Tesla to Mars - The Podcast

Welcome to Episode 34 of Tesla to Mars!

This is the first in our Robotaxi Countdown Series, where we dive deep into Tesla's upcoming autonomous future with special guest Cern Basher.

We explore the economics of Tesla’s Robotaxi network, the role of fleet operators, the dawn of abundance, and how humanoid robots fit into the picture. Expect practical insights, mind-expanding theories, and a hint of what’s coming next from the Elon empire.

🎙 Hosted by Florian, with Demian, Kees, Kenny & Cern Basher as a guest.

🚖 Countdown to Robotaxi in Austin: T-minus 60 days...

Creators and Guests

DB
Host
Demian Beenakker
Co-Host Tesla to Mars
FM
Host
Florian Minderop
Co-Host Tesla to Mars
KR
Host
Kees Roelandschap
Co-Host Tesla to Mars
CB
Guest
Cern Basher
KV
Guest
Kenny Vaes

What is Tesla to Mars - The Podcast?

Welcome to Tesla to Mars – The Ultimate Podcast on everything Tesla & Musk! 🚀

We offer you a unique European perspective on all things Musk – from Tesla, SpaceX, xAI, The Boring Company, and beyond.

🔹 Florian – Founder & CEO of MisterGreen, a pioneer in sustainable mobility, managing a fleet of 5,000 Teslas.
🔹 Kees – Chief Content Officer & Business Development at MisterGreen, expert in Full Self-Driving & European regulations.
🔹 Kenny – Founder & Managing Director of MAKE & Partners. Finance, M&A, and investment specialist. Tesla investor since 2019.
🔹 Demian – Founder of Next Level Human. Entrepreneur with a passion for Elon’s vision and future tech.

From Robotaxis and Optimus to Tesla Energy and stock insights – we break it all down.

Okay,

welcome back to the thirty fourth

episode of Tesla to Mars.

Today we have a very special guest.

He's called Cern Basher,

and this is the first of

many episodes to come

because we're going to do a

robot taxi countdown until

the robot taxi starts

rolling out in Austin, Texas.

For today,

we're going to start off with a

video from Elon Musk.

about the transatlantic

trade union and then we'll

dive straight into the

episode and florian will be

the host today of our

session I I hope that um I

hope that the united states

and europe can establish a very close

partnership.

We obviously are there's an

alliance already,

but I'm hopeful that there

can be a very close

relationship with America and Europe.

And I'm hopeful, for example,

with the tariffs that that

at the end of the day,

I hope it is agreed that

both Europe and the United

States should move ideally, in my view,

to a zero tariff situation,

effectively creating a free

trade zone between Europe

and North America.

And that would be my,

that's what I hope occurs.

I hope that... All right.

Florian and Damian,

can you tell us what we saw just now?

Yeah, sure.

In the video,

he also talked that he

suggested that to Trump.

But one of the areas we are

very passionate about in this podcast is,

let's say, the Age of Abundance,

which is Tesla's new mission.

We always had Tesla's

mission to accelerate the

world to sustainable energy,

and now it's working

towards a sustainable abundance for all.

which is, I think,

more in line with the whole

mosque economy that that

has been created.

So not only Tesla,

the boric company and all

the companies within within

within that realm.

And

I think this transatlantic alliance,

sort of new alliance

between the US and Europe.

First of all,

I personally like that idea a lot,

so I'm all in favor.

But I think it's a big

stepping stone towards sort

of the golden era,

age of abundance and

revival of the West that we

are seeing here.

and today with uh with a

guest from from overseas we

thought well let's already

take a step into that

direction and uh and uh

work towards um yeah

working working more

closely with uh with with

people across across the

world yeah so we're

establishing our own

transatlantic bridge over

here so thanks cern for

giving us the possibility to to do so

um for today thank you for

coming on um the last time

we tried wasn't that

successful due to

technological difficulties

from our end not your end

for today I want to give

the floor to florian and

florian will be the

asking the questions because

we've looked at a lot of

your content we've

assembled some questions

which we think are the best

questions we could have

asked in limited time and

it will circle around a

couple topics so the first

topic will be robotaxi

fleet operations and investment strategy

The second topic will be a

little bit more about

Robotaxi unit economics and

the business models.

The third topic,

Tesla's competitive

position and future growth.

And the fourth and final

topic in our eyes is the

most fun topic to discuss.

And that's the Robotaxi revenue strategy,

community governance.

And Damian also already mentioned it,

the age of abundance.

So...

Florian, the floor is yours.

Maybe before we go there and

just touch a little bit

upon the point where we started, sir.

And so we're trying to

create a bridge from the US to Europe.

We have a lot of European

followers and a lot of

engagement with European followers.

Can you more or less paint

us a picture from your

point of view of like

what's happening with the terrorists?

Because here in the

Netherlands and in Europe,

it's fairly much driven by

the mainstream media.

So I think it would be good

to get some input from

somebody directly with a, I would say,

crisp view on the

a lot of things that are

happening in the world.

Sure.

Yeah, I can attempt to do that.

Let me also first add that

we also have a

trans-Pacific partnership

going here today as well.

I'm a New Zealand citizen.

I grew up in Canada.

I've lived in the US now for thirty years,

so I'm a citizen of three countries.

So let's extend this

trans-Atlantic partnership

to the Pacific as well.

Great.

All in.

Yeah.

New Zealand is a nation

that's left out of discussion.

So I'm forcibly including

him here in this discussion today.

You know,

sometimes it's easier actually to

see things clearly from

outside the nation that you're in.

So I'm curious about your

guys' perspective on this

whole tariff situation.

But my perspective is that, you know,

this is something that

Trump has been thinking

about now for forty years.

Right now,

people might question his

ability to think deeply about this stuff,

but make no mistake about it.

He's been talking about

trade imbalances now for forty years.

He was on the Larry King show, you know,

basically four years ago,

Oprah Winfrey as well.

Yeah, right.

So, you know,

this is an issue to the

extent that tariffs and more importantly,

probably non tariff trade

barriers of all different kinds.

And there's a.

four-page list of the

different types of

non-tariff trade barriers

that nations can throw at each other.

And by the way, the U.S.

is guilty of this as well.

It's not like we don't throw

up non-tariff trade

barriers to all kinds of nations.

We have a system of trade in

the world right now that's far from free.

Every country has carved out

all kinds of protections

for different types of groups.

And so this, I suppose,

is Trump's attempt at

trying to address that.

Will his strategy of making

the world deal with this all at once,

will that work out?

Or is this too big of a lift?

And I think that remains to be seen.

I think most of us believe

that Trump is a dealmaker.

He's made deals before.

He's renegotiated the US

free trade agreement with

Canada and Mexico in his first term.

And his eyes made that better.

And so how far is he willing

to go with this, I think,

is the question.

And I don't have the answer on that.

Time will tell.

For me, it's, I think, also...

the terrorists are sort of

one of the levers that Trump is pulling.

I also think that Elon is

very closely involved into

the thinking in this thing.

Otherwise,

you would not have Elon talk about

this on this italian event

and elon was already like

meeting world leaders over

the last four years right

so he he he was a little

bit um uh pre pre-rolling

himself into this

disposition already and in

in our podcast we we we

also followed initiatives

around those very closely

And, um,

we talked about those being a sort

of flywheel of, of five pillars.

We'll touch to the flywheel

later on because we have it

structured in the, in the comments.

Um, and it's, it's a very good topic,

so it's not to steal it, but, uh,

I would love to give the

stage to Florian to start

diving into the topics and

then those will be amongst

one of the talking points.

Okay.

Cool.

Well, thank you, Kees.

I think we're still in the

introduction round.

We would have loved to

introduce you and invite

you to our office where we normally sit,

but due to technical reasons,

we are not able to do that.

But I thought that was kind

of a good way to actually

build the bridge already

that we're trying to create.

Um, I was actually born in Venezuela,

so I'm South American by heart, uh,

and by, by head and by my parents, I'm,

uh, I'm Dutch.

So, uh,

I also would like to call me more

of a global citizen than, uh,

than a European.

Um, and, uh,

I think you guys touched upon

something that, uh,

Elon is talking about.

Trump is talking about

terrorists or for four years, I think.

It all started also with Reagan.

He also started this

conversation to get in that

time in the eighties to get

from this progressive

sixties and seventies to the eighties.

And I think we are in the

kind of similar kind of

culture shift where we go

from being woke to more right.

So I think there are a lot

of similar things happening

in this world.

Well,

I just want to also explain a little

bit about our background

between CERN and iSELF.

We approach each other on X,

and it also shows the power of X.

I think you sent out a

valuation of Tesla in a

beautiful report and I reacted to that.

Thank you for this.

And I used it for an

inspiration in my

management team to explain

what the valuation could be.

And you talked about a Tesla

being worth a seventy two K

if Robotaxi arrives.

So we started this

discussion about

depreciation and our current model,

et cetera.

and um now we are here two

years later and we're

having big discussions with

our funders about residual

values and in sixty days

there's another paradigm

starting where uh tesla

starting with their um with

their robot taxi and

residual values could could

be turned around completely so um

um we also discussed in that

time that I went on a

podcast with herbert and

you watched that podcast

and you said uh what an

amazing story I would like

to learn more about it and

by the way I love that

you're building a robot

taxi fleet and by the way I

already bought

so I I replied yeah I also

buy fifty or cyber trucks

in private so we are doing

the same thing that shows

the power of x you know

it's like there are totally

different people around the

world doing exactly the

same thing and they're

thinking the same so um it

was a pleasure to meet you

cern in that time and um I

think the last two years

we've been back and forth a

lot trying to understand

what this is actually doing

and that this is actually

building a robot taxi fleet

And we also discussed of

maybe becoming partners in the U.S.

