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Just came across something fascinating about how Elon actually operates at SpaceX. Apparently Dolly Singer, who headed talent recruitment there, gave this wild description in a BBC doc - she basically said working under Elon is like joining the Navy SEALs of engineering. Not in a motivational poster way, but literally the hardest thing you'll ever do.
What struck me most was her take on how his mind works. She described it as processing information at a rate that's orders of magnitude beyond normal people. His problem-solving approach apparently operates on a completely different cognitive level. When you're in a room with him, you're constantly learning to manage uncertainty and handle challenges that most people would consider unsolvable.
Here's where it gets interesting though - Singer didn't hesitate to make a direct comparison. She stated that in her view, Elon is smarter than Einstein. Not just in raw IQ, but in the combination of intelligence and ambition. The guy literally thinks in terms of what's 'impossible' and treats that as the starting point for engineering problems, not the endpoint.
What this reveals is why he's managed to lead in so many different domains - EVs, rockets, AI, brain-computer interfaces - all within a couple decades. The common thread isn't luck or timing. It's that his brain genuinely doesn't accept 'impossible' as an answer. When you operate from that baseline, entire categories of problems become solvable.
The SpaceX culture Singer described makes sense in that context. You're not just working there to build rockets. You're part of a team that's trained to operate in discomfort, to grow every single day, to think bigger than conventional engineering allows. It's why the talent there tends to be exceptional.
Markets are responding to this kind of innovation momentum too. BTC sitting at 69.17K with a 3.48% move, ETH at 2.14K up 4.85%, even DOGE showing 2.12% strength. The broader narrative around what's possible in tech and space is clearly influencing sentiment across the board.