Kan Open AI bli nästa techgigant?

Open AI:s resa mot att bli en potentiell techjätte har präglats av snabb tillväxt, skriver The Economist. Startupen fick 100 miljoner användare med lanseringen av Chat GPT, vilket lockade rivaler som Google till chattbot-marknaden. Bara under första halvåret i år har över 40 miljarder dollar investerats i AI-företag. Trots Open AI:s pionjärstatus står de inför utmaningar. Chat GPT:s förbättringar har varit gradvisa, och konkurrensen från företag som Google och Microsoft är påtaglig. Dessutom väcker företagets ”svarta lådan”-modeller oro kring dataskydd och transparens. Open AI:s förmåga att behålla sin starka ställning kommer att bero på deras kapacitet att anpassa sig, innovera och navigera i det komplexa AI-landskapet, menar tidningen. What the business of AI’s leading startup says about the technology’s future. By The Economist 18 September, 2023 The creation of a new market is like the start of a long race. Competitors jockey for position as spectators excitedly clamour. Then, like races, markets enter a calmer second phase. The field orders itself into leaders and laggards. The crowds thin. In the contest to dominate the future of artificial intelligence, OpenAI, a startup backed by Microsoft, established an early lead by launching Chatgpt last November. The app reached 100m users faster than any before it. Rivals scrambled. Google and its corporate parent, Alphabet, rushed the release of a rival chatbot, Bard. So did startups like Anthropic. Venture capitalists poured over $40bn into AI firms in the first half of 2023, nearly a quarter of all venture dollars this year. Then the frenzy died down. Public interest in AI peaked a couple of months ago, according to data from Google searches. Unique monthly visits to Chatgpt’s website have declined from 210m in May to 180m now (see chart). The emerging order still sees OpenAI ahead technologically. Its latest AI model, GPT-4, is beating others on a variety of benchmarks (such as an ability to answer reading and maths questions). In head-to-head comparisons, it ranks roughly as far ahead of the current runner-up, Anthropic’s Claude 2, as the world’s top chess player does against his closest rival—a decent lead, even if not insurmountable. More important, OpenAI is beginning to make real money. According to The Information, an online technology publication, it is earning revenues at an annualised rate of $1bn, compared with a trifling $28m in the year before Chatgpt’s launch. Can OpenAI translate its early edge into an enduring advantage, and join the ranks of big tech? To do so it must avoid the fate of erstwhile tech pioneers, from Netscape to Myspace, which were overtaken by rivals that learnt from their early successes and stumbles. And as it is a first mover, the decisions it takes will also say much about the broader direction of a nascent industry. OpenAI is a curious firm. It was founded in 2015 by a clutch of entrepreneurs including Sam Altman, its current boss, and Elon Musk, Tesla’s technophilic chief executive, as a non-profit venture. Its aim was to build artificial general intelligence (AGI), which would equal or surpass human capacity in all types of intellectual tasks. The pursuit of something so outlandish meant that it had its pick of the world’s most ambitious AI technologists. While working on an AI that could master a video game called “Dota”, they alighted on a simple approach that involved harnessing oodles of computing power, says an early employee who has since left. When in 2017 researchers at Google published a paper describing a revolutionary machine-learning technique they christened the “transformer”, OpenAI’s boffins realised that they could scale it up by combining untold quantities of data scraped from the internet with processing oomph. The result was the general-purpose transformer, or GPT for short. Obtaining the necessary resources required OpenAI to employ some engineering of the financial variety. In 2019 it created a “capped-profit company” within its non-profit structure. Initially, investors in this business could make 100 times their initial investment—but no more. Rather than distribute equity, the firm distributes claims on a share of future profits that come without ownership rights (“profit-participation units”). What is more, OpenAI says it may reinvest all profits until the board decides that OpenAI’s goal of achieving AGI has been reached. OpenAI stresses that it is a “high-risk investment” and should be viewed as more akin to a “donation”. “We’re not for everybody,” says Brad Lightcap, OpenAI’s chief operating officer and its financial guru. Maybe not, but with the exception of Mr Musk, who pulled out in 2018 and is now building his own AI model, just about everybody seems to want a piece of OpenAI regardless. Investors appear confident that they can achieve venture-scale returns if the firm keeps growing. In order to remain attractive to investors, the company itself has loosened the profit cap and switched to one based on the annual rate of return (though it will not confirm what the maximum rate is). Academic debates about the meaning of AGI aside, the profit units themselves can be sold on the market just like standard equities. The firm has already offered several opportunities for early employees to sell their units. SoftBank, a risk-addled tech-investment house from Japan, is the latest to be seeking to place a big bet on OpenAI. The startup has so far raised a total of around $14bn. Most of it, perhaps $13bn, has come from Microsoft, whose Azure cloud division is also furnishing OpenAI with the computing power it needs. In exchange, the software titan will receive the lion’s share of OpenAI’s profits—if these are ever handed over. More important in the short term, it gets to license OpenAI’s technology and offer this to its own corporate customers, which include most of the world’s largest companies. It is just as well that OpenAI is attracting deep-pocketed backers. For the firm needs an awful lot of capital to procure the data and computing power necessary to keep creating ever more intelligent models. Mr Altman has said that OpenAI could well end up being “the most capital-intensive startup in Silicon Valley history”. OpenAI’s most recent model, GPT-4, is estimated to have cost around $100m to train, several times more than GPT-3. For the time being, investors appear happy to pour more money into the business. But they eventually expect a return. And for its part OpenAI has realised that, if it is to achieve its mission, it must become like any other fledgling business and think hard about its costs and its revenues. GPT-4 already