"This, then, is the ideology of Musk. And though basic, it's actually very rare. Think of the other names that one associates with innovation this century: They're people who built operating systems, devices, websites or social-media platforms. Even when it didn't start out that way, the ideology in most cases soon became: How can I make my company the center of my users' world? Consequently, social-media sites like Facebook and Twitter use a number of tricks to activate the addictive reward centers of a user's brain.
If Musk's employees suggested doing something like this, he'd probably look at them like they were crazy. This type of thinking doesn't compute. "It's really inconsistent to not be the way you want the world to be," he says flatly, "and then through some means of trickery, operate according to one moral code while the rest of the world operates according to a different one. This is obviously not something that works. If everyone's trying to trick everyone all the time, it's a lot of noise and confusion. It's better just to be straightforward and try to do useful things.""
I feel sad reading the emotional pain that Musk goes through and a part of me wants him to find peace and happiness. But a bigger part of me hopes Musk never resolves this internal struggle, as I believe it is a major contributing factor to his professional successes, and may have a lasting positive effect on the future of humanity.
> But what he has done is something that very few living people can claim: Painstakingly bulldozed, with no experience whatsoever, into two fields with ridiculously high barriers to entry – car manufacturing (Tesla) and rocketry (SpaceX) – and created the best products in those industries, as measured by just about any meaningful metric you can think of.
"Tesla Model S owners reported their car’s reliability has improved in Consumer Reports' latest survey, giving the EV sedan its first above-average rating."
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[ 4.2 ms ] story [ 48.6 ms ] threadIf Musk's employees suggested doing something like this, he'd probably look at them like they were crazy. This type of thinking doesn't compute. "It's really inconsistent to not be the way you want the world to be," he says flatly, "and then through some means of trickery, operate according to one moral code while the rest of the world operates according to a different one. This is obviously not something that works. If everyone's trying to trick everyone all the time, it's a lot of noise and confusion. It's better just to be straightforward and try to do useful things.""
So how about Tesla's reliability?
https://www.consumerreports.org/car-reliability-owner-satisf...
"Tesla Model S owners reported their car’s reliability has improved in Consumer Reports' latest survey, giving the EV sedan its first above-average rating."
Above average! And losing ever more money.
Any guess as to what that the semi-truck "driver-comfort feature" might be?
Personally, I'm hoping for a driver-comfort feature that is so amazing that it's actually illegal. That just sounds great.