Transcript
dXmAAEQXfcg • Macrohard vs Microsoft: Elon Musk’s AI Company That Could Replace Millions of Jobs
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You're scrolling through LinkedIn and
seeing another headline about AI
replacing workers. And maybe you're
thinking your job is still safe because
it requires human judgment. Here's what
caught me off guard about Elon Musk's
newest project, Macrohard. He's building
an entire software company where AI does
everything, coding, testing, even
managing without human employees. And
the most surprising part, it might
actually work. Welcome back to
bitbiased.ai, 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
breaking down the battle between
Macrohard and Microsoft, examining
Musk's track record with AI and showing
you exactly how this bold experiment
could reshape American work as we know
it. By the end, you'll understand not
just what's coming, but how to position
yourself in this AIdriven future. First
up, let's look at Microsoft's current
dominance and why they should actually
be worried.
Microsoft, the AI giant
you already know. Let's start with the
elephant in the room. Microsoft isn't
some dusty old software company anymore.
Founded by Bill Gates and Paul Allen
back in 1975, Microsoft has transformed
itself into something much bigger than
Windows and Office.
Here's where it gets interesting. Under
CEO Sacha Nadella, Microsoft became only
the second company ever to hit a $3
trillion market cap.
Think about that for a second. Three
trillion dollar.
But here's what most people miss.
Microsoft didn't get there by accident.
They became one of the most aggressive
corporate investors in AI, pouring over
$13 billion into Open AI, the company
behind Chat GPT.
And this investment is paying off big
time. Their Azure cloud services and
co-pilot AI tools just helped boost
revenue by 15% in fiscal year 2025,
contributing to a staggering $281
billion in sales. Now, you might be
thinking, Microsoft is just playing it
safe, right? Well, yes and no. Microsoft
has this massive global user base
running on billions of devices, decades
of software expertise, and deep pockets
for research. They've got everything an
incumbent needs to stay on top. But
here's the twist. Some analysts argue
that Microsoft has grown more reactive
than innovative. They're still producing
hardware like Xbox and Surface tablets,
but critics suggest they're often
chasing trends rather than setting them.
What's fascinating is how Microsoft is
evolving. They're transforming from what
was once a rigid software factory into a
platform and cloud services leader.
Every single product they offer now,
from cloud computing to developer tools,
has AI baked into it.
Microsoft's founding vision was actually
of a software factory unconstrained by
physical products. And ironically,
that's exactly what makes them
vulnerable to what's coming next.
Enter Elon Musk, the serial disruptor.
Now, let's talk about the man behind
MacroArt.
Elon Musk isn't exactly known for
playing it safe. This South African
entrepreneur helped create PayPal, then
transformed entire industries with Tesla
and SpaceX.
But here's what you need to understand
about Musk's approach to AI. He's not
just building another tech company. He's
got a reputation for audacious goals,
colonizing Mars, autonomous cars, you
name it. But his predictions about AI
are what should grab your attention.
Musk has boldly stated that AI and
robots will replace all jobs and that
working will be optional.
Let that sink in for a moment. He's not
saying might replace or could
potentially replace. He's saying it will
be replaced. And he's backing up these
predictions with real action, launching
his own AI company called XAI in 2023,
focused on developing large language
models like his Gro AI. But wait, before
you think Musk is completely antihuman,
here's the nuance that most people miss.
He's actually emphasizing the importance
of human expertise in AI development.
Musk is actively hiring top engineers
for macro hard and has noted that
creating advanced AI requires creative
problem solving and oversight that only
people can provide. So, what's his real
vision? a hybrid model where AI agents
do most of the heavy lifting, overseen
and guided by elite human engineers.
Think about Musk's track record. He
disrupted the automotive industry with
electric vehicles, revolutionized space
travel with reusable rockets, and pushed
solar energy into the mainstream.
Every single time, people said it
couldn't be done, and every single time
he proved them wrong. Now he's betting
that his next big disruption will be in
how software companies are built and run
using AI. And this next part will
surprise you. What exactly is Macrohard?
Here's where things get really
interesting.
Macrohard isn't trying to be another
Microsoft clone. It's not a hardware
manufacturer at all. Instead, it's
conceived as a purely AI run company
where the entire software development
cycle is driven by AI models.
