Quote from: Nameless on July 17, 2023, 18:02:36I referred to EVs in Asia, where according to you, "there are plenty of cheap EVs under 10k" which have a laughable 100km range and they take many hours to charge.
You are the one who used asia as and example so I pointed out they do have cheaper EV options.
That said, you are still wrong. For example Leap Motors T03 it costs 65,800 RMB (about 9k) and has 403 km, Ora R2 Baimao LR for 75,800 RMB
Full list can be found by searching for:
china-ev-price-list-rank-chinese-electric-cars-by-range-and-price
QuoteMy complaint is about the flaws and disadvantages of EVs TODAY, not a decade into the future. Obviously, technology will improve, but it will likely happen in small increments over many years, as was the case in the past.
But the discussion is about a decade into the future...
QuoteNope. You made the unconvincing argument that 'if you have a phone in your house, you should not care about cameras in the cockpit', in response to my dissatisfaction with cameras built-in in the EV's cockpit.
No, my argument was you can just block the camera. Then I went to talk about how so many devices already have cameras and mics.
QuoteYou get what you tolerate, shill.
Can we not result to personal insults? Sure you get what you tolerate, but lets stop pretending that his is somehow different than what we already have.
QuoteNothing, but if you put privacy blockers on the cameras in the cockpit, you give car manufacturers one more reason to stop your car remotely, which is why I'd rather not have cameras in the cockpit in the first place.
Then they'll stop your car for not having cameras in your cockpit.
I mean seriously, you think automakers want to put cameras in the cockpit? They wouldn't be doing it if government wasn't requiring it. Take that to your politician
QuoteYou already answered your own question- because the car manufacturers might be convinced that "those truly caring about privacy are a minority" (which I disagree with BTW), and make a decision based on the assessment that the benefits for the car manufacturers would outweigh the drawbacks (namely the small impact on profitability that such a minority would cause).
Sure, but you make it sound like they actually care what you do on your private time. All they care about is giving consumers the features they want that drive sales.
QuoteCan you guess which ICE car won't have it? My current, trusty ICE car. And the second-hand market, too, for years to come.
If government is going to require such, they simply won't renew your car registration until you install one.
QuoteI wrote it in my previous comments but I'll remind you again since you didn't figure that out by yourself- It will take Europe years to build the manufacturing plants to produce enough batteries to become self-reliant. Thus China will continue to dominate the EV battery market globally (maybe except for the US), which means the CCP will laugh all the way to the bank.
Note that most of China's dominance of the EV battery market is inside their own country. They aren't the only major producer of batteries, especially when you take out outside of China, there is Japan and South Korea and America too. Of course China will benefit from it too in the short term, but so what?
QuoteSource: "trust me lad"
You don't know how emissions standards work do you?
QuoteHere's where you're wrong- people need to drive cars, that's why they own cars even when using public transportation makes more financial sense. If ICE cars are no longer an option in the market, many people will buy whatever they can. Tesla, as the market leader in EVs, is best positioned to benefit from that, which is why they're lobbying the EPA to ban ICE cars.
That isn't how fleet average works, its based on emissions per mile per fleet average of a manufacturer
And Tesla isn't even asking them to ban ICE cars, they are simply trying to prevent manufacturers from weakening the planned standards by pointing out it is not only possible but can be made even stricter and still be feasible
QuoteGiven that many markets, such as the EU, will ban ICE cars in the next decade, other brands are already investing heavily in EV tech.
Relatively, none are planning a ban in 2030 right? And for US automakers, the US is pretty much the biggest market
QuoteWhataboutism
Ah, so you think only ICE cars can be allowed to be anti-competitive, got it