Jeff Bezos Says Blue Origin Needs To Be 'Much Faster' 127
In an interview with Lex Fridman, Jeff Bezos candidly acknowledged Blue Origin's slow progress (compared to SpaceX). From a report: "Blue Origin needs to be much faster, and it's one of the reasons that I left my role as the CEO of Amazon a couple of years ago," he said. "I wanted to come in, and Blue Origin needs me right now. Adding some energy, some sense of urgency. We need to move much faster. And we're going to."
How is Blue Origin going to speed up?
"We're going to become the world's most decisive company across any industry," he said. "We're going to get really good at taking appropriate technology risks, making those decisions quickly. You know, being bold on those things. And having the right culture that supports that. You need people to be ambitious, technically ambitious. If there are five ways to do something, we'll study them, but let's go through them very quickly and make a decision. We can always change our mind."
How is Blue Origin going to speed up?
"We're going to become the world's most decisive company across any industry," he said. "We're going to get really good at taking appropriate technology risks, making those decisions quickly. You know, being bold on those things. And having the right culture that supports that. You need people to be ambitious, technically ambitious. If there are five ways to do something, we'll study them, but let's go through them very quickly and make a decision. We can always change our mind."
So, to get this straight... (Score:5, Insightful)
... the guy who had made for the company a coat of arms featuring turtles reaching for space [bustle.com] over the slogan "step-by-step ferocious" and uses turtles to denote successful missions [bustle.com] is going to speed up the company?
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Partially correct. He was going to speed it up two years ago.
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Partially correct. He was going to speed it up two years ago.
But they are still shooting fuel tanks into barely the limits of outer space. People that fly on their flying fuel tank are classified as astronauts, per rule.
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Some people can admit they're wrong. A few of those can do something about it.
Bezos seems to have some capacity for the first at least.
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So, Bezos is suffering from... (Score:2, Interesting)
Musk Envy!
Questions remain:
Can Bezos _ever_ be Musk? Probably not
Can Bezos hire staff away from SpaceX , who have been Muskified? perhaps
Is Bezos likely to listen to them, if he can hire them? Not likely
I just hope that all of this thrashing about does not hamstring SpaceX by taking away key people
At least Bezos is giving SpaceX business launching staellites, which leads to the last question
Will Bezos just become another Musk customer?
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23 years in and a publicity stunt of a rocket and an engine firing on a test stand, that is not a lot to show for Bezos's ambitions
Maybe you are using different metrics
SpaceX started a year later and was already launching Falcon1 with a merlin engine from Kwaj, while Blue Origin was still on the drawing board
Failed launches or not, SpaceX was moving fast and breaking thins, which Blue Origin still aspires to do
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Is English your primary language? I am trying to figure out if you are an idiot or just not expressing what you are thinking
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Frankly you posted tangential musings, while I posted actual results
Actual results always stand against trivialities
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If SpaceX is an Apple, then Blue Origin is a apple blossom that appears to have not taken
In reference to companies trying to build systems to get objects into orbit, SpaceX outpaces Blue Origin by all metrics, unless Blue Origin has a different goal
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"Moving fast and breaking things" is not the motto you want for a rocket company, especially one that hopes to carry passengers.
Re: So, Bezos is suffering from... (Score:2)
Plus, failed launches only count if you actually expect them to succeed. These have been integration tests with lots of stretch goals, not acceptance tests like the rocket industry normally does for a first launch.
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Give Bezos a little credit. He may have not been "the coder" but he was not just the one who envisioned online purchase markets, he was the one who got venture capital while taking years of quarterly losses. He was a successful entrepreneur who could properly marshal investment capital into correct investment decisions, while the loser CEOs at uber, lyft, and other internet era startups just suck money away from people "capable" of losing it.
Bezos is probably correct on some level that Blue Sky "failure"
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As for Elon, you talking about an entrepreneurial "genius" who's lost at least 44 billion dollars of his fortune for a bullshit text messaging company.
