Limitless Podcast

SpaceX's upcoming $1.5 trillion IPO is undervalued. Why? Four words. Data centers in space. We analyze Elon Musk's vision for using Starlink satellites to enhance AI capabilities, the U.S.-China GPU rivalry, and Google's new Project Aura eyewear.

 We also highlight Noose Research's impressive AI model breakthrough. Tune in for insights on these groundbreaking developments shaping the future of technology!

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🌌 LIMITLESS HQ: LISTEN & FOLLOW HERE ⬇️
https://limitless.bankless.com/
https://x.com/LimitlessFT

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TIMESTAMPS

0:00 SpaceX's $1.5 Trillion IPO
1:02 Starlink's AI Data Centers
3:32 SpaceX's Unique Position
7:14 The Monopoly of SpaceX
8:08 The Risk and Reward
8:41 Science Fiction Becomes Reality
13:36 Communication in Space
16:43 AI Data Center in Space
17:20 Proof of Concept
19:36 GPU Wars: USA vs China
25:18 Google's New Glasses
29:18 Open Source Breakthrough
31:08 Conclusion: Future of AI

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RESOURCES

Josh: https://x.com/JoshKale

Ejaaz: https://x.com/cryptopunk7213

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Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here:
https://www.bankless.com/disclosures⁠

What is Limitless Podcast?

Exploring the frontiers of Technology and AI

Josh:
On paper, SpaceX's $1.5 trillion IPO would be the biggest in history,

Josh:
raising about $30 billion.

Josh:
But that's not the crazy part. The crazy part is that even at that price,

Josh:
we still believe it's undervalued.

Josh:
In fact, grossly undervalued because this all stems from one realization.

Josh:
It's turning Starlink into AI data centers in space. And the winner who deploys

Josh:
resources the fastest gets to reshape civilization.

Josh:
It isn't just SpaceX stock finally available to the public.

Josh:
This is Elon using Wall Street's money to build an

Josh:
orbital gpu swarm with these new satellites that are 150 kilowatts and starship

Josh:
will launch basically a small city's worth of ai power into orbit every single

Josh:
flight we're going to talk about all of this um because eventually this leads

Josh:
to lunar factories producing ai satellites and if he pulls this off it's going

Josh:
to be pretty amazing so in this episode we're going to break down why this ipo exists

Ejaaz:
Only because of ai.

Josh:
This was not the case prior to this week how the physics actually favored data

Josh:
centers in space and why 1.5 trillion dollars may be a rounding error if SpaceX

Josh:
wins because, I mean, in this game, Ejaz, it's kind of simple.

Josh:
Whoever can deploy compute the fastest, they win the AI race and they probably

Josh:
get to rewrite the future of civilization.

Ejaaz:
Yeah. I mean, before we get into it, I want to walk everyone through the kind

Ejaaz:
of series of events that kind of led to this groundbreaking bit of news.

Ejaaz:
So it all started off around Wednesday this week, where two news sources,

Ejaaz:
Bloomberg and the information leaked news that SpaceX was potentially going to IPO sometime in 2026.

Ejaaz:
But we didn't quite know the valuation at that point.

Ejaaz:
And then it broke that it was a $1.5 trillion valuation.

Ejaaz:
And the reason why this is such big news is it would technically be the biggest IPO ever.

Ejaaz:
And then people were like, but Elon hasn't confirmed it.

Ejaaz:
Well, yesterday, Elon officially confirmed it. He responded to a great article

Ejaaz:
from Eric Berger where he kind of predicted why he thinks SpaceX is definitely going to IPO soon.

Ejaaz:
And Elon confirming it all but means that,

Ejaaz:
If SpaceX IPOs, Josh, at $1.5 trillion, his net worth would effectively double,

Ejaaz:
which would put him just under, not exactly at, but just under $1 trillion overnight.

Ejaaz:
Once the IPO goes live, he owns 42% of SpaceX.

Ejaaz:
So listen, there's a bunch of big numbers here.

Ejaaz:
In order to successfully IPO at this valuation, he needs to raise $30 billion.

Ejaaz:
Dollars um he needs to you know

Ejaaz:
technically deliver on a lot of stuff that we're going to get into in a second

Ejaaz:
but you know massive massive vision so the question i ask myself is why now

Ejaaz:
and what is he doing to justify this what is he telling the people that he's

Ejaaz:
raising 30 billion dollars from um to convince them to give him that kind of

Ejaaz:
money and it comes to one thing josh,

Ejaaz:
AI data centers in space. Now, you and I have had a very tumultuous relationship with this.

Josh:
We've come a long way.

Ejaaz:
We've come a very long way. And by a long way, in the last four weeks,

Ejaaz:
when this kind of like entire trend started developing, at least on social media.

Ejaaz:
And the concept here is if you're able to put GPUs or AI data centers in space

Ejaaz:
and harness the energy of the sun, you effectively have infinite power.

