Aape Pohjavirta
20.3K posts

Aape Pohjavirta
@aape
Co-Founder at Dragon Guild. Positive change, digital, & education activist. Dad. Entrepreneur. Changemaker. Speaker. Coach. Friend. Curious. LiG!












"a first step towards becoming a Kardashev II-level civilization." - Elon Musk In the last three weeks: SpaceX acquired xAI, merging the world's largest rocket company with one of the fastest-moving AI labs on the planet. SpaceX valued at $1 trillion. The stated goal of the merger: build orbital data centers. A constellation of a million satellites that generate AI compute in space, powered by near-constant solar energy with near-zero operating costs. Elon Musk's words: "Within 2 to 3 years, the lowest cost way to generate AI compute will be in space." The math he laid out: launching a million tons per year of satellites generating 100 kW of compute per ton adds 100 gigawatts of AI compute capacity annually. The long-term path is 1 terawatt per year from Earth launches alone. And with lunar factories using electromagnetic mass drivers, 500 to 1,000 terawatts per year into deep space. Elon Musk also announced SpaceX is building a self-growing city on the Moon. Target: under 10 years. First uncrewed landing: March 2027. Lunar manufacturing will feed the orbital compute network. Factories on the Moon building satellites and launching them deeper into the solar system. And the rocket that makes all of it possible, Starship V3, with 100+ tons to orbit, orbital refueling, and Raptor 3 engines, is targeting its first flight in mid-March. The plan: launches every hour, 200 tons per flight, millions of tons to orbit per year. The most powerful rocket in history. Aimed at the Moon. Designed to launch the largest AI infrastructure ever built. Weeks from flying. It's happening.






American founders believe innovation happens in Silicon Valley. They are wrong. The future of technology is being built in small Finnish cities you cannot pronounce. I have advised founders to relocate to Jyväskylä for six years now. Population: 140,000. Regulatory bodies within two hours: 17. In San Francisco, you wait six months for a compliance officer to ignore you. In Jyväskylä, you schedule a meeting within 48 hours. The Finnish government provides founders with a cabin, broadband internet, and direct access to EU regulators. There is no running water in winter. This eliminates distractions. One founder relocated his entire team. Within eight months, they achieved ISO 27001, SOC 2 Type II, and the Nordic Privacy Seal. Their product did not yet function. This was not a problem. Compliance came first. In my Masterclass, I explain why geography determines regulatory destiny. Only serious founders will understand.






