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李成银的技术随笔

TechCrunch

Peec, one of Berlin’s rising startups, more than doubled annualized revenue in months to $10M, sources say AI is being used to resurrect the voices of dead pilots SpaceX launches Starship V3 for the first time, but loses booster on return Blue Origin cleared to fly New Glenn mega-rocket after April mishap Google goes for the glitter with disco-ball icons: ‘Are y’all sure you still want this?’ How VCs and founders use inflated ‘ARR’ to crown AI startups Kash Patel’s clothing brand website shut down after reports it was hacked Apple says Epic lawsuit shouldn’t reshape App Store rules for all developers Spotify’s AI bet: more of everything, less of what you want You can no longer Google the word ‘disregard’ We tried Google’s AI glasses and they’re almost there Trump Mobile confirms it exposed customers’ personal data, including phone numbers and home addresses SpaceX files to go public, and the math requires a little faith Meta quietly launches a new Reddit-like app called Forum Smart ring maker Oura files to go public Audio generation app Huxe, founded by former NotebookLM developers, shuts down Finnish phone-maker HMD bundles Indian AI chatbot onto new smartphone in push to reach local market Waymo expands pause to four cities as robotaxis keep driving into floods SpaceX scrubs first Starship V3 launch just before liftoff Who will benefit most from SpaceX IPO? Mostly Elon — and a few from his inner circle Waymo halts freeway rides after robotaxis struggle in construction zones Spotify and Universal Music strike deal allowing fan-made AI covers and remixes How Elon Musk will increase his power through the SpaceX IPO Forget ‘TechnoKing’: Elon Musk will really be king at SpaceX Law enforcement shuts down VPN service used by two dozen ransomware gangs Six search engines worth trying now that Google isn’t really Google anymore Convective Capital raises an $85 million fund to build disaster resilience Trump delays AI security executive order: ‘I don’t want to get in the way of that leading’ This young startup is taking on a fragrance industry that hasn’t changed in a almost half century Spotify adds AI-powered Q&A and briefing generation features to podcasts Spotify takes on Google’s NotebookLM with its new app Spotify launches an ElevenLabs-powered audiobook creation tool Spotify will reserve tickets for top fans of an artists in a bid to drum up engagement NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani takes to Twitch to chat with New Yorkers Waymo pauses Atlanta service as its robotaxis keep driving into floods Maka Kids is redefining kids’ screen time with a streaming app optimized for well-being, not engagement The Path, founded by Tony Robbins and Calm alums, hopes to offer safer AI therapy Hark raises $700M Series A for its secretive “universal” AI interface Google is pitching an AI agent ecosystem to consumers who may not buy it Wayve’s self-driving tech is headed to US cars made by Stellantis With aluminum prices up 20%, recycling startups bet on AI to cash in Flipper unveils a Linux-powered networking gadget built for hackers and tinkerers Scammers are abusing an internal Microsoft account to send spam links Beauty booking startup Fresha hits $1 billion valuation with KKR backing General Catalyst just led a $63M bet on India’s travel payments market Imperagen raises £5 million to use quantum physics, AI on enzyme engineering Jensen Huang says he’s found a ‘brand new’ $200B market for Nvidia Anthropic says it’s about to have its first profitable quarter The SpaceX IPO filing is filled with AI bets, Starship dreams, and Elon Musk at the center Clouted wants to take the guesswork out of making short videos go viral xAI burned $6.4B last year. SpaceX’s IPO filing shows why the spending is far from over Nvidia posts another record quarter, reveals $43 billion of holdings in startups Musk’s xAI is being sued over its data center generators. Now, it’s buying $2.8B more. Anthropic will pay xAI $1.25 billion per month for compute Sam Altman makes ‘mic drop’ offer to every Y Combinator startup You don’t need to be an AI startup to raise. Lucra has $20M to prove it. The SpaceX IPO filing has arrived Microsoft’s carbon removal plans aren’t dead after all OpenAI claims it solved an 80-year-old math problem — for real this time IrisGo, a startup backed by Andrew Ng, looks to become the AI desktop buddy you never knew you needed Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software is creeping into Europe Airbnb gets into hotels, expands AI for host onboarding and customer support Truecaller gets into the eSIM business to diversify its revenue streams Global EV market goes K-shaped as the U.S. gets left behind OpenAI barrels towards IPO that may happen in September OpenAI barrels toward IPO that may happen in September Jeff Bezos, you were so close to making a good point Customers say Trump Mobile is leaking their personal information Intuit to lay off over 3,000 employees to refocus on AI AI search startups are blowing up Stability AI release a new audio model that can create six-minute songs Startup Battlefield 200 applications close in 1 week: Window to nominate and apply for the most promising startups closes May 27 Startup Battlefield 200 applications close in one week: Window to nominate and apply for the most promising startups ends May 27 NanoClaw creator turns down $20M buyout offer, raises $12M seed instead GitHub says hackers stole data from thousands of internal repositories Figma adds an AI assistant to its collaborative canvas This startup raised $43M to build a hive mind for ships Quartermaster is building a maritime hive mind ‘Ask YouTube’ brings AI-powered conversational search to video, adds Gemini Omni to Shorts Google just declared itself a contender in AI design at IO 2026 You can now talk to your Gmail inbox, as seen at Google IO 2026 How to use Google’s new AI agents to go beyond your standard searches Discord enables end-to-end encrypted voice and video calling for every user Mach Industries just spent $50M to solve a major defense tech problem From teen hacker to Iron Dome researcher, this founder raised $28M to fight AI phishing Elon Musk said Sam Altman “stole” a non-profit — but the trial showed he had similar aims Google takes a page out of Meta’s book, announces new audio-powered smart glasses Google takes a page out of Meta’s book, announces new audio-powered smart glasses at IO 2026 Google’s Genie world model can now simulate real streets with Street View With Gemini 3.5 Flash, Google bets its next AI wave on agents, not chatbots How to use Google’s new information agents Google Search as you know it is over Google launches Antigravity 2.0 with an updated desktop app and CLI tool at IO 2026 Google updates its Gemini app to take on ChatGPT and Claude at IO 2026 OpenAI is making it easier to check if an image was made by their models Google’s Gemini Omni turns images, audio, and text into video — and that’s just the start Google just declared itself a contender in AI design Google’s AI Studio now lets anyone build Android apps in minutes Google’s new Universal Cart wants to follow you across the entire internet Agentic app coding gets an upgrade with Google’s release of Android CLI
Elon Musk has given up on solar power (on Earth)
Tim De Chant · 2026-05-23 · via TechCrunch

