The Robot Future Won't Be Driving Your Car, It Will Be Charging It
Public EV charger utilization is a broken model and Madhav Ayyagari and David Alspaugh, co-founders of Inductive Robotics, may have figured out a way to fix it through autonomous EV charging.
Our conversation explores the founders' journeys, the necessity of their solution in the face of growing EV adoption and inadequate infrastructure, and the technical workings of their robotic charging system. They delve into the challenges of fundraising in the hardware space, the importance of vehicle compatibility, and the future roadmap for their technology, emphasizing the potential for scalability and improved user experience in EV charging.
The Urban EV Podcast is about electric vehicle ownership in a city -- and how that can be daunting when you don't have access to a plug. We explore urban charging infrastructure along with the day-to-day experience and economics of public charging your vehicle in a big city.
The TTAC Creators Series tells stories and amplifies creators from all corners of the car world, including culture, dealerships, collections, modified builds and more.
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Exploring EV charging and infrastructure with real stories and expert insights on the future of electric mobility
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- MaintenanceCosts His list for those who don't want to give Zuck another click:[list=1][*]Miata[/*][*]Fox/SN95 Mustang[/*][*]Civic (in context he clearly means old manual Civic)[/*][*]Early WRX[/*][*]Gated manual Ferrari[/*][*]McLaren, on track[/*][*]Acceleration pull in a Model S Plaid or Air Sapphire[/*][/list=1]My list:[list=1][*]Agree with him on the Miata and the Plaid/Sapphire[/*][*]Coyote Mustang[/*][*]Any BMW with a naturally aspirated inline six and a stick[/*][*]Any Honda/Acura with true VTEC and a stick[/*][*]A full-size BOF Cadillac or Lincoln[/*][*]13- or 18-speed manual semi truck, ideally with a big Cummins[/*][/list=1]
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Wow...so many morons on the comments here. Sure, let's stick with ICE, but why not promote steam? Then we'd have a use for all the coal inbred rightos want to keep mining.
Again what I see and read does not appear to make any sense.
Tesla has the largest market cap/value of any auto manufacturer world wide. Tesla only sells EV's. Yet I keep seeing comments that 'nobody wants to buy EVs'.
Elon Musk is requesting a trillion dollar compensation package from Tesla. If EV's do not sell, where will that money come from. Why would Tesla be willing to pay that if they know that they will be selling far less vehicles?
China is the largest auto market in the world. Approximately 50% of all new vehicles sold in China are EV's. And their market share is growing. Yet I keep reading that 'nobody wants to buy EVs'.
China exported well over 1 million EV's last year. Yet I keep reading that 'nobody wants to buy EVs'.
So who is correct? The number one auto market. The most valuable auto manufacter in the world? Or the anonymous posters who keep telling us that 'nobody wants to buy EVs'?
And Chinese vehicles are already now largely using sodium-ion batteries. The next 'big step' in battery technology.