Hennigan's Huddle

SpaceX's $10 Billion Week and the Man Building America's Defense

15 min · 30 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio SpaceX's $10 Billion Week and the Man Building America's Defense

Descripción

SpaceX just landed $10B+ in federal defense contracts. One company, one man, one alarming concentration of power. What could go wrong? • Nvidia, Microsoft, and Arm are all teasing Nvidia’s new N1X laptop processors Nvidia, Microsoft, and Arm are all publicly teasing the imminent launch of Nvidia's N1 and N1X Arm-powered laptop chips, set to be officially announced at Nvidia's Computex keynote in Taipei on Sunday night. • SpaceX gets $4 billion contract to build missile-tracking ‘Golden Dome’ satellites The Pentagon has awarded SpaceX a $4.16 billion contract to build missile-tracking satellites for Trump's 'Golden Dome' defense system, adding to the company's growing portfolio of Golden Dome-related deals. • Acer’s launching a Linux handheld for streaming your PC games Acer is entering the PC game streaming handheld market with the Nitro Blaze Link, a Linux-based device launching in Q4 2026 that acts like a PlayStation Portal for your home PC rather than a standalone gaming machine. • Founders seize on Indian court ruling to revive criticism of Google’s ad business An Indian court ruled Google liable for trademark infringement over its keyword advertising practices, finding it actively enabled competitors to bid on brand names like Hindware — and prominent Indian tech founders are using the ruling to amplify longstanding complaints about the practice. • I went to the so-called ‘steroid Olympics,’ to understand why Silicon Valley is obsessed with peptides The Enhanced Games, a Silicon Valley-backed athletic competition where athletes openly use performance-enhancing drugs under medical supervision, debuted in Las Vegas over Memorial Day weekend — and it's really a $1.2 billion business selling peptides and enhancement drugs to consumers. • SpaceX awarded $6.45B in Space Force contracts ahead of IPO SpaceX landed $6.45 billion in U.S. Space Force contracts this week — $4.16B for Golden Dome missile defense satellites and $2.29B for a low Earth orbit communications network — just weeks before what's expected to be the largest IPO in history. • Proposed new US funding rules: We can cancel any grant at any time The Trump administration's Office of Management and Budget has proposed sweeping new federal grant rules that would let any agency cancel any grant at any time, sideline peer review in favor of political appointees, and ban funding for a range of research topics deemed contrary to administration priorities. • Kenyan court blocks Trump admin from dumping Ebola-exposed Americans there A Kenyan court has blocked the Trump administration's plan to quarantine Ebola-exposed Americans at a makeshift facility in Laikipia, Kenya, rather than repatriating them to specialized treatment centers in the US. • Botnet of more than 17 million devices dismantled Dutch authorities dismantled a massive botnet of over 17 million compromised devices managed by 200 servers, linked to Russian proxy service ASOCKS. • Illinois starts critical

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Hennigan's Huddle!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

30 episodios

Portada del episodio GTA VI Is Rewriting the Rules — And Giants Are Winning Everything

GTA VI Is Rewriting the Rules — And Giants Are Winning Everything

Rockstar is warping the entire gaming calendar, Reid Hoffman is chasing AI's next frontier, and IBM may have buried major breaches. Power moves everywhere. • More than a decade later, the team behind N++ is back with a multiplayer sequel Metanet Software, the two-person studio behind cult platformer N++, has announced a multiplayer sequel called N Plus Infinity Times Two, set to launch in 2027 across PS5, Xbox, Switch 2, and PC. • Grand Theft Auto VI is warping the video game release calendar Grand Theft Auto VI's November 19th launch is reshaping the entire fall gaming calendar, with major publishers scrambling to release their biggest titles in September and October — or pushing to 2027 entirely — to avoid competing with Rockstar's juggernaut. • Final Fantasy VII’s remake trilogy will conclude with Revelation Square Enix has officially revealed Final Fantasy VII Revelation, the third and final entry in its FFVII remake trilogy, launching spring 2027 across PC, PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and Nintendo Switch 2 simultaneously. • Reid Hoffman is leaving Microsoft’s board to go ‘founder mode’ with startup Manus Reid Hoffman is stepping down from Microsoft's board to focus on Manus, an AI-driven drug discovery startup where he serves as co-founder and chairman. • Founders share VC horror stories, and some are naming names A viral thread on X sparked by startup podcaster Greg Isenberg has founders — including Mark Pincus, Travis Kalanick, and Cloudflare's Matthew Prince — publicly naming and shaming VCs for bad behavior ranging from sleeping through pitch meetings to alleged sexism and predatory deal tactics. • Former cyber executive turned whistleblower accuses IBM of covering up several data breaches A former IBM cybersecurity VP is suing the company, alleging it was hacked over 56,000 times by Chinese state-sponsored hackers between 2013 and 2016 and then deliberately concealed the breaches from U.S. authorities. • Baby botulism outbreak: FDA still doesn't know cause—or how to prevent it The FDA has closed its investigation into a baby botulism outbreak linked to ByHeart infant formula without identifying the root cause or offering prevention guidance, leaving 48 hospitalized infants and their families without answers. • How a USB-connected speaker can infect a PC without ever being touched A security researcher discovered that Creative Technologies' $283 Sound Blaster Katana V2X speaker can be hijacked over Bluetooth — no pairing required — to execute malicious commands on any USB-connected PC within range. • Small modular nuclear reactor reaches criticality in first test Nuclear startup Antares has achieved criticality with a small modular reactor at Idaho National Laboratory — the first new reactor design to hit this milestone under Trump's executive order to accelerate U.S. nuclear development. • Lane-Brayman JV wins $1B Ohio River tunnel job A joint venture between Lane Construction and Brayman Construction has

