Elon Musk Podcast

WWDC 2026: Siri on Gemini, a Foldable iPhone, and Cook's Last Keynote

17 min · 11. juni 2026
episode WWDC 2026: Siri on Gemini, a Foldable iPhone, and Cook's Last Keynote cover

Beskrivelse

Apple's WWDC 2026 keynote did three things at once: announced Tim Cook's retirement and John Ternus as the next CEO, rebuilt Siri on top of Google's Gemini models, and quietly seeded code for a foldable iPhone into iOS 27. This episode breaks down all three. The Siri rebrand is the headline. The newly named "Siri AI" runs on Gemini through Apple's Private Cloud Compute layer, gets a standalone app, and adds real-time screen awareness plus personal context across apps. It's the first time Apple has handed its assistant to a competitor's model, and the privacy framing on stage was clearly built to answer the question that move invites. The foldable iPhone story isn't in the keynote, it's in the code. Analysts pulled flexible display references and new app-adaptability tools out of iOS 27 betas, the strongest signal yet that the long-rumored foldable is closer than Apple is saying. Then the platform updates. iOS 27 brings up to 30% faster app launches and supports every device back to the iPhone 11. macOS 27 "Golden Gate" drops Intel support and refines the Liquid Glass design system. The Health app added perimenopause and menopause tracking, and Apple Watch picked up updates aimed squarely at Garmin and Whoop. Expanded parental controls now require child accounts for under-13s. Two things that almost got buried. Siri AI won't launch in Europe or China at first because of regulatory complexity, which leaves Apple's two largest non-US markets out of the headline feature. And this was Tim Cook's final WWDC as CEO. He hands the role to hardware chief John Ternus on September 1, ending a 14-year run. We cover what it means for Apple's identity that the privacy-first company now routes its assistant through Google, why Ternus over Federighi is a hardware-first bet at exactly the moment AI is software-defined, and what foldable code in iOS 27 says about the iPhone 18 roadmap. WWDC 2026, Apple WWDC, Siri AI, Google Gemini, iOS 27, foldable iPhone, Tim Cook retirement, John Ternus, Apple Intelligence, macOS Golden Gate, Apple Watch, Apple Health.

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Amazon Triggered a Global Ban on Anthropic

The 2026 launch and subsequent global suspension of Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 AI models. Initially released as high-performance frontier models capable of advanced reasoning and long-horizon tasks, these tools were abruptly disabled following a U.S. government export control directive citing national security concerns. The government alleged that a narrow jailbreak could expose unrestricted cyber capabilities, a claim Anthropic disputed by noting that similar vulnerabilities exist across the industry. Developers utilizing the LiteLLM proxy to manage these models faced immediate service disruptions and were encouraged to implement fallback routing to available alternatives like Claude Opus 4.8. Technical reports also highlight a security advisory for specific LiteLLM versions that were compromised with malware during this period. Ultimately, the White House later softened its stance, indicating Anthropic was no longer a threat after the company complied with the mandatory shutdown.

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John Ternus reclaims Apple's design authority

As John Ternus prepares to transition into the role of Apple CEO, reports indicate that his primary mission is to revitalize the company’s design department. Over the last decade, the firm's creative influence reportedly waned as operational efficiency and supply chain management became the dominant corporate priorities. To reverse this trend, Ternus aims to restore design to its status as a core strategic pillar, filling leadership voids left by high-profile departures. This internal restructuring coincides with an ambitious product roadmap featuring innovations like foldable iPhones, smart glasses, and AI-integrated wearables. Ultimately, the new leadership seeks to ensure that aesthetic excellence remains the defining characteristic of Apple's future hardware. While some analysts question if such a drastic reset is necessary, Ternus maintains that superior design is the essential engine for the brand's continued success.

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The evolution of software development toward a loop-driven era, where autonomous AI agents transition from simple code generation to independent system orchestration. Central to this shift is compound engineering, a methodology that treats every development task as a reusable investment to achieve massive productivity gains. This paradigm emphasizes that code verification, rather than generation, is now the primary bottleneck in engineering velocity. To address these risks, the texts advocate for a robust execution harness—such as those developed by Harness AI—which provides the necessary memory, governance, and real-time context for safe deployment. Furthermore, the documents highlight community innovations like Lore, a tool designed to extract developer judgment from session histories into reusable agent skills. Ultimately, the materials illustrate a transition from manual programming to the design of sophisticated autonomous verification platforms that operate within live cloud-native environments.

