Elon Musk is an entrepreneur known for co-founding
Tesla Motors, X.com—which later became PayPal—and SpaceX, the last of which launched a landmark commercial spacecraft on May 22,
2012.
Synopsis
Elon Musk was born in
South Africa and became a multimillionaire in his late twenties when he sold his start-up company, Zip2, to a division of Compaq Computers. He went on to more early success launching PayPal via a
2000 merger,
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) in
2002, and Tesla Motors in
2003. Musk made headlines in May 2012 when SpaceX launched a rocket that would send the first commercial vehicle to the
International Space Station.
Early Life
Elon Musk was born and grew up in South Africa, buying his first computer at age 10. He taught himself how to program, and when he was 12 he made his first software sale—of a game he created called
Blaster. At age 17, in
1989, he moved to
Canada to attend
Queen’s University, but he left in
1992 to study business and physics at the
University of Pennsylvania. He graduated with an undergraduate degree in economics and stayed for a second bachelor’s degree in physics.
After leaving
Penn, Elon Musk headed to
Stanford University in
California to pursue a PhD in energy physics. However, his move was timed perfectly with the
Internet boom, and he dropped out of
Stanford after just two days to become a part of it, launching his first company, Zip2
Corporation.
An online city guide, Zip2 was soon providing content for the new Web sites of both the
New York Times and the
Chicago Tribune, and in
1999, a division of Compaq
Computer bought Zip2 for $307 million in cash and $34 million in stock options.
An Earnest Entrepreneur
Also in 1999, Musk co-founded X.com, an online financial services/payments company. An X.com acquisition the following year led to the creation of PayPal as it is known today, and in
October 2002, PayPal was acquired by eBay for $1.5 billion in stock. Before the sale, Musk owned 11 percent of PayPal stock.
"
If I’m trying to solve a problem, and I think
I’ve got some elements of it kind of close to being figured out,
I’ll pace for hours trying to think it through."
Never one to rest on his laurels, Musk founded his third company,
Space Exploration Technologies Corporation, or SpaceX, in 2002 with the intention of building spacecraft for commercial space travel. By 2008, SpaceX was well-established, and
NASA awarded the company the contract to handle cargo transport for the International Space Station—with plans for astronaut transport in the future—in a move to replace NASA’s own space shuttle missions.
Another Musk venture is Tesla Motors, an automobile company dedicated to producing affordable, mass-market electric cars, which he co-founded in 2003. With a stake in the company taken by Daimler and a strategic partnership with Toyota, Tesla Motors launched its initial public offering in June
2010, raising $226 million.
The boundless potential of space exploration and the preservation of the future of the human race have become the cornerstones of Musk's abiding interests, and toward these he has founded the
Musk Foundation, which is dedicated to space exploration and the discovery of renewable and clean energy sources.
Preparing for Lift-Off
On May 22, 2012, Musk and SpaceX made history when the company launched its
Falcon 9 rocket into space with an unmanned capsule. The vehicle was sent to the International Space Station with 1,
000 pounds of supplies for the astronauts stationed there, and it is the first time a private company has sent a spacecraft to the International Space Station. Of the launch, Musk was quoted as saying, "I feel very lucky
. . . . For us, it's like winning the
Super Bowl."
Hyperloop
Musk has continued his work in attempting to make his innovative ideas a reality. In
August 2013, he released a concept for a new form of transportation called the "Hyperloop."
The new invention is intended travel at speeds greater than 700 miles per hour to commute between major cities while severely cutting the time of travel. As opposed to using railroads, the Hyperloop would use tubes for transportation, creating travel options between
Los Angeles and
San Francisco—the original proposed location—that would take a shorter amount of time than a flight. Musk says that the Hyperloop could take from seven to 10 years to be built and ready for use.
Although he introduced the Hyperloop with claims that it will be safer than a plane or train, with an estimated cost of $6 billion—approximately one-tenth of the cost for the rail system that California has been planning to make—his concept has still drawn skepticism.
California High-Speed Rail Authority Chairman Dan
Richard has stated that he will show Musk "what it really takes to build a project in California" if the Hyperloop project begins to gai
- published: 25 Jun 2015
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