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AI & TECH

Musk bets on AI hardware supremacy to supply rivals like Anthropic

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 · from 2 podcasts, 3 episodes
  • Elon Musk leased his flagship 220,000-GPU Colossus data center to Anthropic, shifting xAI’s focus from building frontier models to becoming the industry’s top compute supplier.
  • Anthropic’s revenue skyrocketed 80x year-over-year, but growth was throttled by GPU scarcity until Musk’s deal doubled Claude Pro user limits overnight.
  • Anthropic unveiled agent features like Dreaming for self-improvement and Outcomes for automated grading, cementing its push toward reliable AI workforces over raw model intelligence.

Elon Musk folded his model-building ambition into a new business: becoming AI’s hardware landlord. After failing to match frontier rivals with xAI’s Grok, Musk spent a week with the Anthropic team and concluded he’d rather power them than compete. He leased his 220,000-GPU Colossus 1 cluster to Anthropic, ending the GPU famine that had capped Claude Pro usage throughout 2024. According to Nathaniel Whittemore, the move immediately doubled user rate limits and signaled Musk’s pivot from chasing OpenAI to competing directly with AWS and Azure for compute dominance.

On The AI Daily Brief, Whittemore explained this resolves a mutual crisis. Anthropic had best-in-class coding models but no scale; Musk had unprecedented scale but a mediocre model. The alliance lets Anthropic focus on software while Musk’s SpaceX provides the physical backbone. Musk reportedly justified the deal by saying no one at Anthropic set off his “evil detector.” He’s now converting electrons to tokens faster than anyone, generating billions in revenue to fund his own model training on the newer Colossus 2 cluster.

“Elon Musk is moving from a ‘model builder’ phase into a ‘compute kingmaker’ role similar to Nvidia’s Jensen Huang.”

- Nathaniel Whittemore, The AI Daily Brief

Anthropic’s explosive growth made the compute crunch acute. CEO Dario Amodei revealed the company saw an 80x annualized growth rate in revenue and usage this year - far exceeding its planned 10x annual target. This velocity, combined with Musk’s hardware, creates a formidable force. On All-In, David Sacks cited Anthropic’s revenue tripling from $10B ARR in January to $30B ARR by March, then hitting $44B ARR in April. He argues that trajectory could make Anthropic the most powerful monopoly in history, using safety rhetoric as a potential tool for regulatory capture.

Anthropic is channeling that scale into building agentic infrastructure, not just bigger models. At its Code with Claude event, the company skipped a flagship model release to showcase “harnesses” like Dreaming - a scheduled memory review that lets agents learn from past sessions - and Outcomes, which uses a separate grading agent to score work against user-defined rubrics. Internal tests showed Outcomes improved file generation quality by 8.4% for Word documents and 10.1% for PowerPoint slides. Boris Cherny, creator of Claude Code, stated there is no manually written code left at Anthropic; Claude agents coordinate via Slack, code in loops, and resolve issues autonomously.

The deal reshapes the competitive landscape. Musk is betting his engineering speed and access to power gives him a structural advantage over cloud providers. As Chamath Palihapitiya predicted on The AI Daily Brief, power and data center constraints are forcing these “trade-back” deals where software leaders rent hardware from specialists. For Musk, it’s a pivot to what he does best: solving hard physical problems at scale. For Anthropic, it’s the runway to chase “infinite” context windows and multi-agent coordination - shifting from a chatbot that answers questions to a system that functions like a reliable, evolving employee.

“Anthropic uses safety rhetoric for regulatory capture. This strategy could lead to a $1 trillion revenue run rate by 2027.”

- David Sacks, All-In

The collaboration underscores a broader industry shift where access to compute is becoming a more decisive moat than algorithmic breakthroughs. While OpenAI and Google chase the next model release, Musk and Anthropic are building the infrastructure to turn those models into persistent, scalable workforces. The question is whether this hardware-for-software trade makes Musk the industry’s indispensable kingmaker - or just a temporary landlord until someone builds a bigger warehouse.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

How to Build an AI Native Team with Mike Cannon-BrookesMay 9

  • Anthropic launched Dreaming, a scheduled memory review system for agents that extracts patterns from past sessions to improve performance over time.
  • Anthropic is developing future models with higher judgment, 'infinite' context windows, and multi-agent coordination, with research head Diane Penn suggesting infinite context could enable continual learning.
  • Anthropic and SpaceX announced a partnership granting Anthropic full use of XAI's Colossus 1 data center, containing 220,000 Nvidia GPUs operating at 300 megawatts.
  • Elon Musk explained his decision to lease Colossus 1 after meeting with Anthropic's team and concluding their work was 'good for humanity'.
  • Nathaniel Whittemore argues Elon Musk's pivot from model builder to compute provider represents AI play 3.0, aligning with his strength in scaling known-but-hard infrastructure projects.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya predicted power constraints would force AI labs to negotiate for compute, creating an opportunity for SpaceX's excess capacity.
  • Anthropic will dissolve XAI as a separate company, integrating it as SpaceX AI, and will initially raise API rate limits and eliminate peak hour reductions for Claude Code users.
Also from this episode: (6)

AI & Tech (4)

  • Anthropic's Code with Claude event centered on agent harnesses and workflow tools rather than a major model release, reflecting the shift from model to ecosystem competition.
  • Anthropic's Outcomes feature uses a separate grading agent with a user-defined rubric to automatically evaluate and iterate on agent outputs, improving document quality by 8.4% for Word and 10.1% for PowerPoint.
  • Managed Agents now support multi-agent orchestration, allowing a lead agent to delegate tasks to specialists with shared context and auditable execution traces.
  • Anthropic released a suite of 10 predefined financial service agents for Claude Finance, including pitch builders and market researchers, alongside a cookbook for customization.

