The quote doesn't show him admitting it, but rather says his biographer said it.
Thunderf00t made many videos about the Hyperloop and while you do need to keep thinking for yourself while watching them because he makes mistakes or interjects conjecture or personal opinion as fact at times, he still does a good job of showing how absurd Hyperloop is on its face.
The so-called "fall of Elon Musk" should be a reminder to everyone so just think for yourselves. I know the TV ended up painting this guy is the second coming of Christ, but you don't become a multi multibillionaire several times over by just being a good guy. There's an old saying, you can become a millionaire through honesty, integrity, and hard work, but you can't become a billionaire.
Also everyone needs to keep in mind that most of his billions came out of your pocket. His companies are based off of massive government subsidies including the hyperloop, and one of the reasons why Tesla's stock price is so high is just because of government policies that have led to a massive stock market bubble at the expense of the common man. And there's just so much money sloshing around due to excessive government debt and massive central bank money printing it had to go somewhere, and it ended up going into stocks and other assets making those people rich while inflation adjusted wages have stagnated for decades.
I like Adam Something’s takes on it, which is essentially that the Hyperloop is dangerous and metros/subways are better.
Hyperloop and Loop are not the same thing. Loop is Teslas in small cheap tunnels. Hyperloop is high speed trains in vacuum tubes.
A vacuum under atmosphere is effectively a bomb. The loop is basically a fire tunnel waiting to happen. They are both stupid and dangerous.
I don't know if I would call it a bomb. Like it could implode, but how much would that affect stuff outside the tube. Its a bad idea regardless, just doesn't really seem like a bomb.
Woth how big it would have to be the sound waves alone would probably have semi-explosive like propeeties.
Please read the title of the post.
Adam Something has done a bunch of good quality videos on Elon Musk's failed projects, including the Hyperloop.
High quality comment! Thank you!
His companies are based off of massive government subsidies including the hyperloop,
I'd love to know if he redirected any of that Government funding away from the hyperloop, to his other corporate interests.
Regarding your last paragraph:
Do you disagree with EV subsidies? The only reason Tesla was getting so many is because other components haven't really made EVs till recently. I think EV credits are a good thing for society because of the lower environmental cost than gasoline vehicles.
You referring to SpaceX? they do make a lot of their money from the government, but almost all as a customer rather than an investor. They sell NASA a product for less than NASA could have bought it for otherwise. I don't think that's unfair at all.
I think EV credits are a good thing for society because of the lower environmental cost than gasoline vehicles.
I would think so too if the second part was true. While the emission cost of an EV indeed about 30% lower (data for Germany, probably worse in the US), that means it's still 70% as bad as an ICE. That's an amazing relative efficiency gain and super interesting technologically but it's still pretty shit in absolute terms.
The future of transport is not cars everywhere but with electric engines; that's still not sustainable (far from it).
What actually needs subsidies are alternatives to cars:
- Trains are incredibly efficient compared to EVs and viable for any distance greater than ~1km. The US has basically none and most places with better trains aren't that amazing either.
- Walking can be incredibly convenient with no special infrastructure required other than a relatively well paved path. No looking for parking spots or whatever; just walk out of your home, around a corner and into the shop.
Pretty much requires the absence of heavy and/or fast vehicles and needs attractive locations nearby. If you have to cross busy roads or have nothing of interest within 1km or so, walking just doesn't really work (see: Walkable cities). - Cycling is efficient, healthy and fast for ranges of up to a few kilometres. Similar to walking, it requires separation from cars but is slightly more compatible with cars due to it's higher speed which means not so busy streets (as in: destinations, 30km/h max.) can often be shared.
Bicycles do need a bit more infrastructure than walking however: Well-paved paths (ideally separate from pedestrians) and racks to lock them to. This isn't nearly as bad as cars but even this very efficient form of individual vehicle can reach limits at some point (see: Bike racks near train stations in the Netherlands).
While the emission cost of an EV indeed about 30% lower (data for Germany, probably worse in the US)
I've never seen this number. The numbers I've seen generally paint EV emissions as fairly low with most of them occurring at manufacturing (see, https://afdc.energy.gov/vehicles/electric_emissions.html).
Which state you live in has a huge impact on EV emissions. For my state (Idaho), emissions are hyper low due to the amount of hydro power.
Even then, emissions are tricky to exactly calculate. The majority of EV manufacturing emissions comes from the battery manufacturing process. And, it seems pretty likely that EV batteries will see a second life after their first life in the EV. Batteries are too valuable to just throw away. We aren't seeing a ton of that ATM primarily because most of the current generation of EVs are still on the road!
Now, I have seen some pretty bad numbers usually from fossil fuel powered publications against EVs. Usually they'll take the absolute worst case scenarios for an EV "Imagine all your power is coming from coal that's being transmitted 6000 miles and from 1000 year old plants with 5% efficiency. See, EVs are just as dirty as ICE!" Those articles universally ignore the fact that we have a mixed generation grid with renewables growing rapidly.
Sorry, I kinda missed your reply as it quoted the same source as the other one. Here's what I said to that: https://lemmy.ml/comment/1611213
it seems pretty likely that EV batteries will see a second life after their first life in the EV
Why do you think that? In order for that to happen, this form of recycling must be significantly more economical than a new battery (which I doubt it currently is) because auto makers won't recycle out of the goodness of their hearts, that's for certain.
I haven't seen any data pointing to BEV batteries being actually recycled to a significant degree any time soon. I'd love to be proven wrong on that but I have my doubts.
I have seen some pretty bad numbers usually from fossil fuel powered publications against EVs. Usually they’ll take the absolute worst case scenarios for an EV “Imagine all your power is coming from coal that’s being transmitted 6000 miles and from 1000 year old plants with 5% efficiency. See, EVs are just as dirty as ICE!”
See the paper linked in my other reply. It assumes the 2020 power mix in Germany which is quite terrible (only 55% low-emission) but not nearly as terrible as the US (40% low-emission according to your link). I could see the US getting closer to the 2020 DE power mix within the next decade or so though, so those numbers should be pretty representative of the future US. As mentioned in the other reply, the paper also contains an estimation for 2030 DE power mix.
Note that the article concludes that BEVs are not the future of transport but not that we should therefore use ICEs. In its conclusion it basically says that BEVs offer a good improvement over the status quo but we should really really have fewer cars instead. The focus of future transport should therefore lie on viable alternatives to cars such as walkable cities, cycling and public transport.
I agree those other solutions are good, but cars will still be needed for at least 50 years, and subsidies don't take away from those other efforts.
As for emissions, a car has a lower carbon footprint in the US after 1 to 5 years conservatively, and after that is 61% less carbon dioxide per mile with average US energy mix. That will get even better as the grid becomes more green.
https://youtu.be/6RhtiPefVzMhttps://afdc.energy.gov/vehicles/electric_emissions.html#wheel
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cars will still be needed for at least 50 years
Unfortunately, I think you're right. I think they'll be needed much longer even and I do think the future of transport contains a few cars for i.e. places too far away to sensibly connect with rail. That'll hopefully only amount to a rather negligible fraction of transport.
subsidies don’t take away from those other efforts.
I don't think that's true. EV subsidies just reek of greenwashing. "Oh look how progressive we are, we're spending billions to support EVs!" while showing next to no actual support for sensible alternatives.
EV sales make their cronies' pockets grow larger, cycle paths don't.
As for emissions, a car has a lower carbon footprint in the US after 1 to 5 years conservatively
Lower than what?
after that is 61% less carbon dioxide per mile with average US energy mix.
That'd be nice but it fully ignores the cost of the vehicle itself.
https://afdc.energy.gov/vehicles/electric_emissions.html#wheel
I have two issues with that data:
- It also ignores the cost of the vehicle itself (only a note without concrete numbers at the bottom)
- "light duty vehicles" does not sound representative of the average US car which (to my knowledge) is usually large&heavy in order to circumvent regulations (SUVs, pick-ups, ...)
Smells a bit like a lie tbh.
1. is especially problematic because it massively skews percentages. If you leave out the cost of producing just the vehicle (even without battery), you make BEVs look much better because you only consider the one factor on which BEVs are actually better while ignoring the significant factors in car emissions that BEVs don't improve on or even worsen.
According to my source, the production of the battery and the base vehicle combined produce about as many emissions as the electricity generation the entire lifetime of a BEV.
By omitting that, you ignore about half of the BEVs lifetime emissions but only 10-20% of an ICE's. Do you see how that's not really a valid way of measuring the BEV advantage when absolute terms matter?
