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19 votes
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Here's why most modern cars have that weird flat edge in the bodywork around the wheel
8 votes -
Sentry mode: Guarding your Tesla
5 votes -
Self-driving cars: Navigating the hype
4 votes -
No, Elon, the Navigate on Autopilot feature is not ‘full self-driving’
11 votes -
Tesla’s driver fatality rate is more than triple that of luxury cars (and likely even higher)
12 votes -
Suburbs and car centric urban design is the worst mistake in modern history
Designing our countries to accommodate cars as much as possible has been one of the most destructive things to our health, environment, safety and social connectedness. The damage has spread so...
Designing our countries to accommodate cars as much as possible has been one of the most destructive things to our health, environment, safety and social connectedness. The damage has spread so far and deep that it has reached a crisis point in most developed cities in almost every country. The suburbs we live in are subjected to strict zoning laws baring any form of high density building and any form of mixed zoning. As a result our houses are spaced so far away from each other and from the essential services we need that unless you own a car you are blocked from having a normal life. The main streets full of independent stores and markets have all been killed by megamalls 30km away from where people live with carparks bigger than most park lands. All of this was caused by car usage pushing our societies further and further apart to the point where many people find it acceptable and normal to drive 40km each direction to work each day.
One of the more devastating effects of this urban sprawl is the supermarket has been moved so far away that most people avoid going as much as possible and limit it to a single trip every 1-2 weeks. Fresh food does not last 1-2 weeks which leaves people throwing out mountains of spoiled food that wasn't eaten in time as well as the move to processed foods packed full of preservatives. As well as a shift to people buying dinner from drive through takeaway franchises because their hour long commute has left them with little time to cook fresh and healthy foods.
Owning a car in many countries is seen as the only way to get a job. This locks the poor from ever regaining control of their life because the cost of owning and maintaining a car is higher than most of these people get in an entire year. Our city streets which should be places of vibrant liability have become loud, unsafe and toxic.
Elon and his electric cars solve none of these issues. Electric cars are not the way of the future. They don't even solve air pollution issues entirely because a large part of air pollution is brake pad fibres and tire wear which is proportional to the vehicles weight. And these Teslas are not light.
The only solution is reducing personal vehicle usage as much as possible in urban areas. Of course there will always be some people who will genuinely need vehicles such as in rural areas but there is simply no reason to have the average person drive to and from their office or retail job every day. Its wasteful and harmful in so many ways.
There needs to be a huge push to reclaim our cities and living spaces to bring back the liveability that we could have had. In my city some of the side streets were closed to cars and the change was incredible. Plants and seating filled the spots that would have once been a row of free parking. The streets are filled with the sounds of laughter instead of the roar of motors. The local pubs and cafes have benefited hugely. They didn't benefit at all from street side car parks that were always filled by people who have done 5 laps of the city looking for an empty park and do not intend to shop there.
What is everyone's opinion on this topic and what can we do about it?
64 votes -
The social ideology of the motorcar
6 votes -
Seeing issues with self-driving cars
5 votes -
Italian Village Installs Speed Cameras, Records 58,000 Infractions In 2 Weeks
15 votes -
China is crushing Europe's electric car dreams
9 votes -
Inside Tesla’s factory, a medical clinic designed to ignore injured workers
15 votes -
Waymo has been granted the first permit in California to begin driverless testing on public roads
7 votes -
The origins of speed limits in the US
5 votes -
Singapore flying taxi trial set to begin in the second half of 2019
4 votes -
How a subprime auto lender consumed Detroit with debt and turned its courthouse into a collections agency
7 votes -
The Porsche 959's History Was Way More of a Disaster Than You Know
6 votes -
Cincinnati joins the list of cities saying ‘no’ to parking minimums
11 votes -
Tesla's Model 3 is becoming one of America's best-selling sedans
15 votes -
Tesla shares are soaring. Five experts weigh in on what comes next
8 votes -
'For me, this is paradise': Life in the Spanish city that banned cars
14 votes -
"The Social Ideology of the Motorcar" by André Gorz, 1973
4 votes -
Kalashnikov takes on Tesla with retro-look electric 'supercar'
12 votes -
Jeremy Clarkson in defense of the car
6 votes -
Security research underway to ensure you will not be carjacked by hackers
4 votes -
1,160 miles in eleven days: A grand tour with the Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio
2 votes -
Elon Musk’s Tesla funding wasn’t quite ‘secured’ after all
9 votes -
Elon Musk announces plan to open source part of Tesla's vehicle security software
@elonmusk: Great Q&A @defcon last night. Thanks for helping make Tesla & SpaceX more secure! Planning to open-source Tesla vehicle security software for free use by other car makers. Extremely important to a safe self-driving future for all.