But why this approach?
Well, Musk made one critical
observation. Microsoft and other big
software companies mostly sell digital
products and outsource their hardware
anyway. Therefore, in principle, it
should be possible to simulate an entire
software firm like Microsoft entirely
with AI. In Musk's own words,
Macrohart's goal is to create a company
that can do anything short of
manufacturing physical objects directly.
Much like how Apple designs products,
but has partners actually make them,
Macrohard would handle all the digital
work through AI agents.
Essentially, instead of human coders,
managers, and testers, autonomous AI
agents would handle those tasks. Let me
break down what makes macro hard
different because this is where your
understanding of the future of work
starts to crystallize.
First, every phase of software creation,
designing, coding, testing, and
deployment would be handled by AI
agents, not assisted by AI. Handled by
AI.
Macrohard aims to be a purely AI run
company where autonomous agents take
care of everything from designing and
coding to testing and deploying
software.
No human bottlenecks, no vacation days,
no salary negotiations.
Second, like Apple's model, Macrohard
would outsource any hardware production.
Since Microsoft doesn't actually
manufacture gadgets themselves,
Macrohard won't build devices either. It
will focus purely on software delivered
through cloud and digital channels.
This keeps overhead incredibly low and
scalability incredibly high. But here's
what gives Macroard its real power, the
massive computing backbone.
Macrohart plans to leverage XAI's own
Gro 5 language model and the Colossus 2
supercomputer, which is currently one of
the largest AI clusters in existence.
These high performance GPUs would allow
the system to process data at scale for
continuous software generation.
We're talking about computational power
that most companies can only dream of.
Now, here's the part that might make you
a little uncomfortable.
In Musk's vision, the company might
start with a skeleton team of engineers
and then have AI handle most engineering
tasks.
Musk himself wrote that Macroh hard will
be operated largely by AI agents, not
humans, essentially simulating a company
like Microsoft with artificial managers
and developers. Think about what that
means for a moment. The business model
is still evolving. Macrohard could sell
AI agents as a service, software
licenses, or cloud subscriptions. The
exact approach is undecided, but
analysts are watching closely because
this raises fundamental questions about
how value is created and captured in an
AI first world. XAI's own statements
claim that Macro hard will use advanced
AI models at scale to develop software
faster and with fewer errors than
traditional methods. If this utopian
model actually works, it would
completely redefine how code is written
and products are delivered. and
Microsoft should be paying very close
attention.
The faceoff, Macrohard versus Microsoft.
Now, let's get into the real comparison
because this is where the rubber meets
the road. Macrohard and Microsoft differ
in several fundamental ways that will
shape the future of the tech industry.
Start with the company model. Microsoft
has roughly 200,000 employees,
engineers, managers, sales teams,
support staff, you name it. It's a
traditional corporate structure.
Macroh hard, by contrast, is designed to
be operated largely by AI agents, not
humans.
We're talking about automating or
replacing roles that have always been
filled by human teams. This isn't just
about efficiency. It's about reimagining
what a company even is.
Then there's hardware.
Microsoft still sells physical products
like Xbox gaming consoles and Surface
tablets.
Macrohard explicitly will not
manufacture hardware.
It follows an Apple-like strategy. Set
the software standards and outsource any
physical production.
This keeps Macrohard lean and focused
purely on what AI does best. But the
development process is where things get
truly revolutionary.
Today, Microsoft develops software with
human engineers who are aided by tools
like GitHub Copilot.
The humans are still in charge using AI
as an assistant. Macrohard flips this
entirely. Its AI agents will write code,
test software, and manage projects
autonomously.
Where Microsoft uses AI to assist
humans, Macrohard plans for AI to
replace many humans altogether.
Now, scale and resources tell an
interesting story.
Microsoft has decades of legacy products
and a vast loyal user base. They've got
$281 billion in annual sales and a
proven track record.
Macrohard, by contrast, is starting from
absolute zero. It's relying on Musk's
Gro AI and Colossus computing
infrastructure to somehow match
Microsoft's scale. That's a tall order.
