Elon Musk, Grok & the Tesla Pi Phone: The Real Truth Nobody Told You
c8n7MhKmzok • 2025-11-17
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You've probably seen the posts. Elon
Musk's $789 Tesla Pi phone with free
Starlink internet, solar charging, even
brain computer interfaces. Your feed is
flooded with them. And you're probably
wondering, "Is this thing actually real?
Should you be excited?" Well, I went
down the rabbit hole on this one. I
spent hours digging through Musk's
actual interviews, fact checks, and
technical reports, and here's what I
found. The truth is way more interesting
than the hype. And honestly, it might
surprise you. Welcome back to
bitbiased.ai where we do the research so
you don't have to join our community of
AI enthusiasts. Click the newsletter
link in the description for weekly
analysis delivered straight to your
inbox. So, in this video, I'm going to
break down the entire PY phone
situation. But first, we need to talk
about Elon Musk himself because
understanding his track record is key to
understanding whether this phone could
actually happen. We'll look at his
history of making the impossible
possible, then dive into what's being
claimed about this phone versus what
Musk actually said. We'll examine the
wild features everyone's talking about,
break down the technical reality, and by
the end, you'll know exactly what's real
and what's pure internet fiction. Let's
start with the man behind the myth,
the Musk track record. Before we dive
into whether this phone is real, we need
to understand who we're dealing with.
Because Elon Musk's track record is kind
of insane, and it's exactly why people
believe these rumors in the first place.
Let's rewind to 2002.
Musk co-founded PayPal, which completely
revolutionized online payments. He sold
it to eBay and walked away with enough
money to fund his next crazy ideas. And
that's where things get interesting.
That same year, he founded SpaceX. And
everyone, I mean everyone, told him he
was going to fail. Private space
companies didn't work. NASA had a
monopoly. Rockets were too expensive,
too complex. His first three rocket
launches failed. Spectacular, expensive
failures.
He almost went bankrupt. But then the
fourth launch succeeded.
And then SpaceX became the first private
company to send a spacecraft to the
International Space Station.
Then they figured out how to land
rockets vertically so they could reuse
them.
Something even NASA said was basically
impossible.
Now SpaceX launches are so routine they
barely make the news anymore.
They've sent astronauts to orbit.
They're building Starship to go to Mars.
But wait, there's more. In 2004, Musk
joined a tiny startup called Tesla. At
the time, electric cars were jokes. golf
carts with doors. Nobody took them
seriously. The auto industry certainly
didn't. And for years, it looked like
the skeptics were right. Tesla burned
through cash. Production was a disaster.
The Model 3 launch was infamously called
production hell by Musk himself. There
were points where Tesla was weeks away
from bankruptcy.
But then something shifted. The Model 3
became the world's bestselling electric
car. Tesla briefly hit a trillion dollar
market cap. More importantly, they
forced every major automaker to go
electric. Ford, GM, Volkswagen,
Mercedes, they all pivoted their entire
strategies because of Tesla.
Whether you love or hate Musk, you can't
deny the impact. And he didn't stop
there. He backed Solar City, which
became Tesla Energy. He co-founded
OpenAI, which literally kicked off the
AI revolution we're living through right
now. He started Neurolink to work on
brain computer interfaces. He founded
the Boring Company to dig tunnels under
cities. He bought Twitter and turned it
into X overnight. Controversially, sure,
but it showed his willingness to
completely reshape existing platforms.
Then there's Starlink.
When SpaceX announced they'd launched
thousands of satellites to provide
global internet, experts said it was too
ambitious, too expensive, impossible to
coordinate.
As of now, there are over 5,000 Starlink
satellites in orbit. People in remote
areas who never had reliable internet
now have it because of those satellites.
Here's the pattern. Musk doesn't just
enter industries, he disrupts them. He
takes on entrenched giants and wins.
Not always, not immediately, but
eventually. He's contrarian by nature.
He's willing to bet everything on ideas
that sound crazy. And most importantly,
he has a track record of turning those
crazy ideas into reality. So when rumors
surface about a Musk phone that can
connect to satellites, charge from the
sun, and interface with your brain,
people believe it.