Ejaaz:
And in this game of creating the best AI to reach AGI level,

Ejaaz:
you need as much compute as you can get your hands on. And the fact is Earth's resources is scarce.

Ejaaz:
So Elon's whole pitch behind IPO-ing SpaceX is he believes he can control and

Ejaaz:
build data centers in space using his Starlink satellite network.

Ejaaz:
Josh, he thinks he can create a constellation of Starlink satellites that can

Ejaaz:
speak to each other via laser beams, right?

Ejaaz:
So they can communicate and share compute and data between themselves,

Ejaaz:
harness solar energy from the sun and beam that down to earth to create AGI.

Ejaaz:
This sounds like something out of a sci-fi novel, Josh.

Ejaaz:
It seems like you're obviously bullish. How feasible is this?

Ejaaz:
What are we looking at here?

Josh:
Yeah, it's funny because for the longest time, Elon was strictly no.

Josh:
No way are we ever going to go public. But the second that they realized that

Josh:
Starlink satellites can be architected as this distributed network of data centers,

Josh:
it went from no way to we kind of have to.

Josh:
Because a lot of this AI race, it kind of comes down to deploying assets just

Josh:
quicker than your competitors.

Josh:
And we've seen this with XAI in the past where they did not exist, what, two years ago?

Josh:
And now they are at the forefront with everybody else. And it's because they

Josh:
were able to deploy their resources faster than everyone else.

Josh:
They were the fastest to get to

Josh:
large coherent cluster of nvidia gpus

Josh:
and as a result they have some of the best models in the world so this

Josh:
is clearly a race to get to resources spacex has

Josh:
the ability to do so xai has the models to do so but spacex doesn't quite have

Josh:
the money so their projected revenue was i think it's about 24 billion dollars

Josh:
in the near term which for a fun fact is roughly equivalent to nasa's annual

Josh:
budget but what they realized is wait a second if we're going to compete on

Josh:
a global scale and building AI data centers,

Josh:
we need far more money than that.

Josh:
And that is the reasoning why they're going to public markets,

Josh:
raising the $30 billion.

Josh:
And again, at $1.5 trillion, that's about $30 billion they're going to raise in addition.

Josh:
So Ijaz, I guess the question, I started by saying this is fairly undervalued

Josh:
because the stakes are so high.

Josh:
We'll explain the reasoning, but I'm curious what your take is on the valuation,

Josh:
the $1.5 trillion number as it sits today.

Ejaaz:
Okay, assuming this is economically and physically possible,

Ejaaz:
Josh, it's a no-brainer.

Ejaaz:
And it's for one simple reason, which Andrew actually outlines pretty well in

Ejaaz:
this tweet that I'm showing here.

Ejaaz:
To win the AI race, you need the most compute, data, and energy.

Ejaaz:
That last one, if you can get infinite energy from the sun, you've already won, right?

Ejaaz:
And the only reason why people haven't considered this before is because it hasn't been possible.

Ejaaz:
Elon will effectively own the highway and the tolling system into space.

Ejaaz:
SpaceX is like literally a decade ahead of the next nearest competitor.

Ejaaz:
So if he can create a monopoly on this and actually make this viable,

Ejaaz:
he wins. Your point around him needing the money to apply resources to this,

Ejaaz:
we all know that Elon started SpaceX to get to Mars, right?

Ejaaz:
He wants human civilization on Mars.

Ejaaz:
And he didn't really have a good justification as to why he would IPO SpaceX,

Ejaaz:
aside from maybe getting extra cash to help fuel that vision.

Ejaaz:
Now he realizes that he needs to kind of create this constellation of satellites

Ejaaz:
to pay for the Voyagers and the expensive mission to get to Mars.

Ejaaz:
So it's a means to an end is the way that I'm kind of thinking about it.

Ejaaz:
And so now when I connect the dots, Josh, is $1.5 trillion valuation undervalued or overvalued?

Ejaaz:
I think it's undervalued assuming he can get the data centers out in space and

Ejaaz:
beam it down back to Earth.

Ejaaz:
Because it's not just going to be him and Grok and XAI that benefits from this.

Ejaaz:
It's going to be all the other frontier AI labs that are going to want to or

Ejaaz:
need to rather use his infrastructure. And that's my simple thesis.

Josh:
Yeah, you can ask the question, well, one, like, is this a monopoly?

Josh:
Yes, this is a monopoly. The next closest company is five to 10 years behind being Blue Origin.

Josh:
Is this a monopoly on a market that is meaningfully large? Yes.

