Comment Re:Anything unique? (Score 1) 223
The patent indemnification only covers you if you are using the code for a
The patent indemnification only covers you if you are using the code for a
It would be unusual if Rust was marketed as a functional language, because AFAIK no functional language exists without garbage collection today.
When it is merely cold, like -20C, electric cars are great. You arrive to a preheated and defrosted car and there are no problems starting the engine. 3kW of heating is quite sufficient when it includes heated seats and heated steering wheel, and that takes 3 hours to use 10% of the capacity of a Tesla 85kWh car. At slightly higher temperatures you can get a lot of benefit from the heat pump instead.
Now, lots of electric cars do not have suitably designed heating systems or batteries to handle -20C reliably. This is true of some petrol cars as well.
Series hybrids are a terrible idea. See the BMW i3. It has worse mileage than most comparable cars. Its speed on petrol is limited, and the fuel tank is too small to be useful.
An electric drivetrain costs in the region of 30% of the energy that the engine puts in. Stuff an 8-speed modern automatic in there instead, and you keep the engine at almost the ideal RPM at all times. That drive train will have close to zero loss. Or put an extra electric motor in (two in total) and you get a variable ratio gearbox almost for free -- the Prius solution. Again, close to zero loss when running purely on petrol. Once you have a decent drivetrain, you can afford to put a slightly larger engine in and actually reach highway speeds.
You are seriously implying that living in a house sharing walls with another house is equivalent to serfdom?
This subthread has outlived its usefulness.
Which part of human nature is incompatible with having someone sitting in a separate cabin nearby?
In England, detached houses are comparatively rare. Human nature seems to cope.
I will be surprised if most people manage to spend $1k yearly on car service after the switch. Except possibly if you include fuel costs in that amount.
A 10-year-old car is often expensive to keep running if you drive it a lot, and if you do not drive a lot, autonomous cabs will be a very cheap option.
Busses are more expensive per seat than cars. They are somewhat more fuel-efficient when full compared to cars, but the difference compared with a full car is rather small. The major reason why busses exist is that one person can drive 40+ people instead of 3.
Oh dear, we have found the counterexample! All research into autonomous cars is invalid. We certainly cannot allow the 90% to enjoy the future while a single person keeps the old technology.
If I have to stay late how do I get home? If I can leave early why would I want to wait for anyone else? If I car pool I can't stop and shop on the way home. I can't decide to go to the movie, or library on the spur of the moment because I need to worry about what other people want to do.
Why would any of those be a problem with a shared autonomous car? That is the whole point, there will always be a car ready, arriving within the 10 minutes it would likely have taken to walk to your car anyway. Zero minutes if you schedule ahead.
I have experienced great public transport. At least as good as what you describe. But try working on the subway. Good luck.
You cannot really compare the experience with public transport. With public transport you need to get to the first stop and from the last stop to your destination, and you likely need to change train/bus/whatever at least once in the middle. Working on a bus is most often impossible, so only the train part of the journey is useful. Subtract the time that you use to unpack/repack, and you are likely down to less than half of your commute being spent usefully.
Properly designed cars would be able to take you from your doorstep to your destination, have proper room for working, and noise isolation so you can use your phone. You only have to unpack/repack once per journey.
So I have to wait for someone (something?) to pick me up? I can't just get in my own car and drive when I want to?
Correct. But you also don't have to walk to where you walked the car or spend time finding a parking spot. If you live in a rural area you probably still want your own car, because you likely have a garage and your job likely has enough dedicated parking. Not all are so lucky.
The waiting disappears if you schedule your journeys in advance of course, and in either case it will be much better than waiting for public transport. Millions of people use public transport daily.
Mass transit will only have a chance when it is faster than driving. Busses are likely to suffer a lot, but many trains can still do well -- possibly even better than today, because the last mile problem of train journeys disappears.
Planes should do great, except on the shortest routes. Saving most of the cab fare or the airport parking would make the effective ticket price a lot lower. I have had journeys where airport parking was almost as expensive as the flights.
So far, increases in the efficiency of commutes have led directly to longer commutes. I would be surprised if actual traffic density decreases, but it will be interesting to see.
With your bare hands?!?