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Why Silicon Valley Won't Be the Green Car Detroit

thecarchik writes "NPR boldly pronounced, 'The new automobile of the 21st century is likely to benefit from the culture of Silicon Valley, where people are used to taking a chip, a cell or an idea and working on it until it becomes something big.' We've thought about it for a year, and discussed it with many people. And we don't believe it. Silicon Valley is the wrong place to build an auto industry, for three main reasons."

329 comments

  1. WTF are the 3 main reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello! Keep me in fucking suspense like that....

  2. Only one real reason by megaditto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Too many liberals. And I am not even trolling...

    --
    Obama likes poor people so much, he wants to make more of them.
    1. Re:Only one real reason by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What's funny is how they create bogus metrics to support how wonderful our state is. The one I see most often that really irritates me is the BTU/citizen. They'll state it in a few different ways, but basically they're claiming that because we use less energy per citizen our state is more efficient than everywhere else, but what the metric is really demonstrating is that we have no manufacturing here. Factories require gobs of electricity.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    2. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Inb4 (Score: -1, Flamebait)

    3. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 4, Funny

      Too many liberals. And I am not even trolling...

      Totally. If there is one thing about liberals, they are anti-progress.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    4. Re:Only one real reason by AnonymousClown · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Too many liberals. And I am not even trolling...

      Well, it can't be in a conservative state because they'll only build internal combustion engine powered cars that go VROOOOOM! Electric cars are just too gay. So, it's going to have to be a moderate state.

      BTW, it's a scientific fact that men who drive minivans or electric cars spontaneously grow vaginas.

      --
      RIP America

      July 4, 1776 - September 11, 2001

    5. Re:Only one real reason by Culture20 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Too many liberals. And I am not even trolling...

      Explains why NPR is so boldly pronouncing it, if they're not even hiding their bias any more (Juan Williams fired for fox appearance).

    6. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes, we need more of those forward-leaning, innovative conservatives. In fact, it's well known that most innovation and ideas come not from NY, LA, Boston and San Francisco, but from the red states. And academia, the locus of much of the research and innovation in our world, is overwhelmingly conservative.

      Seriously, what have conservatives contributed, other than complaints and obstruction? They are always on the wrong side of history. Their track record is a running joke.

    7. Re:Only one real reason by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      Is it true that in Orange County you either live next to a celebrity or on a beach?

    8. Re:Only one real reason by MrCawfee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      California uses less energy per person because of the weather not because of the lack of manufacturing.

      manufacturing is never going to come back to California not because of taxes, not because of environmental laws, but because the cost of living is so high. and it is high because it is a desirable place to live.

    9. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Uh... The only rich liberals are those that founded media empires. Few of those are liberals. I just don't know how to respond to such a dumb comment... Rich people (outside of media) got rich by inventing or recognizing and stealing ideas and carrying through on them to make a business. Almost all were/are conservatives and many from the dreaded red states where we did and still make things. Yes we don't make shit in CA nor NY, those are dead states and other blue states are going that way. This must be a troll so I'll shut up.

    10. Re:Only one real reason by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

    11. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 2, Insightful

      (Juan Williams fired for fox appearance).

      How about we unpack that story a little further to something like:

      "Juan Williams fired for saying that when he sees Muslims getting on a plane with him he's afraid they're going to blow it up."

    12. Re:Only one real reason by mosb1000 · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, all the celebrities live on the beach. So it's both or neither. Also, they don't exactly live there. It's their vacation home.

    13. Re:Only one real reason by Locke2005 · · Score: 2, Informative

      For some parts of California, this is true. In Santa Cruz, they have a big problem because they let the students at UCSC vote in city elections. Those students are overwhelmingly liberal, anti-business, don't understand that you need a tax base to fund your socialist utopia, and most importantly, won't be around for more than 4 years to endure the inevitable results of their short-sighted belief systems. So the huge shopping mall project tries to locate in Santa Cruz, they get firmly rejected, they locate next door in Capitola, and a few years later the city of Santa Cruz is begging the City of Capitola for a cut of sales taxes from the mall on the weak argument that customers are driving through Santa Cruz in order to get to the mall in Capitola to shop... no, I'm not making this shit up!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    14. Re:Only one real reason by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't think Modesto, Stockton, Fresno, Bakersfield, or pretty much the entire Central Valley is considered a 'desirable place to live'. And I'm not clear on how running air conditioning 24/7 throughout most of the state reduces energy consumption, nor can even the highest consumer energy consumption compare to myriad widget factories producing millions of widgets each with only 1000 employees or less. How many humans even work in a modern auto plant?

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    15. Re:Only one real reason by ickleberry · · Score: 1

      Shit, i better cancel my order then...

    16. Re:Only one real reason by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      Does my hybrid make me a hermaphrodite?

    17. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1, Troll

      You're welcome to justify your bigotry, but it's still bigotry.

      Alternately, a rational person might ask themselves what percentage of the 9/11 hijackers were wearing traditional Muslim garb. Even suicide mission terrorists are only so stupid.

    18. Re:Only one real reason by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      Oh nonsense! Cows and corn seem to love living in the Central Valley! Oh, you mean desirable for humans? Yeah....that could be true then...

    19. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, it's a scientific fact that men who drive minivans or electric cars spontaneously grow vaginas.

      I see many orders for minivans and electric cars.

      Everyone knows that there is more fun to be had with a vagina.

    20. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in the area, I can verify this. I am not certain about the City of Santa Cruz asking Capitola for a cut, but I know that Capitola has gobs of money (police department is incredibly well equipped) and Santa Cruz is hurting for cash. And yes, the UCSC students are encouraged to vote, often at the behest of their teachers (almost communist level liberals for the large part) for whatever hippy-happy legislation is on the ballot.

    21. Re:Only one real reason by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Too many liberals. And I am not even trolling...

      I think you are, because I personally claim what's wrong with California is not the number of liberals, but the number of dumb and crazy people of any political leaning. We might have more dumb liberals, but I maintain that's because we have more liberals period. The conservatives who decided it should be all but impossible to raise taxes ever, that was also pretty short sighted.

      Anyway, liberals can make cars in theory, just as conservatives can, in theory, be funny comedians.

    22. Re:Only one real reason by martas · · Score: 1, Insightful

      conservatism is necessary. ask your nearest physicist what would happen if science wasn't conservative... that being said, being too conservative == being a moron asshole stick-in-the-mud grumpy get-off-my-lawn waste of breath.

    23. Re:Only one real reason by DarkOx · · Score: 4, Informative

      yes

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    24. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It's not really a partisan issue. He clearly violated their policy.

      Not too long ago, NPR was in the news because they instructed their employees not to attend Jon Stewart's Rally to Restore Sanity. Their response can be found here.

      One of the reasons given in the article states "You must not advocate for political or other polarizing issues online". It would seem to apply in this case.

    25. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1, Troll

      So his personal opinion in an opinion piece gets him fired?

      NPR won't let their employees attend even nominally political rallies, so yes.

      He even went on to say how much he is against outright hatred and racism based on work he has done.

      Did he say how one of his best friends is a muslim too?

      Sorry but NPR is showing its true colors. You must "one of us" or you are gone. Sad.

      When "one of us" means not a bigot, then yes.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    26. Re:Only one real reason by hey! · · Score: 1

      Well, if you can manage to do it, the proper way to measure BTU/citizen (or CO2/citizen) is to go all the way back along the supply chain to China, then all the way back to where the raw materials were extracted.

      As a country, we've shifted a huge fraction of our pollution and energy consumption to China.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    27. Re:Only one real reason by DarkOx · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Juan Williams is an idiot for so many reasons but; I have to agree with your post. Its not as if he said we should be afraid when Muslims get on a plane we us, he said he is. Its a statement that is not against Muslims or anyone. He even goes on to offer the idea that its an irrational fear. I don't see what NPR's issue is other than that he admitted to be less than a perfect liberal/progressive. Based on this working at NPR must be like working in soviet Russia, with the Party representative constantly watching over your shoulder.

      Frankly some people naturally probably have some fear of people who look different and you know what I would only call them racist if they don't recognize that and try using their higher reason to overcome those instincts and treat people fairly. You are only a racist or a bigot if you give into those instincts and there should be no shame in admitting you have them. I say shame on NPR and their PC ilk treating someone so unfairly. He should be judged on his deeds.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    28. Re:Only one real reason by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      (Juan Williams fired for fox appearance).

      How about we unpack that story a little further to something like:

      "Juan Williams fired for saying that when he sees Muslims getting on a plane with him he's afraid they're going to blow it up."

      How about we unpack that comment a little further to something like:
      Juan Williams fired for saying that "when he sees Muslims getting on a plane with him he gets a little nervous", and then saying that the type of visceral response he has is wrong because it's the basis for discrimination based on appearance. It was a perfect example of someone trying to follow the good path, but his body (psychology) getting in the way initially. His boss obviously didn't watch the full clip on Fox before pulling out the Fire stick, and refused to listen to him over the phone.

    29. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Desirable for whom, illegal immigrants?

    30. Re:Only one real reason by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Actually I was on a transatlantic flight two seats away from a guy who was reading Koran out loud the entire damn flight. If you are prepared to say that this wouldn't scare you more than a guy reading the bible I think you are lying. This has nothing to do with bigotry and everything to do with the knowledge of the fact that he probably comes from a country where his Imam at a local mosque is filling his head with glories that await kafir killers in the afterlife and the many examples of those who acted on such beliefs. By the way, agree or disagree with Williams, why is he not allowed to say that? I am an atheist but even I notice how much more the American liberals rise in anger at any comment against Muslims than at a comment against Christians. I can't believe that it's some kind of suicidal self hate, I think it's a simpler 'support the underdog' instinct which we all have, but it doesn't make it any less stupid.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    31. Re:Only one real reason by russ_allegro · · Score: 1

      I used to live in Fresno. No snow you have to deal with, not much rainy days, an hour away from the mountains. If it wasn't a desirable place to live why has the population skyrocketed even compared to the rest of California as a whole?

    32. Re:Only one real reason by Varsik · · Score: 0, Troll

      big problem because they let the students at UCSC vote in city elections.

      Ah, 26th? Yup, its a well known fact college-aged students have the highest voting turnout of any age group. That's why they are so well represented!

      Those students are overwhelmingly liberal

      Aren't most students, everywhere more liberal? Have you been to Santa Cruz, it's a republican enclave, for sure!

      don't understand that you need a tax base

      Yup, students are dumb... Liberals do not support taxes?

      won't be around for more than 4 years

      Yup, after 4 years they demolish the campus.

      huge shopping mall

      Sounds gorgeous, what town wouldn't want one.

      weak argument that customers are driving through Santa Cruz in order to get to the mall

      Many countries have Value Added Tax deductions for visitors, obviously creating that was a weak argument.