Josh:
AI, as well as low earth orbit satellites, as well as energy satellites,

Josh:
are about some of the biggest markets on planet earth so the total active

Josh:
market size is gigantic and the

Josh:
third question is is there an operator capable of actually doing

Josh:
the impossible and making the impossible a reality and the

Josh:
answer to all three of the questions are yes so there is

Josh:
a unique monopoly in a industry that

Josh:
is larger than any industry that exists today run by

Josh:
the best operator in planet earth and the convergence of those three things if

Josh:
it works in the world that we do actually get ai data centers in space and we're

Josh:
building artificial general intelligence out there we're harnessing a lot of

Josh:
power of the earth that is a civilizational scale shift and the amount of wealth

Josh:
generated from that will make 1.5 trillion dollars feel like a drop in the bucket

Josh:
so maybe today 1.5 trillion feels large but in the scale of things

Josh:
that's a very small number.

Ejaaz:
Typically, we speak about companies going from zero to one, and that's where

Ejaaz:
those exponential valuations come from.

Ejaaz:
With this IPO and with Elon's kind of successful Starship launches and satellite

Ejaaz:
launches, we're somewhere between zero and one. We're at 0.5.

Ejaaz:
So the risk has been reduced because he's reduced the cost of going to space.

Ejaaz:
He's already launched satellites successfully. So now the exponential returns

Ejaaz:
seem really, really more feasible.

Ejaaz:
So I think he's going to raise that $30 billion in a matter of,

Ejaaz:
you know, months, if that amount, right?

Ejaaz:
The other thing is, like, he's literally turning science fiction into reality here.

Ejaaz:
We talked about the concept of the Kardashev scale, type two civilization,

Ejaaz:
which is, you know, humans being able to harness the energy of their local star, that is the sun.

Ejaaz:
And we've suddenly gone from it being zero.

Ejaaz:
So like that, there's no way he's going to pull it off to, ah,

Ejaaz:
you know what? He actually might.

Ejaaz:
And so $1.5 trillion seems kind of very undervalued if you have that kind of mindset.

Ejaaz:
But again, people listening to the show, Josh, are going to be like,

Ejaaz:
well, I don't think the numbers make sense.

Ejaaz:
You can't get rid of heat in space. It's a vacuum.

Ejaaz:
How are you going to be able to launch satellites? They're going to need to

Ejaaz:
be kilometers square wide.

Ejaaz:
Josh, have you got any of the numbers that can help break this down?

Josh:
Let's run the numbers. So we talked about a good bit of the logistics and

Josh:
the cooling in a previous episode earlier this or last week so

Josh:
go listen to that if you're interested in that the numbers that

Josh:
we're going to talk about today are the amount of scale

Josh:
they're actually able to get into outer space and what that looks like so elon

Josh:
recently posted on x their ability to get 150 kilowatts

Josh:
per satellite into outer space so for some reference numbers the average u.s

Josh:
home uses about 10 500 kilowatt hours which is about 1.2 kilowatts of continuous

Josh:
energy so if an ai satellite can generate around 150 kilowatt of electrical

Josh:
power, like Elon is saying,

Josh:
150 kilowatts divided by 1.2 is about 125 homes worth of continuous power.

Josh:
So one of these AI satellites has roughly the power budget of 120 to 130 American

Josh:
homes running all the time.

Josh:
Now, how much can you do per launch? Because a launch consists of many of these satellites.

Josh:
So SpaceX's own site says Starship is designed to carry up to 150 metric tons of low Earth orbit.

Josh:
So how many is that? that's about 50 to 75 of these satellites per flight.

Josh:
So if you do that math, 60 satellites times 150 kilowatts of energy is nine

Josh:
megawatts of power in orbit from one starship,

Josh:
which is equivalent to a small town in New England with every single launch

Josh:
that they make into outer space.

Josh:
That is 7,500 homes. That is 19,000 people's home usage.

Josh:
So every fully loaded starship launch is like dropping a small city's worth

Josh:
of electric households dedicated just to AI into orbit.

Josh:
And that is an outrageously large amount of energy and compute that they're

Josh:
putting into outer space, especially relative to what people are trying to do back here on Earth.

Josh:
If you remember a Blackwell chip, which is NVIDIA's newest cutting edge rack,

Josh:
it uses 120 kilowatts per rack.

Josh:
And each one of these satellites surpasses a Blackwell. So it's like this gargantuan

Josh:
amount of energy and compute that's being sent to orbit every single launch.

Ejaaz:
Yeah, he's tapped into the infinite energy clip and it's become a reality.

Ejaaz:
And if he can harness all of that, he basically wins.

Ejaaz:
The other thing I was thinking about, Josh, is

Ejaaz:
To your point around SpaceX or Starlink specifically being a monopoly on this,

Ejaaz:
that's effectively the way that I see it.

Ejaaz:
Like pretty much every single usable satellite out there is a Starlink-affiliated satellite.

Ejaaz:
In fact, we've got this really cool graphic that we want to show everyone here.

Josh:
Oh, yeah, this is sick.

Ejaaz:
Okay, if you're looking at this, if you squint, it might look like a bacteriophage,

Ejaaz:
right? But no, this is a simulation of all live satellites that are orbiting Earth right now.