So we could bring our

knowledge of Mr. Green to the U.S.

and start together a Robotaxi fleet.

So I think the core

questions that we want to

address here is around the

Robotaxi business model.

um and uh this is going to

be our first episode in uh

what we will call our

countdown to robo taxi uh

episode so we will we will

do like ten episodes until

june uh all talk about robo

taxi so we will be happy to

have you more and not only today but um

We'd love to invite you for

more episodes about this.

If we don't manage to get

all the questions answered today,

we will have some other editions.

You're actually the first

one that actually has already a fleet,

and now we're waiting for

the moment that it can wake

up and become a robot taxi fleet, right?

So how is it right now for

you to have sort of five

thousand Teslas under your belt,

but still waiting for that capability?

I can imagine that sometimes

you wake up in the middle

of the night and think,

when is it going to happen?

Yeah, well, uh,

we already building this

fleet for ten years as of

two thousand thirteen.

So, um, I think patience is the core,

core habit here or the core value.

And, uh, I mean,

patience will eventually pay out big time,

um, when this future will happen.

And I think we only need like.

What is it?

Forty five, sixty days,

because we will see this

future actually going to happen.

So I'm happy.

It's five.

Is it one hundred percent of

your fleet that is capable of FSD?

Yeah, well, according to my theory,

I think it's capable.

According to Kay's theory, it's not.

We're still having this

discussion about whether

V-III is also capable of

becoming a robot taxi, yes or no.

What's your picture on that, Cern?

Do you think V-III is

capable of becoming a robot taxi?

Yeah, Hardware III versus Hardware IV.

Yeah.

yeah I think it's uh highly

likely that something will

need to be done there with

the hardware but you know

what the economics of

robotaxi make it a slam

dunk opportunity you would

spend several thousand

dollars upgrading the

hardware perhaps even the

cameras if you need to

because the the revenue

upside is enormous so

whether it's capable on day one

or not remains to be seen

but it will be capable in

fairly short order I think

that would be pretty

important for tesla to take

care of and then florian

just to comment on on what

you've built I I see you

right now as having

essentially you know five

thousand caterpillars

waiting for the day they

turn into butterflies and

I'm not sure if the logo on

the mr green on your shirt

there is a butterfly but it

looks like a lot from here

like a butterfly taking flight

Let's rebrand it that way.

And CERN,

if you would assign a probability

to the fleet of Florian

becoming a robot taxi fleet at this point,

what would be your probability?

Oh,

I think Tesla has signaled a very clear

intention about having

non-Tesla owned vehicles in the fleet.

They've certainly talked

about individuals being

able to put their vehicle in the fleet.

And to me,

then it makes extreme sense to

have a enterprise doing the same thing.

The nice thing about Mr. Green,

for example,

let's say they're rolling out

a robo taxi network service

across Europe.

So you would sort of start

maybe city by city or a few

cities at once.

When you start,

you want to make sure that

you've got enough vehicles

in that market so that you

can offer a proper service.

And I think fleet operators like Mr. Green,

I think,

would be a great partner for

Tesla in helping them roll

it out across the continent.

Same thing here in the US.

And so that's really attractive, I think,

for Tesla, because that's, you know,

five thousand vehicles they

don't have to make.

At least initially, obviously, over time,

they're going to make

millions of vehicles,

but the larger the fleet

and the quicker you get to that size,

the better off it's going

to be for everybody.

Yeah,

it looks like that Tesla abandoned

that idea a little bit of

operating them themselves

and more sort of open

sourcing that whole fleet

management idea to entrepreneurs.

Yeah, and for me,

that's a pretty obvious

decision because the

Robotaxi model is so profitable.

If Tesla doesn't share it,

they actually open

themselves up to all kinds

of political attack.

Right.

So in the U S you know,

Trump is not going to

remain in power forever.

It's quite likely at some point, the,

you know, the Democrats have,

have a president.

Right.

And so you want to make sure

that you've got enough

constituents benefiting

from this new powerful business model.

It's very clear to me when I

run the numbers, the Tesla only models,

the most profitable by far,

because they don't have to

share the revenue with anybody.

But from a, just a, you know,

political monopolistic standpoint,

Sharing that wealth around I

think is going to be very important.

And of course,

with humanoid robots coming down the pipe,

that's even more important

than that scenario.

yeah I think if you look

look at the war chest now

of Tesla as well they have

like thirty billion plus on

the on the balance sheet

right so they have some

capital to deploy there and

I think it's it's better

there's been a lot of

discussion around it uh of

how to use that capital

maybe buy some stock Etc

but I think most sense

makes to put it where it

makes the most money which

is with robot taxi

essentially are you looking

at it from the same point of view sir

Yeah,

the capital expense of Robotaxi isn't

so terrible because the

vehicles are going to pay

for themselves in about six months.

So that's not too big of a deal.

When I look at my models,

Tesla is going to have an

abundance of cash flow

pretty quickly after

Robotaxi is rolled out.

I'm not in the camp that

says that Tesla should

start buying back stock today.

I mean,

certainly it would be nice for the

stock price,

but I think Tesla needs to

make sure that they've got

the financial resources

necessary to invest in

particularly compute.

I think they're going to be

spending a lot of money on

that for the foreseeable future.

We have an interesting

question about that as well,

the compute later on.

And it also makes sense to

open up this as a sort of

business opportunity for

people that are excited about this thing.

If you look at the last two decades,

the companies that have

been winning Alibaba,

let's say fun companies, Apple,

Google, Amazon,

and they all sort of open

up a sort of ecosystem for

entrepreneurs where they

can work with AWS,

but also the Amazon store,

Google with SEO,

Alibaba with buying and selling goods.

I've been an Amazon seller

for a couple of years,

and I always thought about

Jeff Bezos waking up every morning like,

wow,

how amazing is it that one million

entrepreneurs wake up every

day working as hard as they

possibly can to actually

grow your own business?

So in Tesla's case,

that's a really good point.

In Tesla's case,

the Robotaxi network is a

platform for other services.

everybody's focused on you

know ride hailing and

that's the first use case

but it extends way beyond

that to you know package

delivery and all kinds of

other services that can be

delivered on a robo taxi

network um this idea of

having like a mobile office

for example tesla again is

like you said they're going

to want to partner partner

with entrepreneurs that

have different ideas about

how to you know put robo

taxis in the world and

offer additional services

And we're still in the early

innings of that.

Like there's so many stuff

that's still to be thought of.

Like you,

you can think of some services right now,

but I think once it gets up

and rolling up and running, then the,

the creativity will flow.

You could have a bar on wheels.

Yeah.

Right.

You don't need to go to a

bar anymore vehicle and

drink if you want to.

And it could be a, you know,

unique experience wine

tasting experience or

something right that's the

same that robert scobel

said to us as service that

I'm personally hoping for

is that uh I can rent out

my dog so my parents can

just the dogs just walks in

the cyber cap you know has

a big can of food there

where he walks in and he

gets delivered to my

parents that they can walk

him out yeah many crazy

things will occur and

And a lot of people talk

about sort of dojo as sort

of AWS of Tesla.

But this cyber cap and this

whole robot taxi thing will

open up so many

opportunities for

entrepreneurs all over the world.

And I think that's to become a dead scale.

It's only possible when you

have thousands or millions

of entrepreneurs waking up every day

and using your your products

and services to help their

customers and grow together

that's right and I think

the cyber cab is the the

vehicle that solves the

transportation issue in

terms of moving humans

around but the robo van is

the one that truly opens up

business opportunities on

this on this platform right

you could have you know

wedding parties use the

robo van you could have

kids use that instead of a

school bus you could have

pop-up stores pop-up

restaurants pop-up bars

Food trucks, all that stuff.

Yeah, with a larger vehicle.

Are you more excited about

that van or the cab?

Or is it a sort of equal big

opportunity in your eyes?

Yeah,

I'm excited about the entire platform

and what that provides.

I actually think that one

day the transport of humans

could actually be almost free.

That Tesla and its partners

will make their money on

these other services.

But initially, obviously,

the ride share part is significant.

The revenue stream from that will be huge.

But I think like a lot of things,

like when Amazon opened up,

you couldn't have imagined

what Amazon could become.

And I think it's the same

thing with this platform.

We can see now some ideas.

We're talking about some

ideas that what it could offer,

but there's probably a

thousand things that we're

not thinking of.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I also remember that story

with Jeff Bezos with,

when he bought a warehouse

that was way too big for

the capabilities or the

things that Amazon had at the,

at a certain point,

they just had one hundred,

one percent of one hundred

of the space being used for

Amazon there themselves.

So they, so they approached Toys R Us to,

to, to get in.

And from there on that, that whole yeah,

fly view of third party

sellers came across.

But that was also not like a

very well thought out business move.

It was just happened to become that way.

And for me,

we talked a lot about sort of

technology adoption.

So with software, for example,

with WhatsApp,

the adoption was like two

years before getting to one

billion users.

But this business has a sort

of big physical aspect in

it since it still has to be manufactured.

Do you think

Do you think to get to sort

of enormous skills,

Tesla will expand on their

own capabilities to manufacture?

But do you think there will

be cybercaps from different

brands at a certain point?

Yeah,

I think if you would have asked me a

year ago,

I think I would have said I'm

hopeful that other

manufacturers will partner

with Tesla in some way and

provide different vehicles

and be a part of this.

If you ask me the same question today,

I'm less hopeful on that.

which I suppose, financially speaking,

may be better for Tesla,

but I think it spells the

likely death of many automakers,

unfortunately.

