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If you have already received the grant I don't expect that is changeable right?


That’s what I would hope but since they aren’t vested I’m not sure?


I'm not surprised that it's only 5%. I think it's worth keeping in mind that this is a cryptocurrency company and so that already are within a culture that has strong libertarian leanings. The people that took the severance are very likely just bored with their job and wanted a vacation.


It is a mixed bag. Early model S cars are only 8-9 years old right now. Still pretty young to determine true long term reliability. Tesla also kept the reputation decent early on by offering warranty repairs on pretty much everything. I've heard it is not uncommon when looking at an 2012 model S to have reports of 10+ door handle replacements. The real test will come at the EOL time for batteries. If it is similar to hybrids, that comes at ~15 years. I imagine in ~2027 virtually all original model S cars will be in junk yards/salvage auctions when they are totaled by a dead battery.


ICE vehicles don't have a battery that costs $15k to replace after 15 years though


Batteries get cheaper over time. Getting a replacement will be less expensive than getting a new car.


modern performance bmws (which compete w/teslas) do not last 15 years. nothing even close. not even half that.


Are you saying, eg, a BMW M3 wouldn't last for 7.5 years? Sounds like you've drank some strong Tesla koolaid.


nope, i used to own an m5. here's a letter i sent to BMW years ago.

To whom it may concern,

I purchased an E39 M5 in 2000, which at the time was the absolute pinnacle of automotive achievement. No other car came close to the blend of utility, luxury, performance and driving ex- perience. I was thrilled.

After a few years of ownership, I began to be troubled by the frequency with which I had to visit the repair shop. It seemed that every few months something else had gone wrong, and needed to be repaired, or more often, replaced. All of the repairs have been done at an authorized BMW repair center, with only one exception when my passenger seat broke; BMW wanted over six hundred dollars for a repair that someone else did for me for $50.

Dino Belotti, my Service Representative, has been nothing short of fantastic. He made every visit as painless as possible. The problem is, there were far too many visits. I’m sure he’s got a special file in his drawer with my name on it that is significantly thicker than any other in his drawer. Or then again, maybe they are all that thick. One wonders.

As you can see, the list is quite extensive. Too extensive. In fact, despite only driving my M5 about once per month in the last year, the pace of repairs has not slowed down. The last straw was this past weekend, when I drove my M5 for the first time since getting it back from the repair shop the week prior, and it started to rain. Wouldn’t you know, but the wipers fail to function. So for that round trip to the shop I had exactly zero trouble-free drives in my car.

This is what I have had to replace on this car since I bought it new in 2000: * passenger-side mirror (twice) * interior rear-view mirror * clutch (erroneously blamed for noise when I had an engine problem) * flywheel (erroneously blamed for noise when I had an engine problem) * brake rotors * right rear taillight assembly (connectors had corroded/fused) * right rear taillight assembly again (connectors had corroded/fused) * navigation system including head unit * stereo amplifier * center console (twice -- once damaged during another service) * hazard lights switch * front cup holders (filmsy plastic that's a joke... I never use them and they still broke!) * passenger front seat (as noted, this lone repair was done at a non-authorized BMW service center) - the motor (yes, the entire motor. a $17,000 part) * the battery * front passenger-side blinker assembly * driver's side interior door trim * front spoiler * on-board computer * O2 sensor * parking brake * air-conditioning unit * air-conditioning unit again * central locking feature (keys needed to be replaced and reprogrammed) * two replacement windshields (one developed a crack randomly, the other due to impact) - transmission universal joint * gas tank cover actuator * passenger side rear-view mirror (third time) * front spoiler undercarriage panels * coin tray cover * shifter knob (just fell apart) * rubber moulding around the windshield * ABS brake pump (a $3,000 part) * brake bushings * final stage resistor (not sure what this is) * paint on the wheels peeled off, looking absolutely embarrassing. Had them repainted. That de- veloped spider cracks. Had them repainted again. I don’t know whose decision it was to paint wheels. Bad choice. * windshield wipers no longer work * BMW logo just peeled off the front of the car. The irony of this last defect is not lost on me.

With only a mid-level understanding of how cars work, I have to think long and hard about what parts of the car I bought that I haven’t had to pay to replace. The above list reflects only what I could remember at the time of writing this letter. I’m sure there are many more repairs not listed here, but on file at Vista BMW.

I am a huge fan of BMW, and when I bought the M5 for me and the X5 for my wife, I sincerely hoped that we would stay within the BMW family for a long time. I wanted my M5 to be a car that my son could drive some day. I love it that much. But given this track record, it is unfortunately a car I can no longer afford to keep, nor can I in good conscious recommend that anyone I care for buy a BMW.

My repair history has changed me from a fan of BMWs, to someone who cautions others about buying them. I do not know what, if anything, can bring me back into the BMW family, but I thought someone at the highest level of BMW should know of my experience.


A BMW straight six with a manual transmission can be expected to last 300K miles, and if you choose the right one (some models are notoriously bad), the maintenance isn't even that bad. Electronics are damn expensive to fix in any car, though, which is one of the best reasons to prefer older cars with less of that error-prone stuff. German cars have crappier electronics than others, for some reason. (It's no longer even possible to build really reliable electronics in the age of ROHS lead-free solder.)


Bull.

There are plenty driving old BMWs.

My 15 year old Volvo suv with V8 runs fine. No leaks either


L6 at google is >$500k for engineering... L8 should be $1M+


I doubt there is a significant enough amount of those materials being burned. Millions of acres of forest has burned compared to relatively few buildings.


To be fair, if you are the engineer leading that project and it ships on time and on budget then you are still worthy of promotion. The product leaders who thought another chat app was a good idea are the ones who need a reckoning


Also the ubiquity of auto-uploaded videos and livestreaming. Only in the last few years has virtually all video recording become online first. Before all police had to do was take a person's phone away to hide their actions.


That’s a great point. Oddly enough it works the other way too. My neighbor is a detective and told me that a young lady livestreamed herself looting Target. Shared it on Facebook.


Some older usb-c devices would start charging based on order of plugging in. i.e. plug the phone side in first and the phone will start charging your iPad. Seems the defaults are smarter now and phones always prefer to receive power.


Why not just use the MacBook charger for everything? I've had no issues using a variety of MacBook usb-c chargers for lots of devices.


The RAVPower is 50% smaller than a 13-inch MacBook Pro's AC adapter while providing the same wattage. Also, the RAVPower has two ports, a USB-C and a USB Type A so you can charge two devices at a time.

The RAVPower is also cheaper than buying a 2nd Apple AC adapter when you want to leave an adapter at your desk and have a 2nd one in your bag to use elsewhere.


What extra88 said. My Macbook charger is fixed at my desk and I wanted a travel charger that was compact and also had a USB-A port for other low-power devices I need to charge when I travel like my Fitbit and Kindle.


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