7 votes -
Why Tesla stock skyrocketed and got halted - Elon Musk is "considering" taking Tesla private in a $70 billion deal
12 votes -
Car design today: Is baroque back?
3 votes -
Telsa unveils internally developed neural network accelerator chip and drop in replacement for existing Nvidia solution
4 votes -
Inside the life of the world's first self-driving teen
8 votes -
Tesla whistleblower countersues over Elon Musk’s ‘defamatory’ statements
5 votes -
George Hotz is on a hacker crusade against the "scam" of self-driving cars
6 votes -
Mitsubishi wants your driving data, and it's willing to throw in a free cup of coffee to get it
7 votes -
Anyone into cars? What are you driving?
Pretty much the title. I have a black 2017 Focus ST that I've been enjoying for a year and a half myself. Would like to hear about what others are driving!
12 votes -
Driverless cars could make our roads safer and reduce congestion. But the algorithms driving them will also have to make life-or-death decisions.
10 votes -
Elon Musk ordered Tesla engineers to stop doing a critical brake test on Model 3s
11 votes -
Tesla hits Model 3 manufacturing milestone, hours after deadline
23 votes -
Why nobody ever wins the car at the mall
16 votes -
Elon Musk emails employees about 'extensive and damaging sabotage' by employee
20 votes -
Tesla is laying off about 9% of its workforce as it restructures the company
6 votes -
Inside Tesla’s Model 3 factory
11 votes -
Why emergency braking systems sometimes hit parked cars and lane dividers: Recent Tesla autopilot crashes hold a lesson for the whole industry
13 votes -
Musk promises manufacturing, self-driving, battery breakthroughs—and profits
5 votes -
The flying car backed by Google's cofounder just got a big update, and people can pilot it with less than an hour's training
5 votes -
Uber's self-driving car didn't malfunction, it was just bad
12 votes -
Car/motorcycle modifiers, restorers and racers... what do you drive, and what have you done to it?
I'm a serial car/bike addict, and have owned close to 50 cars and 10 or so bikes. Usually at least mildly modified for performance/handling/modcons, if not heavily modified. I'm not so much into...
I'm a serial car/bike addict, and have owned close to 50 cars and 10 or so bikes. Usually at least mildly modified for performance/handling/modcons, if not heavily modified. I'm not so much into visuals, as I am into improving cheaper cars so I can get more bang for my buck (I'm not well off).
I've owned everything from 1960s Mercs and Holdens to brand new Subarus and VWs. V-twin sport bikes to show-level streetfighters. I just like weird/unique vehicles, and tinkering with them.
Currently got a '97 Nissan Stagea RSFour imported from Japan. RB25DET with a few mods. FMIC, turbo back exhaust, intake, boost controller, turbo timer, TE37 reps, BC coilovers, and currently converting the centre console to a 7" RPi-driven touch screen with CONSULT integration to the ECU for sensor readouts, and setting it up for track days (half cage, etc). Pic.
Also about to take on a late 80s JDM Honda Goldwing which I want to fully restore to meticulous detail, for no other reason than I think they look retro-cool and are massively underrated for cruising. I plan on doing a small turbo conversion, and upgrading the brakes and suspension, but keeping it looking 100% stock and perfect down to every last bolt.
6 votes -
Cars
So what all do you drive?
18 votes -
Digital license plates finally hit the road in California
11 votes