Now, maybe it's not too late,

but it's going to take a while, I think,

for other automakers to

engineer FSD into their vehicles.

It's not just, you know,

you don't slap on the

cameras and put the hardware in the car.

For most of them,

it will be too late already.

Yeah,

and this is something we also talk

about a lot is we have this

thesis that Tesla is

currently eating one

hundred percent of the

profits of the EV market

because nobody is making

EVs at a profit yet.

Right.

Let alone being on the verge

of launching cybercaps.

And I think this is

something very much

appreciated in the market

that actually nobody is

making money on EVs.

The capabilities of EVs are

much better than ICE

vehicles already at this point.

And everybody's selling at a loss.

So Tesla is competing

against companies that are

loss making at this moment.

So how long is that bubble still?

The analogy for me is that

you've got farmers tilling

the field by hand.

And you've got a company that's invented,

you know,

horses that till the field and

it's better.

But the game is not even that.

Now you've got a company making tractors.

So the original farmers are

trying to catch up to the

guys with horses.

But their game is actually

in tractors and no one's

really recognizing that yet.

It's a good way to paint the

picture indeed.

Tesla's so far ahead, right?

If they can pop out a cyber

cab every five seconds out

of their factory, I mean,

the other automakers are

just dead in the water.

There's lightning fast, by the way.

And millions of tractors

entering the road very soon.

Yeah.

Let's see.

Before we hijack the whole

meeting with all kinds of sidesteps,

and there are millions with Tesla,

Florian.

Yeah, thank you, Kenny.

I was hoping to ask you some

questions as well, Cern,

about actually what we've

been talking about in the

last ten minutes.

But I think the core of the

questions are like,

if you are an entrepreneur,

if you are seeing this happening,

what are the possibilities

for you as an entrepreneur?

So what I would like to ask you is,

what's the difference in roy

between buying a used tesla

versus um versus a cybercap

for example so if you're an

entrepreneur right now you

will you are um you're

seeing what elon is doing

you're you have the

ambition to become a

shepherd what would you

advise him would you advise

him to buy a secondhand

tesla or would you say no

please wait and um and buy a cybercap

Yeah, that's a good question.

I have theorized that the

value of a secondhand Tesla

goes up dramatically once

the Robotaxi network is in

operation because you're

turning a depreciating

machine now into a money-making machine.

You've fundamentally changed

what that vehicle is.

So there is an opportunity, I think,

to purchase Tesla vehicles

secondhand that are FSD capable

um with purchased fsd again

tesla has said that they'll

make whole those those

those folks right if you've

got purchased fsd in your

car um that they'll you

know they'll make it

robotaxi ready now whether

it's ai five chip remains

to be seen maybe it might

be something else but

either way it'll be able to

be a money-making machine

so that seems like a pretty

reasonable way to go

And the nice thing about the

existing Tesla vehicles is

you can carry more than two passengers.

Now,

maybe there are some other issues that

we haven't thought of yet in terms of,

you know,

what happens if somebody leaves

the door open and stuff like that, right?

Whereas the cyber cab,

that happens automatically.

If Tesla does make good on

their promise to sell cyber

cabs to people, sure,

they can make the car for, what,

twenty thousand dollars,

twenty five thousand?

What are they going to sell it to you for?

I don't think they're going

to sell it to you for

twenty five thousand dollars.

Why would you sell a money

making machine so cheaply?

So I think the lower risk

opportunity probably is to

pick up some used Teslas

that are robo taxi ready.

Because it's unclear to me

what the cyber cab will

actually be sold for.

I believe there are some

orders already placed for

cybercaps by the bigger fleet owners,

which is not made out in the open yet,

but I think they're already

opening up for orders.

If that would be the case,

it would also go to Mr. Green, right?

Cern, would you think that the use case of,

let's say,

the existing fleet and the

cybercap is different?

So even talked about the

Airbnb model for sort of

mix between Airbnb and Uber.

It seems that the cyber cap

is sort of the more on the

Uber side and the ride

hailing seems to be a

little bit more on the Airbnb side.

Do you,

do you think there's a difference there?

Yes, there is.

I mean,

I think that ultimately I think

we'll have very specific

vehicles for very specific use cases.

Right.

So for example,

just to expand the

conversation to the cyber truck,

every now and then it's

really handy to have a

truck to haul stuff around.

Yeah.

Right.

My mom just recently got a

new big screen TV.

Couldn't fit that in my car.

It wouldn't fit in the Model Y,

but it fit beautifully in

the cyber truck.

So there's all kinds of use

cases where you want

different form factors for vehicles.

In terms of moving people around,

the cyber cab's perfect for, let's say,

ninety percent of the needs

that people have.

But you do need other

vehicles in the fleet to

provide that optionality

for larger group sizes or

to carry certain things.

And so that's going to be important.

I also think that, by the way,

that the amount of revenue

you get for carrying three

or four people should be

more than what you would

get if you carry just two people.

Definitely.

There comes the Model Y. Yeah.

so if I understand you

correctly a certain um if

an entrepreneur wants to

start becoming a shepherd

it doesn't really matter if

he starts with a used tesla

um because the residual

value of that car will

eventually increase to a

certain amount which is

good enough for him to take

that risk um but there he

could also wait and see

what this is going to offer

with the cyber cap but if I

listen to you correctly you

don't think that tesla will

They have been telling that

they would like to offer

them for like thirty K. So

are you saying that you

don't think that they're

going to offer it for thirty K?

Well, just think about this, though,

if you offer a vehicle for

thirty K and that vehicle can make.

That's to say,

ninety thousand dollars a year.

You've undersold the vehicle now,

of course,

Tesla can make some of this up

by taking some of the

revenue from Robotaxi,

which they will do.

So there's two things at play, right?

There's the value of the car

and what the car is worth, right,

as a money-making machine.

And then, of course,

there's Tesla's take rate

on the revenue from the operation of it.

So in theory,

I guess they could sell the car cheaply,

but then they're going to

have a much higher take

rate on the Robotaxi revenue, right?

And it's the same issue with

the cost of the FSD.

know on one hand you could

say fsd should be worth a

lot because of what it can

do it turns something into

a money making machine on

the other hand you could

argue that well they should

sell fsd really cheaply for

individual use but when you

put your vehicle in the

robo taxi network they

should get a higher

percentage of the revenue

because you're using fsd

that they've developed

which is very valuable and

you're making money off of that

So I guess they've got

different levers to pull, Florian,

in terms of how they do it.

So I suppose they could sell

the cyber cab cheaply if they wanted to.

Yeah, indeed.

So that's also my follow up

question is like,

does it really matter if

you buy a used car or a new

car if you are going to

build like a fleet of cars

which you will put on the

robo taxi fleet on the on

the robo taxi network?

Yeah, I think if you are building a fleet,

you probably want to sort of

have a term structure, I guess,

of vehicles, right?

You want some older ones,

you want some newer ones,

and you kind of want to turn them over,

right?

And so you've kind of got

this fleet that's, you know,

not all one year, right?

Let's say you want vehicles

that maybe have been

produced over the last, you know,

five or six years, right?

And then the ones that are

older wear out and you

replace those with a newer

batch of vehicles.

But I do think that there

may be a nice opportunity

with used Teslas that have purchased FSD.

Because right now,

when you buy those in the used car market,

there is not much of a premium,

if anything,

for having FSD that's part of

the vehicle.

The market doesn't

appreciate this or price this in.

And you see that from an

analyst point of view as well.

Nobody really prices in the

robot actually revenues from it.

But are you saying that if

you have a used Tesla, you bought FSD,

that the money you paid for

FSD is not something

current sellers getting back?

Correct.

Okay.

That's already an interesting one.

Yeah.

And particularly if Tesla

makes good on their promise

to upgrade those vehicles

to whatever hardware is

necessary to make them robotaxi ready.

And I think they will do

that because if you look at

the revenue upside,

just a simple hardware adjustment,

even though it might prove

difficult because of the

form factor issues and stuff like that,

it will make sense.

It will justify the investment.

Oh, I think so.

And even if Tesla didn't,

I think the individual

owner would justify their

investment of a couple of

three thousand dollars themselves.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Cern,

like an underlying question that I

have comes from the following.

So Damien and I have been

buying Amazon businesses as

well over the last couple of years.

And I still vividly remember

a couple of guys coming on

the call and I said, well, you did great.

You build a company with

like twenty million of revenue and three,

four million of EBITDA.

It's awesome what you've built.

They were like, yeah, well,

we put a half a million

bucks in this company.

We could better have bought

some Amazon stock,

didn't have to do anything,

and our returns would have been better.

And I think we're dealing here with,

let's say, the same type of arbitrage.

So we have a bit of an idea

of where Tesla is going and

also what underlying

business opportunities are.

How do you look at that

information arbitrage?

If we would do, let's say,

more efforts for a robot taxi fleet,

there should also be a higher return.

How do you look at that in

comparison to the Tesla stock currently?

Yeah, that's a good question.

I think there's a lot of

depth to that to really dig into.

But just at a surface level,

if you are looking for income, right,

then building a business

and generating income

stream makes a lot of sense.

If you're looking for maximum growth,

then being a passive

investor in a company like Tesla,

which doesn't pay dividends at this point,

is the easier way to go.

And frankly,

also probably less risky and

more diversified as well,

even though it's a single company.

Now, ideally, you do both, right?

Yes, both are good ideas.

You can make money on both ideas.

I think also once the market

starts recognizing this as

a valid business,

as a business opportunity,

then you enter a whole new

world where capital is

slowly becoming available.

And this opportunity is now

being opened for more and

more entrepreneurs entering

a certain market.

Because, you know,

who else like money making machines?

Well, obviously banks, right?