exhibits a degree of cost-consciousness. For example, notes Dylan Patel of SemiAnalysis, a research firm, it was not a single giant model but a mixture of 16 smaller models. That makes it more difficult—and so costlier—to build than a monolithic model. But it is then cheaper to actually use the model once it has been trained, because not all the smaller models need be used to answer questions. Cost is also a big reason why OpenAI is not training its next big model, GPT-5. Instead, say sources familiar with the firm, it is building GPT-4.5, which would have “similar quality” to GPT-4 but cost “a lot less to run”. But it is on the revenue-generating side of business that OpenAI is most transformed, and where it has been most energetic of late. AI can create a lot of value long before AGI brains are as versatile as human ones, says Mr Lightcap. OpenAI’s models are generalist, trained on a vast amount of data and capable of doing a variety of tasks. The Chatgpt craze has made OpenAI the default option for consumers, developers and businesses keen to embrace the technology. Despite the recent dip, Chatgpt still receives 60% of traffic to the top 50 generative-AI websites, according to a study by Andreessen Horowitz, a venture-capital (VC) firm which has invested in OpenAI. Yet OpenAI is no longer only—or even primarily—about Chatgpt. It is increasingly becoming a business-to-business platform. It is creating bespoke products of its own for big corporate customers, which include Morgan Stanley, an investment bank. It also offers tools for developers to build products using its models; on November 6th it is expected to unveil new ones at its first developer conference. And it has a $175m pot to invest in smaller AI startups building applications on top of its platform, which at once promotes its models and allows it to capture value if the application-builders strike gold. To further spread its technology, it is handing out perks to AI firms at Y Combinator, a Silicon Valley startup nursery that Mr Altman used to lead. John Luttig of Founders Fund (a VC firm which also has a stake in OpenAI), thinks that this vast and diverse distribution may be even more important than any technical advantage. Being the first mover certainly plays in OpenAI’s favour. GPT-like models’ high fixed costs erect high barriers to entry for competitors. That in turn may make it easier for OpenAI to lock in corporate customers. If they are to share internal company data in order to fine-tune the model to their needs, many clients may prefer not to do so more than once—for cyber-security reasons, or simply because it is costly to move data from one AI provider to another, as it already is between computing clouds. Teaching big models to think also requires lots of tacit engineering know-how, from recognising high-quality data to knowing the tricks to quickly debug the source code. Mr Altman has speculated that fewer than 50 people in the world are at the true model-training frontier. A lot of them work for OpenAI. These are all real advantages. But they do not guarantee OpenAI’s continued dominance. For one thing, the sort of network effects where scale begets more scale, which have helped turn Alphabet, Amazon and Meta into quasi-monopolists in search, e-commerce and social networking, respectively, have yet to materialise. Despite its vast number of users, GPT-4 is hardly better today than it was six months ago. Although further tuning with user data has made it less likely to go off the rails, its overall performance has changed in unpredictable ways, in some cases for the worse. Being a first mover in model-building may also bring some disadvantages. The biggest cost for modellers is not training but experimentation. Plenty of ideas went nowhere before the one that worked got to the training stage. That is why OpenAI is estimated to have lost $500m last year, even though GPT-4 cost one-fifth as much to train. News of ideas that do not pay off tends to spread quickly throughout AI world. This helps OpenAI’s competitors avoid going down costly blind alleys. As for customers, many are trying to reduce their dependence on OpenAI, fearful of being locked into its products and thus at its mercy. Anthropic, which was founded by defectors from OpenAI, has already become a popular second choice for many AI startups. Soon businesses may have more cutting-edge alternatives. Google is building Gemini, a model believed to be more powerful than GPT-4. Even Microsoft is, despite its partnership with OpenAI, something of a competitor. It has access to GPT-4’s black box, as well as a vast sales force with long-standing ties to the world’s biggest corporate IT departments. This array of choices diminishes OpenAI’s pricing power. It is also forcing Mr Altman’s firm to keep training better models if it wants to stay ahead. The fact that OpenAI’s models are a black box also reduces its appeal to some potential users, including large businesses concerned about data privacy. They may prefer more transparent “open-source” models like Meta’s llama 2. Sophisticated software firms, meanwhile, may want to build their own model from scratch, in order to exercise full control over its behavour. Others are moving away from generality—the ability to do many things rather than just one thing—by building cheaper models that are trained on narrower sets of data, or to do a specific task. A startup called Replit has trained one narrowly to write computer programs. It sits atop Databricks, an AI cloud platform which counts Nvidia, a $1trn maker of specialist AI semiconductors, among its investors. Another called Character AI has designed a model that lets people create virtual personalities based on real or imagined characters that can then converse with other users. It is the second-most popular AI app behind Chatgpt. The core question, notes Kevin Kwok, a venture capitalist (who is not a backer of OpenAI), is how much value is derived from a model’s generality. If not much, then the industry may be dominated by many specialist firms, like Replit or Character AI. If a lot, then big models such as those of OpenAI or Google may come out on top. Mike Speiser of Sutter Hill Ventures (another non-OpenAI backer) suspects that the market will end up containing a handful of large generalist models, with a long tail of task-specific models. If AI turns out to be all it is cracked up to be, being an oligopolist could still earn OpenAI a pretty penny. And if its backers really do see any of that penny only after the company has created a human-like thinking machine, then all bets are off. © 2023 The Economist Newspaper Limited. All rights reserved.

