Prioritize the CEO as it legit is the major thing that keeps me from considering a Tesla. But as said before there are other aspects of that company that need to be overhauled up to and including new models.They need to update everything, new models and a new CEO.
Even to the trained eye, it's an issue.Tesla has a ton of competition now, their CEO is constantly in the news for his jackassery, and their models have (to the untrained eye) remained unchanged since introduction.
I'll probably be proved wrong, but that seems like a formula for continued headwinds.
My car is almost 10 years old and doesn't have CarPlay or Android Auto. Every time I have to rent a car, it has CarPlay and I love it. My next car will be electric, and it will support CarPlay. Those are pretty much the only non-negotiable requirements I have."GM's difficulty in ramping up its new family of EVs built around the UItium battery platform has been well-documented."
They got the battery sorted but now have crossed the No carplay/Android auto Rubicon. No coming back from that for me.
This is the fun part: they really can't. They never established an engineering pipeline for regular refreshes and redesigns. There's no modular shared platform to make that easier. They've been wasting money on niche vanity projects instead of solid new product and now that demand is cratering they don't have the revenues to fund a crash development program. They can't even apply the mild refresh the Model 3 got to the Model Y.They need to update everything, new models and a new CEO.
There has to be an internal rationale for that at GM. Admittedly, Ars readers skew tech heavy, so using AA/CP comes naturally."GM's difficulty in ramping up its new family of EVs built around the UItium battery platform has been well-documented."
They got the battery sorted but now have crossed the No carplay/Android auto Rubicon. No coming back from that for me.
I suspect that Volvo's BEV sales in the US would be up dramatically, if only they would actually deliver a few such vehicles, instead of merely talking about it.
Volvo's BEV cars are selling fine?I suspect that Volvo's BEV sales in the US would be up dramatically, if only they would actually deliver a few such vehicles, instead of merely talking about it.
There has to be an internal rationale for that at GM. Admittedly, Ars readers skew tech heavy, so using AA/CP comes naturally.
But GM must have some telemetry data from their cars that show how many customers actually use that interface. I know that with the cars in my family, I use AA, but my wife doesn't.
Personally, I think Barra should backtrack and software update the systems in their EV's to reinstate it, especially since the Prologue already runs it on the same hardware.
But Twitter wasn't giving him brain worms fast enough, so rectifying that obviously had to be priority number one.Imagine how things would be different if Musk invested $44 Billion into improved charging for Teslas.
Honestly, the most meaningful update would be to switch the entire fleet to an 800V system for charging. Especially since Tesla correctly identified charging speed as an issue in the first place.This is the fun part: they really can't. They never established an engineering pipeline for regular refreshes and redesigns. There's no modular shared platform to make that easier. They've been wasting money on niche vanity projects instead of solid new product and now that demand is cratering they don't have the revenues to fund a crash development program. They can't even apply the mild refresh the Model 3 got to the Model Y.
The internal rationale is that Mary Barra and her executive team are completely convinced that fencing customer data is a multibillion dollar business for GM, because they are trying to placate investors and shareholders who have brain worms from a decade of tech sector growth and are screaming for investments in other sectors to deliver like Facebook used to, and they need customers using their infotainment to generate that data. They know AA/CP is incredibly popular, they know it's a majority of new car buyers #1 most desired feature, and they're gambling that the value of the data is worth more than the sales they'll miss because they don't offer it.There has to be an internal rationale for that at GM. Admittedly, Ars readers skew tech heavy, so using AA/CP comes naturally.
But GM must have some telemetry data from their cars that show how many customers actually use that interface. I know that with the cars in my family, I use AA, but my wife doesn't.
Personally, I think Barra should backtrack and software update the systems in their EV's to reinstate it, especially since the Prologue already runs it on the same hardware.
In May, it sold 91 percent more F-150 Lightnings than last year
https://www.roadandtrack.com/news/a60814711/tesla-cybertruck-registration-numbers/Ford's flagship EV, the F-150 Lightning, continues to lead the way. A total of 2893 new F-150 Lightnings were registered in March
I own a Model 3 which I purchased prior to COVID and Elon going full Elon. He is the main reason I haven't jumped at some of their recent sales incentives.Prioritize the CEO as it legit is the major thing that keeps me from considering a Tesla. But as said before there are other aspects of that company that need to be overhauled up to and including new models.
Imagine how things would be different if Musk invested $44 Billion into improved charging for Teslas.
I believe the first one rolled off the line yesterday. But an EX90 is way more vehicle than I want or need. Meanwhile, I still have a reservation to order an EX30 (after one full year), and have placed an actual order for an XC40 Recharge; after 4 months, Volvo has yet to acknowledge that order, other than to collect my down payment.The EX90 goes into production in South Carolina in a few weeks so expect those to start showing up before year's end.
The recurring revenue stream already exists: GM already charges for the cellular connectivity for the system, under the OnStar umbrella for in-car WiFi, as well as app connectivity.It's very clear that they don't care how many people use it, they want a recurring revenue stream. They've said basically this.
This is why - whenever I get to the point where I'm looking to replace my 2017 Bolt - I'm seriously considering the Honda Prologue. All the benefits of the GM Ultium platform, but with the sensible addition of Carplay/Android Auto."GM's difficulty in ramping up its new family of EVs built around the UItium battery platform has been well-documented."
They got the battery sorted but now have crossed the No carplay/Android auto Rubicon. No coming back from that for me.
Join my religion it's the fastest growing in the world - 100% yoy! There's two of us!All these percentages are year over year.
It's not enough to please the MBAssholesThe recurring revenue stream already exists: GM already charges for the cellular connectivity for the system, under the OnStar umbrella for in-car WiFi, as well as app connectivity.