I got to spend all day today with Jensen in Taiwan: talking with thousands of engineers and eating street food at a night market. Jensen is received as a rockstar in Taiwan, like it's Beatles in the 60's. It's mind-blowing and fun to watch. But most importantly, through all the interactions and all my conversations with him, he remained the same humble, kind, thoughtful, funny guy he always was, even as a kid who went to these same night markets many years ago.
Btw, we tried a crazy amount of different street food. It's legit some of the most delicious food I've ever had. I can't wait to share video of it, including a ton of our conversations and hangout. When I can pause for a moment from all the travel to edit the video, I'll post it.
Can't wait to continue talking to Jensen and engineers at Computex this week, and exploring more of Taiwan, and of course roaming the night markets for some more delicious street food.
Days like these, even more than usual, I feel like the luckiest kid in the world.
Love you all! ❤️
All personnel are accounted for and safe. It’s too early to know the root cause but we’re already working to find it. Very rough day, but we’ll rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. It’s worth it.
SpaceXAI will provide @AnthropicAI with access to Colossus 1, one of the world’s largest and fastest-deployed AI supercomputers, to provide additional capacity for Claude → https://t.co/nfDR9S822L
"He is hilarious, actually."
Gwynne Shotwell is second on the SpaceX org chart—behind only CEO and founder Elon Musk—helping lead what is now the world’s most valuable private company. A veteran of nearly 40 years in aerospace, she serves as SpaceX’s president and COO and is one of the industry’s top figures.
“I love working for Elon,” Shotwell told TIME in an interview. “He’s really quite funny. He has said many times that he would like to die on Mars, just not on impact. He also refers to Mars as a fixer-upper planet.”
Though, Shotwell said SpaceX is shifting its focus from Mars to the Moon, with plans to build infrastructure there within the next decade, as the company works to meet a $2.9 billion NASA contract to land astronauts on the Moon in 2028 in SpaceX's spaceship.
Take a look inside Musk’s production: https://t.co/s6ZwB7JQ8T