Has Elon Musk given up on Tesla’s Master Plans, on the electrified economy, on solar power as we know it? From the SpaceX IPO filing released yesterday, it sure seems like it.

A recap for those not enmeshed in the Musk-verse: Tesla has released four Master Plans over the years, and while details have varied, the through line has been electrification of the economy. Musk put it best in his first edition: “the overarching purpose of Tesla motors…is to help expedite the move from a mine-and-burn hydrocarbon economy towards a solar electric economy.”

But recently, one of Musk’s companies, xAI, has embraced the mine-and-burn hydrocarbon economy, using dozens of unregulated natural gas turbines to power its data centers with plans to buy $2.8 billion more, effectively cementing the fossil fuel’s role in the company’s AI operations.

It’s a curious turn for a businessman who built his empire on clean energy — and who has no qualms directing his companies to buy from one another. SpaceX spent $131 million on 1,279 Cybertrucks, and xAI has spent $697 million in the last two years on Tesla Megapacks, it’s grid-scale battery storage systems that the company will use to manage peak loads. But so far, xAI hasn’t bought a materially significant number of solar panels from Tesla.

Solar power isn’t missing in the SpaceX filing, it’s just all concentrated on space, which the company touts as the future of data center power. Terrestrial solar garners a few mentions — not as a power source for xAI data centers but instead to show how much better SpaceX thinks space-based solar will be.

It’s no secret that Musk and other Silicon Valley executives have become obsessed with space-based solar power. SpaceX says that space-based solar arrays can generate “more than five-times the energy” of terrestrial ones thanks to 24/7 illumination. As AI data centers have run into opposition here on Earth, CEOs like Musk have started mulling big server racks in space powered by that 24/7 sunshine. Hammer, meet nail.

Even if SpaceX is able to bring down the cost of boosting a data center into orbit, the economics are challenging at best. Power prices for Starlink satellites are multiples higher than what a terrestrial data center typically spends, and protecting chips from the rigors of space won’t be easy or cheap. It’s also not clear whether AI training can be distributed across multiple satellites, leaving a significant chunk of AI work earthbound. It’s not just one problem that SpaceX needs to solve, but many.

It’s likely that Musk considers xAI’s current data centers as stopgaps, that once SpaceX is able to loft gigawatts worth of servers into orbit — probably just a few years away, in his mind — he’ll scrap what’s here on the ground, natural gas turbines included and not have to think about NIMBYs anymore. The risk, of course, is that he’s wrong.

It’s not just NIMBYs that Musk is worried about, though. He’s clearly concerned that computing demands from AI will quickly outstrip what we can provide here on Earth. Sprinkled throughout the SEC filing are references to “terawatt-scale annual AI compute growth,” which will require power to match. That’s a stunning figure when you consider that all the world’s data centers use around 40 gigawatts today

This is Musk’s “first principles” thinking in action. At some point, he assumed the world will need an additional terawatt worth of compute every year, and he worked back from there. “We believe that third-party estimates on data center demand are constrained by the practical supply limitations that exist in a terrestrial context and the power shortage may be far greater than what research estimates suggest,” the company argues.

Possible? Sure, I suppose. But consider that humanity today uses about 35,000 terawatt-hours of energy annually, or about 4 terawatts on a continuous basis. Energy demand has risen lately, and for AI, it probably is in an phase of exponential growth, which could either continue or level off. We have no way of knowing at this point, but if there’s one thing Musk is good at, it’s spotting a trend at its inflection point and extrapolating wildly.

Here’s where Musk’s problems settle back down to Earth. I’m no rocket scientist, but I suspect that shipping solar panels on a flatbed truck uses less energy than sending them into orbit. Plus, space-ready solar panels will need to be manufactured at unprecedented scale. Not insurmountable problems, but also maybe a distraction. We’ve barely scratched solar’s potential here on Earth, for example.

The perfect doesn’t have to be the enemy of the good. There’s plenty of room to improve things here on Earth even while we chase after our dreams in the stars. 

Just three years ago, Musk and his colleagues at Tesla released the “Master Plan Part 3,” which thoughtfully outlined a “plan to eliminate fossil fuels.” A good starting point might be xAI’s data centers.

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

Tim De Chant is a senior climate reporter at TechCrunch. He has written for a wide range of publications, including Wired magazine, the Chicago Tribune, Ars Technica, The Wire China, and NOVA Next, where he was founding editor.

De Chant is also a lecturer in MIT’s Graduate Program in Science Writing, and he was awarded a Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT in 2018, during which time he studied climate technologies and explored new business models for journalism. He received his PhD in environmental science, policy, and management from the University of California, Berkeley, and his BA degree in environmental studies, English, and biology from St. Olaf College.

You can contact or verify outreach from Tim by emailing tim.dechant@techcrunch.com.

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