Another new story dropped under the stories page. Looks like an article version of the new forging the future video but good read. No link today. Pretend we are playing hide and seek and go explore-just like the Scouts 

Thatās fine, just donāt post about it here without a link. Maybe you should make your own thread with your opinions on recent developments and no other informationAnother new story dropped under the stories page. Looks like an article version of the new forging the future video but good read. No link today. Pretend we are playing hide and seek and go explore-just like the Scouts![]()
It is good to see that charging network growth has not be stifled by our current administration position on EV production & adoption.Some good newsā¦
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America's EV Charging Network Is About To Skyrocket
Led by Tesla, ChargePoint and EVgo, the deployment of new public fast charging ports reached record levels in the second quarter.insideevs.com
Give me a few topics and Iāll jump on itThatās fine, just donāt post about it here without a link. Maybe you should make your own thread with your opinions on recent developments and no other information![]()
Thatās fine, just donāt post about it here without a link. Maybe you should make your own thread with your opinions on recent developments and no other information![]()
Such a good video. I like how they actually studied where eyes go and get distracted.New video out:
See we don't need government subsidies for charging. These companies have it handled.Some good newsā¦
![]()
America's EV Charging Network Is About To Skyrocket
Led by Tesla, ChargePoint and EVgo, the deployment of new public fast charging ports reached record levels in the second quarter.insideevs.com
Let's point out that subsidies are handed out in this country for water, farming, oil, gas and on and on and on.See we don't need government subsidies for charging. These companies have it handled.
@Jamie@ScoutMotors the tailgate on the Terra is the release going to be electric or an actual handle that has to be pulled? Kinda curious since most truck are now electronic release, but buttons wear down.
Nice hopefully colored match.The production vehicle will have a mechanical handle.
True. Even my house is subsidized by the Bank believe it or not. And the Government charges me property taxes even though I own the property. Shows how the Government is a major Cash Cow, something the founding fathers wanted to get away from, but a few bad votes turned it into this.Let's point out that subsidies are handed out in this country for water, farming, oil, gas and on and on and on.
I am sure you already know this. Property taxes are required on land you own because they help fund local services such as schools, roads, and emergency services. But I get your point.True. Even my house is subsidized by the Bank believe it or not. And the Government charges me property taxes even though I own the property. Shows how the Government is a major Cash Cow, something the founding fathers wanted to get away from, but a few bad votes turned it into this.
Make one about the Fall of Rome and its effect on solid state battery scalability.Give me a few topics and Iāll jump on it![]()
The military industrial complex would like a wordā¦See we don't need government subsidies for charging. These companies have it handled.
Gotta love ChatGPTMake one about the Fall of Rome and its effect on solid state by
Make one about the Fall of Rome and its effect on solid state battery scalability.
Fall of Rome (Historical) | Solid-State Battery Scalability (Modern) |
---|---|
Collapse of a large, complex system | Difficulty scaling a complex, promising technology |
Overexpansion without adapting infrastructure | Rapid research advances but lagging industrial capacity |
Fragmented political leadership | Fragmented R&D efforts and lack of standardization |
Disruption of trade and resources | Material supply chain issues (e.g., rare materials) |
Loss of knowledge centers | Need for interdisciplinary collaboration (chemistry, engineering, policy) |
Your welcome!Gotta love ChatGPT
Here's how the fall of Rome might metaphorically or structurally relate to the scalability challenges of solid-state batteries:
Drawing Parallels: Lessons from Rome
Fall of Rome (Historical) Solid-State Battery Scalability (Modern) Collapse of a large, complex system Difficulty scaling a complex, promising technology Overexpansion without adapting infrastructure Rapid research advances but lagging industrial capacity Fragmented political leadership Fragmented R&D efforts and lack of standardization Disruption of trade and resources Material supply chain issues (e.g., rare materials) Loss of knowledge centers Need for interdisciplinary collaboration (chemistry, engineering, policy)
What Can Be Learned?
- Infrastructure Matters: Romeās collapse shows that even a dominant system can fail without adaptive infrastructure. SSBs need scalable, robust manufacturing systems and supply chains.
- Stability & Governance: Just as Rome needed centralized control, the battery industry benefits from standards, regulations, and strategic coordination.
- Overpromising vs. Reality: Rome overextended; modern tech often overpromises. Solid-state batteries are promising, but need realism in timelines and capabilities.
While Rome didnāt directly affect solid-state battery development (they didnāt even have electricity!), the fall of a great empire due to systemic weaknesses serves as a cautionary tale for modern technological ambitions. Without careful planning, coordination, and resilience, even the most revolutionary innovations can stall or collapse under their own weight.
Final Thought
We are so doomedGotta love ChatGPT
Here's how the fall of Rome might metaphorically or structurally relate to the scalability challenges of solid-state batteries:
Drawing Parallels: Lessons from Rome
Fall of Rome (Historical) Solid-State Battery Scalability (Modern) Collapse of a large, complex system Difficulty scaling a complex, promising technology Overexpansion without adapting infrastructure Rapid research advances but lagging industrial capacity Fragmented political leadership Fragmented R&D efforts and lack of standardization Disruption of trade and resources Material supply chain issues (e.g., rare materials) Loss of knowledge centers Need for interdisciplinary collaboration (chemistry, engineering, policy)
What Can Be Learned?
- Infrastructure Matters: Romeās collapse shows that even a dominant system can fail without adaptive infrastructure. SSBs need scalable, robust manufacturing systems and supply chains.
- Stability & Governance: Just as Rome needed centralized control, the battery industry benefits from standards, regulations, and strategic coordination.
- Overpromising vs. Reality: Rome overextended; modern tech often overpromises. Solid-state batteries are promising, but need realism in timelines and capabilities.
While Rome didnāt directly affect solid-state battery development (they didnāt even have electricity!), the fall of a great empire due to systemic weaknesses serves as a cautionary tale for modern technological ambitions. Without careful planning, coordination, and resilience, even the most revolutionary innovations can stall or collapse under their own weight.
Final Thought