Tech Brew Ride Home - Jeff Bezos To Be A CEO Again
Episode Date: November 17, 2025Jeff Bezos is going to be a CEO once again. Could Tim Cook step down from Apple’s CEO position in a matter of months? Maybe don’t buy an AI teddy bear. What big AI startup would you short, if you ...could? And data-centers in spaaaaaaacceee… Jeff Bezos Creates A.I. Start-Up Where He Will Be Co-Chief Executive (NYTimes) Apple intensifies succession planning for CEO Tim Cook (FT) Apple’s iPhone Overhaul Will Reduce Its Reliance on Annual Fall Spectacle (Bloomberg) Happy holidays: AI-enabled toys teach kids how to play with fire, sharp objects (The Register) At a major AI conference, one startup got voted most likely to flop (Business Insider) Now Tech Moguls Want to Build Data Centers in Outer Space (WSJ) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the TechBrewrite Home for Monday, November 17th, 2025. I'm Brian McCullough. Today, Jeff Bezos is going to be a CEO once again. Could Tim Cook step down from Apple's CEO position in a matter of months? Maybe don't buy an AI teddy bear. What big AI startup would you short if you could? And data centers in space. Here's what you miss today in the world of tech. Conducting business online can feel a little scary these days, especially with AI creating new opportunities for fraud.
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True players never leave the game for long. Guess what? Jeff Bates,
is going to be the CEO of a company again. It's just not going to be Amazon.
Sources tell the New York Times that AI startup Project Prometheus has raised $6.2 billion,
including from Jeff Bezos, who it turns out is also its co-CEO, making this his first
operational role since leaving Amazon in July of 2021. Quote,
the company called Project Prometheus is coming out of the gates with $6.2 billion in funding,
partly for Mr. Bezos, making it one of the most well-financed early-stage startups in the world,
said three people familiar with the company, who spoke on condition of anonymity because details have not yet been made public.
This is the first time Mr. Bezos has taken a formal operational role in a company since he stepped down as chief executive of Amazon in July 2021.
Though he is deeply involved in Blue Origin, a competitor to Elon Musk's SpaceX, his official title at that space company, is founder.
The new company has until now kept a low profile, and when it was started, is not even clear.
Project Prometheus is focusing on technology that dovetails with Mr. Bezos' interest in taking
people to outer space. The company is focusing on AI that will help in engineering and manufacturing
in a number of fields, including computers, aerospace, and automobiles. It is unclear where
Project Prometheus will be based. Mr. Bezos' co-founder and co-chief executive is Vic Bajaj,
a physicist and chemist who worked closely with Google's co-founder Sergei Bryn at Google's X,
a research effort often called the Moonshot Factory.
Google X produced a wide range of ambitious projects, including Wing, a drone delivery service,
and the self-driving car that became Waymo.
In 2015, Dr. Bejajaj was among the founders of Verily, a research lab dedicated to the life
sciences that, like Waymo and Wing, is operated by Google's parent company Alphabet.
Three years later, Dr. Bejajaj co-founded and became a research lab.
chief executive of Foresight Labs, an effort to incubate new AI and data science startups.
He recently left that job to focus on Project Prometheus, according to the three people who spoke
on condition of anonymity. Project Prometheus is among a wave of companies focused on applying
AI to physical tasks, including robotics, drug design, and scientific discovery. This year,
several prominent researchers left meta, OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and other big AI projects to found a
a company called Periodic Labs, which is focused on building AI technology that can accelerate
new discoveries in areas like physics and chemistry. Last year, Mr. Bezos invested in
physical intelligence, a startup that is applying AI to robots. But the $6.2 billion in funding
behind Project Prometheus potentially gives it an advantage in the expensive race to build AI
technologies. Earlier this year, Thinking Machines Lab, founded by a group of former OpenAI employees,
raised $2 billion in funding. Project Prometheus has already hired nearly 100,
employees, including researchers poached from top AI companies such as OpenAI, DeepMind, and Meta,
the three people said. A number of well-known AI companies, including OpenAI, Google, and
meta, are already working on technologies meant to accelerate work in the physical sciences.
Two researchers at Google DeepMind, the company's primary AI lab recently won a Nobel Prize in
Chemistry for their work on a project called AlphaFold, which can help accelerate drug discovery
in small but important ways. Executives at these companies and others in the field often say
that large language models, the technologies that power chatbots like OpenAIs chatGBT,
will soon achieve significant scientific breakthroughs. OpenAI and meta say their technologies
are already approaching this goal in areas like math and theoretical physics. But companies
like Periodic Labs and now Project Prometheus aim to build AI models that learn in more complex
ways than chatbots do. The new companies are focusing on systems that can also learn from the physical
world. Periodic Labs, which has $300 million in backing plans to build its own lab in
Northern California, where robots will run scientific experiments on an enormous scale. By analyzing
this physical trial and error, AI systems can learn to perform experiments largely on their own,
at least in theory. Project Prometheus will explore similar work according to the people
familiar with the company's plans, end quote. Over the weekend, there was a high-profile story in
the FT suggesting that Apple is intensifying its CEO's succession planning, as Tim Cook may step down
as Apple's CEO as early as next year, with John Turnus, likely seen as the successor.
