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Better Place

Discussion in 'EV (Electric Vehicle) Discussion' started by DaveinOlyWA, Mar 19, 2009.

  1. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    and i guess you will be glad to know that BP will only be ONE of the options available. for those you with the financial resources like yourself daniel, other options are available including a 100% ownership and control in your EV options.

    for most of the rest of us, BP looks to be a pretty good idea.

    on a side note: the cellphone industry model of business has done very well despite many who feel that the service is overpriced. the competition is strong so as much as we think its expensive, the deals get better and better every day. in a few weeks, Verizon will begin offering laptops, discounted based on the length of a service contract for internet access. as far as what price the laptop would be and how discounted it would be remains to be seen.

    so would this be a good deal to the consumer?? especially now when decent laptops can be had for as little as $400-500? i guess that depends on how good a price they will offer them at... for instance, if you could get one on contract for $250 would you do it?

    now me?? no, i doubt it. but i have enough money to simply go down and pay $1000 cash and get one today...but what about someone who doesnt have the money? maybe getting one for much less and paying a monthly service fee would seem attractive to some and no doubt, a lot of people will go for it simply because its another way of extending credit and this country is addicted to the credit tit BIGTIME.... the hard times we have experienced over the past year has not done much to wean us from that habit.
     
  2. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    obama in his very short period of time has already done more good for the country than bush did in 8 years
     
  3. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    As you say, Dave, it's all a way of offering credit. Except that with discounted cell phones tied to a service contract, the interest rate is hidden. And as you say, Americans are addicted to the credit tit big time.

    I have never borrowed money. I see credit as a big time rip-off. Therefore I take a dim view of discounted consumer goods tied to service contracts where you pay for the device (cell phone, laptop, or car) though fees concealed in the contract price.

    If I offered to give you a new 2010 Prius for $500 on condition that you buy "miles" from me on a contract where you pay $1 per mile for 500 miles per month (whether you use them or not) for ten years, would you jump in and say, "WOW! A Prius for $500!!!" ??? Of course not. You'd say, "I can borrow money from the bank to pay for the car at retail and pay less."

    Some folks think that Shai Agassi is a philanthropist who just wants to make the world a better place (after all, he's named his company "Better Place") and who is going to basically give free credit on the batteries because he's such a nice guy. I think that's wishful thinking.

    Building an EV infrastructure is a great goal. Financing the battery cost through a service contract is a credit scheme where they can charge as much interest as they like because it's not called interest, it's all rolled up and concealed in the service contract.

    As for Verizon's laptop scheme, it does not interest me, because I don't access the internet that way.
     
  4. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    daniel; that is exactly the point. no solution is for everyone. a goal like that is impossible. waaay before BP is up and running, there will be smaller copycat companies doing the same basic thing but with a local twist. competition will make the price competitive with what a person could independently on their own. as always, the more financial risk or money upfront, the better you will fare.

    remember ATM's when they first started. running around town looking for "your" machine because others did not work with your card?? do we do that any more?? (maybe a bad question because i do) no, we dont. we just pay the transaction fee in order to get the money without going out of our way...

    now is that smart?? we all know the answer to that right daniel?? now is it unaccepted? unpopular? not done?. well in this economy, i would hope that the transactions fee collected have dropped significantly, but i bet their is still millions siphoned by banks daily for the convenience of instant gratification.

    now ATM's worked because they became more convenient than going a few blocks out your way. ATM's prey on people's inability to pre-plan their life... and that is how BP will be successful. they will make it more convenient than using your own options.

    i have an EV, very limited range. there is a small charging network in the Olympia area which i use at every opportunity even if just to plug in for 15 minutes. do it more for "getting the word out" than anything. even then, i still do 76-82% of my charging at home.