Take a look at the left graph on page 3: https://www.bmuv.de/fileadmin/Daten_BMU/Download_PDF/Verkehr/emob_klimabilanz_bf.pdf
You can read it without knowing German: "Benzin" means "petrol", brown/orange are fuel emissions, green is vehicle production, gray is battery production and greenish-yellow is electricity production (in Germany, mind you). Y-axis is emissions per kilometre.
(The graph to the right is the same but a projection for 2030 when some amount of batteries are (supposedly) going to be produced in the EU under stricter emissions standards and better electricity mix (seems veery optimistic though IMHO).)
I think you misunderstood my information. The carbon cost of the EV (especially the battery) compared to a gasoline vehicle is overcome within 1 to 5 years. That's when it breaks even. After that, an EV emits 61% less than a gasoline vehicle on average US grid power.
Light duty vehicles are anything that aren't commercial trucks. It includes SUVs and huge personal trucks if I'm not mistaken.
Importantly, it allows us to move that energy from coal/oil to green energy, which I expect will become more and more common.
Hell, when EVs pick up enough, I bet nuclear will start looking great. Such a consistent load on the grid is ideal for nuclear.
If we can charge at work, we could use the extra peak solar power during the middle of the day. Or take advantage of lower power draw on base load during the night. Or even use the cars as batteries for houses, evening out the power peeks and troughs to be virtual power storage. Lots of cool options with EVs.
If only we had a technology that efficiently transports large amounts of people/goods using electricity 100 years ago...
I'm 100% for mass transit. And we should be using freight trains much more often than Semis.
But I have no expectations that we'd make that transition in the next 15 years. We absolutely can have a majority of vehicles being electric and get off of coal/oil power plants within 15 years.
The carbon cost of the EV (especially the battery) compared to a gasoline vehicle is overcome within 1 to 5 years. That’s when it breaks even.
Oh so that's what you were trying to say, I get it now.
It's entirely besides the point though because this is about absolute cost. It doesn't much matter when a BEV breaks even with an ICE car. Those are numbers a car dealer would woo buyers into buying their new "all-electric super BIO lightning green future CARBON NEUTRAL*** super-turbo if-you-buy-this-car-you-are-REALLY-doing-something-for-the-environment" SUV.
At the end of the day, a BEV still produces 70% of the emissions over its lifetime (assuming equal usage). You can't change that fact with break-even points or other nice math.
If you don't think that's bad, you don't know just how bad ICE cars are. About as bad as flying if you normalise for distance: https://ourworldindata.org/travel-carbon-footprint
"30% better than flying" is good in a way I guess but not at all what will make us carbon neutral. Not even close.
I think that @SJ_Zero@lemmy.fbxl.net was referring to the fact that a large portion of Musk's net worth is tied to the Tesla stock price. The age of easy money that the US economy has been living in for most of the past 15 years has led to many stocks to greatly explode in value much farther beyond what makes sense at a fundamentals level; Tesla being one of the most egregious examples.
A few different things including what you're talking about.
Tesla would be one of the smallest car companies if you actually went by the fundamentals of the company though, and instead it has a market cap so high it covers the entire world's car industry combined.
But stocks always look at where a company will be, not where it is now. Traditional car manufacturers have been stagnating for decades, so confidence isn't very high there.
If you look at EV sales, Tesla had a 68% market share. (in 2022) If an investor thinks EVs are the only vehicles that will really be around in a few years, that value may be justified.
https://electrek.co/2022/10/18/us-electric-vehicle-sales-by-maker-and-ev-model-through-q3-2022/
That being said, I do think they are overvalued as of COVID. It became more of a hype train than anything else.
Markets have gotten a lot of things wrong in the past 20 years since the amount of money in the monetary system is distorting asset values and causing bubbles. FTX and Theranos being two great examples, but far from the only ones.
I said this a few years ago but it's becoming increasingly true now: If EVs become the hot new thing, I fully expect traditional automakers to come out on top. Particularly companies like Toyota who are really really good at building cars.
Thing is, it still isn't totally clear that EVs in the form of the traditional automobile will be the best thing. There's a good chance that all the major unsolved problems with them will cut the technology off.
It's funny you mention Toyota, since they're lagging particularly far behind even other traditional automakers when it comes to battery electric vehicles. (Some executive was biased against them or something, so Toyota's spent the last decade trying to push hybrids and fuel cell EVs instead.)
I think that there's a reason for it, and I think that that reason is that they've been selling battery vehicles for 25 years and they know full well that there's going to be major problems.
The reality is that until maybe this year or the year before, these were expensive toys for the 1% to show off about how virtuous they are with their $100,000 sports cars that were saving the planet.
I feel like the major unsolved problems with fossil fuel powered vehicles will cut them off.
Traditional auto makers only know how to make the frame, suspension, and interior. Engine and transmission knowledge doesn't help. You need to know battery management and motors instead.
What unresolved problems? 10 million were sold last year, seems like we'd have seen the problems by now.
Toyota in particular has been dealing with battery management and motors for 30 years. They'll be fine.
Unresolved problems of EVs include extreme cold performance without a heated garage, battery degradation and the massive social, economic, and environmental consequences as people end up with useless used cars you can't fix, grid problems in the event of mass adoption, and the realities of longer distance travel in a car that takes a long time to charge.
Unresolved problems of EVs include extreme cold performance without a heated garage
Diesel engines also have extreme cold issues solved by block heaters. Similar solututions already exist for EVs.
battery degradation
Parts on anything mechanical will degrade. This isn't unique to EVs. Yeah you will have to replace parts on an EV like on any other car.
the massive social, economic, and environmental consequences as people end up with useless used cars you can’t fix
I think you're underestimating people's ability to adapt and learn how to fix new technologies. Someone that only knew how to fix saddles probably thought the automobile would never become a common thing because that saddle maker didn't know how to fix a car engine as well as he knew how to fix a saddle.
There will be a learning curve as with all things, but people will figure out how to fix EVs.
grid problems in the event of mass adoption
We now have new tech for solar and wind that's cheaper than other forms of energy generation. Energy infrastructure does have to be replaced from time to time, as demand grows we can increase energy generation and make improvements to the grid. The money save on no longer needing to have expensive wars to secure the oil supply will more than cover this cost.
realities of longer distance travel in a car that takes a long time to charge
It takes like 10 to 15 minutes at a fast charging station. Stretch your legs, grab a snack, some 'em if you got 'em, and you're back on the road. Very much comparable to filling up at a gas station. Also remember that's only for long distance travel which most people don't do very often. For daily use it's plugging in your car when you get home, which overall takes less time than having to make a trip to the gas station every week or two. So an EV will be even more convenient (and cheaper) than filling up at a gas station.
Yeah I get it that it sucks when technology you understand becomes obsolete. It's just the way things go.
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Look, YouTube has made a lot of shit decisions in regards to the design of their site, and their abusive stance towards adblockers recently. I trust them about as much as I can throw them.
However, your web site is just scraping data from YouTube and stealing bandwidth to provide your own front-end, and it doesn't even have comments. It will be doomed to fail as soon as Google gets around to cracking down on such interfaces. I would prefer to just post YouTube links without this stupid bot pushing a web site that nobody heard of until the bot was created and spammed Lemmy.
Good bot.
So low interest rates caused Tesla stocks to go up? That seems like it'd equally cause all stocks to go up.
No, they're referring to the fact that if you buy a Tesla, the government pays for something like 20% of the cost. You multiply that subsidy times the number of Teslas sold, and a massive chunk of Musk's wealth is government funded.
so he is the biggest welfare queen in the world
So then they disagree with EV tax credits or subsidies? In absence of more train investment (which we should do, but is entirely independent) EV subsidies are a really good thing for the environment
Musk as a complete idiot, but gotta say that's savvy. You don't have to be smart to be ruthless.
I have a completely different stance on EVs.
Part of the "EV Problem" is that they're trying to solve the problem of ICE vehicles as they exist today using electric cars. This is because everything is set up for big ICE cars. The problem to be solved in that case is trying to replicate 100 years of ICE technology including highly efficient long distance travel whose range can be recovered in a few minutes at a fueling station. Since it's not possible to reasonably solve that problem with current technology, oligarchs can collect billions of dollars of money trying to build the holy grail of ICE replacement EVs.
The vision I have for EVs is completely different, and possible with current technology, and would improve the quality of life for a lot more people, and would be better for the environment in the long run.
