Elon Musk paused while chatting about his series of potentially world-changing endeavours to say he isn't in it to provide salvation. It was during a talk on Friday at a prestigious TED Conference in Vancouver, where the tech entrepreneur was discussing his ventures building electric cars and trucks, rockets, a newly launched tunnel-boring company and even dabbling with super-fast mass transit.
"I'm not trying to be anyone's saviour," Musk said while discussing colonizing Mars and other dreams. "I am just trying to think about the future and not be sad."
"You'll tell me if it ever starts getting genuinely insane, right?" the Silicon Valley star known for turning his passions into visionary enterprises added playfully. Musk went on to tease the audience with a photo of a self-driving truck that his company Tesla Motors is adding to its line of electric cars.
Describing the vehicle as powerful enough to tow a regular big rig up a hill, he said it would handle like a sports car.
"When I was driving the test prototype for the first truck, it was really weird," he said. "I thought, 'This is crazy!' driving this large truck and it's doing these amazing manoeuvres."
A founder of the PayPal online payment system as well as Tesla and SpaceX - the maker and launcher of rockets and spacecraft - Musk is also working on building tunnels more efficiently at his aptly named Boring company.
Describing traffic jams as "soul-crushing," he said they could be eliminated by building multi-level tunnel networks for cars.
His company is already trying to bore tunnels under Los Angeles, he said.
The Boring company has a pet snail named Gary that inches along far faster than the current machines used to create tunnels, he added.
His machines would build small-bore tunnels "faster than Gary," in what he said would be a major, cost-saving advance.
A concept video illustrated how cars might someday drive from streets onto sleds lowered into tunnels and be whisked on their way.
Musk also described dabbling with an ultra-fast rail transport system known as Hyperloop that he detailed in a paper several years ago, inviting entrepreneurs to make it real.
In his vision, Hyperloop pods would zip along vacuum-sealed tubes in tunnels that could conceivably be built by the Boring company.
But Musk devotes only two or three percent of his time to the Boring company, he said, calling it more of a hobby - and boasting that it is nevertheless making good progress.
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