    33. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Its not as if he said we should be afraid when Muslims get on a plane we us, he said he is. Its a statement that is not against Muslims or anyone.

      I'm not sure how you're able to reconcile those two statements as rationally consistent.

      If he'd said, "I'm not saying how anyone else should feel, but when I see black people I'm afraid they're going to mug me.", that's not a statement against black people? No one should feel offended by that?

      How about, "I'm not saying how you should feel, but I get scared that gypsies will try to steal my babies?"

      Or, "When I see rednecks, I'm afraid I might see them making out with their sister-mom, but I don't act on that fear?"

      Or even, "When I see Asian people, I'm afraid they're better at math and karate than I am?"

      Sorry, you can't say something that's completely bigoted or racist but expect people to not be taken aback when you stress that it's just your own feeling.

    34. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the direct corollary, there are too many conservatives. Cali is one f'ed up state. If only we were all anarchists with no allegiance.

    35. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      By the way, agree or disagree with Williams, why is he not allowed to say that?

      He's absolutely allowed to say it. He's guaranteed the right by the 1st and 14th Amendments to the Constitution.

      What he's not guaranteed is immunity to the consequences of saying it from an employer that disapproves.

    36. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What percentage of them were Muslim?

    37. Re:Only one real reason by clarkkent09 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure. And I am also allowed to say that the NPR was wrong here and to wonder why on Earth is a politically biased media organization receiving public funding and what is the new Republican congress going to do about it.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    38. Re:Only one real reason by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Seems like a rational fear to have. I would cancel my flight immediately if I observed anyone getting on board that appeared to be of middle eastern origin.

      No - fear is not rational. Fear is an irrational survival instinct. Acting on that fear is simply an indication that you are a poor judge of risk.

    39. Re:Only one real reason by lgw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, I'd prefer to live in a world where I wasn't afraid to publicly state my own beliefs over one where I never had to hear anything offensive. But then, I like freedom. Fewer on /. seem to as time goes on.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    40. Re:Only one real reason by evilviper · · Score: 1

      I don't think Modesto, Stockton, Fresno, Bakersfield, or pretty much the entire Central Valley is considered a 'desirable place to live'.

      You're wrong. The weather in most of CA is quite nice, and there's endless easy access to all manner of recreation. The only reason the populace flocks to the ultra-huge city centers is due to concentration of jobs. If more jobs were available in Central CA, you'd see a population boom there as well. In fact it's inevitable, as witnessed by hundreds of other times jobs have spilled out from LA/SF to inland areas (typically nearer the cheaper suburbs).

      And I'm not clear on how running air conditioning 24/7 throughout most of the state reduces energy consumption

      That's because you're ignorant. AC is a heatpump, which is vastly more energy efficient than resistive heating. Not to mention the mild temps in CA require a much lower delta of heating/cooling than most anywhere else in the country.

      nor can even the highest consumer energy consumption compare to myriad widget factories producing millions of widgets each with only 1000 employees or less.

      Private residence energy consumption is about 1/4 of all electrical demands. The rest goes to companies. So, yes, having 3X as many people will do a very good job of making up for factories. And that's not to mention there more definitely are several factories in CA.

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      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    41. Re:Only one real reason by lgw · · Score: 1

      Well, if the new Republican congress doesn't fix it, we'll have to keep generating newer ones until they listen. But there will be a sea of fresh faces next year, and several Republicans ousted in primaries this year for not getting it, so maybe that will be enough.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    42. Re:Only one real reason by lgw · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The conservatives who decided it should be all but impossible to raise taxes ever, that was also pretty short sighted.

      So you're saying the highest taxes in the nation just aren't high enough? What are you smoking? I lived in Texas, and it had roads and schools and hospitals and no income tax. I lived in Florida, and it had roads and schools ans hospitals and no income tax. Now I'm in California, and its roads, schools, and hospitals are just the same, but it somehow a 9% income tax isn't enough, and the state is bankrupt? What a buch of losers, whatever their political stripe.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    43. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'd prefer to live in a world where I wasn't afraid to publicly state my own beliefs over one where I never had to hear anything offensive.

      Freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    44. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yes, I'd prefer to live in a world where I wasn't afraid to publicly state my own beliefs over one where I never had to hear anything offensive. But then, I like freedom. Fewer on /. seem to as time goes on.

      So you prefer the government force private companies to employee you? Juan is free to express his opinion, NPR is free to stop paying him.

    45. Re:Only one real reason by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Er, what? I can't seem to fit your response in to what I was asking a citation for...

    46. Re:Only one real reason by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      As of August, Fresno had a 15.4% unemployment rate. Maybe people like it there because the cost of living is low enough to live on unemployment. The Fresno Wikipedia page lists the city's top ten employers as being in the medical industry, government entities, such as schools, and the bottom 2 of the top ten are private industry. Sounds like it will soon be the next economic hub of California. Many of California's flat cities experienced a lot of growth through the real estate boom because, well, there are still places to build. As opposed to places like the SF Bay Area, where the only places left to build are pretty much outside of what has traditionally been the Bay Area or ludicrous expensive.

      I'm not arguing that Fresno is undesirable, I just don't think it qualifies as 'desirable'. From Silicon Valley I can catch a Southwest flight to Tahoe for less than $50. We have the greatest motorcycling roads in the world. Redwood forests. Historic landmarks, every kind of sports team, the ocean, plays, museums, etc. I don't think Fresno compares in these things.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    47. Re:Only one real reason by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 2, Informative

      Have you visited or seen pictures of the inside of a factory? If we were to measure energy consumption in BTU/ft2, how many square feet of residential buildings are equal to one square foot of factories? And how do factories compare with offices? California is of course not yet completely devoid of private industry, but if the stat you give is correct, that 75% of the state's energy goes to companies (of course completely impossible given that the state's largest employer is, well, the state, and their offices use electricity), that doesn't mean that the energy is going to manufacturing. It is manufacturing that provides the real economic growth engine of an economy, and we have none, which makes us more 'energy efficient', as well as unemployed.

      I have lived in California for most of my 35 years of life, 8 of which were in Modesto. I'm not sure what you consider 'mild', but regular stretches of 100+ highs is not mild. California has some of the hottest regions in North America, even the hottest of course in Death Valley. I'm not sure where you live, but I have observed the urban heat island effect to keep evenings in the urban areas plenty warm enough to justify keeping the A/C running all night.

      I don't know if you've read any of the posts above mine, but the whole point of this thread is that there are no factories in California because of the tax and regulatory infrastructure.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    48. Re:Only one real reason by TheGavster · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's the delta, not the heat pump, that makes A/C generally cheaper to run than electric heat. Cooling a CA house from 90 down to 70 is a lot easier than heating an upstate NY house from -15 to 60.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    49. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only rich liberals are those that founded media empires. Few of those are liberals. I just don't know how to respond to such a dumb comment... Rich people (outside of media) got rich by inventing or recognizing and stealing ideas and carrying through on them to make a business. Almost all were/are conservatives and many from the dreaded red states where we did and still make things. Yes we don't make shit in CA nor NY, those are dead states and other blue states are going that way. This must be a troll so I'll shut up.

      There are so many factual errors in that paragraph, I don't know where to begin. I'll just choose one: Where was the software and hardware on your computer designed? Alabama?

    50. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      You are! And anyone who's read NPR's fairly straightforward employee policies and understands why they were violated is free to call you a dumbass for thinking they're politically biased.

      (And none of us is free from the consequences of any of that speech, such as down-moderation.)

      Smart money, by the way, says that your new Congress will be too busy racking up more debt to do anything about it, like all Congresses in my lifetime. Just in case you were thinking about betting on the matter.

    51. Re:Only one real reason by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      What percentage of Muslim plane travelers hijack planes and crash them into buildings?

    52. Re:Only one real reason by clarkkent09 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you don't realize NPR is left biased I suggest you shake your head vigorously until that pea you call brain drops into its hole and then maybe you can start thinking again. Btw I doubt there is a clear cut policy that makes what Williams said a terminable offense. He was considered not liberal enough or a faux liberal as some of his NPR colleagues called him for appearing frequently on Fox News and I suspect this was just an excuse to get rid of him

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    53. Re:Only one real reason by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      He said, "in Muslim garb". This is more than Muslim, it is ostentatious defiance. The US climate and US stores are not conducive to Muslim garb. Someone wearing Muslim garb in an airport is much more likely to be trying to cause trouble than other people.

      "...when I see black people I'm afraid they're going to mug me." This paraphrases Jesse Jackson.

      "When I see Asian people, I'm afraid they're better at math and karate than I am?". Yup, and polite too, I really fear polite.

      Reality is racist. There are statistically valid correlations between (on one side) race, other inherited characteristics, cultural characteristics, and (on the other) individual and group behaviour. Denying that such correlations exist is lying, and helps nobody.

      I am hurt neither by the existence of people better than me, nor by people worse than me, so long as they don't act to harm me. It helps me to have a clue which is which, even if I find my initial estimate in error.

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    54. Re:Only one real reason by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      NPR isn't a private organization, their claims to the contrary notwithstanding.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    55. Re:Only one real reason by evilviper · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're just proving your ignorance. Look up SEER or COP (coefficient of performance). A heatpump can commonly move 3X as much heat as energy is put into it. Eg. for every 1KW of electricity, it can output 3KW equivalent of heat. It gets better if you tie geothermal into that.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    56. Re:Only one real reason by interkin3tic · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      So you're saying the highest taxes in the nation just aren't high enough?

      For what was being spent, no, it wasn't. While that's an issue that -should have been- sorted out, it's a separate issue that -wasn't- sorted out. Being unable to cushion the shortfall with increased taxes of -any- type (not just income taxes) meant that it had to pretty much all come down to budget cuts. And, not surprisingly, the cuts were based off who had the strongest lobbyists, not which programs needed the money.

      Now I'm in California, and its roads, schools, and hospitals are just the same, but it somehow a 9% income tax isn't enough, and the state is bankrupt?

      They are just the same in the sense that they're still standing, but they themselves have undergone similar budget cuts which reflect special interests rather than general interest. At the education level, for example, many of the smaller programs, such as dropout recovery programs, got huge cuts. You don't see the effects of that unless you've noticed an increase in the number of adults without their GEDs. At the university level, tuitions were raised, making college unaffordable to many students, while wasteful construction projects continued.

    57. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Someone wearing Muslim garb in an airport is much more likely to be trying to cause trouble than other people.

      I'm quite sure that 1000x more people in western clothing have "caused trouble" in american airports than anyone else.

      Reality is racist. There are statistically valid correlations between (on one side) race, other inherited characteristics, cultural characteristics, and (on the other) individual and group behaviour. Denying that such correlations exist is lying, and helps nobody.