A friend of mine is a Chinese national, he grew up in China. When he was in high school, they had these 3 wheeled electric vehicles people would drive around. They even had enough room that some people would go into business as a local taxi service, picking people up and taking them wherever they wanted to go. Eventually the existence of these vehicles embarrassed the local government so they cracked down on them.
Those vehicles are available online today, and a fully enclosed version is available for a few thousand dollars, no additional tech required.
So my vision is promoting and opening the regulatory field for small, low speed (60km/h or less), weatherproof EVs with a relatively low range (100km or so) that you can buy for less than $10k (a battery powered heater would be good for regions with particularly bad weather). In my view, something with an easily removable battery would be ideal, since on cold days you could bring the battery inside with you instead of trying to deal with cold weather and chargers in spots without power cords.
Since it'd be slower and lighter, I expect we'd be able to reduce the regulations about drivers as well, and the insurance requirements. A low cost to buy, low cost to own, low cost and difficulty to operate personal vehicle that uses significantly less material would improve the lives of many people who presently don't have personal transportation for much of the year.
To accomplish it, you don't need subsidies, just deregulate so it's easy to manufacture, easy to sell, easy to buy, easy to own, easy to use.
Compare that with giving billions of dollars collected from regular Joes to a billionaire so he can make impractical luxury cars for the 1%.
Basically an enclosed golf cart. Unfortunately our roads are built for cars. Crash test safety is another issue. Still causes the same congestion really (we're not going to make lanes narrower). You'll likely still need insurance. I can't see it happening.
E-bikes I can see happening. We already need separate bike paths, you can use the same for normal bike and e-bikes. No insurance. Much less congestion.
Still causes the same congestion
Not really, If you line them up, you can fit 4 of these vehicles in the same space as a F350. 2 in the same space as a regular sedan.
If you allow lane splitting, then that's 8 and 4.
Crash test safety is another issue... You’ll likely still need insurance. I can’t see it happening.
This is actually the biggest problem with these vehicles. They aren't classified as cars in most states, they are classified as motorcycles. Which means to legally drive one you (often) need a special license. It's the regulations around these things that makes them unfeasible.
We need a new class of motor vehicle for them to make sense. 50mph max speed and lower safety standard and licensing requirements (ideally, available with a regular license).
Account for the space between them when traveling at speed (what is it, 3 seconds between vehicles?) and really it's the same congestion.
3 seconds is speed dependent and congestion is a function of the speed slowing down due to too much traffic (Or a wreck/something bottle necking the traffic).
When everything goes down to 5/10mph, there will be some pretty major space savings and when things are moving at full speed, congestion isn't a problem.
I'd say you can have congestion at speed. And you have congestion at traffic lights (this idea won't be going on freeways) because of the amount of vehicles, which this doesn't change, and because there is a delay in the next vehicle going, which this doesn't change.
Too much traffic as in too many vehicles, which this doesn't change.
The space length savings is really miniscule in the grand picture.
Why would companies make that when they could make a 40k car that would sell similarly? I think that's the issue right now
Aside from the margin differences, there's also the fact that companies make what the consumer will buy. The median American consumer is simply not interested in the type of vehicle described above. Outside of major city centers the US is still largely suburban and spread out and while I would personally love to see the same thing as the poster above in more densely populated areas, general mass adoption would require a significant paradigm shift on the part of the consumer.
Have you ever actually carried a battery with any meaningful capacity from a transport perspective?
Nobody is just deciding to grab their trike battery and carrying to their upstairs apartment like it’s a twelve pack.
Upgraded an e bike with a LI ion battery last year. Not big enough for what I'm talking about but that one's super light so something several times heavier could still be quite luggable with a shoulder strap.
This is why e-bikes are better.
I don't see them being very popular.
They come in between electric bikes and proper cars, both of which have their advantages over what you propose. In the city I'd rather take an electric bike and for any real range, or for carrying shit, I'd rather have a real car than a crampwagon.
Unlike most people, I've lived as an adult with just a bike. Finished college and started my career and worked for quite a while without a car.
You think you'd be ok with just a bike, but then it rains, or it snows, or it's a heatwave, or it's a cold snap. The bike is ideal when it's ideal, but it isn't usually ideal. Especially when you live in non ideal locations, which many people do.
And as for a car, sure if you have unlimited resources it's a great choice. But most people don't have unlimited resources. If they can make it to the supermarket and back and make it to work and back with an inexpensive alternative, a lot of people will use it as long as it's ok to.
For a surprisingly large class of people, a car isn't even an option -- even if they had a car given to them, they need insurance and gas, and licensing and oil changes and new tires and eventually you're walking.
A used car that runs is like 200 euros. Okay, maybe 500 now that inflation happened. They're not that unaffordable, but they do require the owner to be resourceful and learn some DIY skills. Tires can be bought used. When I was in university and had no job, I got a set of used Continentals with one summer left in them for 16 euros and only spent real money on tires for the winter, when summer tires (or all seasons as people in non-snowy areas know them) wouldn't work in my climate anyway.
Someone who can't afford a used car can't really afford a minicar EV that starts with maybe 50 miles of range and then slowly works its way down as the battery dies. There's just way less margin for battery degradation than on a bigger EV. You'll have to replace the battery in just a few years and it's going to be way more expensive than getting some old Volkswagen diesel engine from a junkyard for 50€.
I just don't see what the market for those vehicles is. It's not poor people, poor people don't buy new vehicles. It's not the middle class, the middle class would rather buy something that can fill 100% of their transportation needs rather than 80% of their transportation needs.
Are you sure you've looked at a used car in the past decade? (Or maybe the problem is that American policies like cash for clunkers have left the entire continent with unreasonably expensive used cars... Last time I looked at used cars was like 2 weeks ago, and it was absurd. Something with 300,000km going for $15k)
My first vehicle was 500 bucks (and was a piece of junk but I loved it) but I don't even see anything remotely like that anymore.
It's an American problem mostly, yes. These are the available cars in my country and this is far from the cheapest site because it actually requires money for keeping your ad up. Most will run on require minor repairs, some might require major repairs, but it's a risk you take when you're poor. My first car broke down a couple of times, but I think the most money it ever required for a real breakdown was 25 euros for a distributor rotor + some dude's labour in diagnosing and replacing it (with a part he literally had in his garage). It was an Audi with an inline 5 engine for about 500 euros, so far less common than something like a 1.9 tdi Passat too.
Cash for clunkers could've done some good if it'd been done after EVs became available for the mainstream and required you to buy an EV with the rebate. Unfortunately, it didn't even require you to get a particularly efficient car. So not only did it make old cars unaffordable, it didn't improve average emissions or fuel economy as much as it could have.
I'm in Canada but the problem is the same up here.
If our used car market looked like this, then I'd totally agree with you that the small cheap EVs wouldn't have much of a chance. Looks a lot like pre-gfc prices!
Very interesting take, I can agree with a lot of it. I live in Germany and for a few years now, you can buy a version of the Citroen Ami (there is an Opel Version here which is the exact same 'car' but with more marketing in Germany, called the 'Rocks E'). The car has about 75km or range (prob lably 60 realistically), two seats, is fully enclosed, has a heater - decent little thing if you do mostly short trips. It's built to be easily repairable, many parts are used multiple times in the vehicle and basically it's all just plastic trim around a steel frame. I've seriously considered it since I live in a rural area but most of my trips are 5-10km, I work from home. It's not regulated like a car, it does not need car insurance and isn't taxed, and is therefore significantly cheaper to run. You can charge basically with any wall outlet, it doesn't fast charge anyway. In Germany, you can legally drive this car at 16 years of age with a license. The downside? Aside from being a less comfortable overall experience, you can't go faster than 45 km/h. That is just a tad too slow for my taste, since rural streets here allow for either 100 or 70, I'd like to be less of a hindrance all the time. I think in a city, this would be fine, you can't go faster than 50 most of the time anyway.
The price for one of these to purchase is around 8.000 euros, that's not huge but you can get very decent used cars for less money, that's probably why these won't catch on here. But I do like the concept , just maybe let me go 60 in it
That's awesome, if it was an option here I'd have one in my driveway literally today.
Decent used cars are way more expensive here. I was shocked to see vehicles with 300,000km going for 15,000 bucks.
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Good bot.
Exactly that sort of thing.
Seems crazy, but most people don't need a giant expensive car, and many people could get a vehicle if that wasn't the only real choice out there.
