Here's a summary of the provided transcription, including every piece of information:
The speaker highlights two main business areas with significant growth potential:
1. **AI Compute Business:**
* Described as "stupid" in its potential scale.
* Projected to be a "multi-hundred billion dollar a year business."
* This is considered an "extremely conservative estimate."
* The figures refer to revenue, or "probably profits, but let's just say revenue."
* This business is "completely independent of the terrestrial compute" and "nothing at all to do with their launch business."
2. **Starlink (Global Communications Business):**
* **Current Growth:** Starlink is "growing at about 2 point something million customers a quarter."
* This growth rate is "accelerating," with the "next quarter might show it's growing at over 3 million."
* A conservative estimate for current customer additions is "2 million customers a quarter."
* **Impact of Starship:**
* If Starship launches "as frequently as Falcon 9 today" (the same cadence), it will deploy Starlink V3 satellites, not V2.
* The V3 satellites will provide "more than 20 times as much Starlink bandwidth per launch."
* Starship is "meant to be more rapidly, reliably reusable," suggesting it "should actually be happening more often over time."
* This means that if Starship is successful and launches at the Falcon 9 cadence, Starlink could add "40 million customers a quarter" (calculated by multiplying the conservative 2 million current growth by the 20x bandwidth increase).
* This allows them to add "20 times more customers per time period than they are today."
* **Future Customer Projections:**
* The speaker's thesis is that "Starlink direct-to-sell is going to absolutely blast past growth in the home broadband."
* This is because direct-to-sell "can serve many more customers" who "don't need anywhere near as much bandwidth."
* It could enable "at least an order of magnitude, maybe close to one and a half more customers" (referring to the number of direct-to-sell users per unit of bandwidth compared to home broadband users).
* It is considered "feasible in the future that there could be 100 million, 200 million, 300, 400 million Starlink customers globally," a combination of "home broadband and internet."