You forgot the part where despite that misstep he's still the richest man in the world.
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As for Elon, you talking about an entrepreneurial "genius" who's lost at least 44 billion dollars of his fortune for a bullshit text messaging company.
You also forgot the part where, when Elon bought Twitter, he stated that he didn't care if it ever made money. He didn't lose money on Twitter, he spent it. There's a difference.
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Ironic (Score:5, Insightful)
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At Boca Chica, the word is that they work 12 hour shifts, 3 days on 3 days off, they have even cleared the site for holidays as witnessed on LABPadre cams
You need to stop listening to nonsense, and I sure as heck hope that Blue Origin just gets the leftovers, not key players with their efforts
Re:Ironic (Score:4, Interesting)
At SpaceX, the joke is, "if you don't come in on Saturday, don't worry about coming in on Sunday." SpaceX is very up front about this when they hire people.
First off, that doesn't sound like much of a 'joke' if the company is being very up front about that when they hire people.
It's a lifestyle choice.
Saturdays and Sundays included in the work week, isn't a "lifestyle". It's enslavement.
Good luck selling that shit to the 9 to 5 society, especially when they already know sleeping on the factory floor isn't going to result in you becoming a multi-billionaire. Today, a work/life balance means more to the most valued asset than it ever has.
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As long as they're upfront about it, and there's a choice to work at other companies, I don't care. At certain points in my life I just wanted to work all the time and get some money in the bank, and later I had a family and wanted to spend more time raising kids. People's needs vary. Are you saying you want to dictate to everyone else how much they're allowed to put into different aspects of their life just based on your opinions? I thought this was the land of the free! I guess you don't have my vote.
Land of the free, shouldn't mean home of the enslaved no matter how drunk someone is on the benefits of being a workaholic (Yeah. There's a valid reason we use -aholic to describe that addiction.)
Honestly, time should be enjoyed and respected more. All the ambition and riches in the entire world, can't buy more of it. It slips away at the same rate for all, and 100% of it can be taken from you at any moment, because Shit Happens.
We live a finite existence. Also, women in particular that live to work us
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So to summarize your point of view: "I have very strong opinions about how everyone else should live their lives, and anyone who hasn't come to the same conclusion as me is a complete moron and I look down on them." I mean, I share many of your opinions, but I learned them through living life...
Oh, you learned them from living through life? No shit. The hell do you think I got the same opinion from? My ass?
Interesting how you admonish my "moron" opinion one minute, and then validate it the next, via the wisdom we both gathered. Assumption is the mother of all fuck-ups.
Like I said. Live wisely. There is a reason humans can often look back on themselves from 10 years prior until we're half a century old and see yourself as quite the short-sighted moron.
No. Everyone does NOT have to learn the
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Even if people are okay with those hours, and it doesn't put pressure on anyone else to do more hours at other companies or to get raises, that still leaves the fact that if long hours are necessary it's because the company didn't hire enough people.
Is SpaceX short of cash? Or is this a decision to be under staffed for some other reason?
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Move Fast and Fuck Shit Up. (Score:2)
"We're going to become the world's most decisive company across any industry,"
Translation: Light speed is too slow. We need to move to...ludicrous speed. We're not here to 'break things'. We're here to fuck shit up.
Winning like Charlie Sheen with that. Prayers for Blue Origin test monkeys. Seriously. Couldn't pay me enough.
Confusing subject (Score:2)
I thought it meant it had to be 'Much Faster' to achieve orbit.
And who says Jeff Bezos isn't a rocket scientist?
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Same here. Reading the article resolved that. Unfortunately, that didn't work out for the editor.
Facts hurt (Score:3)
Blue Origin is behind the curve, they haven't even achieved orbit yet after years of work. A damming point of shame for Blue Origin is now even Amazon is using SpaceX [cnn.com]
Re:Facts hurt (Score:5, Insightful)
Blue Origin is behind the curve, they haven't even achieved orbit yet after years of work. A damming point of shame for Blue Origin is now even Amazon is using SpaceX [cnn.com]
And yet it appears that Jeff Bezos is convinced he is as smart as Elon Musk.