Ejaaz:
And if you notice my cursor, whenever I touch pretty much any satellite that's

Ejaaz:
kind of bumbling around here, you'll see Starlink repeated over and over and over and over again.

Ejaaz:
So he has the market monopoly. I think something like 90% of satellites out

Ejaaz:
there are Starlink based or have been launched from SpaceX infrastructure and launches.

Ejaaz:
So he has the market monopoly. And the reason why that is so important is...

Ejaaz:
The capex cost of launching this out into space and making AI data centers in

Ejaaz:
space feasible, it actually becomes affordable to do this, right?

Ejaaz:
Effectively, if you imagine having just empty data center slots bumbling around

Ejaaz:
in space, and all you need to do is fit in the latest GPU and launch it up there

Ejaaz:
for cheaper than the cost of the weight of the GPU,

Ejaaz:
Elon will be able to do that via SpaceX.

Ejaaz:
So it's a crazy monopoly. I do not see anyone coming even close maybe it's uh

Ejaaz:
amazon or rather jeff bezos's blue origin but that's still a decade behind right

Ejaaz:
so as far as i see it elon's got this in the bag.

Josh:
Yeah and they're i mean because of the rapid reusability of

Josh:
starship you're able to send just tons of mass to orbit elon he posted that

Josh:
he's expecting one megaton per year um so i mean 100 gigawatts it's on the that

Josh:
includes 100 gigawatts it's on the order of like a dozen large power plants

Josh:
so this map that we're looking at right now full of all these satellites is

Josh:
going to get much more full.

Josh:
Another interesting thing about this map is the way that they communicate to each other, EJAS.

Josh:
A lot of the communication done on Earth is done through fiber optic cables

Josh:
when it relates to AI because it's the fastest way to move information as close

Josh:
to the speed of light as possible.

Josh:
The cool thing about Earth is it's vacuum with no resistance or friction.

Josh:
So when these satellites are communicating with each other, even over a distance,

Josh:
the only limitation is actually the speed of light.

Josh:
And the bandwidth with is huge because there is no friction

Josh:
in communication because they are simply sending photons to

Josh:
each other they're sending and receiving photons so the unlock that

Josh:
that enables where now you have a three-dimensional plane

Josh:
of earth where earth is two-dimensional you can only build so much here you

Josh:
turn them to three dimensions and you're restrained only by the speed of light

Josh:
in terms of photons moving back and forth to each other this gets really sci-fi-esque

Josh:
very quickly but also you could start to see how effective this is and what

Josh:
an incredible business oh my god i am stoked for the CEO. Are you an investor at $1.5 trillion?

Ejaaz:
Yeah. Yeah, of course I am. Yeah.

Josh:
Hell yeah.

Ejaaz:
Dude, the TAM, the total addressable market, is literally infinite space.

Josh:
Yeah, but it does not exist.

Ejaaz:
It doesn't exist. Yeah, exactly. Earth will eventually become energy constrained.

Ejaaz:
If you look at the energy bills, Josh, of the local towns surrounding data centers

Ejaaz:
that are in Abilene, Texas, it's gone through the freaking roof, dude.

Ejaaz:
And this is going to be something that we constantly come at odds with because,

Ejaaz:
you know, who needs it more?

Ejaaz:
What's more important, humans that are kind of local and conducting their own

Ejaaz:
kind of business or creating absolute artificial super intelligence for the world to use?

Ejaaz:
I know some people might, you know, argue the latter.

Ejaaz:
So the point is, we need to find energy elsewhere. And the most obvious one

Ejaaz:
is the thing that stares at us in a blue sky every single day.

Ejaaz:
So to round this off, Josh, and for the listeners and watchers of this show,

Ejaaz:
if you want to imagine what the end game of this looks like,

Ejaaz:
it's this graphic that we're showing you on this screen right now,

Ejaaz:
except it's Starlink satellites all over the sun.

Ejaaz:
And it's just absorbing the energy and transmuting that down to build artificial

Ejaaz:
general intelligence on Earth. It's a crazy, crazy vision.

Josh:
Things are getting really sci-fi really quick.

Ejaaz:
And it's... Josh, I had one more. I had one more thing. Just a little nugget, a little Easter egg.

Ejaaz:
Okay. If SpaceX is one of your favorite, AI companies.

Ejaaz:
Give me another one. Just give me maybe your next three or four.

Ejaaz:
What's one company that comes to mind? I want you to say Google,

Ejaaz:
by the way. So you can cut this and say it.

Josh:
Well, clearly Google is one of them. We are huge fanboys. We love Google.

Ejaaz:
Why do you ask that question? I was hoping you were going to say that.

Ejaaz:
They are an official percentage owner in SpaceX to the tune of around 8%.

Ejaaz:
That means they invested $900 million in SpaceX about six years ago.

