$SPCX shares are priced at $135 for its $2 trillion IPO.
Its return is 100x-200x by 2035.
These 20 companies will benefit the most:
1. $BKSY ~$34
AI-ready Earth observation satellites feed SpaceX orbital intelligence layer.
2. $SPIR ~$20
Space data analytics monetizing SpaceX's growing orbital constellation.
3. $ACHR ~$5
Air mobility networks integrate with Starlink's low-latency infrastructure.
5. $SATL ~$7
High-resolution imaging complements SpaceX orbital AI compute constellation data.
6. $VIAV ~$50
Optical networking components critical for Starlink ground station upgrades.
7. $OUST ~$40
Sensor fusion tech supports SpaceX booster catch reusability automation.
8. $GILT ~$15
Satellite ground infrastructure scales alongside Starlink enterprise deployments.
9. $POET ~$11
Optical interposer chips slash data center power costs inside COLOSSUS AI cluster.
10. $ARQQ ~$12
Quantum encryption securing Starshield government classified orbital networks.
11. $TWST ~$74
Synthetic biology tools accelerate SpaceX long-term Mars life support research.
12. $LUNR ~$30
NASA lunar lander tech directly supports SpaceX Moon base buildout.
13. $AEVA ~$24
LiDAR sensors enable autonomous Starship landing and booster catch precision.
14. $KTOS ~$60
Defense tech partner powering Starshield national security satellite contracts.
15. $IONQ ~$58
Quantum compute layer powering next-gen orbital AI satellites.
16. $RDDT ~$178
Real-time social data feeds Grok's truth-seeking AI via X integration.
17. $RKLB ~$115
Small payload launch fills exact gaps Falcon can't efficiently serve.
18. $ASTS ~$97
Direct-to-phone satellite broadband. Starlink's closest competitor and partner.
19. $MTSI ~$375
RF semiconductors power Starlink phased-array antenna signal processing.
20. $BWXT ~$200
Nuclear propulsion R&D aligns with SpaceX Mars mission power requirements.
I'm definetly a buyer of $SPCX IPO and want to get it super cheap.
♻️ RESHARE this post and write 1 comment, I'll DM you the PRICE I want to buy $SPCX at this month.
For the first time ever, an imported vehicle became the best-selling car in South Korea and it’s the Tesla Model Y
Not just the best-selling EV
The best-selling vehicle overall
Historic moment in Hyundai and Kia’s home market 🇰🇷
May sales:
• Tesla Model Y: 8,762
• Kia Sorento: 7,836
• Hyundai Grandeur: 5,183
Tesla as a brand sold 10,866 cars in Korea last month, more than BMW and Mercedes-Benz combined
Even crazier: roughly one in three imported cars sold in Korea this year has been a Tesla
Tesla has now been the No. 1 import brand in Korea for four straight months
No imported model had ever done this before
A Tesla did
Collectivism is the problem. That is the word you should be using, and everyone on all parts of the political spectrum must unite against it.
Stop arguing about who aligns with Hitler or Stalin or what communism or socialism or capitalism is.
Bunching people together into arbitrary groups according to their race/religion/sex/age or level of income is evil. It is a prerequisite to enforcing unjust ideologies on humans.
Coercing humans into acting "for the greater good" is the other side of the evil collectivist coin. Humans acting in their own interest is what built civilization as we know it.
Any coerced human action is not aligned with this process and is, de facto, anti-civilization and inherently evil, even if it sounds virtuous.
I am a board-certified clinical psychologist with over 20 years in this field.
I have the letters after my name. The license on the wall. I sat through the graduate seminars, completed the internship hours, passed the exams, read the research, contributed to the research.
I am, by every measure the industry recognizes, one of its own.
And I think the whole thing is absurd.
Not the suffering. The suffering is real.
Not the desire to help. That's genuine.
The system we built around it is the joke.
A human being walks into a beige room. They may be carrying grief. Trauma. Spiritual disconnection. The weight of things they cannot name and have never been given permission to speak.
