Author Topic: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?  (Read 8771 times)

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Online temperance

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #325 on: Today at 09:41:34 am »
It is very likely that he'll be the first person to be worth 2 trillion given his track record.

The earlier discussions about Tesla cars being able to accelerate fast baffles me. I hear that its "dangerous". A lot of things are dangerous including my hobby in EE. Someone could say its just too dangerous and I could hurt someone.  I ride motorcycles and they are dangerous. So is surfing, skiing, and snowboarding, and so on.

I need to go hide my sharp pointy stuff.

Yes it is dangerous because people use this power as a weapon. I live in a dense area of Europe. I don't have a dash cam otherwise I could show you how electric car cowboys deal with traffic.

In the past years, here in Belgium alone, about 6 accidents have made it into the news where the acceleration rate of an electric car was the cause of the accident. When the people involved are being interviewed the explanation is always the same: A lady who drove her car over 4 children in a park: "The car shot away on its own." A man who parked his car on the train rails: "I couldn't react." A lady who drove her car into a hospital: "I don't know how it happened. All of a sudden..."  Very safe indeed.

But for some people, anything less than 250 hp is not a car and fails the m'as-tu-vu test.


Make sure you hide the sharp pointy stuff.
 

Online Cyclotron

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #326 on: Today at 09:51:16 am »
It is very likely that he'll be the first person to be worth 2 trillion given his track record.

The earlier discussions about Tesla cars being able to accelerate fast baffles me. I hear that its "dangerous". A lot of things are dangerous including my hobby in EE. Someone could say its just too dangerous and I could hurt someone.  I ride motorcycles and they are dangerous. So is surfing, skiing, and snowboarding, and so on.

I need to go hide my sharp pointy stuff.

Yes it is dangerous because people use this power as a weapon. I live in a dense area of Europe. I don't have a dash cam otherwise I could show you how electric car cowboys deal with traffic.

In the past years, here in Belgium alone, about 6 accidents have made it into the news where the acceleration rate of an electric car was the cause of the accident. When the people involved are being interviewed the explanation is always the same: A lady who drove her car over 4 children in a park: "The car shot away on its own." A man who parked his car on the train rails: "I couldn't react." A lady who drove her car into a hospital: "I don't know how it happened. All of a sudden..."  Very safe indeed.

But for some people, anything less than 250 hp is not a car and fails the m'as-tu-vu test.


Make sure you hide the sharp pointy stuff.

My point is that there's a lot of dangerous stuff.  What's the acceleration allowed?
0-60 in 2 seconds?  3, 4, 5, .... 60?

Do I get to keep working on/playing with dangerous electrical stuff?
 

Offline krish2487

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #327 on: Today at 09:52:32 am »
I seriously hope that spacex stock crash and burns, to a sane and reasonable value, and i hope it happens sooner rather than later.

So do I. The amount of influence and power alone in the hands of anyone man, is enough to corrupt the man himself..  :-//
Having said that, so many organizations have been eager to jump onto the spaceX bandwagon, I fear that any correction will affect almost everyone.
The most susceptible would be the pension funds..
If god made us in his image,
and we are this stupid
then....
 

Offline Psi

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #328 on: Today at 10:03:43 am »
I seriously hope that spacex stock crash and burns, to a sane and reasonable value, and i hope it happens sooner rather than later.

So do I. The amount of influence and power alone in the hands of anyone man, is enough to corrupt the man himself..  :-//
Having said that, so many organizations have been eager to jump onto the spaceX bandwagon, I fear that any correction will affect almost everyone.
The most susceptible would be the pension funds..

It will almost definitely crash at some point. That's very normal for an IPO.
Then it will begin the normal slow recovery and track value normally after that.
In this case it's even more likely due to the AI bubble and space stuff being very high risk.

The AI bubble will pop at some point either by itself or triggered by some other event.
But I do also except a boom in all space stuff, and probably a space bubble at some point. But that's probably 5-15 years away.
Impossible to say how everything will interact.

(not investment advice)
« Last Edit: Today at 10:07:08 am by Psi »
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Offline krish2487

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #329 on: Today at 10:11:25 am »
It will almost definitely crash at some point. That's very normal for an IPO.
Then it will begin the normal slow recovery and track value normally after that.
In this case it's even more likely due to the AI bubble and space stuff being very high risk.

The AI bubble will pop at some point either by itself or triggered by some other event.
But I do also except a boom in all space stuff, and probably a space bubble at some point. But that's probably 5-15 years away.
Impossible to say how everything will interact.

(not investment advice)

I expect the same... Funny story though.. on a sidenote.. I was following ARM's IPO and expected the same.. However, since its IPO , the stock has only continued rising..
They just seem to have the best timing ever.. I dont expect ARM's stock to fall much in case of a correction.. unlike that of SpaceX.
If god made us in his image,
and we are this stupid
then....
 

