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🇺🇸 Elon just locked in a deal to buy Cursor for $60 billion.
SpaceX has the option to acquire Anysphere, Cursor's parent company, before the end of the year.
If they walk away, SpaceX still pays $10 billion "for their work together," basically one of the largest termination fees in history. Which tells you they have no intention of backing out.
Cursor does $2 billion in annualized revenue and its users are mostly elite software engineers, exactly the kind of customer base Elon wants heading into SpaceX's summer IPO.
The combined group is expected to hit $1.75 trillion at listing, the largest flotation ever.
@elonmusk now has space, satellites, AI, social media, and the world's most popular coding tool under one roof.
What he's cooking up will be wild.
Source: Financial Times


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Marc Andreessen on why Starlink may be the most misunderstood success story in tech right now:
“Elon’s not the first guy who said we’re going to do satellite-based internet access.
There was Bill Gates, Craig McCaw. Complete catastrophe, total bankruptcy, complete disaster.
Elon’s like, ‘I know, I’m going to do another three of those. We’re starting as a side project at the rocket ship company.’
If the rockets are reusable, we’re going to be launching them all the time. What’s going to go in the rockets? I could wait for the customers to come to me, or I could just put up my own satellites.
Anybody who knew anything about the history of satellites knew that was the craziest idea in the world.
And of course it’s like this giant success. It’s the side project.
It’s clearly the least studied and understood thing I know of in the world right now.”
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SpaceX has been chosen as the primary lunar lander for Artemis 3 and 4 btw


Ted Cutezynski@shrugdeaIer
Artemis II is a great reminder that we still don’t need Elon for literally anything.
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SpaceX now has over 10,000 Starlink satellites in orbit, which is honestly an absurd engineering achievement.
And no, they are not just up there freelancing and hoping for the best.
They stay separated because they are placed in organized orbital lanes, constantly tracked, and able to maneuver when needed. Starlink also uses automated collision-avoidance systems, which is how a constellation this large can operate without turning low Earth orbit into a scrapyard.
It’s already the closest thing in the world to a true work-anywhere network and they are just getting started.
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The SpaceX Starbase Rocket Garden was unreal a few years ago when you could literally walk right up to the prototypes.
Elon Musk@elonmusk
Rocket garden at Starbase. You can see this from the public highway.
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Free cooling idk why this hasn’t been thought of before
NIK@ns123abc
🚨 NVIDIA JUST ANNOUNCED DATA CENTERS IN SPACE Jensen Huang: >we’re going into space >we’ve already been out in space >announces “Vera Rubin Space-1” >"in space there's no conduction, no convection, just radiation" >"we have to figure out how to cool these systems in space" >"we've got lots of great engineers working on it" GPUs IN SPACE INCOMING
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🚨 NVIDIA JUST ANNOUNCED DATA CENTERS IN SPACE
Jensen Huang:
>we’re going into space
>we’ve already been out in space
>announces “Vera Rubin Space-1”
>"in space there's no conduction, no convection, just radiation"
>"we have to figure out how to cool these systems in space"
>"we've got lots of great engineers working on it"
GPUs IN SPACE INCOMING
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