Here's a hint. Any time science and politics are involved together, rest assured it's a grift/hoax. Been going on for years.. lol
OPEN YOUR EYES
OPEN YOUR EYES
lol at your snapshot localized anecdotal observations and extrapolating those as if they apply every day, and every where in the world. With that sort of mentality, I hope you don't use that same logic to make long-term, high level business or investment decisions.fka ftc said:I mean, the data on my personal weather station showed winds from the south and a high near 90 yesterday with some clouds.aggievaulter07 said:
Haven't heard the "My Kindergarten Teacher's predicted timeline about the oceans flooding Texas didn't come to fruition on time, so it must all be hogwash" excuse before. Congrats on at least being original.
Then the climate changed and it got dark outside and cooled off a bit. Then more clouds came during the darkness and produced wet stuff from the skies.
By this morning it was much cooler, less windy and beautiful blue skies.
I can only surmise that yesterday more people were driving ICE vehicles and then something happened overnight and today everyone must be driving EVs.
So I get it. Its all about the science, no?
WHOOP!'91 said:
Starlink is raising its price for RVs to $150/mo, so I paused my account. I was getting terrible speeds in Brazoria County anyway.
That's all I have to say about Tesla.
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Nora Naughton is a senior reporter covering the automotive industry for Insider.
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The calm, collected Musk helped stem the yearlong collapse of Tesla's stock, but the company's existential problems remain. In almost every area where Tesla has carved out an edge in the past 20 years vehicle design, tech, sales strategy the startup is getting beat. Musk's legacy competitors are right at his heels.
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Mercedes lapping Tesla on Level 3 autonomy was followed swiflty by another setback: Tesla recalled more than 362,000 of its vehicles over concerns the latest Full Self-Driving (FSD) software could increase the risk of crashes.
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The two Tesla owners I know won't be buying Tesla as their next car. They both hate Elon Musk
fka ftc said:
Regarding self-driving tech... that is not limited whatsoever by technology at this point. Well, not directly.
Its limited by lawyers and liability laws. Either the tech / sw has to get to the point where they are happy, or laws are passed where automakers can release the product with a comfortable pucker of the exit valve.
Same things that limit robots, drone deliveries, etc.
XpressAg09 said:Quote:
The two Tesla owners I know won't be buying Tesla as their next car. They both hate Elon Musk
They didn't hate him enough to buy two teslas once…I'm guessing they hate his stance on free speech and preferred Twitter be heavily censored in one direction.
They have been doing self driving proof of concept for 20 years.AustinScubaAg said:fka ftc said:
Regarding self-driving tech... that is not limited whatsoever by technology at this point. Well, not directly.
Its limited by lawyers and liability laws. Either the tech / sw has to get to the point where they are happy, or laws are passed where automakers can release the product with a comfortable pucker of the exit valve.
Same things that limit robots, drone deliveries, etc.
The tech is mostly poof of concept level not production level and that is a big gap when consumer safety is involved. There is way more involved than just lawyers.
fka ftc said:They have been doing self driving proof of concept for 20 years.AustinScubaAg said:fka ftc said:
Regarding self-driving tech... that is not limited whatsoever by technology at this point. Well, not directly.
Its limited by lawyers and liability laws. Either the tech / sw has to get to the point where they are happy, or laws are passed where automakers can release the product with a comfortable pucker of the exit valve.
Same things that limit robots, drone deliveries, etc.
The tech is mostly poof of concept level not production level and that is a big gap when consumer safety is involved. There is way more involved than just lawyers.
What technological advances remain?
Consumer safety is a result of lawyers. Its not about some altruistic endeavour to save human lives, its about money.
But if safety makes it feel nicer, then safety it is.
Then let me help you with the obvious timeline. Fully self-driving cars are NOT happening in the next decade, likely never happen. Airplanes can fly themselves into and out of many airports. Yet even unmanned drones have a guy ready to grab the joystick.AustinScubaAg said:fka ftc said:
They have been doing self driving proof of concept for 20 years.
What technological advances remain?
Consumer safety is a result of lawyers. Its not about some altruistic endeavour to save human lives, its about money.
But if safety makes it feel nicer, then safety it is.
Obvously you are not working on the tech or you would not make this statement.
I'm heavily involved in the UAS and autonomy industry. The BIGGEST challenge will be the regulators. The FAA is VERY risk averse...so we'll have to do lots of work to ensure that the technology is mature before it'll happen...fka ftc said:
Regarding self-driving tech... that is not limited whatsoever by technology at this point. Well, not directly.
Its limited by lawyers and liability laws. Either the tech / sw has to get to the point where they are happy, or laws are passed where automakers can release the product with a comfortable pucker of the exit valve.
Same things that limit robots, drone deliveries, etc.
Drone delivery in a very limited area, with limitations on size of drone and payload, and I would think still requires a human constantly monitoring.Ag with kids said:I'm heavily involved in the UAS and autonomy industry. The BIGGEST challenge will be the regulators. The FAA is VERY risk averse...so we'll have to do lots of work to ensure that the technology is mature before it'll happen...fka ftc said:
Regarding self-driving tech... that is not limited whatsoever by technology at this point. Well, not directly.
