Rocket Money

But sources close to Musk say that, for all his achievements, he feels blind to the universe's 'code.' As if there's a divine algorithm that's been eluding him.

Rocket Money

Nōn's fingers swiped through the countless headlines on his news feed until one caught his eye: "Elon Musk's Revelation: From Disconnection to the Universe."

Skimming the initial lines, he could feel the sensationalism dripping from the words. "Elon Musk, the genius behind the most transformative companies of the century, like SpaceX, Starlink, and Neuralink, recently watched 2001: A Space Odyssey. The experience, sources say, left him profoundly changed."

Nōn snorted. "From rocket man to movie critic. What's next?"

The article continued: "Watching the enigmatic monolith and the sentient HAL in the movie, Musk allegedly realized: 'The Universe is the Answer; we just need to find the right questions, perhaps even the number 42.' Quoting Douglas Adams there, perhaps as an homage to the absurdity of our existence."

Nōn chuckled, "Gotta hand it to Musk, man knows how to keep things interesting."

As Nōn continued reading, he was taken on a roller coaster detailing Musk's newest venture: XAI. "With the aim of understanding the very nature of the universe and consciousness, XAI may be Musk's most audacious project yet. Having funded OpenAI, revolutionized space travel, tapped into the human brain, and even acquiring Twitter, Musk's dream is now to build humanoid robots—entities that might, one day, transcend their digital boundaries."

"But sources close to Musk say that, for all his achievements, he feels blind to the universe's 'code.' As if there's a divine algorithm that's been eluding him."