Or let's say new economy things,

new economy initiatives

that are decentralized

finance like or initiatives

that are in the crypto space.

So I think once the

opportunity is there and

recognized and our

assumptions on that

opportunity is that it's

going to be a very big opportunity.

Not only a lot of money will

flow to the capital markets,

but also a ton of money

will flow to the markets to

utilize this opportunity

for the people that want to jump on it.

The other thing too, guys,

is that RoboTaxi, in my mind,

is a Trojan horse for humanoid robots.

Yeah.

If you have a business around RoboTaxi,

you're now giving yourself

optionality to be a player

in the humanoid bot opportunity,

which is an order of magnitude bigger.

So it's a testing ground essentially for,

uh, for the, for the optimist, uh,

future.

Yeah.

Crazy to realize, you know,

there are days that are not

waking up to this, but end of the year,

there will be four or five

thousand working in Tesla factories, uh,

already.

So, you know,

being caught by the tractor is already,

uh, it's already a big one, but, uh, uh,

the, the,

the Lamborghini tractor is

already on his way.

Right.

Yeah,

that's why we have to extend the

analogy to the next, the next thing,

right?

Yeah.

Yeah.

Maybe, uh,

maybe because I liked it remark a lot, uh,

about the Trojan horse that

you just made about building this, uh,

this setting up this shepherd business,

that it's actually a Trojan

horse who set up this humanoid.

Can you elaborate a little

bit how these two businesses can, uh,

can affect each other and, uh,

and leverage each other?

Sure.

Yeah.

Florian,

I've heard you talk about the

cyber cab and other Tesla

vehicles are robots on wheels.

And robots with wheels that

can move stuff are great,

but they're limited in what they can do.

They can move stuff around

and that's hugely important

in our society.

Moving stuff is a big business globally,

right?

People, goods, et cetera, huge business.

Look at Amazon,

look at the shipping companies,

huge business.

But even bigger than that is

everything else that we do.

And so with humanoid robots,

we have an AI-powered

machine that for the first

time in human history will

be able to out-compete us

at some point with respect

to the work that we are

able to do as humans.

The humanoid robot can work

seven thousand hours a year.

I don't know about you guys,

but I can't come close to that.

right want to nope and

especially not doing manual

labor in the same time like

exactly stop dexterity

creating but also

assembling right and

they're only going to get

better over time whereas

humans get to a point and

then you kind of plateau

and then level off so

anyway the examples go on

but the humanoid robot will

be able to do eventually

anything that a human can do

from a labor perspective and

maybe even more,

but just from a labor perspective,

the human race has never

had a machine that can

outcompete us in that way.

We've had specialized

machines that can do

certain things better,

but we've never had a

general purpose machine

that can do anything that a human can do.

And without a human coming

to operate that machine.

That's right.

And so having a Robotaxi fleet,

having robots on wheels is

going to be important in

moving these humanoid robots around.

So if you are a fleet

operator for the robots on wheels,

that will serve you well in

terms of positioning the

other robots where they

need to be to provide other

services on top of that

Robotaxi network of just

moving stuff from point A

to point B. So for example,

package delivery,

how do you get the package

from the vehicle to your doorstep?

Exactly.

So you use, use,

it's a very hard problem that, that,

that many companies are

working very hard on like,

like Uber and Amazon on

sort of the last mile delivery.

That's sort of the Holy grail and, uh,

where, where everybody's looking for,

but the humanoid would easily, uh,

solve that, that issue.

Well, it's the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last, the last, the last,

the last, the last,

And maybe the robot will

just throw it on the

doorstep and that'll be great.

It'll look like Michael

Jordan when it throws your package.

With a catapult.

Go ahead.

No, go ahead.

It's fine.

I'm actually kind of

intrigued by your Trojan

horse kind of analogy because

uh of course you're right

that um when you have a

logistic company with robo

caps you're able to deliver

those humanoids to the

place where you want to go

but um case and I have been

working on something the

last few months which is

also um getting more and

more uh out in the open is that um

that the physical AI is

built upon data from real world data.

So the cars which are

driving around already are

already accumulating a lot

of data in order to build

the foundation model to

create a self-driving car.

But that self-driving car,

the brains of that car can

be copy pasted to the

brains of the humanoid.

With with the only exception

is that the cars are not

allowed to drive there

where humans are actually walking but

Maybe, Kees,

you can explain a little bit

about what we're doing with

the data and how we see it

as a business model also for Shepard's.

Because there are a lot of

people already working on this.

It's like,

how can we accumulate this real

world data in order to

deploy the humanoids?

And as of

At this moment,

we only know that Tesla is

accumulating the data for themselves,

but maybe we can,

and also Tesla can use that

data to bring it to third

party operators working in

this new world.

So maybe Kees,

you can explain a little bit

about what I'm trying to say.

Yeah,

so we've been tapping into the fleet

API for quite some time now.

And of course,

you're gathering immense

amounts of video data from

multiple camera angles.

You could be able to store

that data and sell it to

third parties that might

map out whole cities.

or charging data or voice control data.

There's a lot of valuable

information that we can map

out the world.

And I think right now it's

very difficult to pinpoint

a specific value to that.

And I'm not sure if anybody

really takes this into

account into their Tesla valuations.

um so very curious how you

look towards that and

because like we are

interested in um you laid

out that three-step model

like tesla can operate

themselves you have a fleet

operator and you have

individual owners our

vision is more we are the

fleet operator running our

own fleet but also in the

meanwhile enabling private

owners and small fleet operators

where we gather or

accumulate all that data

and we will be able to utilize that data.

Just a quick comment on that, by the way.

As an individual vehicle owner,

let's say I contribute my

vehicle to the fleet for

four hours today.

Do I get paid based on the

activity of my individual vehicle?

That's an open question because

My individual vehicle might

not be optimized to produce

the most revenue.

Tesla,

as the fleet operator or as the

network operator,

might want to actually

position my vehicle in a

certain place in case

someone needs a ride.

So my vehicle actually may

not see a lot of action.

So should I not get paid

just because it's sitting

there when other people's

vehicles may have had more rides?

So there's the structure of

the network and how that's going to work,

I think, that remains to be seen.

um I'm sorry I I went on

such a tangent I've

forgotten your question yeah so

um maybe I can hop in and uh

we can talk about it

further is that um what we

what we are uh we're

working with some companies

what their names again

their case um well there's

multiple companies so you

like uh you have a lot of

fleet api companies out

there uh of course one of

those is standard fleet the

first third party uh

a partner of Tesla and that,

but you can extend it

further because Resla, for instance,

and we might too, we're using a fleet.

So they're doing the back

end day to day operations, combining,

enabling people to run their business.

But more the consumer

oriented stuff is companies

like Ziva Global or

matter ai that sell usb

drives to store that video

data instead of just the

flash drive that's in the

tesla vehicle and there's

tons of companies out there

so yeah and and also natix

for example um they're all

uh trying to get a position

In the car.

So what they do is they they

put the USB on the on the

car and they collect the

data and that data you can sell again.

So we've been talking about them.

What what's the value of the

data and to whom are you

going to sell that data?

So at this moment, they only sell it to,

for example, insurance companies.

Yeah.

And they say that they are

ready to see whether an

accident happened and how

it happened and who was

actually involved in the accident.

Just as we are seeing right

now with the crazy Nazi

people spraying and scratching the cars.

There's actually valuable

data because you know who it is, you know,

and you can actually go after it.

So that's the same with an

accident and with insurance.

So they told us that that

data is worth around fifty

to one hundred euros per month per car.

Wow.

So that's and that's just one use case.

Yeah.

So I think they were talking

about the data being a

value of about between two

and four dollars per mile.

so um I don't know how many

miles this already

collected but I think it's

in in the billions with a

value of two dollars per

mile how is this actually

put on the balance sheet of

tesla is is it already on

the balance sheet of tesla

for example and um and how

is this going to play out

for third-party players and

how is this thinking about

this kind of business models

Yeah.

So actually, again,

there's a lot of depth to this.

So think about the different

potential customers, right?

You've got municipalities, governments,

local governments,

cities that could benefit

from a lot of the data

coming from the vehicles,

whether it's real-time

pothole detection and alert, right?

There's a pothole here.

Go fix it.

Or even just issues with the

infrastructure,

like the traffic light's not working,

or the signpost,

someone hit it and it's

fallen on the road,

or a tree has fallen over.

All that kind of stuff would

be tremendously valuable to

municipalities.

I would imagine in that case,

Tesla might just provide

that for free and say, hey,

we're being a good company here.

We're helping you out.

Good Samaritan.

Good Samaritan.

We're helping make the

roadways safer for everybody.

That kind of stuff.

That would be great.

And then at the other extreme,

who is going to pay a ton

of money for this information?

Well, that's Wall Street.

So if you're a hedge fund

and you want to keep track

of certain things,

like how many cars are in a

parking lot in front of a certain store,

or how many Amazon trucks

do you see on the road,

whatever data they want to track,

this would be one way to

facilitate that in a

certain area if they cared about that.

Now they're already using

satellite imagery.

There's companies that

provide that every single

day to Wall Street in terms

of where ships are and how

many cars in a parking lot

and stuff like that.

So those are the two extremes, I think,

in terms of maybe getting

data for free and then

being willing to pay a ton

of money for it.

And then there's a bunch of

companies kind of in the

middle that probably would

pay for portions of the

data that's relevant to them.

And certainly insurance companies, uh,

would be a big customer.

Um, so yeah, I think that's,

that's an interesting one.

The other one is advertising.

You can advertise on the

outside of the vehicle.

You could advertise on the

inside of the vehicle.