Offline NE666

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #330 on: Today at 10:40:32 am »
I was following ARM's IPO and expected the same.. However, since its IPO , the stock has only continued rising..
They just seem to have the best timing ever.. I dont expect ARM's stock to fall much in case of a correction.. unlike that of SpaceX.

This is a manifestation of what I believe was being alluded to, at least partly, in the original question. When a company's stock value is firmly based on actual deliverables, with historical market performance and penetration, as opposed to mainly future intangibles. The difference between there already being tens of ARM licensed processors in every household, with only more yet to come, vs a cult of personality with "cool space stuff".

 
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Offline NE666

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #331 on: Today at 10:47:14 am »
accidents have made it into the news where the acceleration rate of an electric car was the cause of the accident. When the people involved are being interviewed the explanation is always the same: A lady who drove her car over 4 children in a park: "The car shot away on its own." A man who parked his car on the train rails: "I couldn't react." A lady who drove her car into a hospital: "I don't know how it happened. All of a sudden..."  Very safe indeed.

I don't disagree really but for the sake of balance, this has ever been the case.  Since cars were fitted with automatic gearboxes as opposed to a clutch.

Older or distracted drivers launching their vehicles across parking lots, through shop fronts etc. is thankfully rare in absolute terms but definitely not a new thing, and definitely not down to the emergence of EVs.
 

Online temperance

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #332 on: Today at 11:29:53 am »
Quote
My point is that there's a lot of dangerous stuff.  What's the acceleration allowed?
0-60 in 2 seconds?  3, 4, 5, .... 60?

Do I get to keep working on/playing with dangerous electrical stuff?

You don't seem to get my point here. But that's fine. I play with dangerous stuff every day. Most people would have been dead many times doing my job.

https://www.brusselstimes.com/287315/electric-cars-involved-in-more-accidents-than-regular-vehicles-study-shows

In this article, based on data from an insurance company:
Quote
Drivers who switch from a classic car to an electric model often have too little awareness of how an electric car reacts. Before they realise it, they speed away and bang into something. Axa's figures also show that most accidents happen when accelerating, not when braking. In addition, the larger electric cars are extremely fast. Owners often don’t dare to press the accelerator pedal. All this together leads to 50 percent more accidents than with regular cars.

Adjusting the driving style is therefore advised: take into account the much more agile acceleration of the cars, handle the accelerator with more care and keep your distance.

The misjudgement of those unexpected accelerations is therefore the main cause of accidents with electric cars, say the experts at Axa. But when they collide with similar models with fuel engines, electric cars usually come out the least damaged. Electric cars are generally a lot heavier than classic cars because they carry a lot of batteries. And it is the lightest car that suffers the most damage in a collision.

Quote
Electric motor response faster

The main cause of traffic accidents with electric vehicles is the inappropriate driving behaviour of the drivers. Michael Pfäffli, head of accidents and prevention at Axa, explains: "We have seen in our statistics that drivers of electric vehicles cause 50 percent more collisions than cars with internal combustion engines. Drivers of powerful electric cars in particular cause twice as many accidents as with standard cars."

You still believe its all fine and the insurance companies statistics are wrong? I see it every day here where I live around the busiest highway of Europe.

Again, you have people who use this power as a weapon when overtaking (on the wrong side if possible), when merging,...
« Last Edit: Today at 11:34:55 am by temperance »
 

Offline tom66

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #333 on: Today at 11:41:09 am »
I think the biggest issue with EVs is that they have this instant response in a way that only previously was available perhaps in very high end performance cars with an MSRP of £50,000+.  My ID.3 can outpace most other cars of its class.

Of course I believe I use it appropriately, as there is a time and a place for good acceleration.  For instance there are short sliproads near me where you really want to be up to the speed limit (70 mph) before you merge with traffic.  That is possible in both EVs we have but would only be available in a larger engine ICE car otherwise, which comes with other downsides like higher fuel cost and maintenance costs.
 

Offline jonovid

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #334 on: Today at 11:54:31 am »
I think the biggest issue with EVs is that they have this instant response in a way that only previously was available perhaps in very high end performance cars with an MSRP of £50,000+.  My ID.3 can outpace most other cars of its class.

Of course I believe I use it appropriately, as there is a time and a place for good acceleration.  For instance there are short sliproads near me where you really want to be up to the speed limit (70 mph) before you merge with traffic.  That is possible in both EVs we have but would only be available in a larger engine ICE car otherwise, which comes with other downsides like higher fuel cost and maintenance costs.
drive car insurance down with a slow throttle?
 EV car insurance increases with throttle response settings
set how much throttle response boost you like and your insurance increases automatically. do not say they can not do this with in-car spyware.
Hobbyist with a basic knowledge of electronics
 

Offline tom66

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #335 on: Today at 12:12:43 pm »
We already have insurers who will give a discount if you can measure your speed/acceleration/braking,  I personally do not want them to have that data so will pay more for a policy that is untracked.  These policies are most attractive for younger drivers where the discount can be significant, for 30+ the discount is minimal, like 5% at most, unless you have prior convictions/claims.
 