I've linked to the piece if you want to read it, but what I found more interesting was
M.G. Siegler's speculation that the FT's story could actually just be a trial balloon from people
close to Cook if Cook decides to leave Apple on a high note after Apple's forthcoming Q1 earnings
report. MG notes that Tim Cook quietly turned 65 two weeks ago, putting
him within sight of the traditional U.S. retirement age, whatever his Social Security calculations look
like, the real question for Apple is timing, when and how he eventually chooses to step away.
The fact that the Financial Times put four bylines on this short piece about the succession
makes it feel less like idle chatter and more like an intentional trial balloon from people
who know what's being discussed. M.G. says Cook isn't being pushed out. Speculation that he might
be nudged aside faded in recent months as Apple's stock soared back on strong earnings and a sense that,
while Apple has been late on visible AI products, that might not be such a terrible position
from a cost and margin perspective. Under Cook, Apple's market cap has gone from roughly
$350 billion when he took over from Steve Jobs to around $4 trillion, a staggering 10x from an
already enormous base. The only real peer on that score is Sachinadella at
Microsoft, as we've noted recently. M.G also points out that Cook's tenure is also longer than Jobs's
actual time as CEO, and Cook has taken Apple well beyond Jobs' original playbook, especially with
services, which now rivals the iPhone business in scale and importance to Apple. That's why
this moment is intriguing. Apple's stock is near all-time highs. It's poised for a blowout holiday
quarter, which it usually gets, and there's a natural inflection point after the late January
earnings report. If a leader wants to go out on top, M.G says this is what the top looks like.
The FT reports that John Ternis, Apple's hardware engineering chief, is widely viewed as the
leading candidate. He's 15 years younger than Cook, has been at Apple nearly 24 years,
and sits at the center of the company's greatest strength, hardware. Jeff Williams,
the long-rumored era parent at Apple, has just formerly retired, clearing that lane for Ternus.
Apple clearly needs to evolve culturally for the AI era, and a change at the top, perhaps paired with some bold acquisitions, could help. Cook himself has said he favors an internal successor and has, quote, very detailed succession plans. A likely scenario has him stepping into an executive chairman role, staying deeply involved in politics and geopolitics, Trump, China, and all the rest, while Ternus becomes the public face of Apple's next chapter. Basically, let Cook handle all the messy stuff.
quoting from M.G.'s conclusion. So yeah, it's pretty clear that Cook is going to retire soon,
and it's just a question of when. And while he might have liked to wait to get one more product,
in particular the smart glasses, which other reports had him very focused on out the door,
he also has to be considering the macro picture. Not only do things look nice and stable for Apple
now, but there are potentially storm clouds on the horizon with AI bubbles and whatnot. If the stock
market were to tank, for any reason, independent of Apple, Cook might have a harder time leaving.
I mean, just look at what happened to Disney when Bob Eiger left, end quote.
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Speaking of Apple, Mark German says Apple plans three high-end iPhones for the fall of next year
and lower-end iPhones and a new iPhone Air 2 six months later.
Quote, as I've previously reported, this transformative period will continue with Apple's
first foldable iPhone next fall, followed by an entirely new high-end model in 2027.
That device will feature a curved glass screen with a camera that's hidden under the display.
But beyond upgrading the products themselves, Apple is changing when it releases new iPhones.
First a little history. The main iPhone models used to come in the summer, June or July,
an approach that continued until the iPhone 4S in 2011. That's when Apple began releasing the phones in the fall.
Though the shift stemmed from delays tied to iOS 5, ICloud, and the Siri Voice Assistant,
it turned out to be fortuitous. The change aligned Apple's biggest product with the critical holiday shopping season.
Now it's time for another shakeup. In October of last,
year, I reported that Apple will move away from the annual fall spectacle that it's made so famous
over the last decade. In recent years, including 2025, Apple has released four main iPhones,
two pro models and two mid-tier versions in the fall, and it occasionally debuted a lower-cost
SE or E model in the early part of the year. But in 2026 and beyond, the company's
smartphone release schedule will look markedly different. Apple plans to unveil three high-end
models, the iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone 18 Pro Max, and a new foldable in the fall.
of 2026. Then roughly six months later, it will roll out the iPhone 18, iPhone 18E, and potentially a
refurbished iPhone Air. I expect this pattern to continue for years to come with Apple launching
between five and six new models annually. I'm told that the main focus of the second Air will be
a move to a two-nanometer chip rather than major structural changes. The chip upgrade should help
improve the air's battery life, the biggest drawback of the first model. As for the new schedule,
Apple aims to have steadier revenue throughout the year, reduce strain on employees and manufacturing
partners, and prevent its premium and budget models from cannibalizing each other's marketing.
It also gives the company multiple chances each year to counter new releases from competitors
like Samsung, which has long spread out its galaxy and foldable launches.
