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The legend of the 'Tesla killer' came true, and it's Elon Musk (electrek.co)
45 points by doener 4 months ago | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments


It seems obvious that he hasn't even showed up for work in years. His only real tesla-related effort has been to try to strong-arm an illegal 50B pay package. The board should be replaced for negligence and he should be fired for malfeasance and fraud.

The idea that he's the richest man in the world is a joke. Half his rapidly declining wealth is based on SpaceX, a "360B" company with no profit and < 12B in revenue that blows up and burns up its own products more often than not.


Does he care? He has a new source of revenue, the U.S. Treasury. Fort Knox soon.

Anil Dash -- Understanding DOGE as Procurement Capture

https://www.anildash.com//2025/01/04/DOGE-procurement-captur...


Is he working for Tesla at all anymore?

Whats the current stance on remote work? Is it now OK because he wants to do it? Such a hypocrite.


He also fired the entire Supercharger team to make a point to Rebecca Tinucci. But yeah, those are the two contributions I can think of.


Setting aside politics for the moment, Tesla really has lost its way. It has made many extremely customer-unfriendly UX and technology changes over the past few years, including:

* As mentioned in the article, removing the turn signal stalk. Other than the obvious mess that is, the stalk also provides other important functionality such as cleaning the windshield, forcing the wipers to swipe (which is critical since Tesla's automatic windshield wiper setting is famously terrible), and switching off the headlight high beams (also necessary due to the poor automatic mode).

And even when they recently re-added the left stalk, they still omitted the right stalk which controls the drivetrain (PRND) and the parking brake.

* You know where the horn button is on every vehicle? Of course you do, because it where it should be. On some Tesla, it was moved to a tiny button on the right side of the steering wheel - just where you'd never find it in an emergency. There was also the (mostly) unpopular yoke-style steering wheel, which was initially forced on Model S/X buyer, then the round steering wheel was available as a more expensive option, and finally it became the default.

* Removing ultrasonic sensors on the bumper and replacing them with camera-only obstacle detection. This was very buggy for some time and even now, almost all Teslas do not have a camera on the bumper, so there is an area in front of the car where the cameras can not see due to the hood. Ultrasonic sensors are cheap and work very well, and provide an alternative sensing technology to vision-only, but conflict with the mantra that since humans can drive with vision-only, cars should too. This mantra also prevents the use of radar (which was present in early Teslas and then disabled) or LiDAR - both of which could be important additional/supplimental safety technologies, which are explained away as being less reliable than vision.

There are probably some other examples, but these are just a few off the top of my head. Once you include politics and alienating the company's most loyal fans, the increasing quality of the competition, and the Tesla charging network advantage disappearing, I'm having a hard time seeing Tesla growing in the future.


> Tesla charging network advantage disappearing

I just learned about Ionna yesterday, 8 major automakers building out a NA charging network together

https://www.ionna.com/




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