Comment Re:Texas? (Score 1) 172
That makes a stronger business case for China and it looks like they want Teslas much, much more than Texas.
That makes a stronger business case for China and it looks like they want Teslas much, much more than Texas.
If no one provides a link to a story about the Big Bang, does that mean the Universe doesn't exist?
In this universe, we have search engines. Perhaps you might have inadvertently used one but I see you've recovered nicely from that misstep.
Thanks to Castle Doctrine & Stand Your Ground laws, that's not true in a lot of places in America.
So do car drivers as I've noticed over the past 40 years. Take away the insurance requirements & penalties and North American drivers will behave just as badly, probably worse and definitely far more lethally.
Auto drivers aren't better people than cyclists; they're merely under greater external control. Period.
Since that announcement, more than a few car forums have taken to calling it the Gen 3 or Gen III.
The recognition of how long it would take to replace the current driving stock versus Tesla's manufacturing capacity was one of the reasons for opening up their patents.
yup, somehow
There are quite a few solar leasing companies in the USA such as Solar City ( affiliated with Tesla Motors), Sungevity and Sunpower. If your home's roof is suitable, you can have a 20 year agreement for no money down.
There are already 2 AC underwater cables between Spain & Morocco, in operation for over a decade and there are several HVDC cables over 100 miles long; one is almost 400 miles and carries up to 700 MW. and has exceeded revenue expectations from the outset.It's the NorNed Interconnector.
It's been done - most of Europe is one large interconnected grid; something that is only now happening in America.
I expect things will be much improved in the Southwest when the Tres Amigas Superstation goes online but it's something that should have happened between several other American grids years ago.
In many cases, it's still hundreds of miles between power plant & consumer. That's one of the things that is so attractive about rooftop solar - power is produced right where it's consumed.
If the utilities had a lick of sense ( and I hope some did ), instead of fighting against solar, they should have been the ones to start the solar leasing, thereby getting the production credits & subsidies for themselves, have long-term leases with their own customers & less strain on their transmission grid.
There's more to grid demand than baseload and, at least in America, the peak production for solar is the daily demand peak for electricity.
So much of the South and Southwest is prime for solar and as yet has only made modest use of it,even in California. Texas has many GW of wind farms but almost no solar by comparison, a shocking oversight, given that they sometimes go months without rain and stretches of days above 100F.
Why assume that the cost of spinning reserve has not or is not being factored in? The utilities were gaming the system to get paid exorbitantly during times of high demand and now that the renewables are eating their lunch, they want to take their toys and run home?
I'm tempted to say let them fail - and then their assets can be had for pennies on the dollar by someone who takes the long view.
That's one huge upgrade but you'll need a VERY fast connection to really take advantage
jACkass, we are talking about the GMA950.
Sandy Bridge HD / HD2000 / HD3000 are much more capable than that old graphics chip.
It wasn't back when I used it, before switching to my 1st GeForce card.
In fact, it was one of the reasons I decided to build a new machine with a discrete card.
And my point was that I get the performance I do and am able to do as much simultaneously because so much can be offloaded to the GPU.
And even that's not enough for when I really go overboard.
"Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will." -- Virginia Woolf, "Mrs. Dalloway"