Electric cars are better than gasoline ones, but that subsidy money would have even better been spent on biking and transit.
Remember, cars are fundamentally unsustainable because they take up too much space and cause us to ruin our cities trying to fit them in. Electric cars don't fix that. If you want to subsidize "EVs," subsidize e-bikes.
Subsidies and train infrastructure have very little to do with one another in legislation. The objections are in different levels of government and areas. There's very little chance that money from EV subsidies could go to public transit. I think we can do both, as we'll still need cars for many many years to come as we hopefully transition to less car reliance.
EVs are nice, but still a car. And battery-production isnt entirely clean either...
I think EV credits are a good thing for society because of the lower environmental cost than gasoline vehicles.
I tend to agree, but if we are saying "you can have one or the other" then public transport would have a much larger positive impact on society. Particularly, pumping up the rail system would be a massive boon to just about everything. We can move thousands of people huge amounts of goods for a fraction of the space and and energy needs of personal vehicles.
But it is rarely one or the other. Opposition to trains is from completely different areas and levels of government than EVs. There's very very little change EV credit money would go to trains if they were cancelled.
I agree.
I think the issue is that high speed rails cuts into the need for EVs which is why musk is opposed to it. Someone that is climate conscious will ride the train instead of buy a new EV.
And that's why he sabotaged the high speed rail.
Only in New York and a very few others can you live without a car, so we'll need much more than just high speed rail. But this article seems to be conjecture, it doesn't look like they've proved musk sabotaged it.
What you need is a good bus system. With that in place you can live anywhere without a car. A high speed rail connecting major hubs and a bus system (or light rail) is all that's really required. Bus systems can be deployed for even less money than a high speed rail.
This is feasible anywhere. I've lived in fairly small and remote towns in England (Shrewsbury england, population 80,000, for example). There's a robust public bus system, and a rail system. Living there without a car isn't just feasible, it's easy.
Oh my gosh I forgot thunderf00t existed. When I watched him a lot, no matter how much I watched his videos never ended up in my recommended
The saying never says that you can make 999,999,999.99 honestly. It just says one amount you can make honestly and one amount you can't. The implication is that the outer limit of what you can make honestly is somewhere in between.
Majority of his wealth (pre-selling the Hornets) came from Jordans made in sweatshops… I would not call that ethical.
Thousands of underpaid workers in publishing offices, marketers, delivery drivers, and bookstore workers. Without them JK Rowling makes nothing, but they didn't get any extra pay from the success of Harry Potter.
Man, I am the underpaid person in my supply chain.
And its a lot less ethical for people to profit billions off the labour of others than for me to profit a few thousand that I need to eat.
Merchandizing, which involve exploiting labor in underdeveloped countries, and investments, which involve exploiting the market. Also, it's not like she personally sold the books, low-wage bookstore employees sold them while she promoted them. Anyway, she would have pulled 10% on the net profit, probably a little more over time, and the total book sales in USD are ~$7.7 billion. So let's say that's entirely profit (it's not), that's $770 million as of 2017. She allegedly made her first billion in 2005. It literally couldn't have been from book sales.
what is the amount
There is no amount, how could there be? How could anyone place an exact dollar value on something like this?
You can't make a billion dollars honestly, but the exact amount of money that you can make honestly is unknowable, that's just not the kind of thing that has a hard value on it.
Matter of fact, i'm not sure if i agree with the original statement anyway, for the same reason: is there literally no way to make a billion dollars honestly? I don't know that you can make that kind of hard statement
Don't feel like you're taking the content how is meant to be read.
A million is a lot but a billion is an order of magnitude more. You think they worked an order of magnitude more?
Some would even say three orders of magnitude.
But not all, because some people can't do math.
Well, three orders of magnitude more actually. Pop! Pop!
Supply correlates with effort because you cannot create supply without labor/effort. At least not until we're in some fully automated utopia.
I believe he admitted this to his biographer.
[citation needed]
If he had admitted this to his biographer, don't you think the biographer would have written "Musk admitted...", rather than "it seemed that..."?
Did you read the article? Because it flat out said that's what the biographer surmised, Musk never said it.
It's shameful that this individual keeps talking about making a better world for humanity and then he pushes for things like this. I always thought it was some scheme to launder money...
Beware of charismatic leaders.
I'm for deporting the blood emerald African rocket Karen.
It was ironic that some years ago he was quoting Dune on Twitter. Either the message was lost on him or he was trolling..
The right wing money is strong with this one.
I agree with this, Elon is a disingenuous selfish prick, but this source doesn’t provide any indication that Musk admitted anything, it’s just speculation from detractors.
Kinda like the auto industry killing rail cars, which is why in many states you see them paved over
Can you elaborate? Do you mean them shipping cars via truck instead of train? What is paved over? Railroad intersections?
Goddamn Judge Doom.
Thanks
No like trolleys
This moment is so surreal. The link opened my mastodon app.
This is my home now <3
Let's face it, he's trying to build a vacuum tube over many hundreds of km's. The energy you need to keep that at reduced pressure is more than a Little Boy or a Fat Man. The pods are the size of somewhere between a coach and a railway carriage, with seating built to Frecciarossa Executive Class. It's propelled using Maglev tech, so you need a not-insignificant amount of power to also move your pods. And getting into or out of your vactube is going to take some extra work.
One thing that I've seen being pointed out by some critics is that a maglev system is often quoted to cost about a billion per unit distance, while high speed rail is quoted at about 500 million, about half. But then the Hyperloop shows up and is quoted at 250 million. How do the economics of that work? I mean, you take a maglev, which is twice as expensive as conventional but very precise regular railway, but by adding a vacuum tube, which is an added system that takes a ton of energy to even get it start making operational sense, you somehow cut costs in half from effectively a regular railway? I'm no economists, but that makes no economic sense.
The tech looks really snazzy in CGI renderings until you start to look into the engineering and physics to make it actually work. At which point it becomes awful.
So what if we tried?
First thing, the vacuum tube has to go. This is the number one obstacle preventing it from ever working. We'll still accept the special right of way for high speeds though, we'll just make our pods amazingly aerodynamic. Given the fact that our constraining factors may just become simpler, we can rig our pods to form a hyperpod chain, which allows us to bundle power and improve reliability and efficiency via an economy of scale. We can lower the seating quality in some of these pods and sell those seats for a lower price, making up for it in volume. We can still power everything with green energy, we're still using our own hyperway, with a very narrow path that our hyperpods can take, so rigging up an electrification scheme via an infrastructure power supply is quite easy. If we want to deploy quickly and make true on our 250 million quid per unit distance, we may have to rely on proven technology, so we probably base our new hyperway structure on two steel beams being kept a fixed distance of 1435mm apart. Bonus: there's a lot of largely compatible infrastructure at both ends that we can now use, as well as a giant pool of trained professionals around the world, so we can cheap out on stations and hyperway maintenance can be quite cheap and quick.
I just invented a train again, didn't I?
Elon is a con artist and I will take no criticism.
We have a saying "The science might work, but the engineering, logistics and scale absolutely won't"
Nor do the economics. More maintenance and less throughout means the state would end up having to subsidise it more than regular trains, with a smaller economic benefit.
Wasn’t that slingshot rocket launch thing a scam as well?
I will also consider any allegation that I am Adam Something as a compliment.
The energy you need to keep that at reduced pressure is more than a Little Boy or a Fat Man.
For what unit time? Source?
Boo nerd
The Hyperloop would probably need its own dedicated nuclear power plant to power it
Just like the people hyping up kites for green maritime tramsportation
It doesn't take much to have more energy than little boy or fat man. Those were tiny bombs.
Plus the thing about bombs is their high power for ms duration. Not that they have a high energy output.
So is Mark Zuckerberg. So is Bill Gates. So is Steve Jobs.
The businesses each of the above mentioned have built have done far more harm to humanity than Musk has.
Edit: after learning a few more things I'm going to retract this statement with full admittance that this was a dumb comment.
Let this be a lesson to people who time after time after time fall for corporate bullshit. This is why companies should never be elevated above what people - specifically experts - say. Whether it is some social campaign or greenwashing or a host of other "feel good" initiatives that almost universally are there for marketing and nothing more. Companies are here to make money. That's it.
it is true that companies are here to make money. my question is: are there any institutions whose purpose is to benefit humanity, without any hidden maladaptive intent? even the "communicating important scientific work to the public" enterprise is corrupted by perverse incentives. and if not, what is the process by such an institution can come about?
