This is interesting. This is the first time I've seen anything like this. I just searched on Tesla website for existing inventory of new Model 3, S, and X. There's not a single new Tesla car in stock anywhere near me. I searched 200 miles out and nothing. There might not be a single new Model 3 in inventory in anywhere in the US. Tesla is literally selling every car they make as fast as they can make it.
And these moron analysts said Tesla had demand problem.
Don't get ahead of yourself. The first rule of consumerism is marketing. Tesla isn't for everyone. Is it the "best" electric car? Arguably yes. But the design is bland, the cars all look the same and the "SUVs" really aren't roomy enough for more than 4 people. More importantly it's going to take a long time to convince the average person electric is superior to gas and worth the extra cost/hassle.^of course. Tesla is going to kick so much ass that 80% of automobile manufacturers will be 'Kodaks' of the future.
This is only the tip of iceberg.
Don't get ahead of yourself. The first rule of consumerism is marketing. Tesla isn't for everyone. Is it the "best" electric car? Arguably yes. But the design is bland, the cars all look the same and the "SUVs" really aren't roomy enough for more than 4 people. More importantly it's going to take a long time to convince the average person electric is superior to gas and worth the extra cost/hassle.
There's some cool factor but let's face it, a huge group of people buy cars based on styling followed by brand perception.
I said 5?You want to wait 5 years and then come back to this post with belief that 80% of the current vehicle manufacturers will be essentially non-existent?
GM by themselves sells 2.1m cars per year. Even if Tesla increased capacity by 300% over the next few years, they would still be selling 25% fewer vehicles than just 1 of the major manufacturers right now.
I think everyone knows electric is the future but I believe your time line feels a bit aggressive. Other manufacturers have PLENTY of time to catch up and deliver comparable products.
FSD, for the most part, is not nearly ready for prime time. It's Duke Nukem Forever for cars.Could be replaced with less if we get to full self driving.
I said 5?
We can do it anytime you want, man. It does not matter really. I am not saying that I can see into the future, but based on what I know now, it looks as said in my post.
GM, ah? Can we be fair for once?
Per Time.com:
General Motors Bailout Cost Taxpayers $11.2 Billion
The U.S. government spent $49.5 billion to bail out GM, and after the company's bankruptcy in 2009
Also, it does not mean that GM will be selling 2.1 mostly gasoline cars in 5 or so years.
FSD, for the most part, is not nearly ready for prime time. It's Duke Nukem Forever for cars.
We could easily get people to drop cars altogether in many places by just improving mass transit, adding additional costs to storing your private vehicle on public property, and repurposing city roads for people and transit instead of private vehicles. Increase the opportunity cost associated with driving and watch what it does to the total number of vehicles.
Buses are only terrible because we've made a policy decisions that make them terrible. Providing enforced bus lanes, regular service, and all-door boarding goes long ways to making it good. Public transit isn't for every area and won't fix everything, but there is tremendous room to make it so much better than it currently stands.Gas in LA is $4 a gallon. It hit $5 a few years back and there was some reduction in traffic but not much. Public transit works better in densely populated areas or if you happen to live or work close to a station. Buses are terrible. I live 18 miles from work. There is a train station a block away from my office. It would take me 1.5 hours each way to use public transit. No thanks.
They may have some impressive lane-keeping cruise control, but come back to me when it works in bad weather, poorly marked roads, and the insanity that is generally driving. Doing well under relatively well-controlled conditions doesn't mean much for the insanity that is driving. Remember, easy things for people are often very difficult for machines. The best self driving vehicles in suburban settings require highly detailed maps to really perform well. I remain highly skeptical of Tesla being able to get around this roadblock.Another prediction. Tesla will have regulatory approved FSD within 5 years. Everyone else will be another decade behind.
You may be right. Tesla might not get FSD for very long time and lot longer than they or anyone else think. But I'm confident Tesla will be the first to solve FSD for use anywhere. And when they do, their margin on FSD cars will go up to like 80-90% and Tesla is going to print money. That will change everything overnight.They may have some impressive lane-keeping cruise control, but come back to me when it works in bad weather, poorly marked roads, and the insanity that is generally driving. Doing well under relatively well-controlled conditions doesn't mean much for the insanity that is driving. Remember, easy things for people are often very difficult for machines. The best self driving vehicles in suburban settings require highly detailed maps to really perform well. I remain highly skeptical of Tesla being able to get around this roadblock.
You said that other manufactures would be Kodak which I take to mean that they would be a nearly non existant shell of themselves. When another individual responded that that seemed unrealistic you stated that because competition doesn't exist right now that it was realistic. You felt it was realistic enough to want to come back here in 5 years to verify that Tesla is #1 in sales compared to that other car manufactures. Perhaps you meant something else by that. I'm not sure.
-- No you got it right.
I'm not sure how that's relevant. They still sell 2 million cars a year. Look up the information on all the manufacturers that took aid from either our government or theirs during that time. A lot of them did. If Tesla existed as they are right now during that time...they may not have made it. Because they would have had the exact same issues that every other car maker had.
-- This is relevant because if we keep bailing out failures for 11 billion a pop, this will only lead to further and more substantial failures. This is a good quote I found out that might shed some light here:
"The big car companies aren't "sleeping giants". IMO, they are fat, lazy, over-confident morons, who are too top heavy with management that can't won't change unless forced to, and saddled with the burdens of unions who don't want EV's, and huge investments in factories and equipment to only build ICE vehicles. "
No, but wasn't your point that Tesla in the next few years is going to position itself in the lead? So it doesn't matter if GM sells gas, electric or steam. It's going to be awhile for electric is as desirable as you're implying it will be. In that fairly long stretch of time, other manufacturers will catch up and offer comparable products. Tesla will more than likely still exist but I don't feel like they will be a massive dominating entity in their field compared to others.
-- No, Tesla is already the leader. Tesla is so far ahead of everybody else that is very hard to comprehend to average Joe Doe fed by media bull crap.
Nobody cares about ICE manufacturers anymore. All are dead horses. Most just don't feel this yet.
I only proposed to see this in 5 years to verify everybody's point of view from today.
FSD, for the most part, is not nearly ready for prime time. It's Duke Nukem Forever for cars.
We could easily get people to drop cars altogether in many places by just improving mass transit, adding additional costs to storing your private vehicle on public property, and repurposing city roads for people and transit instead of private vehicles. Increase the opportunity cost associated with driving and watch what it does to the total number of vehicles.