This should be...fucking hilarious.
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Cuz he is. Do you get your information from Thunderf00t or something?
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Unfortunately a lot of people can be swayed by speaking patterns regardless of the content. Musk clearly knows how to hire good people and also clearly seems to be able to motivate them to work hard. That is where it all ends, if he speaks on any topic it isn't in depth and rarely shows any nuance.
He also seems to be suffering from his own success these days as he is clearly only surrounded by sycophants. His purchase of Twitter and then inexplicable brand change to X of all things combined with rapid loss
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You think the guy who bought Twitter for $44 billion and has run it into the ground is smart?
You think the guy who was calling for sub 10-micron panel tolerances for the Cybertruck is smart?
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He also did Space X and Tesla Motors and others, and turn them into insanely successful companies.
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Life isn't like this. People aren't just "smart" or "stupid" (and making a determination CERTAINLY doesn't involve incorporating how much you like or dislike the person). A person can do utterly brilliant work in one regard and act completely moronic in another. Trying to categorize people into one bucket or the other hides the nuance of the world.
In particular, I'd point out that software- and engineering types - stereotypically "smart" - also tend to be the most vulnerable to Dunning-Kruger. Like, for
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Capitalism would like to talk to you in the back alley.
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You don't have to feel one way or another about the guy, but denying his intelligence just means you're mentally ill.
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And potentially the bad character of applying it to someone who has actually helped humanity in a tangible way.
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You do realize that you are Elmer Fudd in this cartoon
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Elmer Fudd wasn't the character who was always going on about the Illudium PU-36 explosive space modulator. I think we've been reading Marvin the Martian instead.
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LOL, I never found Duck Dodgers to be very compelling, the Martian Queen, on the other hand...
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LOL, I never found Duck Dodgers to be very compelling, the Martian Queen, on the other hand...
Duck Dodgers wasn't the point. His enemies were ALWAYS more interesting than he was. He was an anti-hero before anti-heroes were awesome. He sorta sucked. His compelling, engaging, and often hysterically charismatic despite themselves enemies were the draw, and the meat of his existence. Without them? He was nothing.
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Elmer Fudd who could not capture the rabbit, as compared to the aerospace engineer who could not get to orbit perhaps
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How's the budget on that rocket going there, champ? How's your cost per flight looking?
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Elon Musk is a genius when the subject is acquiring capital. Man is hype incarnated.
He may suck at actual rocket engineering (and social media handling, and designing cars etc..), but in many cases, it gets to a point where he just hire someone that actually know the hell he's doing and shove a lot of money in the person.
And then you get SpaceX, tesla etc..
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Elon Musk is a genius when the subject is acquiring capital. Man is hype incarnated.
If his skill is truly defined as "hype man" to acquire capital, I kind of doubt he would have spent so much time sleeping on a factory floor, worrying about running out of money unless a successful rocket launch actually happened.
He would have skipped all that and pimped for mo money from a yacht in international waters full of cocaine and hookers.
Also, that "hype man" sucks at pimping EV to the American Government who doesn't even acknowledge him in the conversation. Much less recognize him as an industry
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He actually wants to do the things, rather than being some sort of scammer that want to live the easy life.
That's not a skill, its just not being a dickhead.
But the part where he's good at is getting the money, and giving it to someone that can make it happen.
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Tesla short trader spotted [marketwatch.com]
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Make it extra pointy.
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Blue Origin is behind the curve, they haven't even achieved orbit yet after years of work. A damming point of shame for Blue Origin is now even Amazon is using SpaceX [cnn.com]
Blue Origin took the molases like development cycle of NASA's major contractors over the years, and applied it to a company that didn't get unlimited taxpayer dollars shoveled at it every time it hit a delay. Now he wants to be more like SpaceX, with the move fast and break things mentality of Silly Valley. I don't think Blue Origin will survive trying to shift gears that massively. The only saving grace is he's been focusing on speeding up the company for two years and has essentially zero to show for it.
