• unexposedhazard
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      7 months ago

      Im convinced these are the same people that buy pre release games or early access without actually reading up at all and then get mad after. Like dude, its tesla, everyone knows they make low quality junk.

    • JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I’m no Tesla fan, but your comment could be true of anything new.

      The original iPhone, air conditioning, refrigeration, electricity, you could go on forever.

      Some people will always be early adopters. The bleeding edge will always have takers willing to buy a ticket.

      This truck was the first in a number of categories. One of them being a new form factor. In theory, the idea of a Delorean truck is great. Tesla’s execution on the other hand - not so much.

      It’s still a surprise that people held on to a reservation for long after all that’s gone on. That’s worth critiquing. Wanting the cool new thing isn’t.

      • mommykink@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I’ve spoken about the design of the Cybertruck here before. I personally love it. I think the engineers deserve massive praise for getting something on the streets that looks so close to the concept.

        It’s a shame that Tesla made it. My comment was more to do with the fact that Tesla’s history of new model launches is well-known and very poor. If any other company made the CT I’d be trying everything I could to get my hands on one, but because it’s a Tesla, I wouldn’t touch one with a ten foot pole. I have a hard time sympathizing with anyone who can look past Tesla’s history and still buy one of their cars just because it’s the New Thing.

        • JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I agree. I don’t think it looks abominable, I could get behind it if it wasn’t made by them. No matter the heft of windscreen wiper, there’s no clearing their history.

          Rivian looks like they have better fit and finish - but Tesla did too when they were a smaller company. Hopefully Rivian goes a different path.

          Not looking to for a vehicle myself, I’d still like to see alternatives to Big Auto have success in the market.

      • Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        a number of categories

        I’m interested that you named one, which was *shape, not form factor. That’s marketing bullshit. Nothing new there, cars have changed shape every year for the last hundred years

        What other categories do you mean?

        • JoshuaFalken@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I wrote the truck was the first to introduce the form factor of being electric and made a reference to its material being similar to the Delorean. I didn’t name the shape at all.

          I will say of its shape though, it’s certainly novel and not something the industry has produced previously. Bringing the last century of car design into this conversation is disingenuous as the topic is a pick up truck. Also your point is incorrect. If you blur your eyes and see the same silhouette of two cars manufactured a year apart, it’s not changing. Decade by decade? Absolutely. Year by year? Not so much. Even across manufacturers, each year cars of the same class look the same.

          Now if you did the same with a Ram, F150, Sierra, Silverado, and whatever the others are called, you get basically the same design. Though even with the same number of wheels - that pointy triangular one would stick out like a sore thumb.

          Regarding categories, well, Tesla did announce the first electric pick up truck. At least for the American market of comically large vehicles. The manufacturing method is noteworthy. The triple motors are noteworthy, even now. The initial presentation of being mirrorless was noteworthy. The shatter proof glass was noteworthy, if only for a moment. Highest payload capacity. Highest ‘horsepower’. Highest torque.

          There’s loads of things Tesla claimed the truck could or would do on release that put it ahead of the non existent competition. Unfortunately for them they took too long, they didn’t deliver on most of their promises, and now they’ve recalled all the trucks they made because of some bad glue.

          Oh well. A bad company made a bad product. Some people bought it, and more will buy it still. I guess that’s capitalism.