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Tesla Motors revealed its third (second all-new since the original Roadster was developed… 2

Tesla Motors revealed its third (second all-new since the original Roadster was developed from the Lotus Elise) vehicle last night at a special event in California. The Model X is an good-looking but maybe not very practical all-electric crossover that is expected to the join the Model S sedan late in 2013. http://www.teslamotors.com/modelx

As CUVs go, the Model X is quite attractive and follows the design language that Franz von Holzhausen created for the Model S. The platform is based on the Model S and same sort of skateboard electric drive architecture pioneered a decade ago by its AUTOnomy concept http://www.adrianchernoff.com/pages/AUTOnomy.html

Despite the low-slung platform that gets all of the hardware out of the way, from the initial images I'm seeing of the Model X it seems to have some packaging issues. Like the Model S, the crossover has seven seats although the tiny child-size rear-facing jump seats of the sedan have been swapped for proper forward facing seats.

von Holzhausen has devised an interesting door arrangement for the X that uses conventional hinged front doors and gull-wings (which Tesla insists on calling Falcon wings, presumably in honor of the Falcon rocket produced by Musk's other company, SpaceX) for access to the second and third rows. This arrangement allows for a larger opening to access the third row without making the doors excessively wide when opened. However, judging from the position of the passengers in the second and third rows as seen in the photo below from Engadget, adults won't be very happy in the back for any length of time.

That's actually probably not that big of an issue since most mid-size crossovers have the same issue. Third row seats are usually best left to little ones and they will probably have an easier time getting in an out than they do in most others. While the gull-wings make for easy ingress-egress, I do see this becoming a manufacturing and quality nightmare. Plus being in that third row when the door opens on a rainy day probably won't be much fun.

The other big packaging issue I see is the front door openings. Take a look at those front door openings! They are virtually triangular with the windshield sloping back to meet the B-pillar. Taller drivers and passengers will definitely have to duck to get in and out without whacking their heads on the pillar. I have a feeling this is going to have change quite substantially in the two years before customer deliveries start in earnest.

I must say that I've long been skeptical of whether Tesla could survive in the long-term as an independent entity and I'm frankly surprised they have hung in as long as they have. I think it's the sheer force of will of Elon Musk that has kept them going and I hope they succeed. The success or failure of the Model S will be very telling about the company as a whole. Good Luck to everyone at Tesla.

#tesla #teslamodelx #ev #electricvehicles

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Excellent news for the web! Now we need to go back revisit the pantent granting process…

Excellent news for the web! Now we need to go back revisit the pantent granting process and get examiners to outright reject patents that are either obvious, vague or duplicate ideas that have already been produced.

Reshared post from +Tim O’Reilly

It's so great to see the Eolas patent struck down. We had firsthand knowledge of this case at O'Reilly, since +Dale Dougherty and +Pei Wei, who worked with us on GNN back in 1992 and 1993, have testified repeatedly in this trial over the past decade or more. Pei's work with Viola (see http://viola.org) was clearly prior art, but it took till now for the court system to catch up with that obvious fact.

The current patent system is a terrible tax on invention, as it requires real inventors to spend time in court rather than focusing on making real things happen. We must remember that the patent system was supposed to "promote the progress of science and the useful arts," not to enrich people who know how to work the legal system.

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Texas Jury Strikes Down Patent Troll’s Claim to Own the Interactive Web
TYLER, Texas — After threatening web companies for more than a decade, Michael Doyle and his patent-holding company Eolas Technologies — …

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Just watched this on the new motor trend youtube channel via the xbox on the big…

Just watched this on the new motor trend youtube channel via the xbox on the big screen and it looks fantastic. Congratulations to Angus MacKenzie and the whole +Motor Trend Magazine crew. They have truly succeeded in making the transition from old school print buff book to digital media
#cars #motortrend

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Without doubt the highlight of the current presidential campaign has been Bad Lip…

Without doubt the highlight of the current presidential campaign has been Bad Lip Reading and here is the latest effort.
#indecision2012

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Get the pop tart!!!

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I spent many evenings reading Dr Seuss to my kids when they were young, and loved…

I spent many evenings reading Dr Seuss to my kids when they were young, and loved every minute of it. The silly art and the Ted Giesel's magical words were great.

But all good things eventually need to be updated and the gang at MAD have brought Seuss into the current century.

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Dr. Seuss for the Digital Age
2012 marks the 75th Anniversary of Dr. Seuss’ first book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, which has led many to wonder what the Seuss library would look like if he wrote his books in the present day. Once again, MAD stands years ahead of the pack — in 2008, we updated some of Seuss’ most popular titles to make them relevant to the message-board-trolling miscreants of the YouTube Generation.

