Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Adrian Salustri's avatar

I don't really get this whole elon thing. As an engineer, it's pretty obvious he doesn't do any of the stuff his companies do. The engineers do it. This all seems like twitter drama.

Anyway, are you arguing: "The overcelebration of managers in tech limit innovation"? I could buy that, but you need a lot a proof since (naively) I'd expect any celebration of any individuals to be beneficial. Musk is an important case study in this argument, but is otherwise fairly uninteresting (to me). Does he suck up and missalocate capital, in way that would be intolerable if he wasn't so famous? I dont know. I guess Im looking forward to the next article.

I'm skeptical, though, because there are serious structural impediments to innovation in the private sector that may dominate. Innovation is risky and it's only worth pursuing if existing products are fully optimized/are going obscelete. An executive at AFRL told me that big aerospace companies stopped R&D on years when the R&D tax credit expired (I have not verified this fully). Moreover, Bell Telphone had natural monopoly protection and thus did basic research to keep Washington happy. They actually innovated themselves out of business.

Perhaps the private sector only does high risk developement with exogenous pressure, so a "gritty idiot" is like Musk is essential? Again, idk.

Expand full comment
2 more comments...

No posts