Because historically, betting against
Musk has been a losing strategy.
He's done the impossible before. Why not
again? But, and this is crucial, let's
be honest about Musk's failures, too.
Not everything he touches turns to gold.
Full self-driving for Tesla has been
just 2 years away for about 8 years now.
The solar roof tiles that were supposed
to revolutionize home energy still not
widely available and plagued with
issues.
The Cybert truck took years longer than
promised and launched with problems.
The Twitter acquisition has been
controversial to say the least. And
here's the thing about smartphones.
They're different from rockets or
electric cars. SpaceX could innovate
from scratch because nobody owns space.
Tesla could build electric cars from the
ground up. But smartphones,
Apple and Google already own this
market. They have mature ecosystems,
billions of users, decades of
refinement. Even Microsoft couldn't
crack this market, and they tried hard
with Windows Phone. So, yes, Musk can do
incredible things, but he's not
infallible, and entering the smartphone
market would be one of his biggest
challenges yet, which brings us to the
question, is he actually trying to do
it? Let's look at how these PY phone
rumors actually started.
The viral explosion. Now that you
understand Musk's track record, let me
show you how the PY phone myth exploded
across the internet. Picture this. It's
2021 and sleek concept images of a
futuristic phone start floating around
the internet. Not just any phone, a
Tesla phone, the Model Pi. Gorgeous
renders, impossibly thin design, that
signature Tesla aesthetic.
The images go viral instantly.
Everyone's talking about it.
Tech YouTubers are making videos.
Twitter is buzzing. The hype train has
left the station. But here's where it
gets weird. Fast forward to late 2024
and suddenly the posts explode again.
Except now they're not just concept art
anymore. Now you're seeing what look
like official announcements. Photos of
Elon Musk holding a mysterious phone.
Post claiming it is official.
The $789 Tesla Pi phone just changed the
entire smartphone game. Some say it's
$299.
Others claim it's $789.
The numbers don't even match, but that
doesn't slow anyone down.
Here's what really caught my attention,
though. These posts weren't coming from
tech blogs or Tesla's official channels.
They were coming from random Facebook
pages and social media accounts with
names like Trend Fuel. And the images
They look just a little too perfect.
That uncanny AI generated quality that
we're all starting to recognize. You
know what I'm talking about. That weird
smoothness, the lighting that's just
slightly off. So, I started digging
deeper. And this is where things take a
turn. Politact, AFP, Snopes, Hindustan
Times, basically every major
fact-checking organization you can think
of, they all investigated these claims.
And guess what they found? Absolutely
nothing. No source, no announcement, no
prototype, not a single shred of
credible evidence that Elon Musk or
Tesla ever said they were making a
phone. In fact, Politifact put it
bluntly. We found no source to
corroborate the claim that Musk said
this.
They checked Tesla's website. Nothing
there. They looked for official press
releases. Zero.
The entire viral phenomenon was built on
fabricated quotes, doctorred images, and
pure speculation.
One fact checker even traced the photos
back and discovered they were AI
generated.
Musk never held that phone because that
phone never existed. But wait, it gets
even more interesting
because this isn't just about fake
posts. This is about understanding what
people think this phone can do. The
features being claimed are absolutely
wild,
the impossible features.
Okay, so let's talk about these supposed
features because this is where the PY
phone myth becomes absolutely wild. The
rumors claim this phone would have
capabilities that sound straight out of
science fiction.
First up, direct Starlink connectivity.
According to the hype, this phone would
connect directly to SpaceX's satellite
network, giving you free global internet
anywhere on Earth. No cell towers
needed.
You're in the middle of the Sahara
Desert? No problem. Floating in the
Pacific Ocean? You've got five bars. It
sounds incredible, right? It Here's the
reality check. SpaceX is actually
working on direct toell satellite
service. That part is true. They've
spent $17 billion acquiring Spectrum
licenses to make it happen. But, and
this is crucial, that technology would
work on existing phones, not just a
hypothetical Tesla phone. The current
generation of iPhones and high-end
Android devices already have limited
satellite features for emergency SOS
messaging. The idea that you'd need a
special Tesla phone to access Starlink,
that doesn't add up. If Musk cracks the
code on robust satellite to phone
internet, it'll be a service plan you
add to whatever phone you already own.