    so would BP benefit me? would i use it? and that answer is "ya, sometimes." now would i do a contract? no. like a senior citizen with a cellphone, my needs would not warrant it. and like a "pay as you go" service, i would probably pay a 250% premium to plug in for that hour or so. with metering overhead, detecting my the stored payment info that will be programmed into my car, etc... i am probably looking at a hookup charge, something nominal, like a buck, then 25 cents per KWH (making a KWH picked up off the street the same as what i pay for a week of daily use!!)

    and i guess i need to qualify everything above that it will only work if these charging stations are scattered all over the place. there would have to be at least a few in every shopping center parking lot in town. because in rainy Western WA, if i have to park and walk more than a few hundred feet, i aint gonna park there and neither will anyone else
     
  5. rpatterman

    rpatterman Thinking Progressive

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    Better Place: Solution in search of a problem

    Right now, the problem with EVs is there are none available that can operate at highway speeds for under $100k. I would rather BP spent its billions of investment money on solving this problem.

    BP is building a very expensive infrastructure to solve a problem that does not exist now and might not exist at all in 5-10 years. The battery swap business model would be obsolete with either better storage (batteries or ultracapacitors) or fast charging.

    Their subscription charging business might work in a couple of the small markets that they are entering that can be defined as transportation islands (Hawaii, Israel and Denmark). Large population in a small contained area MIGHT work. These three examples have the potential for strong government incentives to move EV demand. I also see BP as great cheerleaders in moving EVs forward.

    Will the BP business plan work in the USA? NO!

    They will be adding no value to the early adopters who typically, 1) will have access to night time charging, 2) will have a commute within the EV range, 3) will own more than one car (Second car = perfect range extender), 4) will be able to spend $25k on a vehicle.
    5) buying to be energy independent, unlikely to sign up or "subscription' service 6) are not afraid of new technology.

    This buyer profile will buy a large percentage of the EVs produced for the next 3-5 years until EVs become mainstream. BP could possible add some value to the second tier buyers mainly by reducing upfront costs (and increasing long term costs).

    The current administration's goal is to have 1,000,000 Evs in the US by 2015. If 1/3 of these subscribed to BP and had battery swap capability, that would mean approximately 5-6,000 subscribers in Colorado. What kind of infrastructure can you build to service 6,000 cars? Would you invest in a service station on an expensive piece of real estate if you knew only one in 500 cars that drove by could use your service and they probably had a full battery from cheap overnight charging? Even with the totally unrealistic assumption of 5 million EVs and 50% are BP subscribers, only 1 out of every 66 cars that drove by could use your service!

    One opportunity for a battery swap model that I have not heard mentioned is taxis in metro areas. Imagine if every cab in NYC was an EV, the reduction in curbside noise and pollution would be significant. The whole taxi fleet for NYC could probably be serviced with 5-10 swap stations. It would be easy to standardize a cab fleet owned by a handful of companies and the companies would save on maintence.

    Could BP hurt the move to EVs? Possible.

    If BP went out of business there would be a lot of subscribers without charging opportunities, their batteries would now be owned by Wall Street investors who could raise rates or reposses. Biggest concern would be that the biggest corporation in the EV world would NOT want battery improvements. A 500 mile battery or a 2 minute quick charge would put them out of business. When Evs become a significant percentage of cars on the road, it will be necessary to move to time of day metering which will also hurt their business.
     
  6. Fibb222

    Fibb222 New Member

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    You don't know what you're talking about. Once you've learned something about BP, respond to your own post and correct your mistaken notions.
     
  7. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    wow dude!! you ummm, ya right...anyway.

    what we need is for verizon, sprint and att to start manufacturing cellphones. that way we only have to call one place to complain about the games our kids downloaded and the associated charges right...

    yep that is exactly what we need. one company with an end to end solution. that would benefit us right??

    after all, Apple does it right??

    fact of the matter is...what you are implying is pretty far-fetched, uses very unwise mainstream business practices , unlikely to happen and based on groundless speculation

    the # of companies that can do this can be counted on the fingers of one hand. Apple?? ya, sure, they do ok... but at nearly twice the cost which takes them out of the mainstream market which is why they will always be a niche company...

    what you fail to recognize is that BP's business model is something that has been implemented over and over again with great success. the only thing that hinges on their success is their execution.

    sure, they could make poor decisions and fail. they do have a leader with a proven track record of success even in very adverse circumstances. but he would not be the first highly successful CEO to fail when possibly grasping too much at one time when fighting the pathetic dogma we commonly refer to as the "common sense of the masses"
     
  8. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    I remember the Iridium satellite phone system being a very good business plan when it was hatched. However, the changes in technology made it a failure by the time it was fielded.