Its limited by lawyers and liability laws. Either the tech / sw has to get to the point where they are happy, or laws are passed where automakers can release the product with a comfortable pucker of the exit valve.
Same things that limit robots, drone deliveries, etc.
Although, there is limited drone delivery going on right no in the US - hell, BCS is one of the first places it's occurring. Amazon Prime...
Yeah. From what I understand, they're on Autonomy Level 3 right now.fka ftc said:Drone delivery in a very limited area, with limitations on size of drone and payload, and I would think still requires a human constantly monitoring.Ag with kids said:I'm heavily involved in the UAS and autonomy industry. The BIGGEST challenge will be the regulators. The FAA is VERY risk averse...so we'll have to do lots of work to ensure that the technology is mature before it'll happen...fka ftc said:
Regarding self-driving tech... that is not limited whatsoever by technology at this point. Well, not directly.
Its limited by lawyers and liability laws. Either the tech / sw has to get to the point where they are happy, or laws are passed where automakers can release the product with a comfortable pucker of the exit valve.
Same things that limit robots, drone deliveries, etc.
Although, there is limited drone delivery going on right no in the US - hell, BCS is one of the first places it's occurring. Amazon Prime...
And Amazon and its lawyers have decided to accept some risk to advance the technology. Tesla has release limited self-driving functionality based on similar calculus.
Regulators are catnip to lawyers on all sides. Think lobbyists, rule writers, and hell even many of the folks who lead these agencies and certainly a fair amount of those who would vote on any bills / laws... lawyers. Regulations = Laws = Legal Process = Lawyers
I get their are tons of nuances and moving parts. But if you solved every other problem overnight, the legal problem remains no where close to being sorted out.
Maybe they surprise us and sort it all out. But my experience and history indicates otherwise.
I would agree that multiple drone programs reaching level 5 is not just feasible, but will happen and will signal the possibility of cars reaching that. But I dont see a workable solution at this point to the legal liability question.Ag with kids said:
Yeah. From what I understand, they're on Autonomy Level 3 right now.
And MANY people in the FAA are NOT lawyers...I've dealt with many of them up to quite high levels. They're engineers. And they're VERY risk averse. They don't want anything to happen that could come back to bite them.
I'm working on a project that should hopefully be at Level 5 when we're done.
I disagree that it's not feasible. Now, I'm saying tomorrow. But, in the future.fka ftc said:I would agree that multiple drone programs reaching level 5 is not just feasible, but will happen and will signal the possibility of cars reaching that. But I dont see a workable solution at this point to the legal liability question.Ag with kids said:
Yeah. From what I understand, they're on Autonomy Level 3 right now.
And MANY people in the FAA are NOT lawyers...I've dealt with many of them up to quite high levels. They're engineers. And they're VERY risk averse. They don't want anything to happen that could come back to bite them.
I'm working on a project that should hopefully be at Level 5 when we're done.
If you are riding it the backseat of your Tesla and it runs over and leaves my kid an invalid, you can bet its going to be more than Tesla that end of the lawsuit.
Its not that I ultimately don't want to see it. I think its awesome and would welcome it, Just do not see if for passenger vehicles.
Disney's Wedway is much more viable than autonomous passenger cars.
Every Tesla owner I know absolutely loves their car and would never go back to ICE. Let alone a different EV. Some complained a couple years ago they wanted more super chargers but not now. Tesla has THE most brand loyalty and it is extremely strong. Even the ridiculously biased media can't deny the brand loyalty and market leadership of Tesla. The Tesla owners I know also put their money where their mouth is and accumulate as much stock as they can due to the fact that they believe in the product and the future of the company. There is no novelty. So congratulations you must have found the .1% that have owned a Tesla and didn't enjoy the experience. Save yourself some time listening to me or others regarding Tesla - go test drive a Tesla model 3 performance and you will get it. You may love or hate Elon but there is no denying the car itself.bmks270 said:
The two Tesla owners I know won't be buying Tesla as their next car. They both hate Elon Musk, and I guess the novelty of a Tesla cars has worn off and they plan to replace with EVs from a different manufacturer.
Brand loyalty is rare in the car market.
Premium said:
Tesla is years ahead of GM and Ford in many areas. Charging stations network. Battery tech. Fully self driving. Production efficiency and readiness. Lower production costs. High brand recognition for the specific product (like Apple for phones). Innovation for when others think they are catching up. Demand for workers, and demand to be in office. Other products like power storage and solar production for roofs.
There really isn't a comparison.
aggievaulter07 said:WHOOP!'91 said:
Starlink is raising its price for RVs to $150/mo, so I paused my account. I was getting terrible speeds in Brazoria County anyway.
That's all I have to say about Tesla.
Starlink is a SpaceX product, not a Tesla product...
FALSE! Didn't you see? IslanderAg04 just told you that at lest 5 other companies "dwarf" Tesla!Teslag said:
Tesla was 4th last year in the solar install market
That's only residential installation, how many of these other companies also have massive battery storage facilities?aggievaulter07 said:FALSE! Didn't you see? IslanderAg04 just told you that at lest 5 other companies "dwarf" Tesla!Teslag said:
Tesla was 4th last year in the solar install market