      Where you fail is on the "statistically valid" part. Bigotry is innumeracy of exactly that sort. There is no statiscally valid correlation between being muslim and being a terrorist. Hell, in the USA over the last ~20 years 10x as many terrorist attacks were committed by latinos as muslims. Do you fear puerto ricans? What happened to your "statistically valid correlation?"

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    58. Re:Only one real reason by OhPlz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sure, and it has nothing to do with the $1.8 million dollars that Soros just gave to them. No way there'd be strings attached. Nothing to do with the million he just gave Media Matters, whose mission it is to destroy Fox by taking quotes painfully out of context. Juan has been appearing on The Factor for a long time now. If NPR didn't like it, they wouldn't have sat on it for so long. His dialog on the show hasn't changed so far as I can tell. He's honest, he speaks from the heart. I don't agree with much of anything liberal, but I enjoy his presence on O'Reilly's show.

      The irony here is that NPR's action adds credence to FNC's claim of being "fair and balanced". I don't see O'Reilly getting fired for appearing on The View. I don't see Juan being excluded from FNC for having been on NPR.

      "You must not advocate for political or other polarizing issues online."

      He wasn't advocating for anything. He was talking about his feelings. The only reason he'd bring it up is because he recognizes that such an emotional response is wrong, but being honest, he admits to feeling that way. He's not saying O'Reilly's audience should be afraid. He's not saying that anyone should be excluded from air travel. All he did was state his own emotional state. NPR, a network that even has show called "All Things Considered" refuses to tolerate a man's irrational fear, even as he's using it to promote dialog on a touchy subject? It's absurd. We'll never get past issues like this if we refuse to discuss them.

      I have to wonder, if it's so clear to you.. why did you post as an anonymous coward?

    59. Re:Only one real reason by lgw · · Score: 1

      NPR is spending my dollars to (formerly) employ him, so yes I'd like a say in that. Come November, perhaps I will. I hear he's getting $2M from Fox now, so he won't be missing any meals, but with any luck the remaining NPR employees will be looking for work soon.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    60. Re:Only one real reason by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      As someone who read the koran for the same reason he read the bible, to see what so many find interesting enough to turn into a lifestyle, it would not bother me one bit. I found both groups are generally poor followers of their holy books and they just want any answer rather than have to deal with figuring it out themselves.

    61. Re:Only one real reason by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      In mild climates, such as most of CA, heat pumps are better than resistive heat. Down to about the freezing temperature, it takes less energy to pump heat from outdoors to inside than to heat from scratch as resistive heat does.

      Anyway CA has another serious problem for any putative automotive industry: crummy road system with horrible traffic. For instance, I40 should connect to I5. Instead, I40 stops at I15. Travelers going on to SF have a fairly decent road to Bakersfield, but after that they have to beat their way through stoplights and slow, heavy traffic to get to I5. Another is the lack of a good way to go east from San Jose to southbound I5. Either go 30 miles out of the way north, or take a narrow, dangerous, busy state highway that is still 2 lanes in places. Thanks to the Sierra Nevada, good east/west routes are scarce in CA, but what little they have they won't make the most of!

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    62. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 3, Informative

      Btw I doubt there is a clear cut policy that makes what Williams said a terminable offense.

      Enjoy:

      http://www.npr.org/about/aboutnpr/ethics/ethics_code.html

    63. Re:Only one real reason by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      At the university level, tuitions were raised, making college unaffordable to many students

      Bullshit. They may not be able to go to their dream school, but college is plenty affordable. Most public colleges only cost around $10,000 a year for in-state tuition. You could *gasp!* take out loans or work while in school, etc if by some reason you HAD to go to a more expensive school. I worked and took out loans through college and I'm doing the same for grad school, as have countless others. It's only those who either A) are looking for an excuse not to go to college or B) think that everything should be free who claim that college is "unaffordable" and that they can't go as a result.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    64. Re:Only one real reason by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      it's a scientific fact that men who drive minivans or electric cars spontaneously grow vaginas.

      (Looks in pants)

      Doesn't appear to be the case.

    65. Re:Only one real reason by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If NPR didn't like it, they wouldn't have sat on it for so long.

      They didn't. Hence why they apparently repeatedly talked to him about how he appears on Fox News. Mind you, not that he does, just what he says.

      He's honest, he speaks from the heart.

      So is Sarah Palin and Alvin Greene. What's your point?

      The only reason he'd bring it up is because he recognizes that such an emotional response is wrong, but being honest, he admits to feeling that way. He's not saying O'Reilly's audience should be afraid. He's not saying that anyone should be excluded from air travel. All he did was state his own emotional state. NPR, a network that even has show called "All Things Considered" refuses to tolerate a man's irrational fear, even as he's using it to promote dialog on a touchy subject? It's absurd. We'll never get past issues like this if we refuse to discuss them.

      The problem is that he didn't expand on that point. He left it as is and never went into why that particular feeling is wrong: because the statistics are against it. The way he worded it, the way O'Reilly left it up there, it seemed like a completely normal attitude. Coming from someone who is employed as a news analyst - not a commentator, not a reporter, but someone who is supposed to put news into context - this was a major failure.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    66. Re:Only one real reason by TheLink · · Score: 1

      And since hot air rises, cool air sinks and people are closer to the ground than ceiling... Go figure :)

      --
    67. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shit, maybe he's afraid of flying.

      My grandma would pray out loud and fiddle with her rosary during plane flights. Granted, she had some pretty firey opinions about England and Ireland, but she wasn't a terrorist

    68. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still living in texas, and yes we have hospitals and schools and roads. The roads are nice enough assuming you're in a wealthy area.

      The schools suck. Our board of education is run by loons, and I can't say many positive things about even the best public schools here. Unless it's a magnet school, of course.

      As for health care, it's acceptable if you've got the cash. Expect a line at the ER.

      So remember, you get what you pay for. But hey, if you're privileged enough it's a great place.

    69. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's easy to get emotional when you apply those terms to people. My GF is scared of stairs. Completely irrational and she knows it but she's insanely frightened that she'll fall. She doesn't advocate that everyone else be afraid of stairs or that they should avoid stairs, in fact the rational part of her brain tells her it's a silly thing to be afraid of and that there's actually no reason for it, but still when she comes to walk down a flight of stairs she just panics. By your yardstick, does that make her racist against stairs? People have fears, it's part of our make-up and we have no more rational control over them than we do over the sun rising, so what makes someone a racist in this context - having the fear or speaking the fear? If it's having it, then you are unfairly condemning people for something beyond their control, if it's speaking it then you're closing down avenues of dialogue. I'd say it's more than that, it's refusing to acknowledge that the fear is unjustified, or trying to instill the fear in others.

    70. Re:Only one real reason by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Why shouldn't the students be allowed to vote?

      Even if any particular student is only in Santa Cruz for 4 years, another will replace them, so the views of students should be represented. Are you really suggesting students shouldn't be allowed to vote?

    71. Re:Only one real reason by JamesP · · Score: 2, Informative

      A heat pump cannot approach 100% efficiency. Indeed, a heat pump does work, which makes it subject to the laws of thermodynamics, whereas a resistive heater does no work at all. It merely increases the average energy in a region.

      On the contrary. A Heat Pump can be, according to its definition, MORE than 100% efficient. Where efficiency is defined as (heat pumped)/(energy spent). So you can pump 500W of heat with 100W of electricity (non real values)

      So you can have more heating for the same electricity then with an electrical heater.

      Look up the tech data for an air conditioning unit.

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
    72. Re:Only one real reason by smart_ass · · Score: 1

      Makes me think of ISCAR tooling company:

      From Wikipedia:

      Iscar has expanded from a single marketing and manufacturing facility in Israel to a multinational company with representation in over 50 countries. Its production facilities are highly automated; at night, a single employee runs the plants on a computer, from home.[1]

      I remember reading an article about this years ago. Huge plant, run at times, by one guy.

      --
      Ouch ... did I just say that.
    73. Re:Only one real reason by smart_ass · · Score: 1

      If I drive an electric minivan, do I get two vaginas ... cause that's what I've always wanted.

      --
      Ouch ... did I just say that.
    74. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Strange how conservatives love trumpeting "you are free to speak but not free from the consequences of speech" when the Dixie Chicks are getting steamrolled. But a pundit loses his job, or Dr. Laura gets bounced, and suddenly "freedom of speech" means "you can't feel the consequences of what you say."

      Unless you want to defend the other side...

    75. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why don't they fire the other employees who do the same (and much, much worse), only their bigoted remarks are about conservatives? NPR used to be a left-wing, but intellectual news outlet. Now they're so far left-wing they've become impossible to listen to. If they want to continue, they can; just get their money from Soros & other folks, not the US Govt.

    76. Re:Only one real reason by jtev · · Score: 1

      A good chunk of it in Texas. Oh, and I wouldn't be surprised if significant parts were designed in Alabama, there are plenty of high tech things that are. Remember, while Alabama is chock full of trailer parks and rednecks, it also has the High Tech Rednecks in Huntsville, making it a major center for study in physics, optics, and numerous other fields. Oh, and in case you're unfamiliar with Huntsville, it's the location where the Manhattan Project took place. And they took all that concentration of brainpower, and have been running with it since.

      --
      That which is done from love exists beyond good and evil
    77. Re:Only one real reason by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      What total percentage of planes were hijacked by muslims compared to all the other people in the world, now, what is the percentage of the world population that is muslim? I am not so much a bigot that I will cancel my flight, but I assure you that it would make me slightly more nervous to fly with a muslim on the plane.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    78. Re:Only one real reason by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 1

      I guess they will cut the public funding, and NPR will happily continue with the 2% loss of funding. BTW Juan Williams has been a horse's ass for much longer than Fox has been around. Worst "moderator" of Talk of The Nation, ever.

      --
      A house divided against itself cannot stand.
    79. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be joking if you're comparing the hi-tech in Alabama to NY, CA, and MA. My high school had a science lab, but it wasn't Lawrence Livermore.

    80. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      No - fear is not rational.

      You must have a high standard for rationality. Fear is a built-in human response. Acting on fear is no different than acting on hunger. Is it irrational to eat when you're hungry?

    81. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      In principle it does, otherwise it does not exist as a principle. Look at the Terry Jones guy who was going to burn a koran. He started running into "consequences" like his insurance being pulled and his mortgage being called in. That is stifling free speech. It's not at all different than if someone's insurance was canceled because the insurance company found out they are gay.

      Some things are supposed to be protected from consequences, that's why we have laws against discrimination. We should probably have laws against speech-based discrimination too.

    82. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Hell, in the USA over the last ~20 years 10x as many terrorist attacks were committed by latinos as muslims. Do you fear puerto ricans?

      Can you share your source for that, it sounds interesting.