From MAD #491, July 2008
Writer: Darren Johnson
Artist: Gary Hallgren

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I knew this guy was overated :) 2

I knew this guy was overated 🙂

Reshared post from +The Onion

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New Biography Reveals Einstein Devised Theory Of Relativity On Paper Because He Wasn't Smart Enough To Invent Microsoft Word
PRINCETON, NJ—A new biography by science historian Tanya Medel has rocked the physics world with the revelation that theoretical physicist Albert Einstein wasn't smart enough to invent Microsoft W…

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All things great and small set to scale 2

In the grand scheme of things, what we do here on our little blue ball doesn't really amount to a hill of beans.

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This. Is. Bad. Ass. The scale of the universe. Check it. http://images.4channel.org/f/src/589217_scale_of_universe_enhanced.swf

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http://images.4channel.org/f/src/589217_scale_of_universe_enhanced.swf

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Fascinating to watch!

Fascinating to watch!

Reshared post from +Google Earth

This Google Earth animation of the Costa Concordia wreck (by Peter Olsen) is a pretty impressive example of Google Earth's advanced touring capabilities (and 3D modeling)!

Learn more about how the tour was made on this great recap post from the +Google Earth Blog (http://goo.gl/NsCvx) and then download the tour for yourself (http://goo.gl/ivdYv) to dig deeper in Google Earth.

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Two of the top engineers in the US auto industry will both be retiring on April 1….

Two of the top engineers in the US auto industry will both be retiring on April 1. Ford announced this morning that group vice president for global product development Derrick Kuzak will be leaving after 34 years with the company. While CEO Alan Mulally has received much of the public credit for turning around Ford in the last five years, in the auto industry a plan is only as good as the products that roll off the assembly line.

Kuzak is a soft spoken engineer that doesn't have the flash of Bob Lutz but he certainly has the product development chops and understands where the investment needs to go create best in class vehicles. Having spent a number of years at Ford of Europe he was familiar with the products there and what the market was looking for and when Mulally brought him back to Dearborn to lead the ONE Ford effort, he knew exactly what to do. He assembled a great team and like Steve Jobs at Apple he saw what needed to be cut and what should go forward. Hopefully the team he assembled will continue to execute the plan in the coming years.

Just a couple of weeks earlier, General Motors announced that chief technical officer Tom Stephens is also leaving. Like Kuzak, Stephens wasn't typically the public facing voice of GM, but he spent his entire 43 year career in the engineering ranks at GM. After Lutz retired in 2009, Stephens succeeded him as vice chairman responsible for global product development before moving into the new role of CTO a year ago.

Both men helped lead their teams through tumultuous times in the industry and they will be missed. Let's hope their successors have the same kind of vision about where to go in the next decade.

Check out Kuzak talking about global product development and the new 2013 Ford Fusion in the video.

#derrickkuzak #tomstephens #ford #2013fordfusion #fordfusionstory #gm #generalmotors #engineering

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If this is accurate and I'm inclined to believe it is, it makes arguments about…

If this is accurate and I'm inclined to believe it is, it makes arguments about lowering both income and capital gains tax rates even more pointless. Clearly the system is slanted heavily in favor of the wealthy no matter which way you look at it.

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This slashdot post puts a couple of important points together about how rich folks can avoid paying tax simply by borrowing against the value of their stock rather than selling it. For example, the post notes that since Jobs never sold his stock, simply borrowing against it, his widow now has to pay no tax at all, even if she sells the stock, since she inherits it at its current value free and clear of tax. (I'm not a tax lawyer, and can't attest that every detail here is correct, but I have heard this same story from tax accountants as well as from very rich friends.)

It would be really good to have a simple tax system with lower rates and fewer dodges, IMO. Of course, that's not possible with human nature, since whatever simplification occurs will soon be gamed, which is why we need a complete overhaul of the tax system every once in a while….

Nice to see that Zuck at least appears to be planning to pay some tax (but the story might have that wrong too. Unless he's doing this with the intention to pay tax, I can't imagine why he'd sell the shares he exercised (which would be subject to ordinary income unless they were held long enough to get capital gains) rather than simply selling some of his founders shares, which he's held since the beginning, and replace them with newly exercised shares, to get the clock ticking for capital gains rate on those shares too.

I guess what I'm saying is that from a tax accountant's point of view, this story probably is as full of holes as swiss cheese, but the notion that the rich do have some very easy ways to avoid paying any tax at all is quite sound, and the technique fairly common among those with large company shareholdings.

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The Zuckerberg Tax – Slashdot
Hugh Pickens writes "David S. Miller writes that when Facebook goes public later this year, Mark Zuckerberg plans to exercise stock options worth $5 billion of the $28 billion that his ownership stake…

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