6 de jun de 202616 min
Portada del episodio Anthropic Shows the Receipts

Anthropic Shows the Receipts

Anthropic marches toward IPO with a $965B valuation and Daniela Amodei shrugging off skeptics. Plus Steam Machines, humanoid robots, and Founders Fund's tech game show. • Valve says it’s ready to launch the Steam Machine this summer Valve has confirmed its Steam Machine PC and Steam Frame VR headset will finally launch this summer, narrowing a window that has slipped multiple times since the products were first announced late last year. • Cyberdecks used to look like little laptops, but now they’re getting more personal The cyberdeck DIY movement is evolving beyond chunky 3D-printed laptop lookalikes, with makers like TikTok creator Annike Tan hiding Raspberry Pi-powered mini Linux computers inside purses, jewelry boxes, and quirky everyday objects. • Kevin O’Leary agrees to downsize massive Utah data center Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary has agreed to cut his planned Utah data center nearly in half, reducing Project Stratos from 40,000 acres to roughly 20,000 acres after pressure from state officials and local activists. • Mira Murati steps back into the spotlight, carefully Mira Murati, former OpenAI CTO and now CEO of Thinking Machines Lab, made her first major media appearance in 18 months, previewing a new 'interaction model' AI interface and addressing the 2023 OpenAI boardroom crisis. • Founders Fund launches game show starring Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey, and other tech elites Founders Fund has launched a celebrity tech game show called 'MAFIA the GAME,' featuring Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey, Bryan Johnson, and Moxie Marlinspike playing a card game moderated by Pirate Wires editor and Founders Fund CMO Mike Solana. • Ahead of its IPO, Anthropic’s Daniela Amodei shrugs off doubts about AI’s returns Anthropic is moving toward a public listing after filing confidentially for an IPO, with co-founder Daniela Amodei citing the massive capital demands of frontier AI development as the primary driver. • The skeptic’s guide to humanoid robots going viral on the Internet Viral humanoid robot videos are often misleading, exploiting human tendency to anthropomorphize while obscuring teleoperation, sped-up footage, and narrow training environments. Experts say real robotic capability requires large-scale, real-world evaluations — not curated demos. • AT&T and Verizon lose Supreme Court case over fines for selling location data The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 against AT&T and Verizon, upholding $104 million in FCC fines for selling customers' real-time location data without consent and affirming the agency's enforcement process is constitutional. • These LLMs are the best at resisting Russian propaganda Estonia's government-sponsored language institute has released a new benchmark ranking dozens of LLMs on their ability to resist Russian propaganda narratives, and Anthropic's Claude models came out on top. • The Stein Line has reported that the Dallas Mavericks have reached out to two prominent college coaches to gauge inter

Ayer15 min
Portada del episodio Google's Water Promise Can't Hide Its Publisher Problem

