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Elon Musk Spending Again? 60 Billion to Buy Cursor — Is This a "Pinduoduo Cut" in the AI World or a Dimensionality Reduction Strike?
When Elon Musk spent 60 billion to acquire Cursor, many people's first reaction wasn't shock, but—"Is he bored again?"
But don't rush; on the surface, this looks like a "tycoon buying toys," but fundamentally, it could be a major reshuffle in the AI programming landscape.
Let's look at the logic: SpaceX itself isn't a software company, but it heavily relies on engineering efficiency. From rockets to satellites, the code complexity is off the charts. And what does Cursor focus on? AI coding, auto-completion, engineering-level collaboration. This is like installing an "extra programmer plugin" for SpaceX.
The question is: why spend 60 billion? Because this isn't about buying tools; it's about buying the "future mode of production." If AI can boost engineering efficiency tenfold, then the time SpaceX saves is equivalent to a rocket launch window.
Even more interesting is that this could be Musk's move to counter OpenAI and Google. While others are building large models, he's directly integrating AI into industrial systems.
To sum up: while others are still competing in AI chat, Musk is already competing in "AI rocket building."
#SpaceX花600亿购买Cursor