| 1. | | "It's A Brick" - Tesla Motors' Devastating Design Problem (theunderstatement.com) |
| 542 points by degusta on Feb 22, 2012 | 268 comments |
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| 2. | | EFF Wins Protection for Time Zone Database (eff.org) |
| 457 points by taylorbuley on Feb 22, 2012 | 36 comments |
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| 3. | | Remove Google Search History Before New Privacy Policy Takes Effect (eff.org) |
| 399 points by bootload on Feb 22, 2012 | 150 comments |
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| 4. | | Hack your way through Stripe's Capture the Flag (stripe.com) |
| 391 points by gdb on Feb 22, 2012 | 199 comments |
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| 5. | | Cogs bad (williamedwardscoder.tumblr.com) |
| 313 points by willvarfar on Feb 22, 2012 | 76 comments |
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| 6. | | How Exercise Fuels the Brain (nytimes.com) |
| 287 points by danso on Feb 22, 2012 | 18 comments |
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| 7. | | Sublime Text 2 Build 2181 (sublimetext.com) |
| 275 points by pshken on Feb 22, 2012 | 111 comments |
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| 8. | | Flash For Linux Will Only Be Available For Chrome (adobe.com) |
| 240 points by hotice on Feb 22, 2012 | 184 comments |
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| 9. | | Rapportive (YC S10) Has Been Acquired By LinkedIn (rapportive.com) |
| 222 points by rahulvohra on Feb 22, 2012 | 36 comments |
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| 10. | | Paul Graham: Why Y Combinator Replaces The Traditional Corporation (fastcompany.com) |
| 215 points by turoczy on Feb 22, 2012 | 93 comments |
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| 11. | | Faster-than-light neutrino result may have been due to bad connection (news.sciencemag.org) |
| 153 points by necubi on Feb 22, 2012 | 68 comments |
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| 12. | | Github is my resume (pydanny.blogspot.com) |
| 154 points by craigkerstiens on Feb 22, 2012 | 67 comments |
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| 13. | | HyperDex: A Searchable Distributed Key-Value Store (hyperdex.org) |
| 139 points by lpgauth on Feb 22, 2012 | 88 comments |
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| 14. | | VoiceBunny: Fast and professional voiceovers (with an API). (voicebunny.com) |
| 130 points by ph0rque on Feb 22, 2012 | 50 comments |
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| 16. | | Kevin Fox on recent Google UX changes: from strange-to-me to just-plain-crazy (plus.google.com) |
| 113 points by dannyr on Feb 22, 2012 | 47 comments |
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| 17. | | Thoughts on Growing Old (nerdyfool.blogspot.com) |
| 110 points by bennesvig on Feb 22, 2012 | 64 comments |
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| 18. | | W3C Proposal from MS, Google, Netflix for adding copy protection API to html5 (w3.org) |
| 108 points by ldite on Feb 22, 2012 | 102 comments |
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| 19. | | Scroogled (2007) (blogoscoped.com) |
| 108 points by jacquesm on Feb 22, 2012 | 26 comments |
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| 20. | | SSH Do’s and Don’ts (hypergeometric.com) |
| 107 points by gpapilion on Feb 22, 2012 | 61 comments |
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| 21. | | Megaupload Founder Kim Dotcom Released From Prison (torrentfreak.com) |
| 102 points by cleverjake on Feb 22, 2012 | 53 comments |
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| 22. | | Amazon Simple Workflow - Cloud-Based Workflow Management (aws.typepad.com) |
| 104 points by jeffbarr on Feb 22, 2012 | 31 comments |
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| 23. | | Intel becomes a foundry, offers up its 22nm process (extremetech.com) |
| 93 points by Flemlord on Feb 22, 2012 | 18 comments |
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| 24. | | The Problem with Facebook Connect (dcurt.is) |
| 83 points by teej on Feb 22, 2012 | 44 comments |
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| 25. | | Show HN: The reinvention of the company profile (thedailymuse.com) |
| 79 points by acav on Feb 22, 2012 | 21 comments |
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| 26. | | Show HN: A PHP parser written in PHP (github.com/nikic) |
| 77 points by nikic on Feb 22, 2012 | 39 comments |
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| 29. | | 300 million year old fossilized forest discovered under coal mine in China (zmescience.com) |
| 76 points by yogrish on Feb 22, 2012 | 7 comments |
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| 30. | | How the European Internet Rose Up Against ACTA (wired.com) |
| 73 points by jwr on Feb 22, 2012 | 9 comments |
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Completely disagree. Tesla is, I think, unquestionably the most impactful company in the game, including GE and Nissan. For two reasons.
First, before Tesla people thought of electric vehicles as ridiculous DIY golf carts driven by treehuggers. They were utterly uncool and stupid. Post-Tesla, electric cars are among the very coolest cars in the world. GE didn't do that. Nissan didn't do that. Toyota didn't do that. Tesla did. I think fundamentally changing people's perceptions of what an electric car is and what it can do is the single most impactful action in the industry so far.
Second, Tesla's critical product isn't their cars. Their critical product is their battery technology. It is second to none, in a business where the battery is everything. This is the reason that both Daimler and Toyota have invested in the company. I think you are seriously underestimating how important this is.
As to the article proper: it seems to me that running down your car is a pretty simple problem to engineer away. This might be an issue, perhaps a burp that Tesla has to get fixed pronto. But it's hardly, to use the breathless headline, devastating.