bitching and flopping
I mean, you said it right there
Kyrie has also burned a lot of bridges
Reducing part count and vertically integrating makes more sense to me than asking suppliers to charge less money.
Mandate cab over trucks
Anything small and reasonably low is so much more fun on twisty roads than a big jacked up lifted truck or jeep or whatever. I hate catching up to trucks in my crossover and getting stuck behind them on what should be a super fun mountain road.
A want a dumb truck. I hate all the extra electronics that add cost and failure points. Bring the Hilux to the US! Or, even better, Kei trucks.
Full self driving
...until it isn't
Nobody ever said consumers were rational!
The micro bus is closer to Amazon's Rivians. USPS's Canoos are more like the minivans they sometimes drive now.
The Pixar one probably has better visibility for the driver, though
The [your username] of customer service
This frees him up to go back to the Lakers
"Orbital class booster" vs "actual orbital reentry" is still a biiiiitttt different on the loading, but it's interesting nonetheless.
For sure. I want small cheap hatchbacks and sedans, too, though!
A boxy body will give it a masculine and athletic appearance
Hmm, "athletic" to me looks more like a sports car, not a battering ram
I'm gonna be so mad if after asking for BYD to build a plant in Mexico, the only thing the US gets is a truck
Biden ft. Obama, you are on the clock
I hope to see a lot of EX30s in the US!
The visor looks so cool! That's impressively barely bulkier than the IVA suit. Compared to the EMU and the concepts from Axiom and Collins, this is incredible.
So you're telling me there's a chance
Ford now says mass-adoption needs EVs that cost the same as combustion cars.
Starlab Space, the joint venture developing the Starlab commercial space station, has selected SpaceX’s Starship to launch the station on a single flight.
"Just give us a sip. We'll take our 14 tons and we'll be glad to pay for it."
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk again appeared to rule out any near-term plans for spinning out his company’s Starlink broadband satellite business going public.
Space Force assigns 21 national security missions to ULA and SpaceX
Attached: 1 video Russian Gas Pipeline! #AureFreePress #Ukraine #Russia #Putin #EU #NATO #Zelensky #war #news #Moscow #USA #UK #Germany #Poland #France #Turkey
"I just want to be out. Make as much noise as possible."
SpaceX has filed a final mishap investigation report to the FAA for its April 20 Starship integrated flight test, the FAA told Payload on Tuesday. Submitting the report is an important regulatory step toward SpaceX launching Starship on its second orbital test flight, a milestone that will req...
SpaceX is offering a second class of rideshare missions on its Falcon 9 rocket to serve customers seeking to go to mid-inclination orbits.
NASA's Orion spacecraft is taking a bit longer to prepare for its first crew flight.
From the last section of the article:
>If the Artemis III landing mission moves to 2026 or later, it doesn't make much difference whether Artemis II flies in late 2024 or 2025. There's just no big rush. In fact, Free acknowledged on Tuesday that NASA is considering alternate mission profiles for Artemis III in case of significant delays to Starship and the Axiom spacesuits. > >SpaceX first needs to get the Starship rocket into orbit. Another Starship test launch could happen in the next couple of months. Then there will need to be many more test flights, including a Starship refueling demonstration in orbit, a capability without which Starship can't reach the Moon. Finally, SpaceX plans to fly a Starship test mission to land on the Moon without astronauts before committing to a crew landing. > >Free said NASA officials recently met with SpaceX's team at the Starship development site in South Texas. SpaceX provided NASA with an updated schedule of milestones to get to the Artemis III landing, but Free declined to discuss specifics of the timeline. > >"I think we’ll look at that and update around that in the near future, after we have some time to digest it," Free said. "But we’re holding all the contractors to that December of ’25 date (for Artemis III). > >"We may end up flying a different mission," Free said. "If we’re having these big slips, we’ve looked at can we do other missions, if the possibility exists there. Right now, we’re still taking a look at their schedule. The spacesuits are having a CDR (Critical Design Review) in October, so that’s obviously another piece of hardware that’s on the critical path for that mission.”