And then it kind of related

to it is you can create,

because the vehicle is, you know,

GROK powered,

the vehicle could be your guide.

And you could have this guided experience.

So if I travel to Amsterdam,

I could get in a cyber cab

and it could take me around

the city and tell me

everything about what I'm seeing.

Yeah.

Right.

And then I could say, you know,

take me to the best

restaurant in this area

that serves this kind of

food and it would take me there.

And by the way, the restaurants would pay.

Yeah,

I liked I liked the direction where

it's going from.

I think if you look at what Elon is doing,

Elon never works in the day-to-day,

right?

So he's always ten years

ahead and works on where he wants to go.

Um, yeah, I, I really liked what you,

what you posted about, uh, the,

the functions that each of

Elan company had put

together in one slide and

the X and XAI from my point of view,

one of the first

consolidations that we're

going to see within the, the, the,

the Elan empire.

And, uh,

with X they're working on the everything.

store everything app right

so all the goods and

services that you use in

your daily life can be

powered by uh by x xai is

exploring is trying to

understand the secrets of the universe so

Therefore,

it really needs the real world

data that Optimus and the

cybercaps are providing.

And right now we have a fleet of globally,

let's say, of ten million.

But ten years from now,

there will be a fleet of

probably one hundred fifty

to two hundred fifty million cars.

I'm very excited about Kees

and Florian already working

on the API store because I

think that API and the app

store are sort of early

innings where Tesla is developing because

especially when the fleet is that large,

to two hundred million,

two hundred fifty million ish.

That also has never happened in the world.

The same counts for Optimus.

Like,

is it already crowded in the restaurant?

So that information is going

to become so real time.

Um, and, and especially if you see like,

okay,

I want to drive around in only that

feature would be already fun.

Like drive around the Sydney, bam.

And, and some, uh, FSD, uh, car will,

will accept that offer.

You pay like one,

one dollar and then off you go.

So you can think about

millions of things there.

Um, said that is from my point of view,

something inevitable.

And we cannot,

Ilan also talked about using

the cars as the total

compute of all the cars together.

It's also something valuable

that is going to happen

because in the end,

even if you drive ten hours a day,

there's still fourteen

hours of compute left and

you have that battery

already in place that can power that.

But those are things.

that we cannot envision how

it's going to look like,

but it's going to be

inevitable that this stuff

is all going to happen.

Think about how useful it

would be for police forces.

They're looking for a certain vehicle.

Now with the whole Robotaxi fleet,

you can basically look at

every license plate of

every car on the road

instantly and tell the

police exactly where that vehicle is.

So there's all kinds of

applications for that data.

And, of course,

it's the perfect thing for

AI to parse through and

find out what's relevant

with all the data that's coming in.

It's something that Kees and

I looked at when we visited the GIGA

factory in Berlin, the opening,

we got the opportunity to

walk around and see everything,

all the lineup.

And at the end,

we saw this chip and with eight cameras.

And I said to Kees,

I think this is the most

important part of the whole factory.

So we touched upon the

cameras actually getting

all the data in there,

but we also have a compute in the car.

So I think you touched upon this as well,

Cern, about the inference compute,

which is available in the car.

Can you elaborate and maybe

talk a little bit about

what you think the value is

going to be of that compute in the car?

yeah I built a model for

this florian uh probably a

year and a half ago now and

it was really just a stab

in the dark and it still is

but there's no doubt that

if you have a powerful

computer in the vehicle

that that is very useful for ai inference

You shared some slides with me,

and I would love to show it.

In which document is that?

I don't think I sent that to you.

I'm happy to send it to you,

but it's kind of an old

model at this point.

I actually worked with James

Delma a little bit on that,

and he and I basically

concluded that at this point,

we don't know what the

pricing would look like.

But certainly at scale,

it's a very valuable thing.

Yeah,

I think we also discussed a little

bit about it, Cern, is that with AI,

you need compute.

And with compute,

you need a lot of energy.

So with the cars already

having a compute in there

and also their batteries already in there,

it's like a distributed

force of AI already in place.

So if you add all the

gigawatt hours in battery

already in place of the six,

seven million cars already

roaming the world,

together with the compute power in there,

there's already kind of a

use case only for having

some models running on that

computer in the car.

So we definitely need an

expert like James Dahmer to

really explain this,

but I think we are already

kind of grasping the idea

of how this could play out.

Sorry, Kenny.

I think they're already doing right.

I read something about it.

What are they doing?

Well,

I think they're already partly using

using a part of the fleet

to run some of the models.

I think even mentioned it or

someone mentioned it in the

last couple of weeks.

Well, let's say that supercluster,

what they have,

they what have they paid

with XAI for that whole

superclusters like twenty billion,

something in that realm.

or that is the fundraise

that XAI has been doing to build compute.

Well,

let's say the computer within a Tesla

costs two and a half thousand dollars.

Then you can divide that

twenty billion to the two

and a half thousand and see

how many cars you need to

come to the same compute as

that super cluster, as a rough estimation,

because those are

specialized computers and I

understand all that.

But the amount of compute

will start exceeding that

very rapidly when cars are

coming off the line every five seconds.

And it's a combination, too,

of the car is going to need

that compute itself, perhaps.

But certainly when it's idle,

you can use that compute, right,

for other things,

less maybe time sensitive type work.

um it remains to be seen

it's certainly a nice asset

and the other thing that

we're not mentioning is the

same ship is in the

humanoid robot it's an

optimus as well right now

maybe there's one chip

instead of two in there but

still it doesn't take many

optimists to get you know

equal to the fleet of the

vehicle so they're going to

have a massive mobile

distributed inference capability

Yeah,

I'm not as technically advanced as

most of the people are,

but is it possible to train

like AI models on that

computer as well that are

in the cars and maybe an

optimist in a while?

I don't think so.

I don't think it would be

optimized for that.

I think it's more for inference, which.

Ninety five percent of what

we need for AI ultimately

will be inference once you

build the model.

So it's good.

It's going to be in the right place.

So sort of a napkin

calculation to have twenty

billion in compute requires

roughly eight million cars

to get on the road.

So when you're then at the

point of having twenty

million cars being built annually,

then you see how much

compute also is going to be

just by selling cars.

It's crazy.

I mean, this is going to be amazing.

And I think we need to do a

deep dive into this in one

of our next episodes.

So we need to invite

somebody who's going to

help us explain this.

I think for this episode,

we would like to touch on two more items.

One is the Age of Abundance,

which I want to discuss in ten minutes.

But we also wanted to

discuss the Doge flywheel.

Maybe, Damien,

you can answer some

questions about this and

how you envision this Doge

being a flywheel for Tesla as well.

Yeah, yeah.

And just flywheel for let's

let Bridget for that sort

of age of abundance.

And obviously there's a lot

of dirt where let's say we

as a society as a whole

need to go through.

So a lot of secrets are being revealed,

a lot of things,

how sort of the system has

been operating behind the scenes.

But

Yeah, for me,

I think that's a lot of noise

and not very much signal

that we're hearing there.

So we talked about it in our

podcast that the whole Doge

operation is a sort of five

pillar flywheel that Elon

has created there.

So the first one is

obviously cost savings.

So people keep more money in the pocket.

And we start seeing the

savings of those being

openly being published on their website.

The second is less regulation.

What that means for

companies is so much money

is now being spent of

lawyers and administration

just to keep your business running.

Depends on what kind of sector you are.

But let's say you're in the

banking system.

Well, you already need like

fifty two hundred million a

year to just uh operate

your your bank and a lot of

these people will start you

know need to uh start doing

something else but if you

think about it from a sort

of productivity standpoint

those people are just

referees on the field and

not and not players so I

think that whole efficiency

thing is uh is um it's not

only less rules and

regulation but also people

being freeing up and

starting being more productive

Yeah.

Entering more productive roles.

So even touch on that.

And that's point number three.

So people moving from a sort

of bad operating system to

a more efficient operating

system and use the analogy

of East Berlin versus West

Berlin at that point.

So that will go into to add.

We have seen the cost savings already.

So point number one is already in place.

We have seen the efficiency.

So Doge is also publishing

the amount of rules and

words being used in things.

And we start already seeing

sort of job numbers that

are quite positive in the US.

So that means a lot of new

initiatives are being

started and investments are being made.

The fourth pillar is

obviously a very important one,

the lower interest rates,

because now you keep more

money in your pocket as a

government as well,

so you can have better conditions there.

Therefore,

less cost for people in their daily lives,

because in the end,

the consumers are paying

that interest rate.

be it by mortgages,

being by goods or services,

just be more expensive.

And the fifth pillar is that

it just becomes more

attractive to work and

start your company.

Because if there's less

rules or regulations and

there's more access to

people and there's more

money that you keep in your pocket,

then the incentives are

aligned to sort of start

your own business and

become more entrepreneurial.

So there's a lot of data

that shows the less

bureaucratic a country is,

the more entrepreneurial

becomes and the more

uh the more wealth you

create as a as a company

and I think all those five

uh uh pillars will

influence tesla very much

for the good because um

because those teslas are

are being used for people

in their daily lives so

financing becomes more attractive

um that that's the thing

people have more money in

the pocket so they can buy

a sort of car in in that

sort of segment um do it

yeah maybe that's a bit of

an optimist view on on how

things go but um I think we

already seen the first uh

the first things in in

interest rates coming down

and uh savings that are

being made that this

flywheels now already start

uh start rolling

Yeah,

I think that's a really good observation.

And actually,

I would even extend it a little further.

And this takes us right into

this idea of sustainable abundance.

Right.

So again, as I mentioned,

for the first time in human history,

we're developing a machine

that can outcompete us.

So think about this.

You've got a nation that has

that and a nation that doesn't.