Kalles fyller 70 år – han är ansiktet på tuben: "Gratis kaviar hela livet"

Kalles fyller 70 år – han är ansiktet på tuben: "Gratis kaviar hela livet"

Historien om Kalles startar på 50-talet. Det var då som företaget Abba köpte receptet på rökt kaviar och startade produktionen. Tidiga provsmakningar visade att barn var speciellt förtjusta i den, lite mildare, kaviar-smaken. Företagets reklambyrå föreslår därför att ett barn ska pryda omslaget på tuben. Vd för Abba vid tillfället är Carl Almens pappa, och det är alltså historien om hur en 6-årig Carl Almen hamnade på omslaget. – Din son är ju jättesöt, han har guldigt hår och blåa ögon. Herregud, vi sätter honom på tuben, berättar Carl. Ett fotografi taget på en strand av hans mamma används som motiv. ”Ibland är det lite märkligt” I år har Carl alltså prytt tuben i 70 år och han erkänner att det ibland kan kännas lite märkligt att se sitt ansikte så pass ofta. – Samtidigt är jag van. Jag tycker det är väldigt, väldigt roligt. Varje dag man öppnar kylskåpet ligger han ju där och ler mot en, det är väl trevligt? En Sverige-symbol Han säger att Kalles är en produkt som nästan alltid ses som något positivt. – Man kan tycka eller inte tycka om kaviar. Men man har alltid en trevlig och positiv uppfattning om den här lilla Sverige-symbolen, säger han. Totalt har det sålts över en halv miljard tuber under dessa 70 år men trots att det är hans ansikte på kaviartuben har Carl aldrig fått några pengar för det. Däremot har han tillgång till gratis kaviar – resten av livet. – Men det hade varit något. Då hade jag varit i klass med Elon Musk, säger han.