Microsoft's wealth and ecosystem give
them an enormous head start, while
Macroard is completely unproven.
But remember Tesla was unproven once
too.
Leadership and strategy couldn't be more
different. Microsoft is led by Satya
Nadella and a professional executive
team focused on incremental growth and
serving enterprise clients. It's steady,
predictable, and conservative.
Macrohard is Musk's project, a rapid
experimental push into uncharted AI
territory.
As one tech analysis perfectly put it,
Macrohard is Musk's next bet on AI, a
high-risk, high-reward gambit rather
than a steady corporate strategy.
In summary, Macrohard's AI only approach
contrasts sharply with Microsoft's
human-driven legacy.
Microsoft is entrenched with billions of
users and decades of trust.
Macrohard is a radical experiment in
automation.
If Macrohard can truly automate software
development at scale, it could pose an
entirely new kind of competition to
Microsoft.
But it also faces enormous hurdles to
match Microsoft's scale, reliability,
and user trust. Battle of the founders,
Musk versus Gates.
Let's talk about the masterminds behind
these companies because understanding
them helps us predict where this is all
heading.
Both Musk and Bill Gates reshaped the
tech industry, but their styles and
visions couldn't be more different.
First, track record. Musk has this
serial disruptor image, and honestly,
he's earned it. He drove Tesla to lead
the electric vehicle revolution, built
SpaceX rockets that routinely land
themselves like something out of science
fiction, and spearheaded ventures like
Solar City and the Boring Company.
Gates on the other hand co-founded
Microsoft and led it to completely
dominate personal computing.
Windows and Office became so ubiquitous
that we take them for granted today. He
left day-to-day management in 2000 to
focus on philanthropy through the Gates
Foundation, but he remains a major voice
in tech strategy.
Their AI philosophies reveal a
fascinating contrast.
Musk is a fierce advocate for AI
automation. He co-founded OpenAI, later
left and criticized its direction, and
now boldly predicts AI will replace most
human jobs. Gates, by contrast,
acknowledges AI's immense power, but
urges caution.
In a recent comment, he noted that
coding is too complex to fully replace
humans using AI, suggesting there are
hard limits to what automation can
achieve.
Gates has invested heavily in AI through
Microsoft and health research, but he
consistently stresses that humans still
add critical value that machines cannot
replicate. When it comes to their
approach to work, Musk famously demands
intense aroundthe-clock effort from
employees.
He's called remote work morally wrong
for some jobs and has zero patience for
lagging productivity.
He even proposed a government department
of government efficiency run by AI to
purge wasteful bureaucracy. Gates, by
comparison, was a rigorous software
engineer who earned the nickname father
of basic, but his public image is more
that of a methodical programmer and
later a careful philanthropist. Gates
hasn't called for mandatory inoff work,
though he has embraced policy solutions
like universal basic income to address
automation. Similar to Musk, their
visions for the future tell you
everything you need to know.
Musk envisions humans exploring Mars,
uploading brains to computers, and he
talks openly about the need for
universal basic income as AI rises. He's
looking decades, even centuries ahead.
Gates is more focused on immediate
challenges, global health, climate
change technology, and ensuring AI
benefits humanity responsibly. today.
In essence, Musk is the provocator.
He pushes radical automation, files
lawsuits against AI companies, and
demands rapid innovation at any cost.
Gates is the steadier pioneer who built
Microsoft's empire and now advises
caution on AI deployment, though he
still funds cutting edge research.
Their legacies converge in philanthropy
and global impact, but diverge
dramatically on risk tolerance and
rhetoric.
And this difference shapes everything
about how Macrohard and Microsoft will
compete.
What this means for American workers?
Here's the question on everyone's mind.
What does all this mean for your job?
Macrohard's AIcentric model has sparked
intense debate about how work will
fundamentally change in America.
Musk himself doesn't mince words. He
says AI and robots will replace all jobs
and working will become optional. Not
might, will. Let's look at the data
because this isn't just speculation.
Analysts estimate that up to 80% of US
workers could see at least 10% of their
tasks affected by AI.
Even more striking, about 19% of workers
could have more than half their duties
disrupted or automated.
