Elon Musk Podcast

Bolt fires HR after valuation collapse

13 min · 23 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Bolt fires HR after valuation collapse

Descripción

While Breslow reports his company is better off without HR, I’d argue the art and science of managing humans is more important than ever—and it’s also evolving fast. I recently spoke to Himanshu Palsule, the CEO of Cornerstone OnDemand, a learning and talent software company. With 140 million users and 7,000 enterprise customers who are taking a hard look at their own HR spend, Palsule has a vested interest in the conversation. But I’m impressed by the agentic platform it launched yesterday that leverages AI to help assess, train, and mobilize employees. “People will enable agents to take over the enterprise,” he told me at a customer event in New York. “If you lose your people, those agents aren’t doing anything in your company—they’re just creating chaos.” Other thoughts:

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Elon Musk Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

1376 episodios

episode Claude now writes its own codebase artwork

Claude now writes its own codebase

When AI Builds Itself," the AI laboratory Anthropic reveals that its systems are increasingly automating their own development, with Claude now generating over 80% of the company's internal code. This rapid progress toward recursive self-improvement—where AI autonomously designs its own superior successors—has prompted Anthropic to propose a global, verifiable pause mechanism modeled after nuclear arms control treaties. While the company warns that failing to coordinate could lead to a loss of human control, skeptics argue the proposal is technically impossible to verify and may serve as a "safety liability shield" or a strategic marketing move ahead of its trillion-dollar IPO. Despite internal data showing exponential productivity gains, experts highlight significant "judgment gaps" in AI's ability to choose research goals, suggesting that a true intelligence explosion remains theoretical. Ultimately, the sources depict a high-stakes tension between accelerating capabilities and the desperate search for governance frameworks capable of managing a potential technological singularity.

6 de jun de 202623 min
episode Indexes rewrite rules for trillion dollar IPOs artwork

Indexes rewrite rules for trillion dollar IPOs

The highly anticipated 2026 public listings of major technology leaders, specifically Anthropic, OpenAI, and SpaceX. These companies are preparing for historic debuts with projected valuations reaching the trillion-dollar mark, driven largely by their dominance in artificial intelligence and infrastructure. To accommodate these unprecedented "mega-IPOs," major stock exchanges and index providers like Nasdaq and FTSE Russell have implemented new "Fast Entry" rules to allow rapid inclusion into flagship benchmarks. This structural shift aims to improve market representativeness but introduces significant risks regarding forced passive buying and heightened price volatility for index fund investors. Experts suggest that global investors navigate these listings by monitoring indirect exposure through major stakeholders like Alphabet and Amazon or by utilizing staggered entry strategies around lock-up expiry windows. Ultimately, these sources reflect a transformative era where private-market giants are fundamentally reshaping the architecture of public stock indices and passive investment strategies.

Ayer18 min
episode SpaceX trades rockets for AI infrastructure artwork

SpaceX trades rockets for AI infrastructure

SpaceX's historic move toward a public listing on the Nasdaq with a target valuation reaching $2 trillion. The company’s S-1 filing reveals a complex financial landscape where the profitable Starlink satellite business is being used to fund massive losses within its newly integrated AI division, xAI. Beyond space exploration, the company is pivoting toward a future in AI infrastructure, evidenced by a planned $60 billion acquisition of the coding startup Cursor. However, legal disclosures warn that ambitious joint ventures with Tesla and Intel, such as the Terafab chip factory, remain in non-binding, early stages. Investors are also monitoring how this IPO might eventually lead to a broader merger of Elon Musk’s various enterprises.

4 de jun de 202620 min
episode MacBook Neo Squeezes Windows Laptop Profit Margins artwork

MacBook Neo Squeezes Windows Laptop Profit Margins

Recent data from IDC indicates that Apple has successfully entered the mainstream laptop market with the launch of its MacBook Neo. The device achieved significant early momentum by shipping 1.1 million units during its initial weeks of availability. This strategic move targets budget-conscious buyers who typically purchase Windows-based machines from competitors like Dell and HP. By leveraging optimized silicon technology and more accessible pricing, Apple is challenging the long-standing dominance of traditional PC manufacturers. Analysts suggest this shift could permanently alter industry dynamics if Apple maintains its sales velocity through upcoming shopping seasons. Ultimately, the Neo's debut represents a major effort to expand the Apple ecosystem beyond its traditional high-end niche.

3 de jun de 202611 min
episode Microsoft bans Claude to cut AI costs artwork

Microsoft bans Claude to cut AI costs

A significant shift in the artificial intelligence landscape, specifically focusing on Microsoft’s internal decision to mandate a transition from Anthropic’s Claude Code to its own GitHub Copilot CLI. Despite a documented preference for Claude among engineers, the company cited toolchain unification and strategic alignment as the primary drivers for this change, which coincides with the end of the fiscal year. These reports highlight a broader industry trend where soaring token-based costs are forcing major enterprises, such as Uber, to reconsider the financial sustainability of third-party AI tools. To address these economic and regulatory challenges, some experts propose bold policy reforms, including the separation of algorithms from data centers and the creation of public digital utilities. Meanwhile, tech giants continue to evolve their offerings, introducing features like Copilot Cowork to transform AI from a simple chat interface into an autonomous agent capable of executing complex workflows. Together, these texts illustrate the tension between developer autonomy and corporate fiscal discipline during a pivotal moment of AI integration.

3 de jun de 20267 min