Clustertruck
Member
- First Name
- Adam
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2022
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 18
- Reaction score
- 11
- Location
- Silicon Valley, CA
- Vehicles
- Models X, 3, and X, Roadster and Cybertruck res.
This doesn't sound compelling.
- This has three negatives: Dealers don't have EV technicians. Dealers don't have short-term profit-motive to sell EV over ICE. Dealers don't know how to sell EVs.
- A mailing list?
Another example of data: Tesla has "millions" of miles of road data, but zero data for numerous countries where Mercedes has millions of vehicles, many with degrees of data logging and autonomy, crash data, and their R&D. Sitting in a relational database in Germany, these data are probably not worth the storage devices they occupy. But as training data for AI and ML, Tesla can leverage years or even decades of vehicle and user data. An autonomous system driving a road for the first time is already equipped with dozens or thousands of occurrences of human drivers negotiating that length of road under all weather conditions, during road construction, knowing local traffic, making informed real time decisions. That all might sound unimportant, but it's this information which analysts credit as a material advantage Tesla has in keeping ahead of its competitors.
- Patents for what? If their patents were valid, they would have sued Tesla for infringement already.
- How did that work out for NUMMI or Grohmann?
- Writing off stuff they just spent money for doesn't save taxes.
- They already have the carbon credits leverage.
- Vans that aren't EV platforms.
- ...You have to sell new EVs to the fleet customers, they don't just buy whatever you offer.
Anyway, it's a thought-provoking experiment to wander through these aspects of the electric reinvention of the automotive industry. There's going to be surprises and new ways of doing business. Tesla buying Mercedes is one of the simplest to conceive. Tesla going straight to fully autonomous vehicles which it owns and never sell, only "leasing" to end users like a software license … this is a nebulous proposition for retail and commercial buyers … from the career and employment of drivers to the concept of having a car accident and the other driver … doesn't exist.