    Better Place is in exactly the same situation. It only takes some more advances in the next few years to potentially make it a failure. Will those advances occur? Glad it's not my money.
     
  9. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    Says the gentleman whose argument is that he "imagines" that BP will make sure everything is all smiley-face for the customer.

    Oh, come on now, Dave. You know better than that. Apple made a business decision to build only high-end machines. If you buy a PC of Apple quality and with similar specs, you will pay about the same. You can get a computer at half the cost of an Apple, but you'll get half the computer, in terms of specs and quality. I had PCs before my iMac, and since I shopped for quality rather than price, I paid about the same.

    Apple is a "niche" market because the Microsoft marketing department has convinced big business to run Windows. Too bad Microsoft's software department doesn't have half the brains of its marketing department!
     
  10. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    bottom of the line Mac is around $1000. can get a "comparable" windows pc for half that ....only thing is the very subjective worth of the software included which is the real reason why Apple is still around.

    it sure isnt the "high-end" hardware. when they partnered with moto, they had crap. with intel, they pretty much have the same as anyone else. their lack of basic options pretty much is a box with minimal interface options...not sure that qualifies in my mind.
     
  11. rpatterman

    rpatterman Thinking Progressive

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    I tossed it out there to open discussion, but as the leading cheerleader
    for BP, I guess you are not open to any discussion of why it might not work. Any particular point that you believe I am mistaken about, or do we just have a different opinion of whether it is feasible?

    And believe me, I hope it does work because that would mean we would have 5 to 10 times more EVs over the next 5 years than anyone is projecting.
     
  12. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    how well BP does is pretty much all speculation, but what is certain is that they have a valid business plan...

    now, IF there was a major breakthru like ultra caps which makes batt tech obsolete, it would still take forever to get it in place. batteries are here now and even if we had ultracaps, that would not eliminate the unprepared technological neophyte from the face of this Earth...

    to be honest with ya, we can whine, complain and insult each other all day and it will change nothing. the ONLY thing i really care about is getting gas guzzlers off the road ASAP therefore i will be a cheerleader for any company who contributes to that end PERIOD.

    i hope they succeed and if they failed, i will still appreciate the fact that they at least tried which is more than most other companies up to this point can say
     
  13. Fibb222

    Fibb222 New Member

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    Sorry not enough sleep last night. No energy to be helpful - snarky side got the better of me. Maybe later....
     
  14. Fibb222

    Fibb222 New Member

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  15. Fibb222

    Fibb222 New Member

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  16. Fibb222

    Fibb222 New Member

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    Some details on aspects of the "solution"

    Solution
     
  17. lys

    lys AerodynamicMac

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    Isn't it the same "value-equation" given every time the Prius hybrid-cost comes to front?

    For a lot of non-Prius users there isn't any reason to pay for it, since a "Corolla can perform equally".

    But Prius users know better (and Mac users, for the same).

    Edit: sorry to remain off-topic. Sensitive theme :)
     
  18. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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  19. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    Hope this isn't a duplicate post, but here's an actual demonstration of the BP actual exchange...takes right at 1 minute!!

     
  20. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    Thanks for the video, Evan. That's pretty slick. Of course, nobody doubted they could build a switching machine. The questions are (among others): Can they raise enough money to put in enough stations; can they build the system cheaply enough that people can afford to use it; will the public accept a system where someone else owns the battery of their car; etc. Those are where the controversy is.