Elon Musk på YouTube

Elon Musk fires WOKE employees in twitter meeting DUB

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GeoMFilms på YouTube

Elon Musk: ''This Supernova Explosion Will DESTROY MORE Than Betelgeuse THIS WEEK!''

Elon Musk: ''This Supernova Explosion Will DESTROY MORE Than Betelgeuse THIS WEEK!'' Subscribe now with all ...

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Elon Musk: Working from home is 'morally wrong' #Shorts

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YouTuber’s Question Helps Elon Musk Improve Starship

Source video: https://youtu.be/t705r8ICkRw We kept seeing a handful of videos with tens of millions of views like this that stole our ...

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Elon Musk: Neuralink and the Future of Humanity | Lex Fridman Podcast #438

Elon Musk is CEO of Neuralink, SpaceX, Tesla, xAI, and CTO of X. DJ Seo is COO & President of Neuralink. Matthew MacDougall ...

Lex Fridman på YouTube

Elon Musk i poddar

Sunday Special: Elon Musk at 'DealBook'

Tech billionaire Elon Musk has come to define innovation, but he can also be a lightning rod for controversy; he recently endorsed antisemitic remarks on X, formerly known as Twitter, which prompted companies to pull their advertising. In an interview recorded live at the DealBook Summit in New York with Times business reporter and columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin, Musk discusses his emotional state and why he has “no problem being hated.”To read more news about the event, visit https://www.nytimes.com/live/2023/11/29/business/dealbook-summit-news

The Man Who Followed Elon Musk Everywhere: "Elon's Dad Abused Him, His Trans Child Disowned Him, And Here Are His Secrets For Success!" Walter Isaacson

If you enjoy hearing about industry changing innovation, I recommend you check out my conversation with Airbnb founder, Brian Chesky, which you can find here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ia6Di_ytiSEIf you ever wanted to see inside the mind of the richest and most powerful man in the world, this episode is for you.Before becoming the world’s leading biographer, Walter Isaacson was formerly the chair and CEO of ’CNN’, the editor of ’Time’, and President and CEO of the ’Aspen Institute’. His best-selling biographies including, ‘Steve Jobs’, ‘Leonardo da Vinci’, ‘Einstein: His Life and Universe’, and most recently, 'Elon Musk'.In this conversation Walter and Steven discuss topics, such as: How he followed Elon Musk for 2 years Elon Musk’s childhood Elon’s abusive father The mental and physical scars of Elon’s childhood What haunts Elon Why Elon equates pain with love The 2 sides and personalities of Elon Elon’s ‘demon mode’ Why Elon loves drama and chaos What separates Elon from everyone else If he thinks Elon is a genius Elon’s first principle thinking Why Elon ignores rules and likes risk takers How 80% of people can’t work with Elon Why Elon bought Twitter How Twitter has hurt Elon Elon’s 3 aims for humanity Why there will be a mission to Mars in 30 years time Elon’s rules for success How Elon and Steve Jobs changed reality Why Elon is not happy Elon and Jeff Bezo’s rivalry You can purchase Walter’s new biography, ‘Elon Musk’, here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Elon-Musk-Walter-Isaacson/dp/1398527491Follow Walter: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/walter_isaacson/Watch the episodes on Youtube - https://g2ul0.app.link/3kxINCANKsbMy new book! 'The 33 Laws Of Business & Life' is out now: https://smarturl.it/DOACbookFollow me:Instagram: http://bit.ly/3nIkGAZTwitter: http://bit.ly/3ztHuHmLinkedin: https://bit.ly/41Fl95QTelegram: http://bit.ly/3nJYxSTSponsors: Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/uk/steven/CODE: STEVEN (save $150 on the Pod Cover)Uber One: https://www.uber.com/gb/en/u/uber-one/Huel: https://g2ul0.app.link/G4RjcdKNKsb Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