Enterprise (1)

  • Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei revealed the company saw 80x annualized growth in revenue and usage during the first quarter of 2026.

Coding (1)

  • Claude Code creator Boris Cherny disavowed the term 'vibe coding', stating his company uses coordinated AI agents over Slack with automated testing and no manually written code.

Surprise Elon Anthropic Team Up Reshapes the AI RaceMay 7

  • Anthropic's 'Dreaming' feature is a scheduled memory review system that analyzes agent sessions to identify recurring mistakes and successful workflows, automatically encoding these learnings to preload into future agent operations.
  • Dario Amodei revealed Anthropic saw an 80x annualized growth rate in revenue and usage during the first quarter of this year, far exceeding their planned 10x annual growth.
  • The partnership grants Anthropic immediate use of X.AI's Colossus 1 data center, which contains 220,000 Nvidia GPUs operating at a 300-megawatt capacity, to alleviate their severe compute crunch.
  • Elon Musk explained his shift in stance came after meeting with Anthropic's team, stating no one 'set off my evil detector' and that he was leasing Colossus 1 as SpaceX had already moved training to the newer Colossus 2 cluster.
  • The host argues the SpaceX-X.AI merger was less about giving SpaceX a model like Grok and more about establishing a footprint in terrestrial compute, positioning Elon Musk as an AI infrastructure kingmaker akin to Jensen Huang.
  • Diane Penn outlined Anthropic's future model roadmap, focusing on three key features: higher judgment and 'code taste', 'infinite' context windows, and enhanced multi-agent coordination.
  • Before the event, Anthropic released a suite of 10 predefined financial service agents for Claude Finance, including a pitch builder, market researcher, and month-end closer, alongside new connectors for platforms like Dun & Bradstreet and Verisk.
  • The host notes X.AI's model development had stalled with Grok 4.2 in February gathering little buzz, and the company had seen all co-founders depart over the past year, leaving Elon Musk to acknowledge a need for a 'total rebuild'.
Also from this episode: (3)

AI & Tech (3)

  • Anthropic's 'Outcomes' feature uses a separate grading agent to score agent outputs against a user-defined rubric. Internal tests showed it improved file generation quality by 8.4% for Word documents and 10.1% for PowerPoint slides.
  • Anthropic's managed agents now support multi-agent orchestration, where a lead agent can delegate tasks to specialist sub-agents that work in parallel on a shared file system, with the entire process auditable in Claude Console.
  • Boris Churnney stated there is no manually written code left at Anthropic; Claude agents coordinate via Slack, code in loops, and resolve issues across the codebase, rendering the term 'vibe coding' an understatement of their system.

Elon's Anthropic Deal, The Next AI Monopoly?, "FDA for AI" Panic, Trading the AI BoomMay 8

  • Elon Musk leased Colossus 1, his H100-powered data center, to Anthropic, providing them with over 220,000 Nvidia GPUs and over 300 megawatts of energy.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya argues AI revenue growth for Anthropic and OpenAI is constrained entirely by compute and power supply, not demand. Brad Gerstner estimates this deal will generate $4-5B in incremental revenue for SpaceX this year.
  • David Sacks cites Anthropic's revenue growth as unprecedented, tripling from roughly $10B ARR to $30B ARR from January to March 2024, then accelerating to $44B ARR in April. He argues this trajectory could make it the most powerful monopoly in history.
  • Sacks draws a parallel between Anthropic's safety-focused branding and John D. Rockefeller, suggesting effective altruism rhetoric could distract from the creation of a historic monopoly, using the hypothetical example of 'Safe Oil'.
  • Sacks argues the real regulatory need is for cyber defense, as models like Mythos and OpenAI's equivalent give sophisticated hacking capabilities. He supports KYC for preview API access but opposes pre-release government approval of models.
  • Brad Gerstner points to hyperscaler revenue growth as proof of the AI boom's ROI: AWS grew 28% to a $150B run rate, Azure grew 39% to $108B, and Google Cloud grew 63% to $80B.
  • Brad Gerstner credits Trump administration policies - rescinding Biden-era chip/model approval rules and promoting 'drill baby drill' energy policies - for unleashing the AI boom and enabling the concurrent blue-collar construction surge.
  • David Sacks identifies organized activist groups, funded by unknown parties, as the primary force protesting new data center construction, comparing their tactics to those that halted nuclear reactor construction decades ago.
Also from this episode: (5)

Regulation (1)

  • The hosts discuss reports that the White House is considering an 'FDA for AI' to vet new models for safety, a move reportedly catalyzed by Anthropic's Mythos model. David Sacks dismisses this as fake news, stating senior Trump officials do not support an approval regime.

AI & Tech (2)

  • Chamath Palihapitiya is skeptical that AI-driven productivity gains have yet materialized in broader economic data, noting a lack of evidence for lifted S&P 500 operating margins. He predicts a reckoning on ROI within roughly 500 days.
  • Gerstner argues against top-down government solutions for healthcare and minimum wage, stating market-driven abundance from AI will solve these problems more effectively than increased regulation.

Business (1)

  • David Sacks counters that unemployment remains at historic lows (~4.2%) despite efficiency gains, and a Wall Street Journal article shows it's getting easier for recent college graduates to find jobs, contradicting AI job-loss narratives.

Startups (1)

  • Jason Calacanis advocates for tech winners to give back, suggesting companies like Nvidia or SpaceX allocate 1-5% of IPO shares to a public investment fund, and calls for a sector-led, gradual increase in the minimum wage to boost consumer spending.