Offline Psi

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #336 on: Today at 12:27:47 pm »
The difference between there already being tens of ARM licensed processors in every household, with only more yet to come, vs a cult of personality with "cool space stuff".

I wouldn't dismiss "cool space stuff". It's easy to think of it as being a fad, or just cool for the sake of cool, and not something to take seriously. Like AI was, until it wasn't.

Assuming Starship is successful at being fully reusable, and assuming SpaceX continues to build the Starship production line factories they're building now. (Which seems very likely given progress so far and the money SpaceX now has).  Then the ability to launch a metric shit ton of stuff into space for cheap from a huge number of reusable rockets will create a booming new space industry.

People often interpret new things as being a showoff or a fad, or something to not take seriously, because that's usually the case.
But if you pay close attention you can usually spot the ones that are different and will lead to a booming new industry. "cool space shit" is definitely one of those IMHO. We are in the AI boom/bubble right now the space one and the robotics one are next.
« Last Edit: Today at 12:30:50 pm by Psi »
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Online mtwieg

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #337 on: Today at 01:33:34 pm »
The "should my EV have >500hp" discussion in a nutshell:



Probably applies to most tesla-related discussion.
« Last Edit: Today at 01:36:21 pm by mtwieg »
 

Online temperance

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #338 on: Today at 01:48:18 pm »
mtwieg, that is not my point. But, ok, I forgive you. It's warm today.

See my earlier post for a news paper article talking about the implications of giving the average person a fast car.
 

Offline NE666

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #339 on: Today at 02:33:59 pm »
I wouldn't dismiss "cool space stuff".

I won't dismiss anything, short of perpetual motion or free energy machines.

My point is rather that the 'what' which is to be delivered by SpaceX over the next 5 years, and the value of it to shareholders, is not so clearly defined in many areas of its interests as they are for a company such as ARM. Especially so the more ambitious those plans which has become even more apparent as original plans and focus have changed (e.g. Mars was the big prize, but now that's diluted with AI_in_space and moon bases) and timescales slip further and further from the initial ones given.

This is not so say that this is unique to SpaceX. It's pretty much the anthem for all national and commercial spaceflight programs to date. But it is a different kettle of fish to most other NASDAQ listed tech companies which are delivering consumer products (or components thereof).
 

Offline Psi

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #340 on: Today at 02:47:46 pm »
I wouldn't dismiss "cool space stuff".
My point is rather that the 'what' which is to be delivered by SpaceX over the next 5 years, and the value of it to shareholders, is not so clearly defined in many areas of its interests as they are for a company such as ARM.
...
This is not so say that this is unique to SpaceX. It's pretty much the anthem for all national and commercial spaceflight programs to date. But it is a different kettle of fish to most other NASDAQ listed tech companies which are delivering consumer products (or components thereof).

Absolutely, SpaceX is taking on a huge amount of work and their valuation is assuming it will all go how they expect.
They're definitely going to have further delays and setback. SpaceX is extremely high risk verses a company like AMD.
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Online Cyclotron

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #341 on: Today at 02:55:55 pm »
mtwieg, that is not my point. But, ok, I forgive you. It's warm today.

See my earlier post for a news paper article talking about the implications of giving the average person a fast car.

Temperance, I believe I understand your point. EVs can offer 100% of their available torque instantly. I'm sure EV manufacturers already select a delivery curve they consider safe, but it may still be far more than the average person is used to.

As some have said, if the EV product is more likely to be harmful, I suspect insurance will regulate the problem as a feedback mechanism. People do dumb stuff with things they don't understand. Take pleasure boating. People die in large numbers every year in boating accidents because they have no training and often are partying.

Anyway, I don't see this as a problem strictly related to Musk's worth or even Tesla solely.  More of a broader topic that covers a lot of things. I see alerts all the time for people who run through the front of buildings, over people, and road rage is a huge problem. I understand these things are problems.  It's why every retail outlet has bollards out front.  Well they do here in the US.
 

Online mtwieg

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Re: Musk, the World's First Trillionaire - Is He Worth It?
« Reply #342 on: Today at 03:31:29 pm »
mtwieg, that is not my point.
It wasn't directed at you, I don't disagree with anything you posted AFAIK  :-//
Anyway, I don't see this as a problem strictly related to Musk's worth or even Tesla solely.
Yeah it's weird how discussions regarding Musk derail into bickering about recessed handles or touch screen displays, rather than all the gross things he says and does, most of which have no basis in engineering or his companies.
 


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