Ejaaz:
Josh, that is currently worth $111 billion if SpaceX IPO is at 1.5.

Josh:
Trillion. When you got it, you got it, man. And Google just got the juice.

Josh:
Listen, I'm a SpaceX shareholder too.

Josh:
My friend John and I, we worked so hard back in 2020 to find an SPV of an SPV

Josh:
of an SPV to get shares in.

Josh:
And it is now up like 50. I'm so excited to finally have some liquidity.

Josh:
Not that it matters. I fully intend to add more, but like, man,

Josh:
good time to be an optimist.

Josh:
Good time to be an investor in the future because it is getting so weird and so wild. So weird.

Josh:
But if you are new here, every Friday, we release an episode about kind of a

Josh:
roundup of the world in AI. There's more stuff that happened.

Josh:
And this second half of the episode, we're getting into that,

Josh:
starting with what feels like a natural extension of this e-jazz, right? Where,

Josh:
We officially have the first AI data center in space that actually worked.

Ejaaz:
Yep. So this tweet that you're seeing from Philip Johnson, Philip is kind of

Ejaaz:
like the guy that kicked off this trend, I would argue.

Ejaaz:
He is the CEO and founder of StarCloud, which is a startup incubated by Y Combinator

Ejaaz:
with a very bold vision of putting AI data centers in space.

Ejaaz:
The one difference between Philip and Elon is he's actually put a data center

Ejaaz:
in space and he launched it through one of Elon's Falcon rockets last month.

Ejaaz:
And they put an NVIDIA H100 in space. It's currently out there running inference and training models.

Ejaaz:
And it was able to do two really cool things, Josh.

Ejaaz:
Number one, it trained a version, an open source version of ChatGPT from scratch

Ejaaz:
on all of Shakespeare's works.

Ejaaz:
Just for fun, to see if it could figure it out. And secondly,

Ejaaz:
it took an open source version of Google's AI model called Gemma and is currently,

Ejaaz:
right as we speak, inferencing between that model in outer space back to Earth.

Ejaaz:
So you can send a prompt to the Gemma model out there and get a response in

Ejaaz:
a couple of seconds, which is just insane to say.

Ejaaz:
Now, people listening to this might be like, well, an NVIDIA H100,

Ejaaz:
that's an old GPU, who cares?

Ejaaz:
And it's just one of them. This isn't the vision that you just pitched me of

Ejaaz:
a satellite network eclipsing the sun.

Ejaaz:
Baby steps guys this is baby steps the fact that this uh gpu can survive out

Ejaaz:
there dispels the rumors that you know oh you can't radiate the heat or radiation

Ejaaz:
is going to kill the gpu it's it's out there it's been running for two and a

Ejaaz:
half weeks now so this is a very feasible thing uh josh are you excited about this.

Josh:
I'm i'm excited about it it's a great proof of concept

Josh:
it shows like okay shielding works okay heat dissipation

Josh:
works what i really love the most about this is the models that

Josh:
they run uh here on the post that you're showing they trained the nano

Josh:
gpt model from andre carpathy uh to work

Josh:
on those shakespeare things so it's cool like our i mean

Josh:
number one fanboy of andre here he created this like small little nano gpt and

Josh:
now they've created a model in space and there's two models running there there's

Josh:
one that they actually trained and then there's one that they had pre-built

Josh:
that is returning tokens this is awesome it is a proof of concept and it shows

Josh:
that i mean granted i think people have now realized that this is possible but

Josh:
they are actively proving it in reality.

Josh:
And for that, it's awesome. StarCloud seems to be doing cool stuff.

Josh:
I'm very happy with the company, very excited for the future.

Ejaaz:
Yeah, but enough talk about GPUs in space, Josh.

Josh:
Let's kind of like touch. You mean we're going to ground this conversation?

Ejaaz:
I am grounding the conversation. I am touching wood. I don't have any grass

Ejaaz:
near me right now, but I'm back on Earth officially.

Ejaaz:
There is a GPU war going on between our two favorite foes, Josh.

Ejaaz:
The USA, and China. Now, they've had a very tumultuous relationship,

Ejaaz:
mainly because NVIDIA has been restricted from selling their GPUs to China.

Josh:
Which, by the way,

Ejaaz:
Makes up a huge percentage of their revenue every year. So the fact that Trump

Ejaaz:
said no to Jensen was a big deal.

Ejaaz:
Until this week, when he gave the thumbs up to sell not just any NVIDIA GPU,

Ejaaz:
but their second older generation GPU, the H100 or H200 sorry.

Ejaaz:
To China. And it comes with a few stipulations, Josh, which is 25% of revenue

Ejaaz:
that NVIDIA makes from these sales to China needs to go to the USGov.

Ejaaz:
So he's paying a pretty hefty tax on this.

