
In a blog post on Tuesday,
Rhinehart-whose personal achievements include giving up on the electrical grid , throwing out his fridge, and (to the chagrin of neighbors) attempting to live out of a shipping container which he dropped in LA without permits -wrote on the company website that he's either grown bored with, or has been made obsolete by his contributions to the brand:
Along the way I have seen my role as CEO evolve, especially enjoying the process of delegating my responsibilities to more skilled and experienced scientists, managers, and executives. These specialists are clearly better at their roles than I would be, especially if I were handling tons of other responsibilities simultaneously, which is the exciting early stage of a startup. But that time has passed.
Bryan Crowley, the president of Soylent's parent company, will now take over the business of the
Earlier this year, Rhinehart wiped his personal blog clean, but interested readers can still find some of his most color spoutings via the Internet Archive .
On cooking: "I am all for self reliance but repeating the same labor over and over for the sake of existence is the realm of robots."
On trade: "Shipping is a problem. I wish container ships had nuclear engines but it's still much more efficient and convenient than retail."
And on having a magnet implanted in his hand and hovering said magnet-hand near electrical outlets: "I can feel fortresses of industry miles away burning prehistoric hydrocarbons by the megaton."
All of which serve to make his send-off note to the meal replacement company he founded in 2013 startlingly level-headed.