There is a lot of open source software, projects, ML/AI models, where individuals have put hundreds if not thousands of hours of work and are offering their work for free to other people.
Then again we also have Linux and believe it or not, the world wouldn't be the same without it. This OS has been created by one single individual who to this day didn't want to monetize his creation, otherwise he would have been filthy rich by now.
But not filthily.
I don't, I find so many Marxists online who think via magical thinking the proletariat is just gonna rise up and be better than the status quo. China and USSR failed and are now hellscapes when it comes to liberty and human rights. We have compromises like those in the Scandinavian countries where it's not perfect, but people generally have good health care, freedom, and generally a good standard of living. Those are the extremes in modern governments. I think the USA can do better, but we are much better off than Russians and Chinese, so far.
Yes, that's definitely true. There are narratives at play, ulterior motives everywhere, and of course Musk is playing his cards for the sake maximizing revenue.
In general, it's best to follow the money. That's the way our world works.
I didn't ask for it to be that way, but that's the way it is.
You should question the angle everywhere.
Anyone who thinks that Hyperloop is a great idea is an idiot.
Vacuum trains weren't elon's idea they go back to the 40s, and they are neat. Just wildly impractical, silly and unsuitable as anything other than a one off tourist draw or something to make your scifi setting seem different.
Anyone down voting your comment is an idiot.
Anyone who doesnt think its a good idea doesnt know what it is or how air drag works
There's so many flaws with a system like this, I can't imagine how you could make it economical. I'm just gonna list a few that have popped up in my mind over the years
- Thermal expansion. Steel contracts and expands a lot depending on the temperature, railroads have regular expansion joints to account for this. But having expansion joints which withstand a vacuum in a 500+ km tube in a reliable way would be amazing. Imagine the maintenance cost just for those. Expanding, contracting, shifting left, right, up and down.
- Maintaining a vacuum. Maintaining a continuous vacuum over 500+ kilometers. There's gotta be a lot of pumps using a lot of energy, considering it would be impossible to prevent leaks over such a humongous distance.
- Vacuum failure. With such a large distance, there's bound to be failures along the hyperloop. The train can probably slow down along these sections, but they would need to be prepared. Reparation means many hours of downtime, for people who chose a vacuum train presumably to save travel time.
- Capacity. A regular long-distance train can take on hundreds of people, which makes the costs tolerable. All of the concepts show very short vehicles, with maybe a couple seats side-by-side. That'd make the cost/person very high.
- Embarking/Disembarking. The people have to enter the train somehow, either through pressurizing a very long section, or having very precise door section which the train mounts to.
- In the case of pressurizing, it would take a long time for pressurize -> passengers move -> depressurize, adding long wait times at the station.
- In the case of entrance doors, this hampers flexibility. There can't be longer trains than what the station is designed for, the train design and length must always be the same, and any wear&tear on the train could potentially prohibit making a proper seal with the exit door.
- Related to the above point, long-distance railroads have many sub-destinations. Imagine having to pressurize->depressurize at every station, when a regular train just has to stop and open the doors.
I believe all of the above points would make a vacuum train economically stupid and impossible.
Just to escape the friction of air?
I don’t think I need to know how air drag works, I just need to know that busses and trains exist. Build up those systems and you’ll have better efficiency than anything requiring cars.
Hyperloop is trains not cars. Loop is a entirely separate project.
A lot of hyperloop proposals are pods not trains. Never mind that a little thought proves the concept is only viable with large trains.
yeah I think you've got that vegas loop in mind, that's not what a hyperloop is. a hyperloop is a train, a maglev train inside a vacuum tube.
Have you seen how hard it is to convince governments to invest the most efficient and cost-effective medium to long distance mean of transport we have today that has proven itself over hundreds of years?
Now imagine trying to convince them to invest in pretty much the same thing but with a tiny fraction of the throughput and many times the cost.
It's not much of a technical issue. They can be built and will be feasibly buildable in the not too distant future. The problem is economical.
(Though I must admit that I could absolutely see the US investing in Hyperloops to transport aristocrats instead of high-speed rail for the peasants. I was more thinking of countries here that are republics with half-decent democracies.)
Maintaining ordinary railroads is challenging enough. Hyperloop is like a heavily scaled up version of the vacuum tubes found in CERN, which is already one of the biggest engineering achievements of all time. I can’t imagine how hyperloop is going to operate safely at all.
Hyperloop is like a heavily scaled up version of the vacuum tubes found in CERN
Where are you getting this from? I havent seen anyone propose hyperloop vacuums be that extreme.
Traveling through a vacuum gives crazy efficiency gains, especially at high speeds as air drag goes up exponentially with speed. So you can travel faster and with less energy needed.
One word: throughput.
The hyperloop sucks for that. Haaaaard.
Why?
How many people could it move in an hour/day? Not many, when compared to a train.
An arbitrary amount depending on how much you build, same as a train. It is a train after all, you can add more cars.
Fuck Elon, what a tosser.
Yeah! Get 'em
Let's thank him for Tesla and SpaceX reusable rockets, he can disappear now
What exactly to thank him for?
He isn't a car engineer or a rocket engineer. He didn't invent the practical electric car or the reusable rocket. He gave people money to develop those technologies- actually, in the case of Tesla, he bought in after the car was already designed.
He's not an inventor, he's an investor.
They had a Lotus Elise with a battery in it when he came in. Clearly had influence on the models that actually worked.
Why does that mean he had influence?
Because he's product architect at tesla? Lol what's with this massive hate boner that you have to insist he does nothing. I see this all the time from nuffies online here and on reddit
What training does he have in automotive engineering? Where would he get the knowledge? Did he just read some books and watch some YouTube videos and suddenly he's an electric car expert?
Of course he didn’t do it himself, but according to people that actually worked closely with him, he’s not exactly stupid and actually knows quite a bit about both.
Why he’s behaving so stupidly and handling Twitter so badly, I have no idea - he’s really a jerk.
he’s not exactly stupid
That may or may not be true.
and actually knows quite a bit about both.
That I doubt. He has no formal training in either field and it's not something you can just pick up.
You can find videos with him discussing rocket engines in details - he’s spent years working together with a lot of brilliant car and rocket engineers. He (again, not alone, of course) somehow managed to build a successful car company and a successful Space company. Both things are by all accounts very difficult. Not likely to be done by a stupid person.
I fully agree he’s a jerk and I would never want to work for him, but that doesn’t mean he’s stupid or that I can’t be impressed by what SpaceX has achieved.
I'm sure he's very good at preparing for speeches.
LOL! That actually seems like a thing he doesn't spend any time on - just like when he's tweeting stupid shit 🙂
Where does Elon Musk admit it? All I could see was a mastodon post to an editorial…
He doesn't. There is 0 indication that the hyperloop was being built to have any affect on the high speed rail project, infact the much larger delays are from affluent communities not approving the deal, this blocking it's construction.
Educated communities *
Educated people see the benefits of high speed rail. These are rich people who don't want a train going through their county.
The statement that the Hyperloop was never meant to be built was speculation by a reporter called Ashlee Vance. He said "It seemed that Musk had dished out the Hyperloop proposal just to make the public and legislators rethink the high-speed train." There is no evidence that the initial intention behind it was malicious. I would say that effectively, he did kill many public transit projects and the article gives a couple examples, but you can't just put pure speculation in the title. Now fewer people are gonna trust you.
Ashlee Vance is the author of Elon Musk's biography ... Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future
That just means his opinion is likely well informed. Still an opinion, though.
Don't get me wrong, I love me some shitting on Musk just as much as the next guy, but the things he has 100% said and done are already egregious. I don't get why you'd need to mislead people into seeing Musk as something that reality has shown him to be many times over.
I read that book years ago when Musk’s public persona was almost like he came from the future to get humanity back on track. Electric cars, solar, vertically landing spaceships, that time he opened up all of teslas patents to seemingly try and accelerate electric car adoption.
What a bummer how he turned out. That amount of money just poisons your brain. Or let him feel safe lifting the mask. Never have I done such a 180 on an individual. He was supposed to be the one good billionaire solving humanities problems.
As someone who has always been into cars and technology, I've never been able to find anything about that tech that Tesla "open sourced".
It's just another lie that Musk used one time to juice stock prices or something. I've never found anything like a Git with any of their tech. There doesnt' appear to be any way to read about it or download it from any Tesla websites.
I mean maybe someone can finally provide me a link here, I would love that.
