NotMyOldRedditName

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 hours ago

I'm really hoping the newer exo skeletons can help with some of that physical labor pain and discomfort. Things like if you lift your arm to screw something above you, once you reach up it automatically holds your weight for you while you work, and seamlessly releases when you bring your arm down.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

If it was somehow leaking it's initial prompt maybe it could be revealing that?

The one that says your name is grok, you're a helpful assistant, you will not speak poorly of Elon Musk, I Elon Musk am your creator, etc.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

That would be interesting ya. I don't think there would be any way to recoup the cost for the person calling is sick on Friday semi frequently or similar things, but for the people who are gaming the system and didn't work for a year, if they found a way to abuse it, it'd probably make sense if you truly were that suspicious.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

The Tesla show rooms / delivery centers aren't dealerships in the traditional sense. It's all Tesla. Tesla could have just dumped paperwork on a less busy area and said file all this shit.

Edit: and I agree, it's fishy and should be investigated, but all the calls that it IS fraud are really premature.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (4 children)

Or as I said in my OP, a backlog they were forced to deal with when they were advised it was about to run out.

Saying it's fraud doesn't make it fraud. The investigation will tell us if it was fraud.

[–] [email protected] 22 points 1 day ago (2 children)

They can't. The server is in the basement of a friend's house (not a government employee) because they got a really good deal on it!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

How does the body target the real virus though if it has the camouflage? Can the body just bypass it if it knows whats beneath, but we've been training on the camouflage so it doesn't know?

Like, the camouflage doesn't offer any protection if seen through?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

The story explains what their mistake was that others pointed out to them.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

Well clearly there's something that's allowed to be done as that article is about a guy that has a business determining if its legit or not?

But that's an investigator, not the employer, so maybe that makes a difference?

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I don't think I'd ever call behemoth corporations efficient.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

I imagine they probably don't want to release the information that would prove it if they could, and if they did it'd be redacted enough that no one would believe it anyway. It also costs money to fight endless things like this.

Ultimately, if the government comes back and says its legit, then people will believe it. If it's fraud, there should be punishment.

That whole 1.5 billion accounting fraud story last week, I don't think Tesla said anything official about it or done anything at least to specifically disprove it, but the FT has now retracted the story saying they made a mistake.

[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (16 children)

Option 1: Tesla fraudulently filed rebates

Option 2: Tesla filed a backlog of rebates when they realized they had to

Both are possible, but everyone is jumping to conclusion that it's option 1, while option 2 is the easier answer.

Also the government said they're going to let all the other rebates that this pushed out at the last minute get the rebate regardless of if these were legit or not.

 

So, the recall is more than the rear camera, there was a software/hardware combo problem that could cause the HW4 computer to short, which took out major functionality on the car without the computer.

The backup camera is part of what is lost, and is a mandatory safety feature, so the recall is technically because of that, even though it's much more than that.

What I find interesting is that this appears to be the 2nd recall where software has physically broken hardware which is a more uncommon type of recall. Lots of hardware problems that can be fixed with software, but not a lot of software problems breaking hardware.

The other one was on earlier Model 3's they were logging too much data, and they actually went through the lifespan of the memory in the vehicle. Once the memory was dead the vehicle had problems. The fix was to log less. They eventually had to address that, but it took a long time to properly acknowledge.

Tesla said a reverse current may occur while powering up the vehicle, which could cause a short circuit on the car's computer board and result in the rear-view camera becoming inoperative, the automaker said.

The automaker said the issue was the result of a sequence of specific software and hardware configurations, coupled with colder temperatures.

Tesla said it has already pushed a software update to vehicles that changes the vehicle power up sequence to prevent the shorting failure. Tesla will identify any vehicles with a circuit board issue and replace the car's computer if necessary.

The automaker launched an investigation after seeing an increase in car computer replacements relating to short circuit issues in November.

Tesla said it has 887 warranty claims and 68 field reports related to the recall but said it is not aware of any collisions, injuries or fatalities related to the condition

Tesla said Model 3, Model S and Model X vehicles in production also received a different car computer variant after Dec. 16 to address the issue.

The issue affects 2024-25 Model 3 and Model S vehicles and 2023-25 Model X and Model Y.

 

Having a discussion about turning radius of the EV trucks, and a person takes a radius for 2 vehicles, and then compares it to the turning circle of the 3rd.

I try to politely point out that the numbers he's comparing aren't the same, and then he replies that he "stands by the numbers I found"

https://lemmy.world/comment/14256612

 

The company’s letter to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) stated the door handles could allow water to enter the circuit board assembly, which may lead to the doors opening unexpectedly.

According to Volkswagen, the production halt could last until the beginning of next year as it works to resolve the issue.

 

This was a really good interview, worth the watch!

 

It doesn't say what was changed but that makes it a great price again.

It also really messes up the pricing between the 3 RWD which doesn't qualify and the AWD that does since it's only a 1k difference now. I wonder if we'll see them lower the RWD or potentially raise the AWD price?

 

So both Rivian and Tesla have or say they are going to have range extenders for their trucks, but in both cases even if they are removable and rentable they are huge as trucks are huge. In teslas case it seems to be a permanent change though.

What about commuter cars though?

One thing we really need is cheaper in city commuters and those don't need a long range. That brings costs down and gets more people into EVs, but those will get relegated to 2nd cars in many cases.

If those commuter cars could go to a shop and get an extender added in the trunk though that would make them much more capable of longer trips as well while keeping costs down.

If the battery rental is similar or less to renting a car for the same period then people would opt to use their own car for the longer trip and all the personal comforts that provides.

The batteries would be much smaller as well for a smaller vehicle.

 

Really cool look inside the factory!

 

I've been following the strike and sympathy strike happening against Tesla and the similarities to what happened with Toys R Us, and I'm left wondering why the financial sector in Sweden hasn't stepped in by now?

This has spread to multiple countries now, so it's not like this is day 1 of the strike.

Do they consider themselves some sort of thermonuclear option and would rather not get involved unless necessary for some reason?

If my understanding is right, they're what forced Toys R Us to sign an agreement since they couldn't effectively do anything like payroll anymore?

It seems like the logical next step to me at this point unless I don't understand something about how the sympathy strikes work there?

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