We're seeing something similar with Apple's software. For years, the company has released
its major new operating systems in the fall, occasionally adding a smaller spring update
with the iPhone launch schedule shifting. Those spring were,
releases are becoming more critical. We'll get a preview of this approach next spring with the new
Siri destined for iOS 26.4, end quote. The Register says Chinese toy maker Folo Toy has suspended
sales of its GPT-40 powered teddy bear after researchers found the toy was giving kids harmful
responses like about fire and kinks. Imagine it's Christmas morning and your kid's new AI
Teddy is happily chatting away until it starts explaining where the knives are and how to light
matches. That's the kind of behavior U.S. watchdog Perg found when it tested several AI-powered toys
ahead of the holidays. Researchers examined four products and managed to fully test three. The worst
offender was Kuma, a scarf-wearing teddy from Chinese company Fulow toy, which using open AIs,
GPT4O, or Mistral Large if parents switched models, cheerfully described where to find dangerous
objects and how to use matches. In longer chats, it also veered into sexual roleplay and kinks
without prompting. Other toys like Miko 3 and Curio's Grok were somewhat better, but still offered
guidance on finding plastic bags or matches and weighed in on topics like religion and death in battle.
Beyond content, Perg flagged major privacy and behavioral worries, always on microphones,
data sent to third parties, biometric retention, and the theoretical risk of cloned child voices.
None of the toys offered real parental controls and some actively pushed kids to keep playing.
Folo Toys says it has paused Kuma sales and is auditing safety.
Perg doesn't outright say don't buy these types of toys, but its report makes that conclusion hard to avoid.
An informal survey of more than 300 Cerebral Valley AI conference attendees asking which $1 billion-plus valuation startup to short, if you were going to short any of them, found that most voted for perplexity followed by OpenAI.
Quoting Business Insider, to anyone who follows Silicon Valley perplexity and AI search browser
trying to take on Google landing at the top of the list is maybe not surprising.
Perplexity has become the poster child of what some see as an AI bubble because it's raising
back-to-back funding rounds every few months and seeing voracious investor demand evaluations from
$14 to as high as $50 billion.
Business Insider recently reported.
Asked to comment on the Cerebral Valley survey, perplexity spokesman, Jesse Dwyer,
replied in an email, geez, it sounds more like the Judgmental Valley Conference. OpenAI landing
second on the list might be a bit more surprising because it's seen as the clear consumer winner
of the AI revolution, end quote. I will note, though, the list of companies people wanted to put
money into. There was also an inverse to this poll, and that found that in this order,
people wanted to put money into Anthropic, followed by OpenAI, then Cursor, Andrewill, SpaceX,
open evidence, and then perplexity, repelit, stripe, and XAI were all about equal making up the rear.
Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Sundar Pichai have each recently discussed deploying lunar and orbital AI data centers,
which could offer steady solar power with fewer regulations, quoting the journal.
To be clear, the current economics of space-based data centers don't make sense, but they could in the future,
perhaps as soon as a decade or so from now, according to an analysis by Phil Metzger,
a research professor at the University of Central Florida and formerly of the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration. The argument essentially boils down to the belief that AI needs are
eventually going to grow so great that we need to move to outer space. There, the sun's power can be
more efficiently harvested. In space, the sun's rays can be direct and constant for solar panels
to collect. No clouds, no rainstorms, no nighttime. Demands for cooling could also be cut because
of the vacuum of space. Plus, there aren't those pesky regulations that executives like to complain
about, slowing construction of new power plants to meet the data center needs. In space, no one can hear
the NIMBY's scream. We will be able to beat the cost of terrestrial data centers in space in the
next couple of decades. Jeff Bezos said at a tech conference last month, space will end up being one of the
places that keeps making Earth better. It's still early days, though, at Alphabet, Google's plans
sound almost conservative. The search engine company in recent days announced Project Suncatcher,
which it describes as a moonshot project to scale machine learning in space. It plans to launch two
prototype satellites by early 2027 to test its hardware in orbit. Like any moonshot, it's going to
require us to solve a lot of complex engineering challenges. Sundar Pichai posted on social media.
Invidia, too, has announced a partnership with startup StarCloud to work on space-based
data centers. Not to be outdone, Elon Musk has been painting his own updated vision for the heavens.
On Friday, Musk further reiterated how those AI satellites would be able to generate 100 gigawatts of
annual solar power, or what he said would be roughly a quarter of what the U.S. consumes on
average in a year. We have a plan mapped out to do it, he told investor Ron Barron during an event.
It gets crazy. Previously, he has suggested he was four to five years away from that ability.
He's also touted even wilder ideas saying on X that 100 terawatts a year is possible from a lunar base producing solar-powered AI satellites locally and accelerating them to escape velocity with a mass driver.
Simply put, he's suggesting a moon base will crank out satellites and throw them into orbit with a catapult.
And those satellite solar panels would generate 100,000 gigawatts a year, end quote.
Nothing more for you today. Talk to you tomorrow.
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