The cabin is fully intact; crumple zones absorbed the impact forces. They burned to death.
The cabin is fully intact; crumple zones absorbed the impact forces. They burned to death.
Teslas are deathtraps and everyone buying one is signing their own death certificate and funding fascism.
Used car market about to blow up even more than it did during Covid.
Yeah, but automakers won’t feel a pinch. They will jack up prices of cars. And since number of cars on US roads has grown significantly, people will need new cars. They will also layoff workers, which works better for companies’ bottom line. Stock price goes up, money goes brrrr.
So we’re just realizing that Elon is dumb as a stump?
Bullshit. They aren’t a startup anymore, they have been selling product for *years*, and their sales have peaked and are declining fast (which is the real issue here). If you can’t cover your overhead, which includes R&D, you aren’t a viable business at that point. Just like GM wasn’t pre-bankruptcy, and it is…
Doing that discounted cash flow stuff is hard math to an art history major.
And yet, it matters, because absent the ability to flim-flam investors into setting money or on fire ala Elon Musk, or getting on the stock price game of musical chairs, this level of losses when sales are declining is completely unsustainable. Expressing losses as X per unit sold is perfectly valid. That they are…
F1 expects drivers to act like adults when talking about F1 on TV.
I mean I admit I’m an average or even below average in term of intelligence but the more I grow up, the more I realize that common sense is not common at all
No.
Yes. We need to call out the shit articles so Static Media (Jalopnik’s new owners) can weed out the bad writers
Did this need to be a reply to a comment?
Snarky, Brownell.
Your entire argument is based on a safety issue that happens incredibly rarely in life (and not at all to most adults).
Times you will expose yourself in the station lot while getting out in a passenger side car when getting gas: Every time you get gas.
Phone bills were really high 30 years ago. You paid ~$50 a month in the mid 1990s for landline phone service (about $104 in today’s dollars). 10 cents a minute was considered a good price for “long distance” (Sprint flooded the TV airwaves for these long distance plans), which was any call outside your immediate metro…
Did THIS need to be capitalized?
Re New Car Prices: I think we are making a lot of apples to oranges comparisons.
Send him on a ski trip, like the last F1 “superstar” who kept using his car as a weapon.