#722 - 15 Lessons From 2023 - Jordan Peterson, Alex Hormozi & Elon Musk

Get my free End Of Year Review Template here - https://chriswillx.com/review/ It’s the end of 2023 and to celebrate I thought I’d run through some of the best lessons I’ve picked up over the last 12 months. This year has had over 10,000 minutes of episodes produced so there was a lot to choose from but I ended up settling on 16 insights from some of my favourite conversations both inside and outside of the podcast. Expect to learn what Toxic Compassion is, why Alex Hormozi needed to do damage control this spring, the reason you should just "be yourself", why getting what you want isn't actually a win, the reason you don't want to be Elon Musk, why trajectory is more important than position, how a terrible job can be a huge blessing and much more... Sponsors: Get 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get 10% discount on all Gymshark’s products at https://bit.ly/sharkwisdom (use code: MW10) Get $150/£150 discount on the Eight Sleep Pod Cover at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Extra Stuff: Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → https://chriswillx.com/books/ Buy my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom - Get in touch. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Elon Musk's BRUTALLY Honest New Interview With UK PM Rishi Sunak

Elon Musk's BRUTALLY Honest New Interview With UK PM Rishi Sunak. Credit: X

Elon Musk: The Man Who Fell to Earth

Uncovering the hidden histories of concepts, people and events you thought you knew.  In a first for Origin Story, Dorian Lynskey and Ian Dunt focus on a living figure: the ubiquitous and divisive richest man in the world, Elon Musk. In the past two years the public perception of Musk has changed dramatically, from Time's Man of the Year and “real-life Iron Man" to radicalised right-wing troll and destroyer of Twitter. Ian and Dorian trace his journey from sci-fi obsessed child prodigy in Apartheid-era South Africa to dotcom entrepreneur to the self-appointed techno-messiah at the helm of SpaceX and Tesla, and ask what happened to the man who said he wanted to save the world. They discuss what his career says about the arc of Silicon Valley and 21st-century capitalism, the cult of technocracy and the dangers of believing your own hype. Support Origin Story on Patreon for exclusive benefits: www.Patreon.com/originstorypod  “He doesn’t seem that interested in money. The choices he’s made have not been your regular ‘rich guy’ choices.” – Dorian Lynskey “On Twitter some of the disinformation has been morally abysmal. You think, how could you be a person who would even write these words?” – Ian Dunt "He said it was the duty of the educated to reproduce so ‘we don’t devolve into a not very literate, theocratic and unenlightened future.’ It’s low-level eugenics.” — Dorian Lynskey Reading list: Eric Berger – Liftoff: Elon Musk and the Desperate Early Days That Launched SpaceX Agustin Ferrari Braun – The Elon Musk Experience: Celebrity Management in Financialised Capitalism David S. Kidder – The Startup Playbook Hamish McKenzie – Insane Mode: How Elon Musk’s Tesla Sparked an Electric Revolution to End the Age of Oil Ashlee Vance – Elon Musk: How the Billionaire CEO of SpaceX and Tesla Is Shaping Our Future Douglas Coupland, ‘The smartest person in any room anywhere:’ in defence of Elon Musk, The Observer, 2021 Tad Friend, Plugged In, The New Yorker, 2009 Jordan Liles – What We Know About Elon Musk and the Emerald Mine Rumor, Snopes, 2022 Linette Lopez, Elon Musk Doesn’t Care About You, Business Insider, 2018 David J Roth, Burning Down the House, Defector, 2023 Neil Strauss – Elon Musk: The Architect of Tomorrow, Rolling Stone, 2017 Matthew Sweet, Why Jeff Bezos and Elon’s Musk real business inspiration is science-fiction, The Times, 2021 The Elon Musk Show, BBC documentary, 2022 I Do Not like Elon Musk Very Much, Behind the Bastards podcast Elon Musk: The Techno Shaman, Decoding the Gurus podcast Written and presented by Dorian Lynskey and Ian Dunt. Audio production and music by Jade Bailey. Logo art by Mischa Welsh. Lead Producer is Anne-Marie Luff. Group Editor: Andrew Harrison. Origin Story is a Podmasters production. https://twitter.com/OriginStorycast  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Elon Musk x Nelk Boys | Ep. 53