To me, it seems like it's just more empty words. Googling/Binging/Yahooing "Tesla Open Source" just brings up nine year old articles and the "All Our Patents Are Belong To You" press release. And no actual meat. And an interview with someone from Tesla who qualifies that they're not actually open source because they're not publishing confidential engineering data.
You seem to be confusing Patents with Copyright.
All Patents are "open source", that's how Patents work: you pay to get a state-approved monopoly on some idea for a number of years, in exchange for making the stuff public.
Don't need "a Git" to get patents, just https://patents.google.com
You should ask how much is Tesla charging for licensing those patents to others, or whether they have kept paying for the right to keep the monopoly at all.
NACs is now an open industry standard.
Well it was a great PR move even if it led to nothing. Fit the character I hoped he was. Sadly not surprised if this was also a complete fabrication.
I mean, it does make logical sense. But does the article actually say that he admitted to it? From how I understand it it doesn't.
The picture is a screengrab from the article
Yes, and the grabbed text doesn't show Musk admitting to anything.
It was never meant to be built because it cannot work as advertised.
Come on people the hyperloop as a concept is deeply unpractical and impossible to build. It was never to be an alternative to anything in the best case scenario a deluded billionaires dream but it seems it's more than that it's also malevolent.
Why are these notions (billionaire, bullshit, malevolent, etc.) So often present in the same contexts?
It's not impossible to build. There's no magical technology in it. Lots of things can be built if you just sink money in the project. But hyperloop is inefficient and insanely expensive. It would carry very few people, would be hell to maintain, with likely a lot of down time, and really isn't worth the hassle. (and don't even get me started on his idiotic "let's add more cars underground" idea)
Yep, anything you saved in additional speed would probably be eaten up by longer boarding times and security. The reason high speed rail is competitive with airlines below ~500km is the fact that the train stations are close to where you need to be, and you can rock up 5m before departure and still make your train.
I have no idea whether hyperloop is impractical/impossible to build and no intention of defending Elon Musk, but nobody thought landing a rocket was possible and SpaceX has since made it seem like a simple and easy thing. Starship seems completely bonkers to me too, but I wouldn't be surprised if SpaceX ends up completely changing space exploration with it.
Edit: I wrote “nobody” in my comment, clearly some did, but my point was that the rest of the industry clearly didn’t expect them to have any success.
When it comes to posts like yours, whatever comes before the but is pointless to read.
I’ll try to formulate my comments better in the future - English isn’t my native language.
This isn't an English issue, your English is great and I couldn't tell the difference compared to a native speaker even if I looked for it. "But" in a discussion as the you've made can be looked as a separator. On the left, it's a sale pitch. Ground prep for the reader to buy into what's to follow after the but.
I used to do this all the time so I don't blame people who do it too.
I'm not gonna delve too much into SpaceX. To me the accomplishment of that company is largely thanks to the employees. Elon Musk does not strike me as a competent engineer or manager, he's just a guy with a lot of money and sometimes he makes good use of it. To me, he isn't worth the benefit of the doubt. It's your time though and if you think a billionaire is worth it then who are we to judge?
Thanks for explaining it, makes sense. It just feels neccesary to write something like that to have even slight chance of not being labelled as an Elon fanboy that would lick his boots if he asked you to do it - all discussions seem to be black/white with nothing in between.
As for Elon Musk - the opposite can be said. Why are so many people spending so much time commenting about the latest crap his has said or done? 🙂
nobody thought landing a rocket was possible
You've clearly never watched a 1950s sci-fi movie, since half of them involve rockets which land.
It was clearly something people thought was possible.
Sci-fi also includes forms of travel like Hyperloop, FTL travel, time travel... Does that mean people believe all those things are possible, or does it mean people like those fantasies and/or they hope future innovations will make those things possible?
I don't think "look at sci-fi" really means anything here, regardless of what the opinion of experts and the public was.
Does this count as sci-fi too?
Okay, trying to say it in another way: I don’t think many people thought SpaceX had much chance of success or becoming basically the #1 in the industry, far ahead of everyone else.
I don’t buy your sci-fi argument. Do people also think time travel will be possible?
Have you ever heard of NASA's DC-X? It was a working reusable launch vehicle prototype in the 90s based on the same concept. Often, when someone talks about SpaceX, it seems like they're not even interested in launch vehicle development. The DC-X was a well-known project.
Yes, I’m fully aware of it. Very cool, but it never got any further than the prototype stage AFAIK - SpaceX made it work and has lowered the price to orbit considerably and the rest of the industry is scrambling to catch up.
Scientists are really looking forward to Starship because of the incredible potential it provides. If SpaceX manages to get it working, it’ll likely change space exploration in a massive way. I find that quite exciting.
Then I don't understand why you mentioned that a reusable launch vehicle was inconceivable before. Anyway. This whole story isn't as one-sided as you described it. Even though the program was cost-effective, it was eventually discontinued due to budget constraints and an accident. At that time, understandably, ISS was the priority, since unlike SpaceX, space agencies are not transportation companies. This is why the growing market demand for low-Earth orbit transportation in the 2000s was beneficial, and NASA got involved in the Falcon 9 project early on in the 2000s, providing engineers and funding for development. It was/is mutually beneficial, since the costs were lower for both NASA and SpaceX. Therefore, NASA didn't fail to develop its own reusable launch vehicle, but joined a similar project shortly after the end of the DC-X(A). The vertical takeoff and landing concept isn't as groundbreaking after the aforementioned proof of concept as some people make it out to be. Apart from a few years after DC-X, the concept went through a steady development to practical use.
Edit: typo
I might have been lacking coffee when I wrote my first comment 🙂 I re-wrote it in a later comment.
SpaceX and the other big space companies wouldn't exist without NASA and/or the military. NASA have sent quite some money towards SpaceX - I think NASA is quite satisfied with their investement.
Well, again, I also showed that Von Braun was suggesting the same thing at the same time. And yes, I do think some people think time travel will be possible considering people have believed time travel hoaxes before.
But I don't know what people thought SpaceX's chances of success were.
I have added an update to my previous post. I think we just misunderstand each other.
Of course there are people believing all kinds of crazy shit, like the Earth being flat. I don’t see how that is relevant?
Von Braun was amazing.
Musk is good at getting investors, but he was smart enough to let other people run Space X. Twitter is just a toy they convinced that he needed so that he would leave the cars and rockets alone for a while.
I miss the days when aristocrats and big business owners were genuine philanthropists and not greedy money-hoarding bastards. Even Edward Colston, a merchant who literally profiteered from the transatlantic slave trade, built homes, schools and other public works.
I'd have a much higher opinion of people like Richard Branson, Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk if they used the vast sums of wealth they hoarded to build homes, power stations, water treatment plants and other useful infrastructure, not lobby governments for even more tax cuts. Otherwise, they're chasing privatised space travel pipe dreams that we either aren't going to achieve, or will be reserved only for the ultra-wealthy.
How can we honestly have dreams to colonize Mars, the Moon, or Venus in the next few decades when we can't even fix our own problems at home?
They never were. You only think that because philanthropy has always just been an exercise in PR. If you dig deeper into the life and actions of those individuals, you will notice they all suffer from the same pathology.
This is it. If you Google Andrew Carnegie, he's listed as a philanthropist who built libraries. If you Google the Battle of Homestead, you can see how people literally died to fight for labor rights against him. These people were never good people. We just forgot the bad.
Then let it be PR. It's still better than whatever is happening right now. They had at least some dignity and somewhat cared about their image, now it's just all greed
I think the point is that as long as certain services or fundamentals for living are based on good-will and philanthropy, they are in the end at the mercy of whims or calculated actions of those doing well.
It is PR in the sense that it does not only make the philanthropist look good, it also ties the subjects of the philanthrophy into a bond between the giver and receiver: as a receiver you are forever thankful to the philanthropist and in some perverted way constantly reminded of your subordinate status towards the giver. This strengthens the societal structures that benefit the rich and helps them stay powerful compared to massess. While I am sure that most rich people genuinely donate money to make things better and help others, it is still them who get to choose where the money is spent.
More equal and transparent option is to make sure that there is enough tax revenue to cover these kinds of costs from public spending.
I have also been playing with an idea of a philanthropic fund that allows anyone to donate, but not to decide where the money is spent. If the target for philanthropy could be decided by a group of experts/public poll, money could probably be allocated to places where it is needed the most. However, I am sure there would be a lack of bigger donations as the PR effect would be smaller...