Ejaaz:
And so people were pretty excited. NVIDIA stock jumped up on the news,

Ejaaz:
except on the same trading session in that same day,

Ejaaz:
it retraced because China put out a commentary officially saying,

Ejaaz:
we don't want your gpus and in fact we're

Ejaaz:
going to restrict the amount of h200 gpus that our

Ejaaz:
companies buy from you because they can just use chinese

Ejaaz:
gpus right so that was the response from china

Ejaaz:
saying like listen we don't need it so it was a very volatile uh

Ejaaz:
day in terms of trading the nvidia stock except that

Ejaaz:
then the chinese companies themselves spoke up and

Ejaaz:
said uh hey we're deep seek over here

Ejaaz:
and we kind of need nvidia's gpus

Ejaaz:
because we can't trade oh we

Ejaaz:
can't train frontier level intelligence unless we

Ejaaz:
have those gpus so there's this there's been this big back and forth china in

Ejaaz:
response to that has been like okay let's hold like a council session internally

Ejaaz:
let me talk to some of the companies here and figure out how many h200s you

Ejaaz:
guys actually need and i have a few thoughts about this josh but what's your

Ejaaz:
general reaction before.

Josh:
We get into it. It's funny. So the story isn't the fact that we made them available

Josh:
to China. It's that China said, we don't want them.

Josh:
In fact, we already have them. We have stolen them. We have smuggled them in.

Josh:
So that is a generous offer of you.

Josh:
But hey, we've already been training models on your hardware for a long time.

Josh:
So thanks, but no thanks.

Josh:
And that comes to the surprise of probably no one. Everyone had an idea that

Josh:
a lot of these were getting sent to

Josh:
I suspect what that means is these new DeepSeq models, which have been hyper-efficient

Josh:
in the past, will just become even more efficient going forward.

Josh:
And we've always talked about this constraint that they've had,

Josh:
where they've been resource-limited, therefore they've had to be resourceful on the software stack.

Josh:
In a world where they are resourceful on the software stack,

Josh:
but also have a competitive hardware stack, that feels like a supercharged DeepSeq.

Josh:
And I feel like whatever model they release next is going to be a seriously heavy hitter.

Ejaaz:
Yeah, I mean, there's, it's a few things. There's the performance competition

Ejaaz:
that you just explained, but there's also a strategic political one.

Ejaaz:
And the strategic political one has two sides, okay?

Ejaaz:
So if I'm China, I don't want my Chinese companies hooked on American GPUs.

Ejaaz:
I want them to use Chinese-made GPUs. Why?

Ejaaz:
Because if the Chinese-made GPUs are good enough to create frontier level intelligence,

Ejaaz:
we now have less of a dependency on the US.

Ejaaz:
In fact, it's probably the most important dependency that China has on the US

Ejaaz:
right now, stretching across from raw materials to computer energy to whatever you might be, right?

Ejaaz:
So they want to rely on Chinese made GPUs, not the US made GPUs.

Ejaaz:
On the US side of things, they're thinking of this specific strategy, which is,

Ejaaz:
If we can keep selling China, older generation NVIDIA GPUs, their intelligence

Ejaaz:
will always lag ours and we will always be the leader.

Ejaaz:
The second way to look at that is also NVIDIA has a really sticky software moat.

Ejaaz:
So typically anyone that runs NVIDIA GPUs isn't just hooked to them because

Ejaaz:
they're using the hardware.

Ejaaz:
It's because they rely on the software stack called CUDA, C-U-D-A.

Ejaaz:
I think it stands for Compute Unified Device Architecture, right?

Ejaaz:
The more and more they use NVIDIA GPUs, the more and more they rely on it,

Ejaaz:
Josh. So it's kind of like a drug for them. So this is strategic from the US.

Ejaaz:
They're like, sell them the GPUs, just take a 25% stack.

Ejaaz:
We're releasing Rubin, which is NVIDIA's latest GPUs coming out in 2026.

Ejaaz:
Just keep them hooked on it. Keep them behind. Let's keep them in check.

Josh:
Well, it seems like that's what they're doing. So that's the update on the China

Josh:
front, which is interesting. But there's another update on the hardware front,

Josh:
EGIS, which I'm very excited to talk about,

Ejaaz:
And that is Google's new glasses.

Josh:
Now, I am old enough to remember the Google Glass version 1,

Josh:
which came out probably over a decade now.

Josh:
And at the time, it was viewed as the nerdy Silicon Valley kind of like freak

Josh:
headwear device, and it never went anywhere. It didn't work very well.

Josh:
But all these years later, it appears as if Google has announced that they're

Josh:
getting back in the hardware game, back in the eyewear game,

Josh:
and releasing these classes.

Josh:
So Ejaz, please fill me in. Tell me why these are not going to suffer the same

Josh:
fate as Google S 1.0 or Meta's Ray-Bans, which are still not on your face for good reason.