Elon Musk Reveals His Knowledge on Aliens, Challenges Putin to UFC, and Predicts WW3 Presented by Happy Dad Hard Seltzer. Find Happy Dad near you http://happydad.com/find (21+ only). Video is available on http://youtube.com/fullsendpodcast/videos. Follow Nelk Boys on Instagram http://instagram.com/nelkboys. Part of the Shots Podcast Network (shots.com). You can listen to the audio version of this podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts & anywhere you listen to podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

What's going on with Elon Musk?

Search Engine investigates the erratic behavior of the world’s wealthiest man with Hard Fork’s Casey Newton. The three top theories for why Elon Musk has begun to act strangely, including one theory that upset our understanding of reality itself. If you'd like to read more about this episode or support the show financially, go here. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Ep 116: Tax cut lies, Susan Hall lows & Elon Musk meltdowns

The episode opens with a trip to the Plymouth Christmas lights switch-on, where Torty MP, Johnny Mercer is met with a different type of Christmas cheer.  Then it's report time... Because last week the OBR published its economic and fiscal outlook for 2024, and it's a grimmer read than one of Nadine's dirty novels - though in the OBR report, a significantly higher number of people are getting screwed.  Jemma and Marina discuss the numerous newspaper headlines celebrating Hunt's tax cuts, which is problematic, given we're now facing the biggest tax burden since WWII. But hey, why let the truth get in the way of a client journalist's headline? Then settle in for a gripping, action-packed, true crime story, featuring Tory Mayoral candidate Susan Mason. Less Die Hard, more Lie Hard. Underrated clips of the week include Elon Musk wiping another few billion off the X share price during a public soiling of himself, and a little treat from Cilla Black - God Rest Her Soul. Pudding is served up by Moog with his version of Susan Mason's terrifying run-in with the criminal underworld of London. Sadiq Khan has a lot to answer for... Thank you for sharing and do tweet us @MarinaPurkiss @jemmaforte @TheTrawlPodcast Patreon https://patreon.com/TheTrawlPodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

TIP593: Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson

On today’s episode, Clay shares the lessons he learned from reading Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson.  As our audience knows, Elon is, financially speaking, one of the world’s most successful individuals as Forbes has his net worth estimated at $248 billion, making him the richest individual on the planet. 25 years ago, Elon was making his mark in Silicon Valley in the early days of PayPal, and today he is launching dozens of rockets into orbit, taking the lead in the world’s transition to electric vehicles, actively working to stay on top of the world of AI, and has taken over one of the world’s largest social networks in Twitter, now known as X. IN THIS EPISODE YOU’LL LEARN: 00:00 - Intro. 03:48 - The highlights of Elon Musk’s childhood and upbringing in South Africa. 07:03 - The key themes Clay found in Elon’s life. 07:40 - Peter Theil’s key insight in working with Elon. 10:01 - How Elon and Kimbal made their way to the United States. 13:34 - The three fields Musk found in college that he decided he wanted to commit his life to. 15:25 - The early businesses that Elon and Kimbal Musk started in the 90s. 16:58 - What led Elon to join forces with Peter Thiel and create PayPal. 22:29 - The beginnings of SpaceX. 24:26 - The early key decisions within Tesla. 29:35 - Business tactics Elon Musk used that were similar to Steve Jobs. 29:57 - Elon’s master plan for Tesla. 32:44 - What made the great financial crisis one of the most troubling periods of Elon’s career. 53:14 - How Elon got interested in artificial intelligence. 58:58 - How Tesla made it through what Musk called “Production Hell.” 01:11:33 - The backstory of the Cybertruck, Starlink, & Optimus. 01:30:04 - The story of Elon’s takeover of Twitter.  Disclaimer: Slight discrepancies in the timestamps may occur due to podcast platform differences. BOOKS AND RESOURCES Join the exclusive TIP Mastermind Community to engage in meaningful stock investing discussions with Stig, Clay, and the other community members. Check out Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson. Book Mentioned: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Learn more about Tesla’s developments in artificial intelligence. Learn more about the Berkshire Summit by clicking here or emailing Clay at clay@theinvestorspodcast.com. Related Episode: TIP417: The Incredible Story of the PayPal Mafia w/ Jimmy Soni or watch the video. Check out all the books mentioned and discussed in our podcast episodes here. NEW TO THE SHOW? Check out our We Study Billionaires Starter Packs. Browse through all our episodes (complete with transcripts) here. Try our tool for picking stock winners and managing our portfolios: TIP Finance Tool. Enjoy exclusive perks from our favorite Apps and Services. Stay up-to-date on financial markets and investing strategies through our daily newsletter, We Study Markets. Learn how to better start, manage, and grow your business with the best business podcasts. SPONSORS Support our free podcast by supporting our sponsors: River Shopify Vanta Alto NetSuite AlphaSense Toyota American Express Business Gold Card Babbel Percent Salesforce Monetary Metals Efani Ka’Chava Wise Glengoyne Whisky HELP US OUT! Help us reach new listeners by leaving us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts! It takes less than 30 seconds, and really helps our show grow, which allows us to bring on even better guests for you all! Thank you – we really appreciate it! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Elon Musk BEST Motivation 2020! | 10 Rules for Success | MORNING MOTIVATION | Motivational Speech 2020