      I think one thing you're overlooking, possibly, which is the target of various terrorist groups. I don't fear drug lord terrorists because I'm not a drug lord myself, and I haven't heard of drug lords attacking non-drug-lords. Plus they're not around me, so I won't even get caught in the crossfire.

      Islamic terrorists want to kill everybody who's not Muslim enough in their opinion, which includes other Muslims, as well as infidels who do not submit to Islamic rule. That's a huge difference from terrorist groups that have local aims, even within the US.

    83. Re:Only one real reason by jtev · · Score: 1

      Nope, not joking at all. I specifically sited Huntsville, also known as Rocket City, where the Nuclear Bomb, the Saturn V missile^Wrocket, and a goodly chunk of the space shuttle were designed. I was also including Texas, home of many electronics firms, including Texas Instruments, and Dell, as well as home of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratories and Mission Control. I am not stating that New York, California, or Massachusetts have lacking contributions either, but I was refuting the previous ACs claim that they are lacking in those arts. Thanks for trying though. HAND.

      --
      That which is done from love exists beyond good and evil
    84. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Look at the Terry Jones guy who was going to burn a koran. He started running into "consequences" like his insurance being pulled and his mortgage being called in.

      All you have is his word for that. He's been known to lie on more than one occasion - like when he said imam Rauf had promised him anything. For one thing, its pretty much illegal to unilaterally call in a mortgage.

      Some things are supposed to be protected from consequences, that's why we have laws against discrimination. We should probably have laws against speech-based discrimination too.

      I totally disagree. If we can't refuse to associate with someone because they are an ass, then there is no point to freedom of speech in the first place.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    85. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      All you have is his word for that.

      Okay I didn't realize it was unsubstantiated. The principle that these sorts of consequences stifle free speech stands though.

      I totally disagree. If we can't refuse to associate with someone because they are an ass, then there is no point to freedom of speech in the first place.

      Freedom of association is great but it's already dead. You can't refuse to associate with some group you hate if it's a protected group. I'd rather not lose freedom of speech too.

    86. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't fear drug lord terrorists because I'm not a drug lord myself, and I haven't heard of drug lords attacking non-drug-lords.

      Have you been living under a rock?
      http://news.google.com/news/search?q=david+hartley

    87. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Can you share your source for that, it sounds interesting.

      http://www.loonwatch.com/2010/01/not-all-terrorists-are-muslims/

      And no, they aren't "drug lord terrorists" lol.

      Islamic terrorists want to kill everybody who's not Muslim enough in their opinion, which includes other Muslims, as well as infidels who do not submit to Islamic rule. That's a huge difference from terrorist groups that have local aims, even within the US.

      Irrelevant. The overwhelming numbers, on the scale of 1,000,000:1 is that muslims are not terrorists. Doesn't matter what the target is of the ones who are terrorists - freaking out because someone is merely obviously muslim is as an effective a means of risk management as body scanning grandmothers at the airport.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    88. Re:Only one real reason by i_b_don · · Score: 0

      Basic physics. You can't get more energy from something than you put into it. If you "tie geothermal" into it... pisya... we're talking home heating. You're not doing better than resistive heating because ALL THE ENERGY YOU PUT INTO IT IS TURNED INTO HEAT. Perfect efficiency.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    89. Re:Only one real reason by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      Then why don't they fire the other employees who do the same (and much, much worse), only their bigoted remarks are about conservatives?

      Citation?

      Unless you find something like, "I'm afraid of Republicans because I think they're going to rape my dog," I'm going to laugh at you. And, frankly, that statement wouldn't even be "much, much worse".

    90. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Freedom of association is great but it's already dead. You can't refuse to associate with some group you hate if it's a protected group.

      Far from it.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    91. Re:Only one real reason by drsquare · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure shopping malls are much of an example, they generally just suck wealth out of an area. Locals go in, spend their money, and it's sent off to shareholders and manufacturers all over the world.

    92. Re:Only one real reason by evilviper · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You don't know basic physics. Note that my post got meeded up by several people, while you did not. Do what I said the first time, and LOOK UP EER, SEER, or COP. If you do so, instead of remaining willfully ignorant, you'll see I'm 100% correct.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    93. Re:Only one real reason by L7_ · · Score: 1

      You're wrong, please don't be defensive.

      Nothing was ever designed in Alabama. Defense contractors in Southern California (mainly Los Angeles) used fabrication facilities to manufacture things in Alabama, but all of the science was done in LA. All of the scientific brainpower for those companies have never resided in Huntsville, it's a shithole.

      And JPL? I thought that was a Caltech institution? You know, in eastern Los Angeles? And Los Alamos National Lab in Santa Fe, NM might have something to do with the design of the nuclear bomb.

      Because a company or an institution has offices in a rural southern state for cheap menial jobs, does not mean that those laborers contribute science or engineering designs. They don't.

    94. Re:Only one real reason by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      You must have a high standard for rationality. Fear is a built-in human response. Acting on fear is no different than acting on hunger. Is it irrational to eat when you're hungry?

      Well, yes. They're natural survival mechanisms. It doesn't mean they are rational. Rational behavior requires thought and (to some extent) action consistent with one's best interests.

      When you're hungry, the rational thing to do is eat something nutritious. Note that hunger itself isn't rational. In some cases, hunger is actually detrimental to our health (we don't always feel "hungry" because we require sustenance). In others, we can respond to hunger in very irrational ways (unhealthy foods, binge eating, and even eating inedible items in rarer cases). That doesn't mean feeling hungry isn't a natural part of our existence.

      Fear is also natural. But we can do very irrational things in reaction to that fear. Rational behavior requires recognizing that fear, understanding the survival risk, and then behaving in a manner to ensure survival.

      I don't find it particularly odd that someone would experience fear seeing people in traditional middle-eastern garb boarding an aircraft. We've been bombarded by imagery of violent people in the Middle East and Muslims in particular. However, that only represents a small subset of a much larger population. The notion that someone is a threat solely because they dress differently is absurd. Rational behavior is to recognize the fear and discount it if no other information about the situation / person exists to further the notion of a threat.

    95. Re:Only one real reason by jtev · · Score: 1

      JPL, it's in Houston, TX, not Caltech. And defense contractors are all over the place. Engineers are all over the place. Plenty gets done outside California, which was my point. But if you're too narrow minded to look at the actual facts, not much I can do. Once again, I'm not saying that California isn't a significant driver of technology, I'm simply stating that they hardly have a monopoly on it. I've never lived in Alabama, but I dislike it when people dismiss places without the appropriate facts. I've stated specific companies and projects, you've only stated nebulous crap. Yes, I'm aware that Intel, AMD, Apple, and many other companies are in California. My point is that they don't have a monopoly, and that the person who stated that Alabama is lacking in these factors is not only bigoted but ignorant. Now, you haven't said anything to counter a single one of my points in a cogent fashion, but you claim that I'm wrong. I've stated specific items designed in Alabama, and you don't provide any evidence of me being incorrect, simply make a blanket statement that I am wrong.

      --
      That which is done from love exists beyond good and evil
    96. Re:Only one real reason by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      Un huh. EER, SEER, and COP are all standards for measuring efficiency. They do nothing to "prove" your point that heat pumps are greater than 100% efficiency (and violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics) and they haven't done a single thing to prove resistive heating isn't 100% efficient.

      I know, you think you're smart throwing out acronyms without a single technical thing piece of information. I don't know basic physics? nice. show me an equation. So far all you've done is toss out incorrect bullshit and worthless acronyms. man up or shut up.

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    97. Re:Only one real reason by evilviper · · Score: 1

      Un huh. EER, SEER, and COP are all standards for measuring efficiency. They do nothing to "prove" your point that heat pumps are greater than 100% efficiency

      They are indeed standards for measuring efficiency. What you apparently did not do is check THE NUMBERS. COP is the simplest example. A COP of 1 would be "100% efficient", yet heatpumps get COP ratings of more than 1.

      For EER and SEER, look up the equations for converting to/from COP.

      Also, you could just look at the ratings of commonly available air conditioners. Ratings are in watts for power consumption, and BTUs for heat moved, yet if you convert the BTUs to watts, you get a value higher than the power consumption (in fact always around 3:1, as I keep saying). Here's a quick link:

      http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=6046606&CatId=4566

      http://www.mhi-inc.com/Converter/watt_calculator.htm

      And wikipedia calls you an loud-mouthed idiot too: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_performance#Example

      If you can't read, or can't understand what it says, don't blame me for your ignorance.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    98. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know, excpet that it's greater than zero, while it's zero for every other group you can name.

    99. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A resistive heater has one energy input: the wires coming into your house.

      A heatpump has two energy inputs: the wires coming into your house, and the ambient heat of the surroundings. Measurements of efficiency (and your electric bill) are made relative to the first input only, so a heatpump can be considered more than 100% efficient.

    100. Re:Only one real reason by irtza · · Score: 1

      Right! And I am allowed to say what it is I am allowed to say!

      --
      When all else fails, try.
    101. Re:Only one real reason by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      This is what it comes to.....

      The overton window (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overton_window) has shifted so far right, that NPR, which when viewed against all the reporting in the world, is actually very center, or slightly right of center against Europe, is accused of having a liberal bias.

      There is such as thing as reality. At some point, news needs to be evaluated by how factual it is. I'd trust NPR over MSNBC, FOX, or any other highly commerical news source any day of the week.

      If you consider NPR liberal, perhaps it really is true that reality has a well known liberal bias.

    102. Re:Only one real reason by AaronW · · Score: 1

      A heat pump is vastly more efficient and obtains well over 100% efficiency due to the fact that it is pumping heat. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_pump#Efficiency. A heat pump is the equivalent of 300-400% efficient compared to a strictly resistive load.

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    103. Re:Only one real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it takes less energy to have a deltaT of 20 degrees than it does 75 degrees plain and simple. Degree days are the relevant calculation not SEER and/or COP.

    104. Re:Only one real reason by penguinchris · · Score: 1

      In California you get a huge discount on tuition at state schools if you're a resident. I bet a lot of students vote who might not normally because they had to register to vote as part of becoming a resident of the state!

      I moved to California and became a resident to go to grad school. I voted in national, state, and local elections. Then I left... but that was in Orange County, an overwhelmingly conservative county, so my vote had little to no effect ;)

    105. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I looked over the FBI report and was really shocked at the number of "environmental terrorism" cases they covered. But it ties in really well with our disagreement over what you called irrelevant. If I worked at a Gillette animal testing center, I would be more concerned with animal rights terrorists than I am. All of the Latino terrorist attacks I saw in the FBI report took place in Puerto Rico. Again, more concerning if I lived in Puerto Rico.