It doesn't take much to

imagine that the nation

that doesn't have that

suddenly is not competitive

against the nation that does.

and so for me doge is kind

of a metaphor for the

process that every country

every company and basically

every family needs to go

through to make sure that

they're not wasting that

they're saving that they're

efficient etc etc because

this change that is about

to come with ai powered

humanoid robots and cars

that drive themselves is such a powerful

competitive force on the

world that we've never seen before.

And it's going to hit us so quickly.

And I don't think really

hardly anybody appreciates

how rapid this change is going to come.

So think about this too,

in terms of let's just

imagine a world where all

labor is done by a humanoid robot.

Let's assume that eventually

we get to the point where

bots are that capable.

Now think about your family.

You've got parents,

one or two that work and

they provide for the kids.

Okay.

And most families provide

whatever they can for the kids, right?

Like we're not looking for

the kids to work.

Now, hundreds of years ago,

that was the case.

Kids used to work.

But now we don't do that so much anymore,

at least in the Western world.

Kenny is being raised as a kid to work.

There you go.

There's always a few exceptions.

But think about the humanoid

robot world where adults no

longer need to work to

provide for the family at the extreme.

So in that sense,

we all become kids in that

sense and that we're

dependent upon this new

form of labor to provide things for us.

Now you could imagine that

that might end badly if we

all sit around and eat ice

cream and lay on the couch

all day because we don't need to work.

And I suppose a few people

will opt to do that.

But it also frees up humans

from the toil of labor.

There's no more need to

exchange labor for money

and scarcity becomes a thing of the past.

And of course,

there's this human nature

view that has always lived

out there that a human is

lazy by nature and that has

held back like a universal basic income,

for instance,

to pop up whilst experiments,

however minor they were all

around the globe,

prove the exact opposite.

That's right.

And we're about to test that theory,

I think, at scale pretty rapidly.

Because initially,

humanoid certainly will be

a tool for us to be better at our jobs.

It'll be like an assistant.

And then it'll start taking

the jobs that humans don't want.

That's great.

And then it's going to start

taking every job.

And the change will be like that.

I don't know when that is.

It might be ten, fifteen years from now,

but that point is coming.

In the early days,

it's going to look really clumsy.

These robots today still

look pretty clumsy.

Walking like Joe Biden or

whoever you want to know

what they're walking like.

But make no mistake,

they are the worst they're

ever going to be right now.

You just need to think

forward a little bit and

it's a profound change on

the entire world.

So I think back to your point that

Doge, I think,

is just the process that we

all need to go through.

And I'm really interested to

see which country is next

in line to do a Doge-type effort.

And the quicker that countries do that,

the better off they will be.

Because in this world that's coming,

it's going to be a force of

deflation like we've never seen before.

And so if you're not already

efficient and lean,

it's going to be a very painful process.

Can you explain why that's

going to be a painful process?

Because it feels a little

bit contradictory.

If there's enough money

being made by robots,

why do you care about

efficiency in the government?

Well,

it's the transition that I think is

risky.

Exactly.

And like before we dive into it,

because a very good question, Florian,

and I've put it on screen a bit before,

but there's this article by

Roboflock and he said

actually that in order to

get to that state of abundance,

we now need to put in

the most effort and the hard

work to actually prepare for that.

And I think, yeah, Cern,

you're going to enlighten us.

But this article,

I can recommend it to everyone.

It's from Ed Roboflock.

He is laying it out perfectly here.

And also he's basing his

work on Tony Siba and other things.

I'm in order of, let's say, next in line,

sir.

And I'm, I think,

optimistic because Elon

always famously wears his

tech support T-shirt.

So he builds this this up

from a technological solution.

And and I even, you know,

have been I've been talking

with with Florian about XAI.

sort of shadow running the

operations on X because he

just wants to have the

wizard engineers building

sort of the future of that app.

And I think same goes for

government because it's

such a headache to work

with the cobalt and all the

legacy technology.

I was called that ex-founder

of Airbnb that is on board.

You talked briefly about

sort of having an Apple or

Airbnb like experience for

all your stuff for the government.

And this is also what was

being touched on one of the

earlier interviews with Marc Andreessen,

where he talked about what

these guys are building in

the background.

It's like the truly groundbreaking stuff.

So now it's a lot of noise

with some cops and all the

bills that are being published.

So that's just a sort of stage one work.

Same with Twitter, right?

So let's keep the things in the air,

make sure it's not loss making anymore.

And from there on,

we start the innovation part.

And since the legacy is so

painful with systems of fifty years old,

it will be probably

overhauled in one big overtake.

And that sort of template of

how to operate these kind

of things will be then

more easily let's say

accessible for governments

around the world let's hope

so yeah and I think what

the point that I want to

try to emphasize here too

is that you know the system

that we have in the united

states is critical for

developing this technology

but as this technology

propagates through society

the system that I think and

by and large that we we

have we see more in europe

is going to be more

necessary in terms of that

mindset in terms of taking

care of people and and

dealing with the fallout of

this as people start to

lose their jobs to robots

those people need to be

taken care of in some way

that's that's respectful

that works economically

yeah right and not allowed

to become a political force

that's trying to stop this

technology because if we

stop it you know what china is not

No, I will be late.

We'll be late.

And so this is a very key time.

And, and particularly now with the,

like in the United States

with the political environment,

I've often said that if I

was an advisor to the democratic party,

I would get them to embrace

Elon more than Trump is embracing him.

They should be fighting over

guys like him.

Yeah.

And that, that that's,

they're doing the exact

opposite right now.

And they're so underestimating.

what this guy is capable of.

I think he explained it

pretty well in the same

interview that we just

showed in the beginning

about setting up a free terrorist zone.

He also mentioned in that

same interview is that the

people who are not in favor

of this are the current establishment

And those are the big, big companies.

The big companies,

they have their cash flows,

they have their dividends,

they have their shareholders, et cetera.

And the big companies are

not known for innovation.

So they know they're going

to lose against innovation.

So what do they do in order

to stop innovation is they

build a lot of rules.

Complexity.

And they thrive on scarcity.

Yes.

They thrive on scarcity of goods.

But the most important thing is, is, uh,

we should keep innovation at,

at the low lowest point as

possible because innovation

is going to really disrupt us.

So I think that's the, the,

the real problem right now

is that we have to shift

from the establishment to,

to new innovation,

which is already knocking on our door.

China is already doing this.

So China is the new world.

And we, Europe, and together with US,

are the old world.

And we are trying to keep it

in the same place.

But we are seeing that we

are getting disrupted.

So I think we are in an

amazing transition phase

where actually a lot of

things are going to break.

But there's also a lot of

things which we can build up again.

And this is this age of

abundance that Ilan is talking about.

Yeah, first.

So what I'm trying to go to

is to that article that you

were showing a case is actually,

it's a pretty good article.

And if you pop it up,

I can walk through a little

bit through it to see if we can

touch upon some stuff which

are written in that article

but one of the things that

um so we we learned from

elon like three weeks ago

four weeks ago that the new

mission of tesla is the

sustainable abundance um

and this is actually the

mission for humanity's future

So we talked about what does

abundance mean?

Well,

abundance means that we don't need to

work anymore.

We don't need money anymore.

We have a lot of abundance.

So he tells there's already

some abundance already in our world,

which is the Internet and water supply.

But he also says that he got

some lessons from reading

the Ian Banks series.

And Ilan referred to these

books several times to

explain to people how he

sees this future of abundance.

And this book talks about AI

and humanity actually

converging and living in a

world where there's abundance.

So it's amazing that we are

actually going into this place.

This is the place that he

wants us to go to.

So in this world,

work transforms into an

optional activity driven by

personal interest and not

by economic necessity anymore.

Money loses its relevance

and time takes center stage.

So that's what I wanted to

talk about is if we are

entering a world with robot

taxis and humanoids and those assets,

real world assets are

producing real world cash flow

Who is going to get all that cash flow?

So if all that cash flow is going to Tesla,

we will get an issue, people revolting,

hey,

I'm losing my job and all the money

is going to Tesla.

So what I wanted to ask you, sir, is,

how does tesla think about

this issue and how is tesla

and elon and how's the

community of tesla thinking

about who's going to own

these assets and how are

they are they going to be

funded yeah now these are

important questions and I

actually had an interaction

with elon last summer on

this um where I had a post

about whether tesla would

rent out the robots or sell

them and elon's response was both yep

And so the fact that he's

saying that we're going to

sell them is an important

answer to this question.

It's much like the answer to

the Robotaxi Network in

terms of selling cybercaps to people.

He's giving people the

ability to earn income for themselves,

both on the cars and with

humanoid robots.

And I think that's important.

I think he recognizes the

issue that if one company

controls all these machines,

that's not going to work.

You have a rebellion on your hand.

They're going to storm your

company with pitchforks and

take everything.

And they're already doing it.

They're already trying to do that.

Yeah.

Right.

And so you have to share the wealth.

You have to make sure that

to the extent possible,

we leave no one behind.

Now, of course, in reality,

that's impossible, but you have to try.

So if we are all assuming

that this is the case,

so Tesla needs to share

their cash flows with the community.

How is this going to look like?

Because I've been I've been

trying to to find a solution for this.

So how how is a thirty

thousand dollar cyber cap

going to be funded then?

He said, is that going to be funded by

a single family or how is

this going to work out?

What's your idea on that?

Well, I mean,

I think initially it's fairly

clear because, you know,

the world isn't going to

change that quickly initially, right?

It's at the extreme other

end where you start to question things.

And Elon's made the comment about,

you know, what is money at this point,

right?

Yeah.

But early on, I think it's pretty clear.