Josh:
So it's a very difficult thing to build the good eyewear and no one's done it.

Josh:
Why is Google going to make it differently if they even can?

Ejaaz:
So in terms of like specific details, we don't have much information beyond

Ejaaz:
this demo video that we're showing on screen here.

Ejaaz:
They've termed the project Project Aura, which is basically going to be their

Ejaaz:
next gen version of Google Class.

Ejaaz:
And from my initial reaction from this video is it looks very similar to the

Ejaaz:
Apple Vision Pro experience, coupled with a few different features that Meta

Ejaaz:
Ray-Bans kind of introduced in their demo a few months earlier.

Ejaaz:
My take is it's, okay, number one, it's gonna be better than Google Glass. I would hope so, right?

Ejaaz:
From the design of the glass, it looks more casual and applicable to a wider

Ejaaz:
range of waters. It looks a little chunky on her head now that I'm actually

Ejaaz:
looking at the person that's using this.

Josh:
I was gonna say, they look beefy. Those are some chunky glasses.

Ejaaz:
That's definitely way too big, which kind of implies that, you know,

Ejaaz:
assuming this is a prototype,

Ejaaz:
they've got a chunky kind of build-out a physical build-out like the computer

Ejaaz:
running I'm super curious what the sensors look like here how they've been able to optimize for it,

Ejaaz:
aesthetically it doesn't look like the best but functionally it

Ejaaz:
looks pretty cool like again like that Apple Vision Pro experience you can kind

Ejaaz:
of like have several desktop screens across you can access all your favorite

Ejaaz:
apps the number one thing that I'm excited about this Josh is Google has built

Ejaaz:
out a range of different apps and services that I use on a daily basis this.

Ejaaz:
So if I can somehow kind of combine that in with my visual experience on a daily

Ejaaz:
basis, it automatically becomes useful, right?

Ejaaz:
Apple kind of took a step in this direction going from the Apple iPhone to the Apple Watch, right?

Ejaaz:
People didn't have to pull out their phone, they could just kind of like look at their wrist.

Ejaaz:
Google can now have the benefit of like kind of your vision doing this. So,

Ejaaz:
automatically through that, I think it's going to be useful.

Ejaaz:
In terms of viability, I'm going to base it heavily on the Meta Ray-Bans reception,

Ejaaz:
which was absolutely terrible.

Ejaaz:
I think Google has the benefit of being able to scale hardware manufacturing

Ejaaz:
way better or have more experience doing that way more than Meta can.

Ejaaz:
So that's pretty bullish, but it's going to come down to the execution and I'm

Ejaaz:
going to reserve my right to judge for now.

Josh:
Yeah, I'll go on record as being the biggest hater for this product.

Josh:
I think it's going to be terrible.

Josh:
But the thing that I love is that Google's making it. They're working on it.

Josh:
And I'm excited for version three of whatever this is.

Josh:
So whatever they make this year or next year in 2026, this demo,

Josh:
that's not really appealing.

Josh:
Whatever the version two is,

Josh:
maybe the battery shrinks, maybe the glasses shrink. Still not that great.

Josh:
Version three, normally version three of these things start to get good.

Josh:
So maybe 2028 will be somewhere in the reasonably viable glasses world.

Josh:
But it's cool. I'm glad Google's in the game because this is very clearly an

Josh:
important form factor in the future of the way we interface with AI and computers.

Josh:
And there's another company now working on manufacturing them.

Josh:
So for that, it is a win for everybody.

Ejaaz:
And the final item on the docket comes from the open source world.

Ejaaz:
Noose Research, which is a frontier open source intelligence lab,

Ejaaz:
had a really big breakthrough.

Ejaaz:
And by big, I mean really small, big breakthrough.

Ejaaz:
They launched a 30 billion parameter model, Josh, which compared to frontier

Ejaaz:
intelligence models right now, which range from, I think, 700 billion to 1 trillion

Ejaaz:
parameters, this is tiny.

Ejaaz:
Except it did a very big thing. It scored an 87 out of 120 on the notorious

Ejaaz:
Putnam mathematics competition.

Ejaaz:
For those of you who aren't aware of this competition, it is incredibly hard

Ejaaz:
for any of the smartest humans in the world to do.

Ejaaz:
And in fact, comparing its results to the human scores of last year,

Ejaaz:
it would have placed second, scoring a problem set of eight perfect scores, which is just

Ejaaz:
crazy. So the fact that this tinier model packs such a crazy punch is nuts.

Ejaaz:
Now, for those of you thinking, oh, well, it's just a mathematics nerdy model, who the hell cares?

Ejaaz:
Bear in mind that Alibaba spent, I think, upwards of $15 billion in collectively

Ejaaz:
training their latest QEN3 model, which is a pretty amazing open source model.

Ejaaz:
They scored 27 out of 120 doing the same test.

Ejaaz:
So the reason why this excites me is for a few reasons. Number one.