      Anyway, your 1000000:1 estimate is incorrect. If there are 2 billion Muslims in the world, that's only 2000 Muslim terrorists. I don't know, maybe you don't consider the Taliban to be a terrorist organization, but it's got way more than 2000 soldiers by itself. Al Shabaab has 3000-7000 members and Al Qaeda has 500-1000 members, both according to Wikipedia. Those are big organized groups that are much in the news. There are a ton of smaller Muslim groups with weird names that you don't hear much about in mainstream American news. Of course, not all Islamic terrorist organizations target the US, and not all that do have the capability of carrying anything out. But let's not pretend that only 1/1000000 Muslims are terrorists.

      Aside from the scale of the problem, the other big distinguishing factor against Muslim terrorists is the degree of state support they enjoy. Tell me what environmental terrorists have CIA contacts, funding from foreign intelligence agencies, government sponsored sanctuaries where they can train for attacks, and so on. Which country would you say is the equivalent of Pakistan in terms of, say, Latino terrorism? Which country is the Saudi Arabia of funding for extremist environmentalist radicals?

      Okay then we have popular support. How many environmentalists support environmental terrorism involving suicide bombing? How many Christians support abortion clinic bombings that result in death? I don't know, it's actually hard to find a poll about those topics. Please share if you have some. It's pretty easy with Muslims though. http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1338/declining-muslim-support-for-bin-laden-suicide-bombing

      I find the numbers extremely alarming.

    106. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I don't find it particularly odd that someone would experience fear seeing people in traditional middle-eastern garb boarding an aircraft.

      Minor point but Islamic garb is more specific than traditional Middle Eastern garb, which would include things like belly dancing outfits. Even I would say a fear of belly dancers is irrational.

      We've been bombarded by imagery of violent people in the Middle East and Muslims in particular.

      You're really downplaying it. It's not just imagery, it's reality. The Middle East is a very violent place, as are other places with high Muslim concentrations. Places like Nigeria, Sudan, and Pakistan are not really Middle Eastern but have a lot of violent conflict due to Islam.

      However, that only represents a small subset of a much larger population.

      It's a subset but small is really subjective. But more importantly, you are mixing up populations here. How many Muslims in the world wear traditional Muslim garb? Maybe a high percentage, at least among women. (Muslim men have much more freedom to dress how they please than Muslim women.) Now look back at American Muslims, which is the population of interest in this story. Out of all the Muslims in America, how many consciously wear traditional Muslim garb? It's really a small subset itself. Most Muslim men that I know or am acquainted with wear "Western" clothes. Basically indistinguishable. Most Muslim women I know wear at most a headscarf, and actually most that I know (mostly doctors and stuff) don't wear any Muslim clothing or accessories.

      So now when you see a group of Muslims who are all wearing traditional Muslim clothing, you are talking about a small subset of Muslims in America. You are then left free to wonder how that small subset intersects with other small subsets, like the subset of radical Muslims (large overlap) and the subset of Muslim terrorists (I won't speculate). I read that Major Nidal Hasan (the Ft. Hood shooting guy) adopted traditional Muslim garb (salwar kameez etc) on his route to extremism and terrorism. I believe Faisal Shahzad did too.

      The point is that the small subset of Muslims in America who choose to ostentatiously wear non-Western clothing have a different agenda than Muslims who assimilate in terms of visibility. Whatever statistics you care to quote about Muslims and terrorism probably don't separate out that small subset for analysis, unfortunately. At least I'm not aware of any. But at the same time, any statistics about Muslims and terrorism which don't make the separation would be weakened when applied to such a visibly distinct subset.

    107. Re:Only one real reason by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Minor point but Islamic garb is more specific than traditional Middle Eastern garb, which would include things like belly dancing outfits. Even I would say a fear of belly dancers is irrational.

      Point taken. I suppose part of the problem is finding a label that's inclusive enough without being too inclusive. I accept "Islamic garb" as we're really talking about clothing requirements as prescribed by Islamic custom (law?) than any particular regional custom.

      The point is that the small subset of Muslims in America who choose to ostentatiously wear non-Western clothing have a different agenda than Muslims who assimilate in terms of visibility. Whatever statistics you care to quote about Muslims and terrorism probably don't separate out that small subset for analysis, unfortunately. At least I'm not aware of any. But at the same time, any statistics about Muslims and terrorism which don't make the separation would be weakened when applied to such a visibly distinct subset.

      How many acts of terrorism against an airline have been committed by terrorists dressed in traditional Islamic garb? The mugshots and video footage I've seen recently all show western style clothes.

      I agree that people wearing these clothes are choosing to stand apart from society. But we have all manner of cultural communities and subcultures that do the same thing. Dressing differently isn't a crime. And dressing differently has all manner of motivations beyond an overall desire to cause harm to others.

    108. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Anyway, your 1000000:1 estimate is incorrect. If there are 2 billion Muslims in the world, that's only 2000 Muslim terrorists. I don't know, maybe you don't consider the Taliban to be a terrorist organization, but it's got way more than 2000 soldiers by itself. Al Shabaab has 3000-7000 members and Al Qaeda has 500-1000 members, both according to Wikipedia.

      And few of them are actual risks. Just like the US army has something like 10 support personnel for every actual soldier. Furthermore, they are all concentrated on the other side of the planet, nowhere near an american airport. But really, so what if I am wrong by an order of magnitude or even two? Its still just a drop of water in a bucket that is absolutely pointless to make any risk evaluations on. Even just 100 false positives for every true positive would be considered an abject failure of practicality for any actual testing system.

      Okay then we have popular support.

      And how many americans supported the use of military force against countries like iraq? That's essentially the same question but american style and just as much an indictment, or not, of us. Just as practically none of the warhawks had a thing to do with the invasions so to do practically none of those who think suicide attacks are legitimate would ever do more than downplay causality reports from such actions.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    109. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      And few of them are actual risks. Just like the US army has something like 10 support personnel for every actual soldier.

      I think it's naive to assume that 90% of the Taliban, al Qaeda, and al Shabaab are harmless, but whatever.

      But really, so what if I am wrong by an order of magnitude or even two? Its still just a drop of water in a bucket that is absolutely pointless to make any risk evaluations on. Even just 100 false positives for every true positive would be considered an abject failure of practicality for any actual testing system.

      I think it makes a difference because of another thing that comes into play. Since we're talking about Juan Williams's comment regarding people in Muslim garb at the airport, the population in question is not "all Muslims" but rather "Muslims who ostentatiously display their religion in a host culture and a particular setting like an airport where it is likely to arouse discomfort."

      When you look at the population of Muslims in America, most do not go about in very traditional Muslim dress. So if you accepted that 1/1000 or 1/10000 Muslims was radical, and some other 1/X proportion of American Muslims dress in a fundamentalist style, you have to determine the intersection of those sets. I don't think that the variables are disconnected.

      Who knows what the real numbers are, but it's common sense that people who purposely stick out and flash their Muslim identity, despite living in a non-Muslim society, and being in a setting where radical Muslims have committed terrorist attacks, may be more likely than a randomly selected Muslim to be radical.

      Certainly common sense enough that feeling nervous around such a group is understandable. Nobody's suggesting these people should be stoned to death for dressing a certain way.

      And how many americans supported the use of military force against countries like iraq?

      Maybe you should read the poll questions again. It's asking specifically about attacking civilians, not collateral damage. Are you suggesting that maybe 40% of Americans support deliberate bombings of innocent civilians?

      Anyway, say you're right. Then wouldn't Muslims have a rational point about fearing Americans? Remember we're talking about a guy who made a comment saying "Yes I feel nervous when I see certain people on a plane." Do you think it's far that if 40% of Americans want to bomb Muslims, AND there's a group of 10 Americans dressed as US soldiers with gas masks on so they can't be identified, AND they are walking down a dark alley in Baghdad... would it be fair or unfair for a Muslim walking through the same alley to either fear that group or be angry at them?

      You've got all the same components, ostentatious dress that rejects local culture, history of problems, a far-away country that supports attacking your civilians, etc.

    110. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      I think it makes a difference because of another thing that comes into play. Since we're talking about Juan Williams's comment regarding people in Black garb at the airport, the population in question is not "all Blacks" but rather "Blacks who ostentatiously display their culture in a host culture and a particular setting like an airport where it is likely to arouse discomfort."

      After all, people who are "first and foremost" black can't be honest americans.

      Who knows what the real numbers are, but it's common sense that people who purposely stick out and flash their Muslim identity, despite living in a non-Muslim society, and being in a setting where radical Muslims have committed terrorist attacks, may be more likely than a randomly selected Muslim to be radical.

      Which has nothing to do with them being a threat. The 9-11 attackers blended in. So did Richard Reid and Abdulmutallab. And of course there is the whole question of what is "muslim garb" anyway? Can you tell the difference between a sikh and muslim? What about a christian from Mali and a muslim from Mali?

      Maybe you should read the poll questions again. It's asking specifically about attacking civilians, not collateral damage. Are you suggesting that maybe 40% of Americans support deliberate bombings of innocent civilians?

      No - both groups support "fighting back" without thinking through the consequences. When at least an order of magnitude more civilians died in Iraq than all terrorist attacks worldwide combined for the last 30+ years it is head-in-the-sand thinking to say that they don't count because they weren't deliberately targeted. Only the wilfully ignorant would believe that massive civilians casualties would not be the end result.

      "Yes I feel nervous when I see certain people on a plane."

      No, that is unequivocally NOT what he said.

      He said it was right to feel that way. He went on to say that because the times square bomber said muslims are at war with america that it is true.

      AND there's a group of 10 Americans dressed as US soldiers with gas masks on so they can't be identified, AND they are walking down a dark alley in Baghdad... would it be fair or unfair for a Muslim walking through the same alley to either fear that group or be angry at them?

      You really can't see the difference between members of an occupying army and muslims who live in america? I have to seriously doubt your good faith.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    111. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      After all, people who are "first and foremost" black can't be honest americans.

      There are black groups, like black power groups, that are definitely not good or honest Americans. I'm not sure if that's what you meant by "first and foremost" black but it would definitely qualify.

      Which has nothing to do with them being a threat. The 9-11 attackers blended in. So did Richard Reid and Abdulmutallab.

      So what? This isn't about establishing a scientific test for who will be the next Muslim hijacker. We're talking about whether fearing someone for how they dress is an indicator of bigotry or craziness.

      No - both groups support "fighting back" without thinking through the consequences.

      Read the poll question! It specifically says "suicide bombing and other forms of violence against civilian targets." How can you claim they are not thinking through the consequences?

      I agree that you can't dismiss civilian casualties from the war, but that harms your point more than it helps. You're drawing an equivalence between the American war effort and deliberate suicide bombing of civilians, which I think is a faulty equivalence, but let's accept it. Are you willing to call every Muslim who expresses anti-American sentiment a bigot?

