Electric cars just came out. It takes time to work out the bugs. The batteries get better every year. Why don't we complain that cars were impractical and dangerous... in 1915?
A lot of the criticisms of electric cars assume there will be cheap oil. Of course, if there is cheap oil, gasoline is the way to go. But what if there isn't cheap oil? Suddenly, things that look too expensive and too much trouble seem downright common sense if oil is $200 a barrel. And I think we are staring at $200 a barrel very soon, and for a very long time, at least a decade... at best.
In order to do a thing, one must first imagine it.
You start out in situations in which it works, and then you work on extending the capabilities so that it works in more and more situations.
Every time I look at my postage stamp size iPod for $50 dollars and think about the WalkMan I bought in 1981 for $900 in adjusted for inflation dollars, it is just unbelievable. But unbelievable or not, it exists.
Video has subtitles in 20 languages here and text explanation.
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/sh...tric_cars.html
A lot of the criticisms of electric cars assume there will be cheap oil. Of course, if there is cheap oil, gasoline is the way to go. But what if there isn't cheap oil? Suddenly, things that look too expensive and too much trouble seem downright common sense if oil is $200 a barrel. And I think we are staring at $200 a barrel very soon, and for a very long time, at least a decade... at best.
In order to do a thing, one must first imagine it.
You start out in situations in which it works, and then you work on extending the capabilities so that it works in more and more situations.
Every time I look at my postage stamp size iPod for $50 dollars and think about the WalkMan I bought in 1981 for $900 in adjusted for inflation dollars, it is just unbelievable. But unbelievable or not, it exists.
Video has subtitles in 20 languages here and text explanation.
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/sh...tric_cars.html
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