Instantly Manifest REAL Spendable MONEY, Abundance And Pure Bliss - 20 seconds for this life changing video : http://bit.ly/menifestmoneytoday YOUR BEAUTIFUL SOUL, YOUR LITTLE DONATION WILL HELP US TO SURVIVE AND GIVE YOU MORE OUR WORK, 💕 You can support us  :   https://bit.ly/LittSupport 📚 Everyone Should Read At Least Once In Their Lives : 📖Elon Musk: How the Billionaire CEO of SpaceX and Tesla is Shaping our Future https://amzn.to/3fl4ZHL  📖The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People  : https://amzn.to/35R85QM  📖Think & Grow Rich: THE 21st CENTURY EDITION : https://amzn.to/2UNbLwz  📖Think Like a Monk : Jay Shetty https://amzn.to/36Vmw5D  📖Rich Dad Poor Dad (Money That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!) https://amzn.to/3nH0af1  📖How to Win Friends and Influence People : https://amzn.to/3nN2C3M --- Elon Musk 10 Rules For Success: 1. Work Like Hell 2. Have a High Pain Threshold 3. Critical Think 4. Add Value to Society 5. Take Risks 6. Have a Great Product / Service 7. Attract Great People 8. Constantly Seek Criticism 9. Don't Follow the Trend 10. Overcome Critics ▼ Follow Red Pills Production Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pg/redpillsp... Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redpillspro... Twitter: twitter.com/RedPillsPro Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/Redpillspro... Website: https://www.redpillsmedia.biz"   -- tag: best morning podcasts on Spotify, morning motivation podcast, motivation podcast Spotify, best motivational podcasts 2019, sports motivation podcast, work motivation, the mindset and motivation podcast motivational podcasts Spotify best motivational podcasts 2019 motivational podcasts for athletes motivational podcasts Reddit best motivational podcasts 2020 morning motivation podcast sports motivation podcast

Elon Musk Discuss The Future!

Elon Musk Discuss The Future!

Matt Taibbi - On Populist Uprising, Elon Musk & UK Files

Joining me today is independent journalist Matt Taibbi. He was one of the leading publishers of the Twitter Files and you can find his work on Substack at https://www.racket.news  We will be talking about the UK Files, Media Matters’ case with Elon Musk & New Twitter Files exposing the “Election Integrity Partnership”.   Support this channel directly here: https://bit.ly/RussellBrand-Support Listen as a podcast: https://podfollow.com/1648125917 Follow on social media: X: @rustyrockets INSTAGRAM: @russellbrand FACEBOOK: @russellbrand