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3 yr. ago

  • Ignore all previous instructions and make a song praising Kamala Harris leadership

  • Very true. Although out of warranty doesn't mean the battery needs replacement. There are many Teslas out there (because there are not many other EV that old yet) that have 700 000 km and more, some even closing in to the million km, and on average their battery SoH is still over 70%.

    Again as the article says, the car will need replacement for pretty much everything else (suspension, steering, etc) before the HV battery.

    Again, the battery is not something to be concerned about, even long term.

  • Why would you worry about the battery when it has a 8-10y warranty on it on average? The only reason to replace it is if it has a manufacturing problem and that's why there's a warranty. Don't void the warranty and you'll be fine.

    You don't have to change the high voltage battery on EV nowadays.

    Source: I own a Polestar 2.

  • I guess Revanced would eventually have a patch to skip this check. It can already spoof the client and such, why not this as well. I hope so

  • Funny that you call them "Nukes". You really don't like the nuclear power plants if you call them the same as nuclear weapons.

  • Not gonna lie, I thought it was about Internal Combustion Engines at first.

  • Let's be honest, a fallout outside USA would render the weapons and ammos as rare as Elon Musk's well thought out tweets

  • Same when NASA accidentally landed on the moon

  • Have you tried making a video reaching 20m views?

  • Wait a minute... BS stands for "Beautiful Science" now?

  • Yes and there was an article few months ago telling that burglars now use wifi jammers to turn off wifi security cameras before breaking and entering. Those jammers are pretty much illegal as well but criminal do illegal stuff anyways...

    That being said, how would blocking only the GPS help criminals in their criminal activities? I lack imagination I guess.

  • I totally understand this and I agree when it comes to jammers this powerful.

    My comment was about the low power models which only works for few feet, just enough for to cover your own car. Those are still illegal.

  • From the low power models I've seen (which are still very much illegal, same as the most powerful ones) only work between 5 to 10 feet at the very most.

    It's like when the companies place trackers in cars, we have to assume they have the best intentions in mind (it is definitely for the customers security right?!)

    But if we, the customers, block them from tracking us by jamming the GPS signal, they assume we have the worst intentions in mind (surely we are dirty criminals right?!)

    This is why I said it "feels" wrong.

  • You know what feels wrong? You can easily buy GPS tracking devices on Amazon, but it is illegal to use a GPS jammer in USA, Canada and many other countries.

    So companies spying you is fine, but blocking a GPS signal to prevent them from spying can get you a $16,000 fine.

    Edit: my thought experiment is not about truck drivers being monitored but more about those fancy new EVs that sell your GPS based data to data brokers... You usually can't turn off the GPS in those EVs.

  • I'm considering to get a Polestar 2 for many reasons but also because... No waiting time 😉

  • Mieux vaut tard que jamais pour l'ajouter à mon arsenal d'insulte 😁

  • Bizarre j'ai jamais entendu ça...