      Even further, it's a small percentage of soldiers who have actually killed any Muslim civilians by their own hand. As you pointed out, 9/10 of soldiers are probably support staff anyway and have no role in direct fighting. So is any Muslim who expresses anti-US-army sentiment a bigot? I mean really, maybe one pilot dropped a bomb on a house full of children. Let's say it was deliberate. So what? 99.9% of soldiers didn't do that.

      No, that is unequivocally NOT what he said.

      He said it was right to feel that way. He went on to say that because the times square bomber said muslims are at war with america that it is true.

      He certainly did say (roughly) what I said. I just watched the clip on youtube. And if he said it's right to feel that way, he also said it's not right to act on those feelings.

      Also I think your logic is faulty at the end. If a Muslim says he and some other Muslims are at war with America, then it IS true that Muslims are at war with America. I don't know what you could mean by implying that's not true. Note he didn't say all Muslims are at war with America.

    112. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      How many acts of terrorism against an airline have been committed by terrorists dressed in traditional Islamic garb? The mugshots and video footage I've seen recently all show western style clothes.

      I don't know, and when restricted to the moment of hijacking itself you may be right. Terrorists clearly know not to stick out when they're making an attack. The mere fact that they recognize that their ostentatious garb would draw attention and identify them as potential terrorists seems like a point in my favor though.

      When you look at the terrorists' broader lives, it's quite common to see an embrace of Islam and increasing strictness in adherence to Islam in the time leading up to the attack, including dress. At least in recent cases, anyway, it happened with the underwear bomber, the Times Square bomber, and the Ft. Hood shooter. They all became very Islamic, including changing how they dress. Faisal Shahzad's wife also transitioned from normal Western clothing to "traditional Islamic" garb.

    113. Re:Only one real reason by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      I don't know, and when restricted to the moment of hijacking itself you may be right.

      Keep in mind that the parent in this thread stated that they would not board a plane if they saw "Muslims" also boarding. So the issue of hijacking itself is rather central to the conversation.

      I suppose interjecting costumes in to the conversation is my fault. In my defense, I made the assumption someone would identify a Muslim by their strict adherence to Islamic dress.

      When you look at the terrorists' broader lives, it's quite common to see an embrace of Islam and increasing strictness in adherence to Islam in the time leading up to the attack, including dress.

      Sure. They drink the Koolaid. Deeply. But keep in mind that there are many more people clinging to their religious beliefs and customs that aren't outwardly hostile or even militant. If anything, I would expect devout Muslims to cling to those customs even more in this current atmosphere of fear and (to some extent) hostility towards their beliefs. Painting them all with the broad brush of fear and distrust is creating a cultural feedback loop. As an aside, I've seen enough anti-Obama "I'll cling to my guns and my Bible" bumper stickers to acknowledge that cultural defensiveness isn't limited to Muslims.

      Not only does this create cultural division, but it does very little to keep you safe. The percentage of militant Muslims are very low. The likelihood of you encountering a someone who is planning to do any violence (much less hijacking) in the name of Islam is rather slim; assuming you're not going out of your way to find hotbeds of such activity. You have a better chance of getting killed driving around during the day. Yet we don't see people stating that fear of automobiles is completely rational and that they personally will not drive on a road if they see any other vehicles.

    114. Re:Only one real reason by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      So what? This isn't about establishing a scientific test for who will be the next Muslim hijacker. We're talking about whether fearing someone for how they dress is an indicator of bigotry or craziness.

      So in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, maintaining irrational beliefs that stereotype a group based on the actions of an infinitesimally small subset of members of that group is not the dictionary definition of bigotry.

      There are black groups, like black power groups, that are definitely not good or honest Americans. I'm not sure if that's what you meant by "first and foremost" black but it would definitely qualify.

      So, being muslim is the same as being a member of a militant black power group.

      Are you willing to call every Muslim who expresses anti-American sentiment a bigot?

      So, being critical of American policies is the same thing as fearing individual muslims.

      I mean really, maybe one pilot dropped a bomb on a house full of children. Let's say it was deliberate. So what? 99.9% of soldiers didn't do that.

      So, being a member of a military that has official goals that have been demonstrated to be more important than civilian lives is the same thing as being a member of the most diverse religion in history.

      He certainly did say (roughly) what I said. I just watched the clip on youtube. And if he said it's right to feel that way, he also said it's not right to act on those feelings.

      So, it's right to be a bigot in your heart as long as you don't act on it.

      Also I think your logic is faulty at the end. If a Muslim says he and some other Muslims are at war with America, then it IS true that Muslims are at war with America. I don't know what you could mean by implying that's not true. Note he didn't say all Muslims are at war with America.

      So, it's logical to point out a technically true fact when it is in no way a legitimate basis for judging all muslims.

      Its pretty clear you approach this discussion from the ingrained belief that any muslims is a potential threat. Pretty much every argument you make has that assumption as its basis. So I doubt that this will ever be productive.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    115. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      So in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, maintaining irrational beliefs that stereotype a group based on the actions of an infinitesimally small subset of members of that group is not the dictionary definition of bigotry.

      Where did that come from? That has nothing to do with my "not a scientific test" comment.

      So, being muslim is the same as being a member of a militant black power group.

      Oh yes, just like being black is the same as being a member of a militant black power group.

      So, being critical of American policies is the same thing as fearing individual muslims.

      You seem more interested in twisting my question than really answering. Let me make it more contrained -- are Muslims throughout the world who feel anger or fear when confronted with groups of Americans bigots?

      So, it's right to be a bigot in your heart as long as you don't act on it.

      A bigot "in your heart" -- is that like thought crime? Juan Williams rightly recognizes that events condition us to react a certain way. You can be conditioned to fear men, women, disfigured people, people of different races.. there's nothing you can do about your immediate reaction. But you can control what actions you take based on that feeling.

      So, it's logical to point out a technically true fact when it is in no way a legitimate basis for judging all muslims.

      If you watch again you'll see that Juan Williams never said all Muslims are at war with us. He basically said it's ridiculous to claim that all Muslims are NOT at war with us when we have testimony of many self-identified Muslims saying they are at war with us. He's talking about political correctness preventing you from being able to talk about reality.

      Its pretty clear you approach this discussion from the ingrained belief that any muslims is a potential threat. Pretty much every argument you make has that assumption as its basis. So I doubt that this will ever be productive.

      I'm not sure what you mean precisely. First of all, we're talking about Muslims in the US who purposely go to airports in "traditional Muslim garb." We're not talking about all Muslims, or even all US Muslims.

      But I don't fear or hate individual Muslims. I just agree with Juan Williams that modern liberal culture is unable to even discuss problems with Islam. Every problem is imagined away as affecting such a tiny proportion of Muslims that it's not actually a problem, and even if it were, it's not actually anything to do with Islam or Muslims. Look at your arguments. You start off with stuff like 1000000:1 Muslims are harmless, a statistic that is completely ridiculous for ANY large group of people. It's like you live in a fantasy world where Islam is this idyllic religion and Muslims are all perfect, rather than reality where Islam has caused huge conflicts throughout the world for 1000 years.

    116. Re:Only one real reason by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that the parent in this thread stated that they would not board a plane if they saw "Muslims" also boarding. So the issue of hijacking itself is rather central to the conversation.

      I suppose interjecting costumes in to the conversation is my fault. In my defense, I made the assumption someone would identify a Muslim by their strict adherence to Islamic dress.

      Yes, you're right. My entrance into the thread was more limited, just talking about your comment on fear, and when we went back to talking about hijacking I assumed you were talking about the Juan Williams comments, not the anonymous guy you had responded to. Very unclear, my fault.

      That's also how costumes got interjected into this conversation, I believe. I wouldn't say it's your fault, or a fault at all, I certainly thought that's what we were talking about.

  3. silicon valley doesn't build most of its silicon by MichaelKristopeit+13 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    why would they be expected to build anything else? they'll build the specs and engineer the processes and ship it off to china... business as usual.

  4. California Taxes by commodore64_love · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That's reason number one. That's the last place I'd want to build an industry, not just because of me but also my workers would have to deal with the heavy tax burden.

    Better someplace that has few taxes & doesn't steal (much) money from the workers' paychecks. Like one of the Carolinas.
    .

    >>>Feedback on this comment system?

    Yeah it sucks. And it's slow (CPU intensive). And I can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    1. Re:California Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Log in and log out? Log in? Check? Uncheck? Log out? Log in? Check? Log out? Log in?

      Check?

    2. Re:California Taxes by mlts · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would also choose to build cars somewhere else for the following reasons, even not bothering with taxes:

      1: Heavy industry is not popular in CA. I'd encounter NIMBY syndrome everywhere I wanted to place a heavy duty factory.

      2: Detroit has lots of fresh water. Most of California does not. This is a make or break, because if push came to shove, the spigots would be turned off on the factory's water supply so the golf course down the street can water their lawns.

      3: Energy problems. California has brownouts aplenty. I'd either have to have large batteries to make up for the poor power grid there, or move to a place that has more reliable power.

      4: Traffic. I would not be able to move cars out to the rest of the nation and the world as readily as if the plant was located in a less populated region.

      Where would I put a factory? Michigan and Texas both come to mind. Detroit, Abilene, or San Antonio would be ideal spots. From there, I can get vehicles onto ships, I can get supplies from both coasts easily. Texas also has the advantage of being "open for business" all year around with few days of snow or bad weather.

    3. Re:California Taxes by chriso11 · · Score: 1

      Your points aren't very great.

      First, heavy industries are generally heavy polluters. The characteristics of California make it easy for air pollution to hang around rather than disperse. Northern California is still dealing with all the mercury that was dumped all around during the gold rush. Maybe other states like pollution, that's fine by me.

      Second, yes, Ca doesn't have as much water as some states. But the biggest chunk of water usage is for farmers.

      Third, PG&E sucks. But the energy problems you talk of were a decade ago when Enron was manipulating the deregulated energy market.

      Forth, yes, there are parts of Ca that have very bad traffic. That's why Toyota was using trains to move auto parts around for Nummi .

      So go to some other state and get a lower educated workforce which is fine with polluting.

      --
      No, I don't trust in god. He'll have to pay up front, like everybody else.
    4. Re:California Taxes by bhcompy · · Score: 1

      1) Heavy industry is not popular. Correct. 2) No one is having water "brown outs" in CA. Valid concern in So Cal, but water isn't much of a problem in Nor Cal outside of Central Valley farming regions. 3) Major brownouts haven't occurred since we kicked Gray Davis' ass out of office 4) California is the shipping capital of the US. Plenty of consumer traffic, sure, but the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles(ahem, busiest in the US) are the primary destination for imported Asian cars. California is a poor choice for many reasons, but not for the ones you are spewing.

    5. Re:California Taxes by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      That's reason number one. That's the last place I'd want to build an industry, not just because of me but also my workers would have to deal with the heavy tax burden.

