 It’s been clear since the early days of xAI that Elon Musk’s empire of companies would soon become one big conglomerate (we wrote about that inevitability in 2024). But Musk’s announcement that SpaceX would buy xAI isn’t just a story about Musk and his wild ambition of making humanity interplanetary. When SpaceX and Tesla finally merge (which won’t happen until SpaceX goes public), we’ll be witnessing the natural evolution of Big Tech, from primarily software-based companies to extraterrestrial industrial giants. Call them EIGs. Already, being a player in Big Tech means pushing the limits of AI while overseeing the world’s most ambitious energy production projects. Inevitably, the biggest energy, mining, and manufacturing projects will move off the Earth’s surface, where solar energy is available 24/7. Of course, we don’t really need to go to space. It would be cheaper to burn coal, oil, and gas basically forever, while stripmining previous metals all over the planet. But for today’s industrialists, that game is no longer fun, and space is finally beginning to look doable. The question is how long this transition will take. The answer has as much to do with robots as rockets. Tesla is now an automation company, and robots could be as critical for this project as reusable rockets. But humanoid robots with dexterous hands and an ability to handle zero gravity could be a long way off. A good rule of thumb when it comes to Musk is right call, wrong clock: He tends to be right on monumental shifts in technology — online banking, solar panels, electric vehicles, reusable rockets, big AI models — but extremely aggressive on the timelines. And that strategy has worked well. By laying out his next big bet, Musk’s essentially daring every other big tech company to call his bluff. |