Musk: $35,000 Teslas might be three years away, will be 20 percent smaller

Musk $35,000 Teslas might be three years away

We can’t argue that the Tesla Model S is not only a great achievement in the EV industry and a looker as well, but there are still a lot of people unconvinced by the $70,000 sticker price ($60k, if you count the tax credits). CEO Elon Musk is definitely aware of that particular concern, and stated tonight at D11 that there’s a very good chance we’ll see Teslas in three years for half the price — and 20 percent smaller, to boot. Speaking with Kara Swisher and Walt Mossberg, Musk mentioned he started the company with a three-step strategy to get to mass market, with the Roadster and Model S being the first two steps. The third step, naturally, would be to offer options that are more affordable: according to Musk, “I think every major product needs at least three iterations to get to the mass market — I know cellphones have had much more than that.” While we wait for 2016-17, we’ll start saving some of our pennies, but fortunately we may not have to pinch all of them.

Comments

Dennis Woodside: Motorola to launch hero Moto X smartphone this year [UPDATE]

The D11 conference has been underway, with Tim Cook discussing all things Apple yesterday, and today with Motorola‘s Dennis Woodside discussing the company and its plans. According to Woodside, Motorola plans to launch amidst a range of smartphones one particular hero handset called the Moto X, which is said to be “contextually aware of what is going on around it.”

Motorola X

Motorola also has plans to release a “handful” of handsets in October (or possibly sooner). While those devices weren’t discussed, Woodside did get into Motorola’s planned hero phone, the Moto X, saying it will be the first smartphone built in the US. Such a title is earned by making the phones via a 500,000 square foot structure in Texas, a place that was used in the past for making Nokia handsets. While Android’s Sundar Pichai has had access to the phone, Woodside says access to Android code won’t be used to give the handset an advantage.

When questioned about the so-called hero device, Woodside responded: “It is going to be broadly distributed. There are a couple things we’re going to be doing differently … Motorola has always been good at managing ultra-low power sensors, such as the gyroscope and the accelerometer, and keeping those on all the time so the device knows different use states. The [Moto X] knows when it is in my pocket, it knows when I take it out of my pocket. I might want to do something, I might want to take a picture, so it fires up the camera.”

When asked if that meant the Moto X will always fire up the camera when taken from the pocket, Woodside went on to clarify his statements, saying no, that it will rather know what the user wants to do, and facilitate such an action. He went on to give a more specific example of what can be expected from the phone, using a different scenario to illustrate the point. “Imagine when in the car, the device will know it is going 60mph and it is going to act differently so you can interact with it safely. Those are the kinds of things we’re doing with fundamental technology.”

Because of its contextual awareness, the phone will allow users to interact with it in a way that is said to not be possible with the current smartphones on the market. According to AllThingsD, the Moto X will be rolled out by October of this year, but no other details about it were provided, such as specs or how much users can expect to pay for it.

Update: According to a press release Motorola has published, the Moto X will actually be available some time this summer, not October as originally stated.

SOURCE: AllThingsD


Dennis Woodside: Motorola to launch hero Moto X smartphone this year [UPDATE] is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Nanotech Announces 4K Media Player, Nuvola NP-1, & 4K Streaming Video Service

4K TV streaming service from Nanotech is coming soon, meaning you can finally put your 4K TV to good use after forking out a fortune for it.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors and SpaceX, live at D11

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors and SpaceX, live at D11

Elon Musk is a busy man. He’s also a man who isn’t afraid to speak his mind, as we found out during his SXSW keynote earlier this year. This evening, he’s capping off a day of interviews at D11 with one of his own. As CEO of both Tesla Motors and SpaceX, he knows a thing or two about transportation — both within this atmosphere and beyond. Grab a cup of cocoa and join us after the break as we cover it live, won’t you?

Filed under:

Comments

9 Places Where No Woman Has Ever Been

Polar Stride Sensor Bluetooth Smart

Get a grip on your performance data as you know on how to better analyze your workout sessions, and to carefully select the right kind of training afterwards.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Samsung Knocks Nokia Off Their Perch In Finland

Samsung beats Nokia at their own game in of all places, Finland, in terms of handsets sold in the last quarter.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Pope Francis Braves Rain To Greet Crowds

VATICAN CITY — The rain hasn’t stopped Pope Francis.

The 76-year-old pontiff, who lost part of a lung during his youth to an infection, got soaked Wednesday as he braved a brief spring shower to kiss babies and greet crowds at his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square. Zooming around the piazza in his open-air jeep, Francis had no umbrella or cover over him as he made his way through a sea of brightly colored umbrellas, happily stopping to caress and kiss babies handed up to him.

Read More…
More on Pope Francis

Prominent Conservative Intellectual Yuval Levin In Denial About Austerity

Yuval Levin, editor of the conservative journal National Affairs, frequent contributor to both National Review and the Weekly Standard, winner of the $250,000 Bradley Prize for excellence in the field of conservative punditry, and unofficial adviser to Paul Ryan, is probably the preeminent conservative intellectual of the Obama era. He has helped to formulate and justify the Republican strategy on domestic policy.

Unfortunately, as I pointed out a couple of weeks ago, two of the most important intellectual premises of that strategy have fallen to pieces. On Friday, Levin wrote a reply — or, at least, a column that purports to be a reply. Mainly, it is a series of evasions about what he and the Republicans have argued, serving only to further confirm the impression that Levin’s analysis has collapsed and he has no idea what to do about it.

Read More…

Moto X Smartphone Arrives In October

It’s official: Dennis Woodside the CEO of Motorola Mobility has announced that the Moto X smartphone will arrive on the market “by October”. Right now, there is no profusion of details on the upcoming handset, but so far we do […]

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.