Comment by merman
12 hours ago
Ah, so your premise is SX is unprofitable without federal contracts! and that the SOTA model, which was released before this investment, can’t “compete”
12 hours ago
Ah, so your premise is SX is unprofitable without federal contracts! and that the SOTA model, which was released before this investment, can’t “compete”
I think the real underlying premise is that Elon is unhinged, cannot be trusted and just makes stuff up. Self driving Teslas were going to launch "next year" since 2017. DOGE was going to find 1-2T dollars worth of waste in our budgets. Thai rescue diver was a pedophile. etc.
For all I know, SOTA model can be a copy with some additive work on Claude or OpenAI models.
You are exactly right that the underlying premise is a dislike of Musk, who has famously made mistakes, I too am critical of all of the things you listed.
So, if a very contentious personality is involved, is there any purpose or value in pointing out seriously flawed assumptions/POV/rationale?
Another example is the excessive divisiveness in politics, what would make discussions around those topics better? In my opinion, it would be better to rein in serious factual errors, even if the errors skew towards "my side"
It's about the ideas, and the idea is bad. It would be bad if Elon Musk came up with it, it would be bad if Martin Luther wrote it down on a handkerchief on the eve of his death.
Do we want to discuss this on merits, or are we concerned that the merit of the idea might undermine... checks clipboard ...commercial LLM businesses cashing R&D checks expensed by the US taxpayer?
1 reply →
That's not what I said at all. If AWS or Azure went all-in on a risky, overvalued technology, they would get extreme scrutiny from both the public and federal contractors. SpaceX is doing exactly that, and diluting their valuation in the process. You'll note that neither AWS nor Azure have made similarly risky "balls on the table" ventures.
You can argue that the dilution is good for taxpayers in the long-run (fat chance lol), or that SpaceX can survive the immediate aftermath (duh). But you cannot argue that XAI is a deserving company, because it never won a contract against it's competition. The demand is invented, simple as that.
Mind you, XAI couldn't even fund itself before the seed rounds. Both political admins will be looking at their SpaceX contracts with a renewed scrutiny, which Elon had better hope doesn't develop into a campaign for nationalizing SpaceX IP.
...who am I kidding, he was begging to become eminent domain the moment he put POTUS in his crosshairs. Au revoir, rocket man.