21. juni 20264 min
episode Anthropic profit forces OpenAI price cuts cover

Anthropic profit forces OpenAI price cuts

AI pricing is changing fast. OpenAI, Anthropic, and Microsoft's GitHub are all moving away from flat-rate subscriptions toward usage-based billing, and the shift is going to hit anyone whose business runs heavily on AI tools. Anthropic has already shifted some business customers to actual-usage billing. GitHub launched a new usage-based system that kicks in after monthly allotments run out. OpenAI executives have publicly floated pricing AI more like electricity or water, where heavier users pay more for slide decks, longer agent runs, code debugging, and email drafting. This episode breaks down the AI pricing shock hitting OpenAI, Anthropic, and Microsoft, what it means for businesses already building on these tools, and which alternatives are starting to look attractive. The driver is straightforward. AI labs are burning cash on chips, data centers, and talent at a rate that flat-rate subscriptions can't support. OpenAI reported a $14 billion projected loss for 2026. Anthropic just filed for IPO at a $965 billion valuation. Microsoft is spending tens of billions on AI infrastructure. The math on a $20-a-month subscription that produces unlimited GPT-5 output doesn't work anymore. The corporate response is already visible. Walmart capped staff use of its in-house AI agent. Uber is limiting monthly employee spending to $1,500 per AI coding tool. Companies that rolled out generative AI broadly in 2024 and 2025 are now reading the meters, because the same prompt that cost $0.02 in 2024 can cost $2 today on a reasoning model. The lower-cost alternatives are gaining real attention. Alibaba's Qwen and DeepSeek both run at a fraction of OpenAI and Anthropic pricing, and both have closed the quality gap enough that routing simpler tasks to a cheaper model is a defensible engineering decision. The question for every business spending on AI is which tasks need a frontier model and which can run on a model that costs 90% less for the same output. What this means for AI strategy in 2026. Flat-rate pricing was a customer acquisition tactic that worked when the labs were trying to win mindshare. Usage-based pricing reflects what AI actually costs to deliver, and it's the model the industry will settle on. For developers, freelancers, and small businesses using ChatGPT, Claude, GitHub Copilot, and Cursor every day, the bill is about to look different. For agencies and consultants billing clients for AI work, the margin model needs a rebuild. We cover the OpenAI, Anthropic, and GitHub pricing changes in detail, how Walmart and Uber are responding, why Qwen and DeepSeek matter more this quarter than they did last quarter, and what the shift to electricity-style AI pricing means for the cost of doing business in the AI economy. Keywords: AI pricing, OpenAI pricing, Anthropic billing, GitHub Copilot pricing, usage-based AI, token pricing, AI subscription, ChatGPT pricing, Claude pricing, Qwen, DeepSeek, Walmart AI, Uber AI, GPT-5 cost, AI ROI, AI infrastructure cost.

21. juni 202622 min
episode SpaceX Stock Crashes: The Cursor Deal and Bond Offering Triggered the Drop cover

SpaceX Stock Crashes: The Cursor Deal and Bond Offering Triggered the Drop

SpaceX stock dropped sharply this week, shedding roughly $620 billion in market value over two sessions as the post-IPO rally finally broke. SPCX fell 8.3% combined on June 17 and June 18, closing at $178.50, down from its June 16 peak of $225.64. That's a 20% drop in two days, the first sustained decline since SpaceX went public on June 12 at $135 per share in the largest IPO in history. This episode breaks down why SpaceX stock is dropping, what triggered the SPCX selloff, and what comes next for the most hyped IPO of 2026. The fall hit despite Moody's, Fitch, and S&P all assigning SpaceX investment-grade credit ratings on the same Thursday the stock dropped nearly 4%. The paradox is the story. Four triggers drove the SpaceX stock drop. First, the $60 billion all-stock acquisition of Cursor, announced June 16, signaled immediate dilution to anyone who bought SPCX on the open market. Second, a planned $20 billion bond offering raised an obvious question after SpaceX had just pulled in $75 billion from the IPO and committed $60 billion to Cursor: how much capital does this company actually need? Third, SPCX options started trading on June 17, giving short sellers a practical way to bet against the stock for the first time. Nearly 1 million call contracts traded on day one, putting SPCX among the busiest options names on Wall Street. Fourth, the fundamentals caught up. SpaceX posted a $4.28 billion net loss in Q1 2026, wider than the $528 million loss in the year-ago quarter, with xAI alone accounting for $2.5 billion of the operating charge. The float math is part of the volatility story. Only 4-5% of SpaceX shares are in the public float. Roughly 95% are locked up at IPO. Selling windows open in late July 2026, the standard lockup lapses in December 2026, and Musk's stake unlocks in June 2027. With limited liquidity, small flows move the SPCX stock price hard in both directions. The Gary Black "meme stock" critique landed because retail investors bought roughly the same amount of SPCX in three sessions as they bought Nvidia, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, QQQ, and SPY combined, according to Vanda Research. The broader picture matters for SPCX shareholders. SpaceX still trades at a $2.4 trillion market cap, the sixth-largest US company by value. The stock ended its first week as a public company 37% above its IPO price. But the xAI subsidiary that justifies a chunk of the trillion-dollar valuation is bleeding cash: $6.36 billion in 2025 operating losses on $12.7 billion in capex, and every one of xAI's 11 original co-founders had departed before the IPO. Musk himself said publicly in March 2026 that xAI "was not built right first time around." We also cover the other space-sector moves this week. Planet Labs (PL) dropped sharply after an earnings report showed margin pressure and near-term losses despite a record backlog, raising questions about whether satellite-data businesses can scale profitably. Intuitive Machines (LUNR) expanded its NASA partnership and shifted toward recurring lunar infrastructure revenue, a model that could de-risk a sector full of one-shot government contracts. We cover what the SpaceX stock drop means for retail SPCX holders, why the Cursor acquisition and bond offering hit confidence on the same week, what the lockup calendar through 2027 means for sustained selling pressure, and whether the post-IPO selloff is a healthy reset or the start of a bigger correction. Keywords: SpaceX stock drop, SPCX stock, SpaceX IPO, Elon Musk, $225 to $178, SPCX selloff, Cursor acquisition, SpaceX bond offering, xAI losses, Planet Labs PL stock, Intuitive Machines LUNR, AI bubble, Magnificent Seven, meme stock, SpaceX lockup, retail investors.

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