Ejaaz:
Noose Research open sourced this entire thing.

Ejaaz:
So if you're listening to this and you're curious to kind of test this out yourself, you can do it.

Ejaaz:
And 30 billion parameter models is something that you can feasibly run on consumer

Ejaaz:
hardware at home. That's number one.

Ejaaz:
Number two, they did this in a distributed fashion.

Ejaaz:
So typically when you're training a model, you want to build heavy data centers

Ejaaz:
and run a bunch of reinforcement learning, reasoning, stuff like that to create

Ejaaz:
the model. They didn't use any of that.

Ejaaz:
They used a distributed network of compute to be able to create this. So that's really cool.

Ejaaz:
And number three, something that they pioneered, Josh, is something called an agent harness.

Ejaaz:
Basically, the way that this model became so smart is in the post-training phase,

Ejaaz:
where they spun up a number of AI agents, which reasoned with each other in

Ejaaz:
a competitive tournament bracket style thing.

Ejaaz:
And the one with the best solution won and submitted their answer.

Ejaaz:
And that's how they reached this frontier level intelligence.

Ejaaz:
The reason why this is so important is if you assume that compute is the only

Ejaaz:
thing you need to train frontier-level intelligence, this experiment disproves that.

Ejaaz:
This experiment proves to you that

Ejaaz:
you can achieve that same level of intelligence with much less compute.

Josh:
It's awesome they're getting these distilled models to be so powerful.

Josh:
And this is kind of a trend that...

Josh:
Projects towards a loose bear case for ai which is if if

Josh:
you can continue to distill these down into these hyper-optimized

Josh:
models that can eventually run on your phone and does

Josh:
the ai at the edge overpower the ai in the data center and does that mean that

Josh:
the value of these large data centers goes down i don't think so but this is

Josh:
a proof of concept and directionally proving or i guess giving us some data

Josh:
on what that actually means and how that looks this is cool It's a fun project.

Josh:
And the fact that they're doing it in a decentralized way seems interesting.

Ejaaz:
That wraps up the end of today's episode. It was a big one.

Ejaaz:
If you can't tell, Josh and I are slight bulls on SpaceX and Elon's companies.

Josh:
You didn't show off your hoodie. Show off your hoodie. Oh, I didn't.

Ejaaz:
I got my news research hoodie.

Josh:
Yeah, so clearly you see where both of us stand here. Yes. Space maximalist.

Ejaaz:
Yes.

Josh:
Other maximalist.

Ejaaz:
Open source. Distributed.

Josh:
Distributed. Distributed training. Sick.

Ejaaz:
I'm a fan of both. I'm a fan of both. And one thing has become clear to me as

Ejaaz:
we wrap up this episode is that the future of AI is dependent on a number of

Ejaaz:
different protocol layers, Josh.

Ejaaz:
I don't think SpaceX wins without

Ejaaz:
the help of Tesla, without the help of Starlink, without the help of XAI.

Ejaaz:
They all kind of feed into each other and I'm excited to see how this industry builds out.

Ejaaz:
You can bet your ass Limitless is going to be the channel that breaks all this

Ejaaz:
news. I just want us to take a little bit of a victory lap, Josh.

Ejaaz:
We have called out two very important trends months earlier that have become super important.

Ejaaz:
One of them being AI data centers in space, the other one being the Google bull case. Am I missing any?

Josh:
Um, well, another one, we had Blake Scholl on the podcast who does supersonic

Josh:
jets and he just announced a supersonic jet generator for AI data center.

Josh:
So we've been early and we've been right. I mean, granted, directionally right.

Josh:
We first started off as haters, but we've haters of the AI space,

Josh:
but we've changed our mind and we've been covering it along the way.

Josh:
So listen, it might not always be right, but it's always early and you'll always

Josh:
be up to date on everything that matters in this world of AI and frontier technology.

Ejaaz:
Yes. So if you're listening to this and you aren't subscribed,

Ejaaz:
and that is 80% of you, by the way, please subscribe.

Ejaaz:
It helps us out so much. Wherever you're listening to it, it could be on Spotify,

Ejaaz:
Apple, YouTube, whatever.

Ejaaz:
If you're on YouTube, actually hit the notifications button because that also

Ejaaz:
alerts you of the latest alpha. We drop three to four episodes a week. It's awesome.

Ejaaz:
And the final call to action is we have a banger of a newsletter which drops every Friday.

Ejaaz:
And from next week, it drops twice, every Wednesday and Friday,

Ejaaz:
one with an SAE investment thesis on the company that Josh or I are super bullish

Ejaaz:
about and the other highlighting the top five bits of news in AI and Frontier Tech of that week.

Ejaaz:
So you don't want to miss it. If you want to keep up to date,

Ejaaz:
subscribe to the Limitless Ecosystem.

Ejaaz:
We will see you on the next one.