If you live in San Ramon, youโve seen the origin story of this on the Iron Horse Trail for years.
Thereโs a guy who seems to run a half marathon every single day, with his robot dog cart wagon with tech already more advanced than this seven years ago. Dude is an absolute legend around here, yet, I donโt think any of us have ever spoken to him.
@XRoboHub Have these nerds thought to add a secondary stretch bounce recoil rebounding sort of component, working in concert with the stepper motors and/or actuators when in speed mode??
All good points, Yep. And yes, I knew all that, I knew what you meant. ๐
Btw, kinda reminds me of Rolex versus Apple Watch. I wonder if overtime these two categories will generally play at the same way (cars and watches).
My guess is both sides would be very happy with a similar result.. one maintains its status while commanding an ever-increasing price, while the other experiences its own version of success with, ultimately, high sales volume contributing massively to its companyโs valuation and bottom line.
@hackagibson@kinglinzhuhui Smashing more rocks with a sledgehammer than an iPhone, doesnโt exactly mean that the iPhone was humiliated.
Thatโs not what itโs built for. Anyway, like I said, the SU7 is pretty amazing (despite the silliness of comparing them via a drag race).
@anomo69@kinglinzhuhui SU7 is amazing, as I said. Are you sure you arenโt the person disrespecting it?
I sort of categorize all electric cars as quarter milers because theyโre all pretty damn fast in a quarter mile. Thatโs how theyโre built. ๐ป
@_GenesisSystems Guys, calm down. it's a dehumidifier. They pull water from the air.
Remaining innovation to be had, to go mainstream, is mainly reducing the energy needed per unit of water (or a function thereof), so, yea.
Nerd water rights facts for those about to point out not paying the utility for water can sometimes be illegal (insane, but true):
Devices that pull moisture from the air, known as Atmospheric Water Generators (AWGs), are completely legal for residential use throughout the United States.
Unlike rainwater, which is subject to complex "water rights" laws in Western states, moisture in the air is generally not regulated as a shared resource that must reach downstream users.