They had at least some dignity and somewhat cared about their image
They literally hired mercenaries to murder striking workers. It has always been greed. It can only be greed. A library doesn't change that.
It isn't bro, go read about the pinkertons, robber barons, etc. It's not great now, but it is infinitely better than company towns, protestor massacres,pinkertons, and jimmy hoffa. Go read history it is amazing, I'm not calling you dumb, just ignorant of history and how bad things can really get if we don't hold the line.
It’s not that they had dignity or cared, it’s that news sources were so limited that if they did something shitty they just paid off the papers and nobody was ever the wiser
Bro they take 95% of the wealth and then donate back 5% and always have, don't believe the hype my friend. OR some wait until they die and donate 20% and leave 80% in perpetual trust to keep their descendants rich and they then dribble out small amounts to charity to keep it as a tax haven.
Your last point is something that I often say: we'll never figure out how to reverse aging, we'll only figure out how to stop Elon Musk aging.
On the philanthropy point: We used to have more progressive taxation systems that discouraged wealth-hoarding. For someone of arbitrarily large income, massive philanthropic acts were often ways to avoid paying taxes. They were going to lose the money either way, but by building a library, expanding a hospital, funding a humanitarian project, feeding the poor or whatever they could choose where the money was spent instead and, as others have said, get some good PR and legacy-building at the same time. Now their wealth isn't threatened by taxation, why would they even consider relinquishing it?
I think the privatized space launch vehicles push is worthy endeavour. Costs of launching on space x are significantly lower. Lockheed and Boeing weren't doing it, and there will be benefit to society in the future.
However, that's about all I can justify as being well meaning. So many other ventures were completely stupid. Instead of buying Twitter, he could have built the highspeed rail and owned that shit, but naw.
I mean, the Russians competed with the US space race at a much lower budget. Privatization of this stuff wasn't necessary to make it cheaper. The US government is just particularly inefficient with spending at times.
Uh unless they caught him saying it/email/memo this is pure speculation and should be marked as such lol. Not a musk fan but people need to demand sources on stuff like this or you'll just be lemmings (the bad kind, not Lemmings)
This is a cross-post from Mastodon and the source is in the link.
And the source only quotes a reporter saying what your misleading title implies..
Utter shocked Pikachu face. its a concept that has been around for 100 years, and no-one did it before for a big reason.
Governments need to hire Thunderf00t to personally inspect these fad-ish techs
The country could have saved a bunch of money on scams like solar roadways and Hyperloop
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https://piped.video/watch?v=ZHjrFKfyZrw
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I think he might be one of the smartest youtubers out there. His arrogant personality probably drives some people away from his channel, but I think at this point he has earned the right to be a bit arrogant. I don't think there's been a single video where he's been wrong.
Without counting all the videos about Anita Sarkeesian, I guess.
Who?
Maybe you're too young to see live the rise of the alt-right, but believe it or not, everything started with a woman dared to talk critically about video games from a feminist point of view. Watch this very very short resume of what happened here, the rest of the channel have more videos with deeper analysis of the situation if you want to learn more. And btw, Anita did like 12 videos on her project, thunderfoot did like 30 or more videos about her.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/6y8XgGhXkTQ
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I love you
There was an era when I used to watch basically everything that Thunderfoot, Sargon, TL;DR and Bearing (and I'm sure others I'm forgetting) did and it's shameful to think back on how gullible I was. Them piledriving on Sarkeesian was part of what drove me away from that alt-right pipeline. Much as I was cheering on their takedowns of her legitimately bad points, I was scratching my head at their inability to give credit to the good ones.
That's the thing about these people; it's all or nothing. Every point you can harp on about has to be added to the video. Exactly like the woman they were criticizing, they felt an inescapable urge to argue every possible point or angle, no matter how weak and indefensible, because otherwise there's less video to monetize. They bounce between relatable and sensible counters, to complete nonsense with the exact same self-righteous "owned" energy. Much as I sympathize with Anita especially today, I don't give her a pass on some of her boneheaded arguments. Bad reasoning deserves critique. But she got a lot more than critique. These internet bloodsports types went right for the jugular, and none of them had any credit to give on a point well made.
I think out of the lot, Thunderfoot is probably the closest to reasonable because he is legitimately educated and intelligent as far as I can tell, but I would caution anyone watching him to take it with a grain of salt because I can pretty confidently say he's willing to bend the truth to make a point on a factual basis. I would not trust him even on simple math/science matters if there's a possible agenda in the way. And that agenda might be as simple as wanting to dunk on someone he knows the algorithm enjoys him dunking on. Be wary of misinformation.
spoiler
Case in point: I recently saw him on my front page tearing down another Musk special: Tesla's electric big rig. Hadn't seen him in a while so figured I'd give it a look. Now there's an easy half-dozen reasons why a battery electric hauling truck probably isn't the best idea, but a large part of his argument stemmed from the notion that they're not saying how much it can haul. Sensing an opportunity to get another 'own' in, he decided that this means the number must be really embarrassing, so he picked out an image that was posted as proof of how much the Tesla truck can haul, involving a load of concrete Jersey barriers on a flat bed trailer, and proceeded to calculate its weight vs what a regular truck was hauling.
I forget exactly what weird reasons (if any) he gave for it, but he calculated the diesel truck's barriers as weighing twice as much apiece in spite of the fact that they were clearly a lot smaller, with a lot more of them fitting on the same sort of platform trailer. But his assumption on the weight of the ones on the Tesla truck was insane. He grabbed the value from some website but I couldn't find any similar number from my own searches - Jersey barriers generally come in a very standardized size and weight, and it was like 4x the figure he managed to scrape together from a product page for something that looks noticeably smaller.
So, he gave some examples, did some 'research' to fill in the blanks and did some math, and that math was technically valid, but he did some sleight of hand in the process of filling in the blanks to massage out a clearly bad result for the Tesla truck. All because the Tesla hauling like 15% less than a normal truck is rated for just isn't as juicy as making it look like an anemic toy for rich kids.
I hate Elon, and Tesla over-sells the capabilities of their tech and their hype cycle should not be trusted, but I would seriously caution watching guys like Thunderfoot without a lot of scrutiny and a good dose of scientific literacy.
Sorry but the alt-right did not start there, it's been around for a while, decades.
I don't think he was wrong there either. Of course all the death threats and the like Anita received were ridiculous and wrong, but presenting an opposing point of view to her opinions isn't really "wrong."
Maybe you don't remember the videos, please come back and see his videos from 8 years ago. If can't see how fucked up and cringe they are, I'm sorry to tell you have no growth up on all these years.
I think it needs to be pointed out how Thunderfoot's videos came in combination with dozens of other fairly large channels all making "epic owned feminist" videos blasting Anita in universally extreme terms, simultaneously with her receiving incredible amounts of legitimate harassment and death threats. Never do I remember these people reminding their audiences not to act out like that. Not once can I recall them giving her credit for points well made. No balanced point of view was ever given. It's just internet bloodsport.
I understand people having missed the broader context of contributing to a harmful pile-on, because my dumb ass clearly did back then when I was watching these channels. I would have been a lot more critical of what I was watching, a lot sooner, if I realized just how one-sided and tone-deaf these people were in light of what was happening to the targets of their hate campaigns. But they controlled the narrative as long as the people watching weren't seeking out other avenues of coverage.
Such a good content creator. I highly recommend. That and his debunking of the infinite battery but the solar roadways video soo interesting.
No glass would be able to withstand constant usage. Even the pedestrian roadways struggled with normal usage.
Solar freaking roadways!
Good, because hyperloop is just a dumber, expensive and more dangerous train with terrible throughput.
Kind of sums up Musk in the last decade. Making dumb expensive decisions.....
The reason why the Hyperloop is such a bad idea is that it would literally be the largest vaccum chamber ever built by orders of magnitude, and even if it does work, just one small leak on the tube somewhere and the people inside will get Titan submersible'd due to the sudden deceleration. (Depending on the design, the pod could be fine though)
Maglevs are a much more realistic option if speeds higher than high speed rail are needed, and even those are usually cost prohibitive.
That isn't how it works at all. The maximum pressure difference possible in the hyperloop would be 1 atm, this is relatively easy to design around with high factors of safety. The titan was under ~300 atm of compressive stress due to the ocean which is why it imploded.
Please read what I wrote on my post more carefully.
