{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/5f2ae0b91ea7197e1ef08ed6/6a34eab34a2a3be0f409d2ff?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Only AI XR News Mega Show: Teflon Sam Altman, Ponzi Schemes, Why Google Blew Up Search & More","description":"<p>Charlie Fink, Ted Schilowitz, and Rony Abovitz take the full hour to work through the most consequential AI and spatial computing stories of the moment — unfiltered, in depth, and without the usual polite hedging that comes with having someone on to promote something. This is a pure news and commentary episode, and the news is strange enough that three experienced people sitting in a room still cannot fully account for it.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>AI XR News You Should Know:</strong></p><p>The OpenAI vs. Elon Musk case concluded without a clear ruling, but the more durable observation is what the whole saga revealed about Sam Altman. He has now survived being ousted by his own board (which he subsequently dismantled), a high-profile lawsuit from Elon Musk, and senior rivals leaving for government roles. Rony frames this through the Overton window — Altman studies what society is prepared to accept at any given moment and positions himself precisely there. Ted references a New Yorker profile that describes Altman as having a politician's gift for telling people what they want to hear until it becomes true. </p><p><br></p><p>The financial architecture underneath the AI boom looks precarious on close inspection. SpaceX, widely assumed to be profitable, is losing five billion dollars a year. Anthropic is spending three dollars for every dollar of revenue it generates — and is paying SpaceX approximately one billion dollars a month for compute through roughly 2030. Rony's framing lands hard: two money-losing entities are funding each other while NVIDIA captures all the margin in between. Sequoia published a fifty-page analysis arguing the economics cannot work — while simultaneously holding positions in the companies it is critiquing. </p><p><br></p><p>Google I/O delivered less on wearables than expected, but the real story was a deliberate strategic decision to put Gemini at the center of the company's entire product surface — effectively cannibalizing an eighty-two-billion-dollar search business before a competitor does it for them. The Innovator's Dilemma, run on purpose. On the hardware side, Android XR glasses are designed to be imperceptible as technology — thin temples, hidden camera portals, frames that belong in an optometrist's display case rather than a trade show floor. Rony notes that Google's glasses almost certainly incorporate Magic Leap optics, following a partnership announced in fall 2025. </p><p><br></p><ul><li>[00:00] – Cold open and episode framing: why there is no guest today and what the trio plans to cover.</li><li>[04:15] – OpenAI vs. Elon Musk non-verdict: what the outcome (and lack of one) actually reveals.</li><li>[09:30] – Sam Altman and the Overton window: Rony's read on how Altman has survived everything thrown at him.</li><li>[16:00] – Anti-AI backlash on campuses: Eric Schmidt booed at University of Arizona, YouGov poll showing 69 percent of young people negative on AI, and what the demographic gradient means.</li><li>[24:45] – SpaceX financials and the AI funding loop: the five-billion-dollar annual loss, Anthropic's burn rate, and Charlie's Ponzi scheme framing.</li><li>[33:20] – Sequoia's fifty-page report and the ad model endgame: Ted's argument that Google wins because they already know the business model.</li><li>[41:00] – Google I/O: the deliberate destruction of the search business, Android XR glasses, and why distribution beats specifications.</li><li>[49:10] – AI accountability and the airplane analogy: Ted's line, Rony's \"underground noise\" from generals and CTOs, and the problem of regulatory vocabulary.</li><li>[55:30] – Palantir, dual-use opacity, and the Lookout Mountain Air Force Station story: Rony on Jared Leto, classified film studios, and Cold War bunkers in Laurel Canyon.</li><li>[01:01:00] – The success ledger: who is measuring impact, and what should actually count as winning.</li></ul><p><br></p><p>This episode is sponsored by Zappar and Mattercraft. Mattercraft is Zappar's web-based platform for building augmented reality experiences without an app. Find them at <a href=\"http://mattercraft.io/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">mattercraft.io</a>.</p>","author_name":"Charlie Fink Productions"}