In practical terms, coding jobs and
routine tech tasks are most at risk
right now. XAI claims Macrohard will
allow software to be built faster and
with fewer errors via AI, which sounds
great until you realize that also means
far fewer human coders and testers are
needed. But here's the nuance that the
headlines often miss. The vision isn't
completely human-free.
Musk's emphasis on the importance of
human expertise and his active hiring of
elite engineers suggests he expects
people to steer and oversee the AI. In
the near term, Macrohard will likely
create new high-tech jobs for AI
trainers, data engineers, and oversight
specialists, even as it reduces
traditional programming positions.
Think of it like this. Instead of
hundreds of engineers writing millions
of lines of code, Macrohard might have a
few dozen engineers supervising AI
coding agents. The jobs don't disappear
completely, they transform.
But that transformation is brutal for
anyone who hasn't prepared for it.
Policy thinkers are already sounding
alarm bells about this transition. Musk
has advocated for universal basic income
as a social safety net for a robot
automated future.
He argues that automation could free
people to focus on creative and leisure
activities instead of drudge work. That
sounds utopian, right? But others
counter that rapid AI deployment without
proper safeguards could dramatically
widen inequality if left unchecked.
For now, Musk's macro hard initiative is
essentially a stress test. If an AI run
company can genuinely compete with
Microsoft, it will force every business
to rethink staffing, training, and even
what education prepares people for. This
isn't just about tech workers. If
software development can be fully
automated, what industry is safe?
Macrohard exemplifies a possible future.
Companies with lean human staff and
heavy AI automation.
This could completely upend traditional
career paths. It raises huge questions
about labor markets and how tech workers
adapt, about corporate practices and the
emphasis on AI skill sets, and about
social policies like universal basic
income and retraining programs. The
initiative underlines the broader trend
that the future of work will likely
involve humans collaborating with
increasingly capable AI agents. But
collaboration might be a generous word
when the AI is doing 90% of the work.
What happens next? So, where does this
leave us? Macrohard is an ambitious
challenge to Microsoft's domain, and it
perfectly reflects Elon Musk's
highstakes approach to innovation.
If it succeeds, it would completely
rewrite the rules of software
development by running a company almost
entirely via AI.
That's not hyperbole.
That's Musk's stated goal. Microsoft
isn't sitting still, though. They're
already an AI powerhouse with a strong
track record and massive resources. But
here's what should concern them.
Macro hard could force even a titan like
Microsoft to adapt if it proves viable.
Microsoft built their empire on human
expertise and traditional software
development.
If Macro hard demonstrates that AI can
do it faster, cheaper, and with fewer
errors, Microsoft's entire competitive
advantage comes into question.
Meanwhile, Musk's vision of work is
crystal clear. In a fully automated
firm, human labor becomes optional and
gets redistributed towards supervision,
creativity, and strategic thinking.
As Musk deploys macroh hard and related
AI projects, Americans should expect
heated debates over job security, income
support like universal basic income, and
how to prepare the workforce for an
AIdriven economy. Think about the
implications. If Macro hard works, every
company in every industry will ask, "Why
are we paying for 10,000 employees when
AI agents could do this for a fraction
of the cost?" That question alone could
trigger the biggest workforce
transformation since the industrial
revolution. In the end, Macrohard versus
Microsoft isn't just a tech battle
between two companies. It's a preview of
how the very nature of work and
innovation might change in the AI era.
And whether you're a software engineer,
a manager, an entrepreneur, or someone
just starting their career,
understanding this shift isn't optional
anymore. It's essential. The race
between MacroArt and Microsoft is more
than corporate rivalry.
It's a fundamental test of two visions
for the future. Microsoft represents the
evolution of traditional business.
Humans aided by increasingly powerful AI
tools.
Macroh hard represents the revolution.
AI doing the work while humans provide
oversight and direction. History tells
us that disruptive technologies always
create winners and losers.
The question isn't whether AI will
transform work. It will. The question is
whether we'll manage that transformation
thoughtfully or let it happen to us.
Musk is betting everything that AI can
run a company as well as humans.
Gates is betting that human judgment and
creativity remain irreplaceable. Who's
right?
We're about to find out. And what you do
with this information right now, today,
will determine which side of that
transformation you end up on.