Detroit man steals 800 gallons using Bluetooth to hack gas pumps at station::undefined

  • Chunk@lemmy.world
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    11 个月前

    I hope it will at least double to shock the system into prioritizing clean energy.

    • Stuka@lemmy.ml
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      11 个月前

      Ah yes, hurt the poor people to make the rich wake up. That’ll definitely work!

    • Usernameblankface@lemmy.world
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      11 个月前

      That would be quite a boost on top of how cheap solar is getting. Just need a good and cheap storage solution for the grid to run on more and more solar later and later into the evening.

    • nostradiel@lemmy.world
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      11 个月前

      That’s lovely idea but I don’t have even money to buy a newly made car. Where I’m supposed to get money for significantly more expensive (price and repair coat) and unreliable electric car? Now I can repair my car on my own cause it’s old and easy, also easy to refill. Electric cars is not the way. Also it’s not that green as everybody thinks…

      • Fiskelord@lemmy.world
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        11 个月前

        The perspective is fun, buying a new car in Denmark is a big investment, for many people it’s around what they make in a year after taxes, and even then it’s a relatively small car. I’m not saying electric is the golden bullet people want it to be, far from it as of right now, but we need to change something in order to have a chance of saving ourselves from destroying the planet. Perhaps a higher fuel cost will incentivice smaller cars, and thus better milage, for our American friends?

          • Fiskelord@lemmy.world
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            11 个月前

            Oh, I definitely agree with that one. Sometimes there is a genuine need for a car of that size, but whether it being media propaganda or not, I feel like there is a lean towards cars of that class, and usually not in a “I need this for a specific purpose, and not just to show the world how small my donger is” kind of way.

        • Xavienth@lemmygrad.ml
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          11 个月前

          The solution is not more fuel efficient or fuel alternative cars, it’s the replacement of cars entirely (where reasonable). But you can’t shock that, because it requires infrastructure which literally doesn’t exist in much of North America, and is severely lacking in the rest of it.

          • Thatpilotguy89@lemm.ee
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            11 个月前

            We used to have good public transit but it was demonized and dismantled by car manufacturers. There is a bus that runs near my house but the closest I can get to work is still several miles away and I cant use it to get home because of how early it stops running. Train service recently improved to twice a week but still has limited stops.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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          11 个月前

          Over half of Americans live paycheck-to-paycheck. Between sky high rent/mortgage, student loans and medical bills, getting a new car is often unrealistic.

      • Mr_Blott@lemmy.world
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        11 个月前

        The point of expensive fuel is to stop manufacturers from making gas guzzling monstrosities. If fuel was $2 a litre would you be looking for a tiny-penis truck or a more efficient car?

        Manufacturers follow the market

        I drive around a country the size of Texas in a 1.2 litre hatchback and have no issues with that

        • lightnegative@lemmy.world
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          11 个月前

          Fuel just went over $3 a litre here.

          Apparently the small dick energy of ute owners offsets the cost, they’ve never been more popular

        • Usernameblankface@lemmy.world
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          11 个月前

          There already is a used market. Old evs with ranges between 75 and 100 miles can be had for less than $10k. For any homeowners already driving 2 cars, using one of these for daily commutes and local errands makes a lot of sense.

        • nostradiel@lemmy.world
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          11 个月前

          I’m sorry but I don’t want used ev. Battery will be degraded and buying new one is like buying a new cheap petrol car. If you don’t buy new one, you’ll have a shity range, which is already shity and heavily exaggerated by manufacturers, especially in high and low temps which are for example in Europe where I live almost 50% time of whole year. There is no infrastructure to charge ev cars and it’s decades away from being build, especially in my country.

          If evs should be reality it has to have range at least 600km in worst temp scenario while being able to charge fully in 15 mins tops.

          And even than I wouldn’t want it. I wanna have car which I can easily repair myself, without electrical shenanigans and bulshit like changing whole fcking light instead of just bulb, or having to ask to access software of my car, jeez…

          I don’t want my car to have displays instead of buttons. I don’t even understand how that can be legal, when you obviously don’t watch the road to adjust fcking air conditioning. Or that stupid hold the line function which has car in my work. You can’t even turn that shit off and it steers instead of you. When I overtake a cyclists it’s a living nightmare and not talking about state of roads which have like multiples lines over and the cars is fcked.

          I’m 29 and I don’t want to have over-electroniseid everything…

          • jarfil@lemmy.world
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            11 个月前

            Europe […] There is no infrastructure to charge ev cars and it’s decades away from being build, especially in my country.

            Which country is that?

            Just the other day I got a taxi trip in a Tesla, with a guy showing photos of how he’d gone from Spain to Ukraine with a bunch of other Tesla taxi drivers to bring back some refugees. That sounds like he could get a recharge, across most of Europe?

      • Nobsi@feddit.de
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        11 个月前

        So much wrong with this one.
        But on the “i can’t afford” one. Yes, you might not be able to afford a new electric car. They are a luxury still and will probably stay that until we see enough teslas on the used market.
        But you also dont have to buy a new car. if you can not afford your car right now and doubling the gas prices will worsen that condition then something entirely different is wrong.

        Might be multiple things. Either you are American and you live in a nice-ish house in the suburbs: Your politicians and the car industry have failed you for a long time. I would say go vote but i doubt that even a fully dem senate and ruling party would change a lot.
        Might be that you don’t earn enough money at all. This one is a bad one, because it means your politicians have failed you deeply. Agin, voting might change it a bit to the better but if you cannot demand a bigger wage to fund your only way to get to work then you’re out of luck.

        Even if you could buy an electric now, it would not save you any money if you don’t or can’t change something else drastically.
        Drive less, earn more, move closer to work if that’s even possible.