It's

you're buying a money making machine.

So you pay thirty thousand dollars for it.

You can finance that through a bank,

maybe even through Tesla directly,

most likely through a bank,

just like you would any other auto loan.

And then you put that

vehicle in the fleet and

you start earning an income.

And it's highly likely that

that income on that vehicle

is more than you paid for

just in the first year.

And so that's going to

attract a lot of people to that business.

And there's going to be Uber drivers,

for example,

that are put out of work that

probably sell their vehicle

and buy a cyber cab and

make some money that way.

So I think that's pretty clear.

It's just as this then

filters through the economy

and starts taking away more

drivers' jobs and other

people's jobs with the humanoid bots,

how does that transition look?

And unfortunately,

I think there's a role for

nation states in this.

And of course,

that's where it gets political.

And that's where it gets, you know,

we're going to have two

camps on this in terms of

how they think about it,

at least here in the U.S.

Will nation states be able to do this?

Aren't we going towards a more global,

new form of state?

Because nation state

building is already two

hundred years old and in

the old paradigm of capitalism.

You can easily think about

cities like Abu Dhabi or

Dubai that wants to say, well,

we're a cybercap operated

city from day one.

They're a little bit more

totalitarian in their rules.

The more totalitarian

countries will probably be

the first to introduce this.

And the sooner you do it, the better,

because it's going to put

you in a more competitive

position for a whole bunch

of other stuff.

Everything you have to offer

your city and just the

quality of living of the

people goes up with so many

points at once.

In the positive scenario and

the negative scenario,

it will help more control.

because you can track where

cars are at Cedra and you

basically can control what

the cars are doing probably

to a certain extent.

But yeah,

we're going to enter many of

these sort of the first to

adapt will have a very much

competitive advantage

situations in the next ten years.

was a video of watching last

night they were talking

about the advent of the

automobile and that the uk

could have set itself up as

one of the major world

manufacturers but when

automobiles were first

introduced there they had a

red flag rule someone had

to walk in front of the car

waving a red flag because

cars were so dangerous to

people yeah and you had to

have two drivers in the car

So of course, regulations, you know,

totally stymied any

advantage that they

might've had in the UK in

terms of being able to

build these things because

the demand wasn't there

because of the rules.

And I think we run the same

risk with this technology,

but we have to recognize

that this is absolutely

critical because if we don't do it,

someone else will.

If I may ask,

I can understand that a lot

of our listeners are not as

far advanced in this age of

abundance as Florian and you, Cern.

Let's say if I'm a regular

person and maybe an

entrepreneur or also on, let's say,

a bigger scale for a country,

how can I as a person or as

a country be...

positioned in the right way

to make most use of this

age that is coming upon us?

What would be your advice if

I would be asking you that

if we're sitting in a bar

or now here in a podcast?

Yeah,

I think it's to find a way to be a

part of this new movement,

whether it's Robotaxi and

being a vehicle or a small fleet owner,

or in the case of humanoid robots,

positioning yourself to be

a part of that movement as well, because

one thing I know for sure I

would want to try to own a

few of those machines that

are changing the world I'd

rather own the machines

changing the world than be

subject to a machine that's

changing my world right and

that's just inevitable I'm

sorry it's just inevitable

it's coming I don't know

when it might be longer in

the dis in the future than

I think it is it might be

twenty five years from now

for all I know but it also

could be as quick as five years from now

And so I think you want to

be prepared for that change.

It's coming.

Humanity's seen other

massive changes before.

It's just that none of us

have lived through them.

We've read about them in

history books and they seem like nice,

neat changes where we go

from riding a horse to driving a car.

But you know what?

The history of that was a mess, right?

They had dirt roads.

These roads were covered in

mud and these cars were

tearing up the roads and

all the horse owners were complaining and

And the gasoline was a mess.

Like there was so many

issues with that transition.

Yeah.

Yeah, I think so.

And then I'm also curious to

hear Florian's view on it,

because he has a bright

mind and has always

busy with, let's say,

ten years down the line.

But I went a little bit

deeper on what are the things,

like with AI as well, right?

So what are the things in

the past we had that things would change?

And the funny thing is you

wouldn't imagine,

but when boats went from sailing to,

let's say,

automatic boats or boats like steamboats,

They had hybrids.

Can you imagine?

It looks so silly right now,

but we're doing exactly the

same with cars.

So it was for me a moment of epiphany.

But for me,

and I'm a guy who always works

in Excel and the guys make

fun of me all the time and

PDFs and everything that

fits in it is my truth.

But there's a lot in vision as well,

and I'm trying to

get on the train and I think

I'm more advanced than general people,

but I try to get people with me and I say,

like, read these books or do this stuff.

But I think you have to get

in the knit of it.

So I had an AI training last

week and that just opens your mind.

There's so much opportunity

and things that are going on.

As you say,

like being just involved in

this transition would be

good for everyone.

Maybe Florian,

you have an idea and also

maybe concrete action

points for listeners to get

on the bandwagon here.

Yeah, I do have a few.

So if you don't buy a Tesla,

you're buying a horse.

Definitely.

That's why I definitely on the on the AI,

because, you know,

many people are having a

jet GPT or a grog.

Grok, you know,

membership or how do you call it?

But there you pay like one hundred bucks,

two hundred bucks.

Well, average employee in your company,

well,

let's say cost between five thousand

and ten thousand euros or a

dollar at any given point.

So I was having a

discussions with my I'm

setting up a new company right now.

So I said, gents,

we need to double down if

we have like five K or ten

K monthly memberships or

things or courses or whatever we have.

So learning from my past.

So I have a history of online advertising.

And I remember the days

starting to advertise when

Google clicks were just one

cent and Facebook clicks

were just one cent.

And I remember like, oh, well, our

uh our rate for email

addresses is now ten cents

that's way way too much so

we we were very

conservative about that

opportunity what was at

hand right now so I will

say if you if you pay ten

thousand euros in

subscriptions for ai at

this moment it's still just

one basically one high paid

employee that you that you

have uh working there and

will benefit you

tremendously if you start

understanding that that world and

humanoids and robot taxis

are just one part of that

whole super intelligence

that is starting to become

reality in front of our eyes.

Yeah, and I would just add too,

just again from a big picture standpoint,

you think about parents and

what they do for their kids.

What do we do?

We protect them.

We provide for them, right?

We educate them.

We guide them and we care for them.

And that's exactly what

humanoid robots are going

to do for all of humanity.

Again, whether you like it or not,

there's pros and cons to all this,

but we're developing

machines that are truly intelligent.

You look at them today, they're clumsy,

but they're only going to get better.

And so we better find a way

to adapt to this as quickly

as possible because it's coming.

there's opportunity in that

there has to be right.

Can either there, anytime there's a change,

there has to be opportunity

for people somewhere in that change.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Whether you choose to see it or not.

Yeah.

A hundred percent.

I th I think we'll adapt in the end.

Of course.

Of course.

The opportunity it will bring is that we,

as a,

as a conscious beings are freed up

of being a slave to money.

Yeah.

And that's something which

is completely behind.

It's such a new paradigm

that we need to get used to it,

but we will get used to it

and we will get into a new

kind of consciousness and

higher consciousness.

The implications are super big.

And we will also be connected to the AI.

So with Neuralink coming,

there will be the first

persons who are actually going to

going to be as brave to

actually connect with AI

and learn languages in a

few minutes or whatever.

And there will be people who say, well,

I'm too scared to do it.

So the new divide will not

be between rich and poor,

but between connected to AI or not.

There's going to be a

totally different kind of

mindset about that.

So that's maybe the more

important discussions that

we need to have.

I had one more question for you,

but I don't know if we have time anymore,

Kees.

Well,

I think we still have a little bit of

time.

Let's say we extend it with, let's say,

ten to fifteen minutes.

After ten minutes,

I'll give a sign and then we'll stop.

Kenny, you go ahead.

You wanted to ask something.

Yeah,

I don't want to waste too much of the

time,

but I think like I tried to go back

to history, you know,

and there have been so many

times when we've had the same as well.

I think like machines that

we saw coming on the landscaping,

you know, when we had farms,

everybody thought everybody

would lose this.

Yeah, industrial revolution came from it.

So I think there will be

always a use for people,

and I think it will be more

to the creative part,

because now a lot of my

time actually goes in my

work to doing structured

things that are ninety percent the same,

while the ten percent, I think,

is the most nice stuff to focus on.

So I hope we will transition

to focusing more on the ten percent,

using our creativity and

using that for a full day.

Damian, don't make a shit.

Don't say anything.

I was saying, Kenny,

I was focusing a hundred

percent on all the good stuff,

but that is also not good for your brain.

You need some structure as well sometimes.

Yeah.

I've seen,

I've seen it can bring a lot of

carnage as well.

Yes.

But that doesn't,

that doesn't account for everyone.

We're seeing people at the

other side here.

So if you think about it,

we're all going to have our

own personal coaches.

Yeah.

Yeah, exactly.

Yeah, Damian,

we were sitting one time in

his garden and he has some

gym stuff laying around.

So he was like,

what happens if Optimus is here?

He can look at your posture is right.

You can say, do pushups.

You need to move.

Maybe you get some data like, hey,

your blood pressure is too high.

Relax a little bit.

So it can help you advance

in all kinds of stuff.

So I can't wait to have it

around the house.

I'm building my new company on this idea.

I'm building a company in health,

so increasing our health as humans.

So my idea was Elon is

taking care of the machines.

What is my vision on helping humans?

One of the things that we're

building are we're just

collecting a lot of

equipment that is collecting data.

So we say we provide the sensors.

So we have sensors that can

measure your body composition,

your heart rate, all that.