Google's Water Promise Can't Hide Its Publisher Problem

AI's infrastructure dreams are crashing into reality. Google goes 'water positive' while UK regulators force it to let publishers opt out of AI Search. • AI has a water problem. Google thinks it has a fix Google has announced five commitments to address AI data centers' growing water consumption, including a pledge to replenish more water than it uses by 2030 and $17 million in new water stewardship projects. • Google must let publishers opt out of AI Search features, rules UK The UK's Competition and Markets Authority has ruled that Google must allow website publishers to opt out of having their content used in AI Search features like AI Overviews, marking a global first in AI content regulation. • God of War Laufey is coming to the PS5 Sony closed its June 2026 State of Play by unveiling God of War Laufey for PS5, a new entry in the franchise that ditches longtime protagonist Kratos in favor of Faye/Laufey as the playable lead. • Squishmallows, dentures, and an ‘I Heart Hot Dads’ bag: Uber has found thousands of items left in robotaxis Uber's annual Lost & Found Index now includes thousands of items left in robotaxis, revealing just how quickly its autonomous vehicle business is scaling — and highlighting a surprisingly practical challenge: who returns your stuff when there's no driver? • Cyera eyes $12B valuation at 80x ARR multiple despite operating losses Data security startup Cyera is closing a $300M+ funding round at a $12B valuation — an eye-popping 80x ARR multiple — just five months after its last raise, despite burning cash faster than it earns it. • Cyberdecks are having a moment, rejecting big tech surveillance with style and substance A growing community of women builders is reviving the cyberdeck trend — DIY mini-computers built inside unconventional objects like seashell purses and Barbie dollhouses — as a stylish rejection of Big Tech surveillance and control. • Male bowerbirds hope to dazzle females with bright human-made items Urban male bowerbirds in Australia are ditching natural decorations for human-made trash — think red wire, plastic, and even handcuffs — and it may be reshaping how the species selects mates. • Microsoft plans Linux tools and an RTX Spark desktop for Windows developers Microsoft's Build 2024 conference unveiled the Surface RTX Spark Dev Box, a compact developer PC powered by Nvidia's RTX Spark chip with up to 128GB of memory, alongside major Windows 11 software updates aimed at streamlining developer workflows. • Microsoft's Project Solara is an Android OS designed for agents instead of apps Microsoft unveiled Project Solara at Build 2026, an Android-based OS built to run AI agents instead of apps, featuring 'just-in-time' interfaces that dynamically generate themselves based on context and device type. • Monday Sports – Tigers swept by the White Sox The Detroit Tigers were swept by the Chicago White Sox, dropping the entire series in a tough stretch for the club. • Your gui

3 de jun de 202616 min
Portada del episodio The AI Bill Comes Due

The AI Bill Comes Due

Alphabet raises $80B while GitHub Copilot sticks developers with the tab. The subsidy era is ending — who pays next? • Don't Analyse Stocks Without Claude's New Finance Agents (Full Install) A new tutorial covers the full installation and use of Claude's finance-focused AI agents for stock analysis, positioning the tool as essential for modern investment research. • Watch — Youtube No substantive article content was provided — only a YouTube page for Shakira and Burna Boy's music video 'Dai Dai' along with standard YouTube navigation links. • Alphabet to Raise 80 Billion in Equity Capital for Ai Spending Alphabet is raising $80 billion in equity capital to fund its AI ambitions, with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway writing a $10 billion check as part of the deal. • Claude Opus 4.8: “a modest but tangible improvement” Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.8, openly describing it as a 'modest but tangible improvement' over its predecessor, with the headline upgrade being significantly improved honesty and reduced hallucinations. • I stopped paying for Obsidian after discovering VS Code can handle my notes just as well with the right extensions A developer ditched Obsidian in favor of VS Code for personal knowledge management, using the Dendron and llama-vscode extensions to replicate and extend Obsidian's core features without switching apps. • Apple probably won't bring any new products to next week’s WWDC keynote Apple's WWDC keynote next week will almost certainly be a software-only show, with no new hardware expected due to a packed recent release schedule and a global RAM shortage. • The Indiana Fever might have a big Caitlin Clark problem The Indiana Fever dropped two straight losses this week, and a viral sideline confrontation between Caitlin Clark and head coach Stephanie White is raising serious questions about team chemistry and leadership. • AI costs how much? GitHub Copilot users react to new usage-based pricing system. GitHub Copilot's new usage-based pricing model went live today, and developers are experiencing severe sticker shock as normal daily coding sessions rapidly drain monthly credit allotments that previously felt unlimited. • Strace-ui, Bonsai_term, and the TUI renaissance Jane Street open-sourced strace-ui, an interactive terminal UI that makes the notoriously cryptic Linux debugging tool strace actually usable, built on top of their OCaml UI framework Bonsai_term — signaling a broader renaissance in terminal UI development. • macOS needs its grid back A developer frustrated by Apple's 2011 removal of macOS Spaces' customizable grid layout has built an app to restore the feature, bringing back spatial muscle memory for virtual desktop navigation. • TV Premiere Dates 2026: The Complete Guide A comprehensive guide to 2026 TV premiere dates has been released, offering viewers and industry insiders a roadmap to the upcoming television season across networks and streaming platforms. • Wha

2 de jun de 202614 min