Next, solar charging. The rumors claim
the Pi phone would have built-in solar
panels, maybe even something called
power glass that charges the phone from
sunlight. Sounds perfect, right? Your
phone never dies. Except here's the
problem with solar charging on phones.
Physics. The surface area on a
smartphone is tiny. Even with the most
efficient solar cells available today,
you're looking at an incredibly slow
trickle charge,
like maybe enough to keep your phone
alive in airplane mode, but nowhere near
enough to actually power modern
smartphone usage. Some niche devices
have tried solar charging before. It's
just not practical for daily use. The
technology would be more of a novelty
than a gamecher.
what Musk really said. This is the part
that shocked me most because Elon Musk
hasn't been quiet about this. He's been
asked about phone rumors multiple times
and his answer is crystal clear. He's
not making a phone. Let me repeat that.
He is not making a phone. In November
2024, Musk sat down with Joe Rogan.
Rogan brought up the phone rumors
directly. And Musk's response,
"No, we're not doing a phone.
It's not something we want to do unless
we have to." Not some vague maybe
someday response, a flat number. A month
earlier at a Tesla town hall, Musk was
even more blunt. He said, and I'm
quoting here, "The idea of making a
phone makes me want to die. Let that
sink in.
This is a man who builds rockets that
land themselves, who created a company
that tunnels under cities, who's trying
to colonize Mars, and the thought of
making a smartphone makes him want to
die.
He went on to clarify that Tesla would
only build a phone if absolutely forced
to, like if Apple or Google banned
Tesla's apps from their stores, and that
context matters.
Back in 2022, when Musk first bought
Twitter, someone asked him if he'd make
a phone if Apple and Google removed
Twitter from their app stores. His
response then was, "I certainly hope it
does not come to that, but yes, if there
is no other choice, I will make an
alternative phone. Notice the framing.
It's a contingency plan, not an actual
project."
As recently as September 2025, Musk
reiterated this position. He said Tesla
is not making a phone unless future
circumstances force them to. His
reasoning,
Tesla's apps already work perfectly fine
on Android and iOS. There's no need for
a separate device. Why would he invest
billions in building a phone from
scratch when he can just make apps for
the two platforms that already have
billions of users? So, we have a
situation where the internet is
screaming Tesla PY phone is coming while
Elon Musk himself is screaming, "No,
it's not." Multiple fact checkers have
rated these claims as completely false.
Yet, the rumors keep spreading.
But here's where it gets interesting.
Even if Musk wanted to make a phone,
what would it actually take? Let's look
at the technical reality.
The technical reality check.
Okay, let's ground ourselves in reality
for a moment. What would a Tesla phone
actually need to compete? Modern
flagship phones are technological
marvels. The iPhone 15 Pro has a
processor built on a 3 nanometer process
that's approaching the physical limits
of how small we can make transistors.
The camera systems have multiple lenses
with computational photography that
rivals professional cameras. Displays
are bright enough to see in direct
sunlight, yet power efficient enough to
last all day.
5G connectivity, Face ID or fingerprint
sensors, wireless charging, water
resistance. These are now baseline
features. And here's the kicker. The
next generation is even more expensive
to build. The rumored iPhone 18 Pro is
expected to use a 2 nanometer chip from
TSMC.
That chip alone might cost 50% more than
current generation processors.
Apple can absorb those costs because
they sell hundreds of millions of
phones. They have the scale. Tesla
doesn't. The most realistic scenario if
Tesla ever did make a phone would be a
high-end Android device with some Tesla
specific features.
car integration, maybe Starlink
connectivity, perhaps, but it wouldn't
be the revolutionary device the rumors
claim. It would be an expensive boutique
phone for Tesla super fans. Why the
rumors persist? So, if the phone doesn't
exist, if Musk says he's not making one,
if it doesn't even make business sense,
why do these rumors keep coming back?
