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Preston Pysh interviews Cern Basher, a Tesla and AI expert, diving deep into Elon Musk's interconnected empire of companies and technologies. The conversation explores Tesla's strategic shift from Dojo supercomputer development to focusing on specialized inference chips, the revolutionary economics of robotaxis and robo-trucking, and the transformative potential of Optimus humanoid robots. (26:36) They discuss how Tesla's robotaxi could generate $200,000 in profit over five years compared to just $4,000 from selling a traditional car. The episode also covers Tesla Energy's megapack systems and how Musk's various ventures are driving costs toward zero across energy, transportation, intelligence, and labor sectors.
Host of Infinite Tech via The Investors Podcast Network. Preston explores Bitcoin, AI, robotics, longevity, and other exponential technologies through a lens of abundance and sound money, empowering listeners to harness future technologies today.
President and CIO at Brilliant Advice, recognized as one of the smartest voices on Tesla, AI, robotics, and Bitcoin. Basher is an expert in analyzing interconnected technology systems and their transformative potential across multiple industries.
Tesla's decision to shut down Dojo wasn't a retreat but a strategic pivot toward owning the inference chip stack. (03:56) Unlike training chips that build AI models, inference chips must operate in real-time on vehicles and robots with millisecond precision. Basher explains that Tesla recognizes you'll need "billions of inference chips" for autonomous vehicles and humanoid robots, and by controlling this technology, they can potentially stack these chips to create their own supercomputer. This gives Tesla a massive advantage over competitors like Waymo who rely on expensive third-party sensors and equipment, while Tesla's vehicles roll off assembly lines ready for autonomous service.
The economics of robotaxis are staggering compared to traditional car sales. (26:00) Basher breaks down how Tesla currently makes about $4,000 profit per car sold every five years, but a robotaxi could generate $200,000 in profit over the same period - a 50x increase that becomes 100x when adjusted for the smaller battery requirements. This isn't just about disrupting Uber; it's about replacing personally owned vehicles entirely. As costs drop to 25-30 cents per mile compared to 65-80 cents for car ownership, families will progressively eliminate their third, second, and eventually first vehicle. The platform also enables layered services like food delivery, package delivery, and even free advertising-supported rides.
Tesla's autonomous trucking represents a 50-65% reduction in transportation costs, from current rates of $1.60-$2.00 per mile to projected 60-80 cents per mile. (33:45) This deflation will cascade through the entire economy since trucking costs drive inflation in everything consumers buy. Unlike the consumer robotaxi market where people can choose personal vehicles, commercial trucking operators must adopt the most cost-effective solution or be driven out of business. With Tesla's Nevada factory targeting 50,000 semi trucks annually by 2027, and the elimination of driver costs (roughly $1 per mile) plus fuel savings from electric operation, the entire logistics industry faces fundamental disruption.
Optimus robots represent an unprecedented opportunity to capitalize human labor on corporate balance sheets. (54:52) Basher explains that while companies have valuable workforces, employees don't appear as assets on balance sheets. Robots change this dynamic completely - a robot generating $25,000 annual profit with a 40x PE multiple creates $1 million in value. For every million robots Tesla produces, that could represent a trillion dollars in market cap. Unlike human workers who work 8 hours daily, robots can operate 22-23 hours per day, making them competitive even at one-third human speed. This represents the first time in human history we're developing systems that can outcompete human labor at all levels.
Tesla's Megapack energy storage systems could double US generating capacity without building new power plants. (46:48) These trailer-sized battery systems store excess energy from wind and solar for use during peak demand periods. Elon Musk noted that much existing capacity sits idle except during certain times of day or year, but with battery storage, these plants could run at full capacity continuously. This creates a massive market opportunity for Tesla Energy while accelerating the transition to renewable energy and supporting the increased power demands of AI data centers and Bitcoin mining operations.