Whatever they're carrying, the system has the same answer.
Forty-five minutes. On a Tuesday. At 2:30pm.
Who decided this? Was there a study? A summit? A breakthrough in neuroscience that revealed the soul opens and closes on a billable schedule?
Of course not.
The 45-minute hour exists because it lets a therapist see enough clients in a day to make their student loan payment.
And here's where it gets cruel.
Let's say something extraordinary happens in session. The thing you buried at age seven surfaces. Your body starts shaking. Tears are coming from somewhere ancient. This is healing happening in real time.
Your therapist glances at the clock.
"We're going to have to stop here."
So they teach you a grounding technique. You name five things you can see, four things you can touch, and one reason you thought this was going to be different. You shove all that energy back into your body where it will stay, compressed and unresolved, until next Tuesday at 2:30.
Then you walk to the front desk and swipe your card while your hands are still trembling.
This is what we call the therapeutic process.
The system needs you to stay in it. A therapist who heals their clients has no clients. A therapist with no clients can't pay rent.
So the industry created its masterpiece: the professional patient. Twelve years in therapy. Fluent in attachment styles, trauma responses, inner child language. No better. Maybe worse. But committed to the process. And the process is committed to their credit card.
The more therapy language you learn, the more you see yourself through the lens of pathology. Every bad day becomes a depressive episode. Every argument, a trauma response. Every moment of self-doubt, your anxious attachment.
You've been handed an entire vocabulary for your own dysfunction. It never occurs to you that the vocabulary itself might be the cage.
And when the talking doesn't work? Drugs. You'll see a prescriber for 15 minutes. They'll ask how you're sleeping. You'll say badly. They'll prescribe something that flattens your emotional landscape into a smooth, gray, manageable surface.
You'll cry less. You'll also laugh less. Nobody measures that.
The pain was a signal. The anxiety was a signal. The depression was a signal. Your body and soul were screaming that something was deeply wrong.
The system's answer was to mute the speaker so you could go back to functioning inside the very machine that was grinding you down.
I've spent 20 years on the inside of this. I wrote the confession nobody in my field wants to make.
Full article. Link in comments.
AWAKEN.
#psychology #mentalhealth #therapy #psychiatry
Tesla just published a new patent today detailing a knee joint assembly for Optimus that closely mimics human knee anatomy.
The patent describes how a human knee uses a quadriceps tendon, patella (kneecap), and patellar ligament system to convert muscle force into powerful bending.
Optimus’ knee uses a 4-bar linkage that mimics the exact movement. This allows the robot’s lower leg to rotate about 150° from straight, which matches human capability. Basically, this allows Optimus to perform human-like movements when squatting, walking, going up stairs, etc.
Can’t wait to see Gen 3, I think it’s going to shock the world.
This episode with @SimonDixonTwitt and @PeterMcCormack is by far the most eloquent explanation of whats going on in the Middle East. Had to watch this a couple of times for all this information to sink in. This is just a sample of what he dissected. Bravo Simon!
Andrej Karpathy on autoresearch with an untrusted pool of workers:
"My designs that incorporate an untrusted pool of workers (into autoresearch) actually look a little bit like a blockchain.
Instead of blocks, you have commits, and these commits can build on each other and contain changes to the code as you're improving it.
The proof of work is basically doing tons of experimentation to find the commits that work."
The idea that distributed & permissionless autoresearch ~= proof-of-useful-work remains a high-level intuition for now, but it is extremely intriguing to say the least.
Someone needs to take this further. See QT for more on what's missing.
An Australian breakfast radio show spent their morning show today seeing how far they could drive their Tesla past 0%.
Probably the most entertaining piece of Tesla content I’ve ever watched 😂
NEWS: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced today that the company is working on a new chip/computer for orbital data-centers called Nvidia Vera Rubin Space-1.
"It's going to start data-centers out in space. Of course, in space there's no conduction, no convection, there's just radiation, so we have to figure out how to cool these systems out in space, but we got lots of great engineers working on it."