I think there are a few reasons, and
they're actually pretty fascinating from
a psychological perspective.
First, Elon Musk is a magnet for
attention. Everything he does becomes
news. When he tweets, markets move. When
he launches a rocket, the world watches.
There's an entire ecosystem of content
creators, news sites, and social media
accounts that make money by talking
about Musk.
So, even baseless rumors about a Musk
product can generate massive engagement.
that Facebook page posting about the
$789 PY phone, they probably got
millions of views and thousands of
dollars in ad revenue.
The truth doesn't matter when clicks pay
the bills. Second, we're living in the
age of AI generated content. It's easier
than ever to create convincing fake
images and videos. You can generate a
photo of Musk holding a phone in
seconds. You can create realistic
looking product renders without any
actual product.
Most people scrolling through their
feeds don't stop to scrutinize images.
They see something that looks official,
they assume it's real, they share it,
and suddenly a fake becomes viral.
Third, and I think this is the biggest
reason, people want to believe.
There's something compelling about the
idea of Elon Musk disrupting yet another
industry. We've seen him do it with
electric cars and rockets.
Why not phones?
People are genuinely excited about the
prospect of a phone that breaks the
Apple Google duopoly. A phone with
Starlink, with next level AI, with
integration across all of Musk's
companies, it sounds amazing. So, when
someone presents that fantasy as
reality, people latch on to it. And
honestly,
I get it. The smartphone market feels
stagnant. Each new iPhone or Galaxy
feels like a marginal upgrade over the
last one. We're not seeing the
revolutionary leaps we saw in the early
2000s. So, the idea of someone coming in
and shaking everything up is appealing,
but wanting something to be true doesn't
make it true. And in this case, we have
overwhelming evidence that it's not.
What might actually happen? So, where
does that leave us? Is there any
scenario where we see a Musk related
phone?
Here's what I think is most likely. We
won't see a Tesla branded phone, but we
might see Musk's technology make its way
into phones through other means.
Starlink directtoell service is real.
SpaceX has been testing it. When it
rolls out fully, your existing iPhone or
Android phone will be able to connect to
satellites for basic connectivity in
areas with no cell service.
That's actually happening. You won't
need a special phone. It'll work with
what you already have. Musk's various AI
projects like XAI and the AI features in
Tesla vehicles could eventually power
software that runs on phones.
Maybe a Tesla app that's smarter than
competitors.
Maybe an AI assistant that works across
all your Mus connected devices.
That's feasible.
And if Tesla's car integration gets
sophisticated enough, your phone,
whatever phone you have, will become an
even more important part of the Tesla
ecosystem.
Think phone as car key. Phone
controlling your home energy system.
Phone managing your Starlink
subscription. All of that makes sense
without requiring a dedicated Tesla
phone. There's one last scenario to
consider. What if Apple or Google
actually did ban Tesla's apps or X from
their platforms? It's unlikely, but not
impossible. If that happened, Musk has
made clear he would build an
alternative, but even then, I think he'd
be reluctant. The investment required is
enormous. The distraction from his other
projects would be massive, and the
chance of success is uncertain.
My prediction, we're much more likely to
see Musk's companies enhance the phones
we already use rather than build a
competing device. That's the smart play.
It's cheaper, faster, and lets Tesla
focus on what it does best: cars,
batteries, solar, and robots.
If you found this deep dive helpful, let
me know in the comments.
What other tech rumors should I
investigate?
Have you seen these PY phone posts in
your feed? I'd love to hear your
thoughts. And if you made it this far,
thanks for sticking with me through this
journey from viral hype to verified
truth. The next time you see a too good
to be true tech announcement going
viral, remember the PY phone. Question
the source. Check the facts.
And maybe, just maybe, we can all get a
little better at separating reality from
really convincing fiction. I'll catch
you in the next
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file updated 2026-02-12 02:43:57 UTC
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