      It would be "the last place" to build an industry because of the "high tax burden" when its not in the top 10 of US states by tax burden, measured either by (tax $)/population or by (tax $)/($ personal income)?

    6. Re:California Taxes by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Traffic. I would not be able to move cars out to the rest of the nation and the world as readily as if the plant was located in a less populated region.

      Highway traffic is roughly as relevant to this scenario as the price as tomatoes. Big industry doesn't use trucks for long distance movement - it uses trains. And California is very well connected. Less populous regions... aren't.
       

      Where would I put a factory? Michigan and Texas both come to mind. Detroit, Abilene, or San Antonio would be ideal spots. From there, I can get vehicles onto ships, I can get supplies from both coasts easily.

      Not on ships you can't supplies from both coasts easily, nor ship outgoing product to both coasts. The Panama Canal is a significant bottleneck.

    7. Re:California Taxes by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      >>>Feedback on this comment system?

      Yeah it sucks. And it's slow (CPU intensive). And I can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times.

      ... and the feedback email link doesn't work. I got rid of the awful disasterous mess by unchecking "Enable Dynamic Discussions" and "Enable Dynamic Discussion Keybindings".

      I don't like the new comment system, and if it becomes permanent I'll stop reading the site. That means loss of advertising eyeballs, loss of market share, and eventually loss of jobs in the slashdot janitor broom cupboard.

    8. Re:California Taxes by careysub · · Score: 1

      TThat's reason number one. That's the last place I'd want to build an industry, not just because of me but also my workers would have to deal with the heavy tax burden. Better someplace that has few taxes & doesn't steal (much) money from the workers' paychecks.

      Yes, the crushing tax burden on the being in the second quintile of per capita taxes. According to the very conservative newspaper The OC Register (http://www.ocregister.com/articles/tax-270147-pay-increases.html?pic=19). California's total tax burden is 12th in total revenues collected per capita. Calculated as a percentage of income (California ranks 7th in income) it is even lower.

      This is not an unreasonable tax burden for a state requiring the infrastructure and education to support a high-tech economy.

      The bit equating all taxation with theft tips the reader that rationality is not forthcoming from the above poster. The real Tea Party (in 1773) believed in "No taxation without representation" not "No taxation!!!". I'm sure we would all be happier in the Libertarian Utopia where all services (if they exist) are provided by unregulated corporations. Possibly you should try it in rugged individualistic Alaska - which has the highest taxes in the country, and the largest amount of government spending per capita.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    9. Re:California Taxes by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Yeah it sucks. And it's slow (CPU intensive). And I can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times.

      From your use page: Help & preferences -> Discussions -> Vieving -> Slashdot Classic Discussion System.

      Took me a while to figure it out too. Kinda panicked when I thought that I'd be stuck with the new system.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    10. Re:California Taxes by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Enron manipulating

      California did a really lousy job of "Deregulating" their electrical markets - mainly because they didn't deregulate. Other states (MD, PA, NJ) have transitioned to Consumer Choice for electricity & natural gas without any problems.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    11. Re:California Taxes by martas · · Score: 1

      having lived in NC for a while recently, i can back that up - don't know how it is for manufacturing exactly, but most high-tech industries have some very good reasons to go to NC...

    12. Re:California Taxes by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      I don't object to taxes that are used for the COMMON welfare (like to build a police force to protect everybody).
      I object to taxes that serve no purpose but to move wealth from one neighbor to another.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    13. Re:California Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somehow I suspect the actual tax burden for a corporation wouldn't be measured well by either (tax $)/population or by (tax $)/($ personal income)? Perhaps corporate tax rates would be more relevant. Now I don't have any solid information, either -- can't be arsed to do my research -- but at least I'm not looking at plainly irrelevant figures and pretending that discredits someone.

    14. Re:California Taxes by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Busiest ports in the US:
      Port of South Louisiana
      Port of Houston, Texas
      Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal, New Jersey
      Port of Beaumont, Texas
      Port of Long Beach, California
      .
      .
      .
      Port of Los Angeles, California - 14th

      Combined Long Beach and LA are above Beaumont, but still 4th over all.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ports_in_the_United_States

    15. Re:California Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Wait? What! The Carolinas? Are you serious?

      South Carolina has one of the most exhaustive lists of things to tax other than just income. They literally double dip on things you long since bought and paid for, like vehicles (wheel tax), regardless of running condition. This is in addition to the fuel tax you already pay to support the roads and such. They also have a pet tax. They TAX KITTENS!

      Overall, this state was the most tax hungry state I have yet to live in.

      http://www.sctax.org/Publications/mov2sc.html

    16. Re:California Taxes by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>That's reason number one

      Reason #1 should be: you can't fucking drive anywhere in the Bay Area. Horrible traffic, and if you try to live in San Francisco itself, you'll find it's quite possibly the most car-unfriendly city in existence.

      No, I didn't read TFA, I've just lived in the Bay Area before.

      >>Yeah it sucks.

      Yep.

    17. Re:California Taxes by just_another_sean · · Score: 1

      Yeah it sucks. And it's slow (CPU intensive). And I can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times.

      Yeah, off topic I know, but absof'inglutely! No one likes a smart ass check box that toggles itself when you hit f'ing "Save". Pissed me off all afternoon.

      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    18. Re:California Taxes by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I live in North Carolina. We have some of the highest corporate, individual and sales taxes in the nation, although not as bad as California. NC public schools are consistently ranked 47th for schools, just behind LA, AR and MS. Great universities, terrible primary schools. The Carolinas DO have a reasonable cost of living and very good quality of life, so I stay because it is a worthwhile trade-off, as I have no kids.

      Dell is based in Texas. So is HP. Many other companies as well, and there are good reasons. Tennessee and Texas are the more tax friendly states (no personal income taxes). Florida is pretty good as well, but high cost of living. Personally, I would be looking at Tennessee because it is located in the center of the USA if you consider population density instead of geography (ie: lower average transportation cost for products), good weather, excellent quality of life (lots to do) and a reasonably educated workforce.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    19. Re:California Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      California's total tax burden is 12th in total revenues collected per capita. Calculated as a percentage of income (California ranks 7th in income) it is even lower.

      That url only shows top/bottom 5 so I couldn't figure out if you're saying they're the 12th highest-taxing or 12th lowest- taxing. If they're the 12th highest taxing, then that means CA's not in the top 37 best states in which to operate.

      Whatever it is, though, saying the tax as a percentage of income is lower than other states, isn't a good way to convince industry to set up in CA. That same statement could be rephrased as, "and whatever taxes you end up paying, you're going to spend more on payroll in CA than you would in other states." More income per capita is something to brag about when you're talking about living there, but not something to grab about when you're talking about hiring people there.

      BTW, this is not a "California Sux" thing. This is a "I wouldn't want to start a manufacturing business in California" thing.

    20. Re:California Taxes by i_b_don · · Score: 1

      Ok... so this just struck me as wrong. Who do we import eh most from? China and Japan would be the first two that come to mind for me. China being waaay #1, but enough cars and stuff from Japan that they'd be up there. But you put all Atlantic ports on the top of the list. That just doesn't seem right. So.....

      Doing a quick google search: "Busiest container ports in the world" from Wikipedia lists the top US ports as:

      16. Los Angeles
      18. Long Beach
      22. New York
      37. Savannah

      Louisiana and Texas didn't even make the list up to that point. So the difference is that you're comparing is probably raw resources vs finished goods in these two cases. My guess is that the top people on your list are transporting metric shitloads of concrete and coal vs the California ports doing more finished goods (thus cargo containers). Grandparent's point appears to still valid. How do you think all the stuff from China gets across the country to stores on the east coast?

      d

      --
      all language nazi's will burne in heil!
    21. Re:California Taxes by careysub · · Score: 1

      Somehow I suspect the actual tax burden for a corporation wouldn't be measured well by either (tax $)/population or by (tax $)/($ personal income)? Perhaps corporate tax rates would be more relevant. Now I don't have any solid information, either -- can't be arsed to do my research -- but at least I'm not looking at plainly irrelevant figures and pretending that discredits someone.

      A lot of attitude there for someone who knows nothing about the subject and is too lazy to look anything up, eh?

      The per capita tax rate is very relevant for assessing the tax climate, especially since the OP specifically combined business and personal taxes in his angry factless bloviation. (Of course no right-winger can discuss taxes without being really! really! angry!).

      If you add just one little factoid (easily looked up) that California relies disproportionately on personal income taxes (Meg Whitman is basing her whole campaign on slashing upper income tax rates - like her own), then you realize that the business burden must be unusually low.

      And so it is: as percentage of the state gross product California business taxes are ... wait for it... 28th in the nation. See the Ernst&Young study at: http://www.cost.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=76116 . Check out the last column on pg. 12.

      That's right folks, the California state business tax burden is BELOW THE MEDIAN of all states!

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    22. Re:California Taxes by careysub · · Score: 1
      That's the last place I'd want to build an industry, not just because of me but also my workers would have to deal with the heavy tax burden.

      Consult the 2010 Ernst & Young study: "Total state and local business taxes State-by-state estimates for fiscal year 2009" (http://www.cost.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=76116). You will find that the business tax burden in California, as a share of the state gross product, is 34th in the nation (last column on pg. 12). On a state ranking is BELOW the median, and is in the BOTTOM THIRD in fact. And on page 8, where it charts the ratio of business taxes to spending benefiting business (and if we pretend education does not benefit business at all) the California ratio is 2.68: 45th in the nation, far below the national average (3.50).

      Taking into account that the total tax per capita burden only places it at 12th place, the fact is California is a moderate tax state, with LOW business taxes, and one of the most favorable business tax vs business support spending environments in the country.

      But if you keep lying repeatedly really loudly, in a really angry voice, non-stop eventually people start to think there is something to what you say. Job well done!

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    23. Re:California Taxes by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Oil, oil and more oil for the Gulf ports. Alot of oil going into the refineries in SoCal too.

    24. Re:California Taxes by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Trade with the US
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_largest_trading_partners_of_the_United_States

      Jhttp://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/statistics/highlights/top/top1008yr.html

    25. Re:California Taxes by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      just make sure to stock up on guns, ammo, flares, food, water, and gas before they shut down welfare and it'll be like the watts riots in every city of the nation.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    26. Re:California Taxes by turkeyfish · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Obama saved the American automotive industry, whether he ultimately gets any
      credit for it or not. Howevver, this really isn't so much about political
      philosophies, as it is whether there is a willingness of Detroit and America to
      recognnize that in order to stay competitive, investments in education and
      infrastructure necessary to invovate and keep up with the competition are
      critical. It seems likely this will be their last chance, as another bailout is
      not in the cards.

      Although the final sentence of the article in French attempts to suggest that
      the future will fall to Detroit by default, becuase "the more things change the
      more they stay the same". The article really presents no real evidence to
      substantiate this assumption. In reality this race will be won by those who
      innovate and take better strategic risks that prove good bets. Life is a gamble.

