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Comment Re:The supply chain problems are real (Score 1) 69

Elon Musk compensation package:

The pay plan would give Musk 423,743,904 shares, awarded in 12 tranches of 35,311,992 shares each if Tesla achieves various operational goals and market value milestones. Goals include delivering 20 million vehicles, obtaining 10 million Full Self-Driving subscriptions, delivering 1 million “AI robots,” putting 1 million robotaxis in operation, and achieving a $400 billion adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization).

And:

The plan has 12 market capitalization milestones topping out at $8.5 trillion. The value of Musk’s award is estimated to exceed $1 trillion if he hits all operational and market capitalization goals. Musk would increase his ownership stake to 24.8 percent of Tesla, or 28.8 percent if Tesla ends up winning an appeal in the court case that voided his 2018 pay plan.

So, Tesla has to generate $8.5 Trillion in revenue over the next ten years for Musk to get $1 Trillion in stock... If the company doesn't meet those targets, he doesn't get the stock.

Comment Re:full-size electric pickup (Score 1) 69

Quote>I agree that people SHOULD want smaller trucks, or—get this—CARS, but the big car companies love their margins. Ford's eliminated every passenger car in their lineup except for the Mustang (even the Mustang Mach-e is classified as an SUV for some reason).

People want smaller pickups, just look at the market for older small pickups... The issue is there is little profit in passenger cars, there is big profit in big pickups and SUVs. If you can make a quality, attractive economical passenger car, you'll sell a ton of them (Honda Accord?) but that's hard - on the other hand, you can make much, much more selling big expensive pickup trucks/SUVs.

Comment Re:How Stupid (Score 1) 69

What?

They lose money on every EV F-150 they sell.

To continue making them is non-sensical. What can Ford sell that generates enough PROFIT to at least offset the LOSSES of every F-150 EV?

They have a huge unsold inventory of $100K pickup trucks, why keep making more F-150 EVs just to park them in an airport parking lot somewhere?

Comment Re: Not surprising, and nothing to worry (Score 1) 286

You might want to talk to some South Koreans who have vowed never to go back to the US after ICE arrested them, held them for a week in those detention centers, then deported them back to South Korea.

Out of curiosity, were ANY of them in the country illegally? Overstaying tourist visas? Working off the US books?

Pretty sure every korean worker, in the plant that was subsidized to create jobs for AMERICAN workers, that was deported was deported for immigration/employment regulation violations.

Last week, US officials detained 475 people - more than 300 of them South Korean nationals - who they said were working illegally at Hyundai's battery facility, one of the largest foreign investment projects in Georgia.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/artic...

They were deported for cause, why don't you mention that when you talk about them?

Comment Re: Not surprising, and nothing to worry (Score 1) 286

If it requires hundreds of millions of federal taxpayer dollars, then yes, that ship has sailed.

Im not aware of anyone trying to STOP EV battery plants in the US, but i do know that the federal government borrowing money to give it to battery plant owners to reduce the cost of EV batteries in EVs that were subsidized at purchase is a bad policy.

Comment Re: Anyway I should have added we need to get rid (Score 1) 286

Anyway I should have added we need to get rid...Of all billionaires jail them all and seize their money to give to us the people so we never ever ever have to work again.

What, are you seven years old?

How much money do you think billionaires have?

How many poor people are there?

And, finally, if no one works, who makes I phones? Delivers your DoorDash order, drives your uber?

Reminds me of the reporter that said Michael Bloomberg should have taken the money he spent on his failed Presidential run and instead he could have made everyone in America a millionaire!

Comment Re:sounds great for error rates (Score 1) 48

They say it won't be an issue:

Google has already conducted radiation testing on TPUs (Trillium, v6e), with "promising" results: "While the High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) subsystems were the most sensitive component, they only began showing irregularities after a cumulative dose of 2 krad(Si) -- nearly three times the expected (shielded) five year mission dose of 750 rad(Si). No hard failures were attributable to TID up to the maximum tested dose of 15 krad(Si) on a single chip, indicating that Trillium TPUs are surprisingly radiation-hard for space applications."

Comment Re:Financially, this does not make sense (Score 1) 48

It's probably more to do with latency and availability. If your phone can talk directly to the satellite, avoiding congested cellular networks, it lowers the response time to queries.

You may want to run some numbers to see if satellite uplinks and downlinks are quicker than "congested cellular networks".

Satellites will never displace land-based cell towers - the key to making weak cellphones operate thru a satellite is that very, very, very few people attempt it at one time.

Comment Re:Heat ? (Score 1) 48

Just a reminder, this is being billed as as lower cost solution, if it takes billions of dollars to figure out a basic solution to heat dissipation, this may not be the money-saving invention they think it is...

What happened to the whole dropping data center containers in the ocean to lower cooling costs idea? Are we still dunking data centers in the ocean?

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