By John Gruber
Due — never forget anything, ever again.
Jonathan Gitlin, automotive editor at Ars Technica, on Tesla’s vaporware event last night:
Over time, Musk claimed the operating costs of his Cybercab would be 20 cents per mile, “and yes you’ll be able to buy one,” he told the crowd to excited shrieks. “We expect the cost to be below $30,000,” Musk said, before expounding on a business model where instead of the company owning and operating these allegedly revenue-generating assets itself, they are instead owned by private individuals who each give Tesla its regular cut. This week another four top executives left the company in advance of last night’s event, including “the global vehicle automation and safety policy lead.”
“It’s going to be a glorious future,” Musk said, albeit not one that applies to families or groups of three or more.
Musk claims that Tesla “expects to start” fully unsupervised FSD next year on public roads in California and Texas. A recent analysis by an independent testing firm found the current build requires human intervention about once every 13 miles, often on roads it has used before.
★ Friday, 11 October 2024