And normally it was just

impossible to just, um,

to just make sense of all the data and,

and, and,

and come with a sort of congruent advice.

Uh,

but my idea is that sensors will have a

huge value in,

in the world because it

feeds the AI with the,

with the data we're, we're collecting.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I think Optimus too is one giant sensor.

Um, you know, he'll,

he'll be able to tell you in real time,

the quality of the air that

you're breathing.

Yeah.

Just all kinds of stuff like that is huge.

For now, I have Optimus behind me,

making me work.

He's got the hammer in his hand.

But hopefully in the future,

I'll be standing behind him.

You can imagine all those

fingers having different

sensors so he can measure

body temperature, room temperature.

Yeah, you got it.

If somebody's got a flu or not,

those things are very easily detectable,

but we're just not used to

having all these sensors around.

That's right.

I think for you, Damian,

it will be very confronting

because you will see also

some gaps in your

personality and other flaws.

I think you will have a big list,

but let's not go there

because then we need

another day for this podcast.

Let's go to that million dollar question,

Florian.

yeah so uh before I want to

do that maybe you can find

the the the advertisement

which frank made for the

tesla robo taxi do you know

which one I'm talking about

I was saying you mean with

grok in the car as well

yeah it's amazing this is a

girl who's being picked up

by the robo taxi yeah

Maybe we can put it on the screen.

Is it possible, Florian?

I know how it looks like.

Sort of final video then?

No, but let's have Kees be busy with that.

But I saw something going

back to the Robotaxi CERN

in the business model.

This guy Phil Beisel put out

an excellent article

regarding the business

model and how it's going to

change everything.

And he also talked about

this disruption that the

cars made to the horses, etc.

So he made the same analogy.

And I saw a remark of you

where you were talking

about the repositioning of the cars,

which will be key.

So for Robotaxi to actually

become a real disruption,

it needs to drive enough

miles in order to get

enough cars off the road.

So the utilization is going

to be like a key driver.

And a key driver for having

a high utilization is

actually repositioning.

So what I read is that you

were talking about this

kind of an AI model trying

to get this problem out of the way.

Can you elaborate a little

bit about that and why you

think repositioning is such

a key element in this business model?

Sure.

Yeah, that's a good question.

And Phil and I have talked

about this as well.

The customer experience with

Robotaxi is going to depend

on having a vehicle

immediately available or

close to immediately available, right?

A lot of times you can

schedule your departure,

but many times it's spontaneous.

You want a vehicle,

you want to walk outside,

grab a taxi and go.

So in that case,

and in order for that to work,

you need to reposition the

vehicles in places where

people are likely to need them.

Well, how do you figure that out?

Well, you need to know where people are.

You need to know what people

are going to do.

So if you are a Robotaxi

Network subscriber,

then the network may learn

some of your habits,

like when you go to work

and when you leave work, et cetera.

Or even that,

just the vehicles driving

around can notice that

there is a congregation of

people at this sporting event,

and it's likely at some

point that those people are

going to want to go home.

or a concert or something, right?

And so you need the

capabilities of AI to parse

through all that data about

what's going on in a city

to figure out then where to

optimally place the vehicles.

It's too complex of a

problem for a person to figure out.

Now, obviously, if there's a concert,

then it's pretty obvious,

or a football game,

you know you're gonna need

to position vehicles next to those venues,

but it's more nuanced than that.

I would also say too,

from a Robotaxi revenue perspective,

So one of the keys is that

if you can drive your cost

of operation down,

then you can afford to

actually have a very low

utilization rate on a per

vehicle basis and still end

up with revenue for the

network that's very high.

Because again,

you're providing a service

to customers that is so

compelling at an attractive price.

And that was to my point

earlier about as an

individual vehicle owner,

I don't necessarily want to

be paid on the use of my vehicle,

but more of the vehicles in

the network during the time

that I put my vehicle in.

Because if my vehicle is

sitting for four hours and

I don't get paid, that's no good to me.

But still,

that was very useful for the network.

That may actually help the

network optimize its total revenue.

Yep.

Florian,

I'm not sure if I answered your question,

but touched on a difference.

Definitely.

And it also reminded me of

something I think Alexander

Mertz also mentioned is

that also the repositioning

AI model behind the

repositioning will also

help increase the value proposition.

Because if I just came back

from a visit to France with the airplane,

I came to the airport, I ordered an Uber,

but I had to time the

moment the Uber was

actually coming and I was at that place.

And it's always that I have

to wait for like five to ten minutes.

But with an AI repositioning

model behind it,

it will probably become

like less than one minute.

That's actually the value

proposition enhancement as well.

So that was something I

wanted to add as well.

But that's what popped up in

my mind when you answered this question.

Yeah,

I would imagine as a Robotaxi Network

subscriber, for example,

it'll know where you are at all times.

And if you're walking through an airport,

right,

it knows where you are and it can

more properly time

the arrival of the vehicle

with your arrival,

that kind of stuff is possible for sure.

Yeah,

and it would also make sense that you

have a lot of premium

versions where you first

align always and all that,

especially in the first, let's say,

five years of this.

Same as airlines, skip the line and yeah.

And certain preferences,

they might even be able to

provide certain things in

the vehicle like drinks and food,

for example,

that's in line with your

preference eventually.

It'll just hop over to Moet Chandon,

put a bottle inside, some water.

That's right.

What I would like to do is

also like if you're sitting in the car,

your time is going to be

spent very differently, right?

So now you're still like

looking at the wheel, at least in Europe,

you have to still hold it as well.

I hope you're looking at the road,

not the wheel.

Sorry,

at the road and the wheel sometimes.

Where is it?

But I think it will change completely.

Like I said to my girlfriend as well,

when we went on vacation,

we left like early morning, came, I think,

like in the night at our

destination in Europe.

And if there would be a robot taxi,

I would just say,

let's hop on the robot taxi

at like nine in the evening,

sleep and then next day.

So it's going to change the dynamics of

like travel through the roads very much,

but also what,

what would you do with your time?

And like, if it's during the day, I,

a lot of the times jump in

my car and then go for a

business meeting and I'm in

the car for an hour.

I would like to do work or

maybe like discuss with grok.

Like I have some ideas.

Uh, can you make a list?

I need to order some food.

I don't know, you know,

so there's going to be a

lot of opportunity there as well.

It'll give us a lot of more opportunity.

I think to spend time with

friends and family that we

maybe don't have today

because either it's,

You have to drive yourself

and you don't want to

because it's tiring or you

just don't have time.

If you're able to work in the vehicle,

then you will have time

because you're just like we are now.

We're sitting there.

Why not be moving at the

same time and then getting

to the point that you want

to be after the meeting's over?

It's going to restructure

the whole way that people move around.

It's going to disrupt airlines.

It's going to disrupt public transit.

It's going to disrupt trains,

not to mention Uber and taxi services.

It's the biggest transition

since electricity.

If you think about the

transition that people had in electricity,

how much of a change in

your daily life that will have suddenly,

you know,

you didn't have to go to bed at

seven p.m.

because you could stay up.

and many of these things

were very revolutionary so

before electricity it was

even the case that people

were um sleeping in two

parts in the night so one

they start sleeping very

early then in the middle of

the night they woke up to

just chit chat with the

neighbors and then go back

to sleep again until it was

uh light again so that

period was just very long

And you would never say that

electricity would have

disrupt such a normal habit,

but many of our sort of

normal habits in day-to-day

life will be completely

overhauled by all these

opportunities that these

technologies are going to bring.

And Jensen Wong of Nvidia

says that AI is so foundational,

it's like electricity.

Yeah.

It's going to be infused

into absolutely everything.

Everything.

I think so as well.

That's a nice bombshell to end on.

And it's almost one hundred year,

one hundred fifty

electricity is not so long

time ago in this grand scheme of things.

So that's right.

The crazy thing before we go that case,

I know we have to wrap up.

So there's only one thing I

would like to mention.

So like back in the days,

you have this movie which

is called The Man Who Made America.

I think, Damian,

we've discussed it a couple of times.

And there's actually I think

it's Edison or somebody

else who's going to be

backed by JP Morgan.

And they have a certain way

to drive electricity.

And everybody backs him, you know,

because he's the most smart

guy in the world.

And then somebody else comes

along with a different

solution for electricity,

which is really going to be it, you know.

So I hope Elon is the latter

and not the former.

But it always trickles in my mind,

like even if you have the

most smart guy in the sense,

also with FSD or whatever,

it can always be that there is coming...

different technologies or

whatever that takes over.

But I think for now they're leading,

so that's all good.

But it always pops to my

mind when it's funny

because I'm on the

Wikipedia page of the

electricity transition.

One of the topics

is that electricity was the

liberator of the woman

because of all the machines,

washing machines, centrifuge, fridge,

all that.

It was electrical

housekeeping was apparently before,

just after the First World War,

a very big thing.

And it was really being seen

at the time as something

that liberated women.

First feminist wave.

And humanoid robots will

liberate humanity.

Humanity, exactly.

Choose your words carefully,

not eliminate.

Right.

Slight difference.

Let's end on a positive note there, Cern.

Let's liberate humanity.

Let's liberate Cern.

We've held him hostage for

quite a while now.

We found the video, so...

yeah we're just gonna we're

gonna close off with this

video uh thank you so much

cern for uh being here with

us and taking the time and

I hope to invite you as a

guest um again in the

coming uh uh ten episodes

uh where we're going down

to the robotics future uh

so for everyone thanks for

tuning in thanks for

listening thanks for

watching thanks for paying

attention and having the

patience and let's close

off with this video

Blind me to the moon.

Honey!

Honey!

Are we flying it?

It's time for love.