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Who's been getting unlimited money?
Any company with a "cost plus" contract.
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just buy parts off Amazon (Score:2)
oh really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Blue Origin is a company that started as a glorified garage project, eventually broke out into limited commercial release, and has dreams that far exceed its (present) capabilities. One does not take such an entity and turn it into a startup sprinter to catch up on a decade's worth of missed development overnight. I'm not sure what's holding Blue Origin back. Their headcount (~11k employees) isn't that far behind SpaceX (~13k). They've got some paying customers, they have some bits and pieces of hardware. On the other hand, RocketLab has around 1000 employees and has been successfully putting satellites into orbit for five years already.
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Packaged goods (Score:5, Insightful)
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yeah, sounds like the actions of a rich kid who thinks hes way smarter than he is
This is one possible explanation. Another one is that Musk realized there is a systemic risk in government-social media collusion to suppress free speech [arstechnica.com] and used his wealth to oppose it.
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It's a problem that solves itself, much like censorship on the Internet in the first place. There will always be another service that will broadcast whatever tripe you want. It is a self correcting problem, perhaps, more importantly, it was entirely overblown. Twitter was not forced to censor anything prior to Musk's having taken ownership. As a non-government entity they are permitted to censor whatever they want.
If the censorship was as pervasive as he claimed then Trust Social would have blown up overni
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No there won't always be another option that the masses can use if the most powerful governments and companies are working in tandem to prevent it. The days of two coders in a garage with a pot of coffee starting a social network are gone.
After what happened to Parler, it clearly demonstrated the widespread collusion in tech to prevent competition. You add government on top of that and there is zero chance any credible competition could form.
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Blue Origin can and will be much quicker... (Score:2)
...he said, two years later! :D
Nice to be him. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't want to minimize Bezos' real business accomplishments, but it takes a special kind of person to hire a bunch of rocket scientist, look at them, and conclude: they really need *me*.
I wonder what it must be like to live with that much ego-validation.
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I'm no fan of Bezos but having someone that could almost literally move mountains in your corner only helps the cause. He's not Trump, he's not saying he alone can fix it. When your engineers are stuck for a variety of reasons, a non-technical manager can do a lot to get them the resources they need to move forward.
Bezos has demonstrated that he can absolutely bulldoze his way through most things. (At great cost to society at large at times)
Trying to be like Musk is pointless, comparisons should stop at ju
Bezos is a net negative for all of us (Score:2)
Amazon is a free rider. They rely on publicly funded infrastructure to support their entire business, and it's falling into disrepair. The American people are supposed to fund the rebuilding of the roads, bridges, etc. that Amazon needs to survive, but does any single company do more to grind the infrastructure into dust?
This guy should be focused on rebuilding the things his company needs to survive, not shooting rockets into space. All of his projects are myopically driven by his own ego, but what is t
Blue (Score:2)
Blue Origin is looking more and more likely to soon become Blue Screen of Death.
Blue Origin slowness... (Score:2)
I am puzzled. If you employ a team of rocket scientists to design and build rockets, surely the only thing slowing the rocket-building process is lack of money? Jeff is the one supplying the money.
Says every CEO ever (Score:2)
We're going to become the world's most decisive company across any industry,
Translation: There will be no discussion, it's my way or get out.
We're going to get really good at taking appropriate technology risks, making those decisions quickly
Translation: We're not going to listen to any concerns that might result in slowing down the process.
You need people to be ambitious, technically ambitious.
Translation: You'd better be prepared to live at the office if you want to work here.
If there are five ways to do something, we'll study them, but let's go through them very quickly and make a decision.
Translation: We're going to "study" them for a very short time and then I'm going to tell you which option we're going to pursue, and the discussion will be over.
We can always change our mind.
Translation: *I* can always change my mind. And if I do, you'd better not tell me that the timeline
How about a space plane (Score:2)
World's most decisive company... (Score:2)