What I stated was that the pod could be fine, because I don't expect it to implode or explode, but the sudden deceleration from the leak (from warpage and deformation of a tube shaped vaccum chamber at that scale) will get the people inside Titan submersible'd from crashing into the pod internal walls at 350km/h, because it's a pretty gory image that I didn't want to type out.
That's not what happened on Titan so saying that it is is just wrong
Kind of the opposite of the Titan submersible regarding pressure differential. The inside of the Hyperloop pods are kept at atmospheric pressure. If the tunnel became depressurized it would only reduce the pressure differential in the pod. Of course they'd all be liquefied in a crash at the proposed speeds...
So fucking stupid, we can't wait for corporations to fix our systems. It's one thing to allow rezoning so that such a project can be built and then offer the project/bid it out to someone like Musk to build, but it's another thing to place all expectations in a corporation on for them to completely drop the ball.
Hope this gets put on the ballot again. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, fuck me
Edit: ballot not ballet :)
Never been a big theater guy myself, but I would see the shit out of that ballet
I mean, it an impossible and impractical project from its inception. Everyone should have known this, but Elon Musk iron man hurr durr.
The thing is we are undergoing one of the most exponential acceleration of technology and society that we have ever experienced as a species by many metrics (even tho many will say we are living in the worst time ever, by other metrics). The last decade corporations threw a shitton of money at seemingly impractical and impossible ideas. Convince strangers to get in other strangers cars to replace taxis and limos? No problem you've just created a whole new "profitable" sector that redefined society all over the world. Create 10 separate Netflix's spending billions of dollars you shouldn't have, ruining your best IP thru oversaturation , and it failed? Everyone should have known this hurr durr. As dumb as the Hyperloop always has been and still is, I do get why so much money and hype went into it during a decade where the impossible and impractical routinely became commonplace
I totally agree on Uber's business model being completely unsustainable. Consumers clearly LOVE Uber, but their business model is so unsustainable it doesnt matter.
Musk, a noted public transit hater
Does anyone have a source for that?
He once described Public Transport as "rubbing shoulders with serial killers".
I mean, he owns a car company.
Have you ever watched Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
Gestures broadly at everything
Yeah I kinda hate requests for specific quotes like that sometimes. A person doesn't have to say specifically "I hate public transportation" for it to be obvious, just like I don't need someone to say "I hate trans people" specifically if they walk around complaining about bathrooms and pronouns.
i don't have a source but elon's twitter history at least is FULL of public transportation bashing, and calling the idea useless
Why should you get downvotes? For all anyone knows, this is a sincere, non-rhetorical question.
You can't just post stuff like this without providing a source.
This is a cross-post from Mastodon and the source is in the link.
And the source only quotes a reporter saying what your misleading title implies..
Sounds like back pedaling.
Here's a link to an article that includes biographer Ashley Vance's take on Paris Marx's statement. https://jalopnik.com/did-musk-propose-hyperloop-to-stop-california-high-spee-1849402460
It’s just opinions and statements and references, it seems to be much based on the fact that Musk said that he didn’t want to build Hyperloop, which is nothing new - he always said that.
I’m not defending Musk, I just really want better media and news than this.
When I spoke with Vance, who is currently a senior writer at Bloomberg, he called Marx’s conclusion “vaguely accurate but a disingenuous take on the situation.” From Vance’s point of view, Musk’s initial announcements on Hyperloop were “more of a reaction to how underwhelming California’s high-speed rail [proposal] was.”
Pretty tired of the vitriol from "reporters" like Marx that isn't based on reality. It's no better than Faux News.
Elon Musk is nothing more than a scumbag with money.
I'm starting to think we just need to rebrand green energy projects to sound more like a tech concept to trick people into liking it more.
It's not solar, it's LightWave.
It is weird that Elon Musk was so worried about California's high-speed rail project because it had the look of a boondoggle from the beginning. It's horrendously expensive and the promise of an alternative to air travel has been diminished as they've decided to use more existing rail (you can't run high speed on it) to save money.
I dont think Elon was worried that the high speed rail would be a boondoggle, i think he was worried it WOULDNT.
If Elon Musk was worried that rail service between San Francisco and Los Angeles might diminish the demand for Teslas, then I think we have a more serious problem with delusion than I thought.
That's what I was thinking. Surely he isn't so narrow minded to have LA-Silicon Valley commuters as Tesla's principal target demographic?
But it was for the first 10 years of Tesla's existence.
People are quick to forget.
From the article:
“It seemed that Musk had dished out the Hyperloop proposal just to make the public and legislators rethink the high-speed train,” reporter Ashlee Vance wrote in his 2015 biography of Musk. “He didn’t actually intend to build the thing.” Musk’s ultimate hope? “High-speed rail would be canceled,” explained Vance.
most literate mastodon user
Omg! Elon lied to us! Say it ain't so!
“Those are just a few of the big transport visions that, just a few years ago, Silicon Valley told us were right around the corner.” where’s the source on this?
[citation needed]
So where did he "admit" this exactly?
How is it that it would be out of date before it is finished? It is a decades old technology with incremental improvements, any finished variation of the technology would be decades ahead of the existing infrastructure.
Current trains slow, new trains faster. Speed isn't obsolete.
Elon didn't want the government to in his mind waste money building the train system which would go over cost and not even be state of the art by the time it was built.
He wanted them to do something substantially more innovative. He never wanted to build the hyperloop, it was meant to try and get others to see if they could make it work, but also as an example of how California should be looking to lead and do something really next level.
Hyperloop wasn't meant to stop it so they'd build it instead. It was there to try and foster any kind of innovation rather than have the existing plan go forward.
So out of context, the thread title can be seen as true, but it's not the whole story, and not what he meant.
You sound a bit like a Musk apologist, ngl.
There's a difference between an apologist and correcting something entirely somewhat out of context.
If I was trying to say it's okay for musk to say FSD is going to be ready this year every year for the past 6 or whatever years it is, that's different.
Was it out of context tho? Theres a lot of context that supports the idea that he really just doesnt care for large scale efficiency, but that he instead leans hard into what is convenient for someone in his position, or near to. The underground tesla tubes comes to mind. True, he never publically admitted to the idea that the hyperloop was meant to torpedo the train project, but it sure contributed, and now California get no train (for now), the car centric society still reigns supreme and he stands to gain by being a large share/stakeholder in the company that sells what is probs the most well known EV atm (important given its California and the general trend of EVs vs ICEs).
Not proof, but he remains suspicious as fuck.
Also, as im sure you're aware, there are a fairly sizable group of genuine apologists who pretend to be different things just to dodge criticism. So any attempt to do what you did here is auto-sus. ;p
Well we really can't speak to any ulterior motives that aren't public and maybe there is. Killing rail outright helps sell more cars, but like you said I doubt we'll ever know one way or the other.
In theory, excluding unknowable hidden motives, the goal was to help halt this very specific plan in hopes they'd come up with something better.
By the time it was cancelled the cost had gone from mid 40 billion to 77 billion and it wasn't going to stop there.
I imagine that the vast vast majority of this isn't the cost of the actual train hardware but the cost of land rights, environmental studies etc. It's expensive as fuck.
I wouldn't be surprised if 3/4 of the cost has nothing to do with the train or engineering itself, especially as it ballooned to 77b (edit this could actually be looked up to some extent I'm sure, I just don't know) I did some more looking and while it's a factor I was indeed off. Things like expensive tunnels are a big factor.
Knowing this, wouldn't it make sense to spend more and make something better and more advanced if you have to sink so much money into all the other stuff before you can even build it? Put the best thing we can through that expensive tunnel.
I think there's a fair distinction of, wanted to kill high speed rail in California (this post) and wanting some form of high speed rail / transport that would be better than what was proposed given the expected costs and overruns, and better technology in general
We'll really never know, but there is a difference in context there.
Edit: looks like it actually is still happening, I thought things got halted other than 1 section of track. Estimates are now 88b-128b.
There is nothing wrong with old technology. If it works don't break it. In the case of transport the innovations we need are cheaper and automated. Cheaper means we can build a lot, giving transport to places that are barely worth it. Automated means we can run frequent service all the time (including holidays), thus ensuring there is never anyone who regrets getting rid of the car which is ready when we want. (Many US cities are limited by their ability to hire qualified drivers more than money)
Sure hyperloop speed would be nice ,but it isn't the pressing issue with transport.
Capacity, wooo!
.... and the lack thereof.
Right, but the point wasn't to make it a hyperloop, but to try and do something, anything better.
And it already wasn't going to be cheap