Elon Musk says he's making "great progress" toward his goal of getting to Mars by 2022.
Speaking during a last-minute appearance at SXSW,Watch The Fearless Online Musk said he thinks SpaceX's Mars ship will be ready for its first trips in less than a year.
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk drops epic Falcon Heavy launch trailers made by 'Westworld' co-creator"In the short term, Mars is really about getting the space ship built, and we're making great progress," he said.
He predicted that the ship would be ready to take to the skies next year -- albeit for short flights only.
"We are building the first ship, the first interplanetary ship right now, and I think we will be able to do short flights, short sort of up and down flights, probably sometime in the first half of next year," he said.
Though still a long way from getting all the way to Mars, it would be an important milestone for Musk, who has said he wants to get to the red planet by 2022.
Still, the SpaceX and Tesla CEO noted that he has a history of being overly ambitious when it comes to providing timelines. "People have told me that my timelines have historically been optimistic," he told the crowd.
In true Elon Musk fashion, he also spoke at length about his well-known fear of artificial intelligence.
"We're quite close o the cutting edge in AI and it scares the hell out of me," he said. "We have to figure out some way to ensure that the advent of digital super intelligence is one which is symbiotic with humanity. I think that's the single biggest existential crisis that we face."
Though many experts have discounted his doomsday fears, Musk dismissed AI critics and doubled down on his position.
"Mark my words, AI is far more dangerous than nukes."
This fear of AI, by the way, is part of the reason why Musk is so keen on Mars. He explained that colonizing Mars, would be an important step necessary to ensuring humanity's survival in the event of a future dark age.
The Laundry Room by Thomas BellerUmberto Eco on ‘The Prague Cemetery’ by Andrew MartinThe Desert’s Daughters by Jenna WorthamStaff Picks: Food Rules, the American Dream by The Paris ReviewKate Beaton on ‘Hark! A Vagrant’ by Nicole RudickDear Stanley by Emma StraubMore From Our Southern Editor: House of Horrors by Lorin SteinAsk the Paris Review! (West Coast Edition) by Sadie SteinWork Frustrations; Social Climbing by Lorin SteinDaniel Sada by Francisco GoldmanThe Smartest Gifts of the Season by The Paris ReviewOn the Shelf by Deirdre FoleyKate Beaton on ‘Hark! A Vagrant’ by Nicole RudickCongratulations to Julian Barnes by The Paris ReviewThe Corner Booth by Vanessa BlakesleeAssault on the Minibar by Dubravka UgresicFake Paintings; Perfume Tester by Chris FlynnThe Grand Map by Avi SteinbergPart 3: The Departure by Mark Van de WalleBranford Marsalis by Sam Stephenson They Tried to Guess My Age By My Vocabulary. They Were Wrong In Which Robert Walser Translates Paul Verlaine (Kind of...) Ramon Todo‘s Glass Books: Good for Looking, Not for Reading What if Hamlet Were Fat? Looking at Shakespeare’s Diction Staff Picks: Castrating Cattle, Driving on Drugs by The Paris Review On Ham, Eternity, and a Quotation of Dorothy Parker’s Best tablet deal: Save $55 on Amazon Fire Max 11 Staff Picks: Barbara Pym, Eileen Myles, Bryan Doerries The Parallel Worlds of Oren Ambarchi and Tyondai Braxton Inside the House Where Coltrane Composed “A Love Supreme” The Striped Pig, and Other Great Old Newspaper Names On the Everly Brothers’ “Bowling Green” On “Little Deuce Coupe” and the Joys of Unlikely Love Songs Having Trouble Writing? Try “Once Upon a Time.” Remembering Bill Becker, a Loyal Friend of The Paris Review Taking Apart the Glitz and Glamour of Modern Websites Lerner, Frazier, Coates, Eisenman—MacArthur Fellows in the Review Roland Barthes Foresees the Rise of Trump On Prison Literature & Dostoyevsky’s Notes from a Dead House Visiting Persephone Books
2.4294s , 10109.53125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch The Fearless Online】,Co-creation Information Network