      Tesla Motors is small and the start up costs are indeed steep, as the article points out.
      However, the article displays a smugness that Detroit really can't afford right now,
      the notion that because of high costs, Tesla Motors is doomed to fail. Telsa motors
      has partnered with Toyota and few can credibly argue that Toyota doesn't know something
      about the automotive industry or electric vehicles.

      For Toyota, the fit is a good one, because from their perspective the costs of
      investment in a manufacturing plant in California makes sense. They already have
      enough capacity at their plants serving the eastern US given current market
      condition. Likewise, it makes no sense to build another plant for internal
      combustion engines, when the mass production of electric vehicles is close at
      hand (nearly all Japense manufacturers are moving entirely electric cars for
      their domestic market, with Toyota, Honda, and Nissan poised to commence sale of
      fully electric vehicles globally in the next production cycle. Further, given
      the appreciation of the yen relative to the dollar, complements of US taxpayers,
      especially republicans, who like to load up on debt with little return on
      investment, their appreciating currency can best be spent in the US, where the
      same number of yen will buy more. Toyota may ultimately be looking for a
      sizeable stake in Tesla, to gain the premier name brand in electric vehicles.

      Yes, costs of living are higher in California, but as with anything else in
      life, you get wh at you pay for. California has, in addition to its geographic
      position, a highly educated workforce that results from its long term
      investments in higher education. Assumming Meg Whitman doesn't succeed in her
      efforts to defund the university system, this advantage will remain for the
      foreseeable future. Likewise, it also has a very strong and emerging solar and
      wind technology industries, that are steadily ramping up in terms of megawatts
      on line each year. Although it does have high taxes, this gives it tax benefits
      associated with investments in infrastructure and human resource and health care
      that most states lack. These are things that are attractive to high tech
      workers, who want to raise happy and healthy families.

      Likewise, the preferred republican approach to encourage off-shoring of American
      jobs is also counter-productive as it fundamentally undermines the buying power
      of Americans, which is why there are so few jobs being created now. Who, besides
      bankers, CEO's and Wall Street tycoons have that much money to spend anymore
      these days? Wealth concentration in the US is at a historic high, so it is
      unlikely that most Americans will have any buying power or jobs soon, which
      ironically will aid Tesla, since the market for smaller, lighter cars will be
      relatively larger.

      Totally overlooked by all the stereotypes in the article are clear synergies
      between electric cars and electric power production that Detroit needs to take
      seriously before their fate is sealed. The oil companies do, which is why they
      are waging w

    27. Re:California Taxes by dingfelder · · Score: 1

      then try the other Carolina... the tech friendly one, located a short drive North. :) home to the Research Triangle Park (the largest research park in the US) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Research_Triangle_Park

    28. Re:California Taxes by dingfelder · · Score: 1

      No, not one of the highest in the nantion, unless you consider 16th place really high: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_tax_levels_in_the_United_States

    29. Re:California Taxes by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      And yet the State of California has the largest economy in the United States, and what, the 8th largest economy in the world compared to countries?

    30. Re:California Taxes by Ezel · · Score: 1

      Maybe you have the same problem I had the last few days:
      I have the classic index but the discussions where messed up.
      I unchecked somthing about "Dynamic" under Discussions in the preferences (can't see exactly what since that page now doesn't look the same) and I got slashdot back to the way I wanted.

      --
      Prosp long and liver.
    31. Re:California Taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But who wants to live in the Carolinas?

    32. Re:California Taxes by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Wait, taxes are usually assessed on business profit, not volume. How is tax per gross product dollar meaningful? Could just mean there are a lot of low/negative/non profit businesses.

    33. Re:California Taxes by stdarg · · Score: 1

      How is per-capita tax meaningful in a progressive tax system? Especially when it comes to starting a new business, which is not what your average capita is doing.

    34. Re:California Taxes by careysub · · Score: 1

      Wait, taxes are usually assessed on business profit, not volume. How is tax per gross product dollar meaningful? Could just mean there are a lot of low/negative/non profit businesses.

      This is a nonsensical response - there are many types of business taxes, some are on profit and some aren't (property tax anyone)?

      Try reading the referenced report, you might learn something. The amount of business tax collected as a proportion of the total California economy is the most direct measure of the aggregate tax burden you can devise. A high proportion is a high tax burden, a low proportion is a low tax burden.

      Possibly you think the eighth largest economy in the world, and 13% of the entire U.S. economy is based on non-profits and money losing businesses?

      Funny thing - not one poster here attempting to promote the "high tax" story, or to attack the evidence showing it to be a lie, has offered any evidence whatsoever. Only FUD.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
  5. Canada! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Come build your car manufacturing plants in Canada, eh? Our workers don't ask for $100 per hour salaries and we got all four seasons* to test your technologies too!

    * warning: the summer-to-winter ratio imay not be uniform.

    1. Re:Canada! by CCarrot · · Score: 4, Funny

      ... and we got all four seasons* to test your technologies too!

      Yep. All four of 'em.

      1. Almost Winter
      2. Winter
      3. Still Winter
      4. Construction

      (how's your Almost Winter goin', eh?)

      --
      "I love animals! Some are cute, others are tasty, what's not to like?" - Betsy Schroeder, Jeopardy contestant
    2. Re:Canada! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's around 12 Celsius outside, so it's still a nice warm summer weather at the moment, thank you for asking!

    3. Re:Canada! by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Actually the fact that the government takes care of health insurance and does it a lot cheaper than the so called "competitive private companies"(read price fixing monopolies) do it in the United States. Canada is just plain more competitive based on that fact alone.

    4. Re:Canada! by stdarg · · Score: 1

      But that has more to do with the oil and gas royalties that the Canadian and provincial governments collect, not some feel-good socialism that just happens to make them more competitive.

      In other words, if they had to charge all businesses equally for health care services, suddenly it wouldn't be a competitive advantage.

    5. Re:Canada! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We always try to look on the bright side in Canada. That's why season number three is actually called "Nearly Construction"

  6. Are they kidding? by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are they kidding? Silicon Valley already doesn't do a lot of it's hardcore manufacturing. Neither does Detroit anymore.

    It's a globalized world out there now. There's no good reason that the Valley can't be the R&D center for even conventional cars. Nevermind bleeding edge EV cars. They just might not build them in California.

    An electric car would be no different from an iPod in this respect.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    1. Re:Are they kidding? by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      I know, I kind of looked at the headline and went...

      Why would it anyone think that?

      I should submit an article on why Canada won't be exporting snow.

    2. Re:Are they kidding? by iammani · · Score: 1

      Actually they should, when alaska is, canada should too.

    3. Re:Are they kidding? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Speaking of Canada: Why isn't there a Phoenix dealership in Texas yet? This is pickup truck country. Our governor should be smiling next to the relevant provincial governor and sending a bunch of those bad boys down here.

      Put charging stations next to all of those West Texas windmills...

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    4. Re:Are they kidding? by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      I suppose northern canada (away from the lakes) could, but exporting snow that would otherwise melt into the great lakes might break the Great Lakes Compact. Same reason we here in Rochester won't be shipping any water down to Arizona anytime soon.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    5. Re:Are they kidding? by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Informative

          I partially agree. The silicon valley was good at making tech, but it's definitely not an industry town.

          Detroit is still heavily populated by good hard working people, that will work long hard hours for good pay. Unfortunately, the unions made a mess of things. It was advantageous for workers, but not good for the company. Workers received exceedingly high wages, and great benefits. This, along with the corporate greed raised the prices of the product. It became more cost effective to to move production away, which killed Detroit.

          Manufacturing could move back to Detroit and be very successful, but only if payroll was not artificially inflated. Artificially inflated payroll is just as bad as artificially inflated real estate and artificially inflated stocks. We've seen them all fail with tragic results.

        With the various national economies in the situation they are in, mass production will likely be offshored to a cheaper nation, than to the most tax advantageous city or state. It would be nice to think it will grow in the location it was innovated in. As we've seen with various auto manufacturers, and other industries.

          Here's the lists of the "Big 3" auto companies. See how many are still in Detroit.

          GM manufacturing plants
          Ford manufacturing plants
          Chrysler manufacturing plants

          Our cars will continue to be built in the locations that have the cheapest labor, the cheapest materials, and the cheapest way to get them to the customers.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    6. Re:Are they kidding? by CAIMLAS · · Score: 0, Troll

      Good reasons to not do anything in Silicon Valley, nevermind California:

      1) Taxes. California is expensive.
      2) Employee wages. Because of taxes, they must be higher to be competitive.
      3) Energy costs and grid instability. I'm continually amazed by how crappy things are there.
      4) Uppity liberal engineers. No, seriously: these people make poor engineers. Good software developers, sure. Reasoning ability isn't in question; their ability to acknowledge the realities of the world around them for what it is, is.
      5) Culture. This ties into #4, but the "I'm due" attitude makes for lazy workers who think they're entitled. Sometimes, hard and unpleasant work is required to get the job done; unless its personally interesting, this type of worker isn't going to get it done. (Check out where industrial machinery tends to be engineered. Hint: it's far from the beaches.)
      6) Lost work hours due to environment. SUre, your workers might be there from 9-5 but if it takes an hour on either side of their work day to transit in heavy traffic to do so, they're not going to be on their game.
      7) They need automotive engineers who understand what has been tried, why it should not be tried again, and so on. These people are likely to be located elsewhere, giving no incentive to move to California over any other state.

      An electric car would be no different from an iPod in this respect.

      Yet an iPod is significantly different than, say, a Nokia n8100 or a Microsoft Zune. Why? It may have to do with the culture and location in which they were designed, and what kind of engineers were working on it.

      I'd sooner want John Deere or CAT engineers designing my EV than iPod engineers. JD or CAT engineers would be concerned with purely quantifiable things: input to output ratios, handling, suspension, etc. The iPod engineers might do some EC stuff, but for the most part, they're going to be focused on the design of the end result. I'd rather have an efficient EV built by experienced mechanical/electrical engineers that looks like a brick than I would a car that looks awesome but can't corner quickly without a wheel flying off, or an electrical short in cold weather that causes the thing to stall.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    7. Re:Are they kidding? by ultranova · · Score: 0, Troll

      Detroit is still heavily populated by good hard working people, that will work long hard hours for good pay. Unfortunately, the unions made a mess of things.

      Yeah; they demanded good pay for long hard hours.

      It became more cost effective to to move production away, which killed Detroit.

      Indeed, Chinese slave labour - or slave labour in general - is more cost effective.

      Manufacturing could move back to Detroit and be very successful, but only if payroll was not artificially inflated.

      If only the peons knew their place and worked for peanuts!

      Artificially inflated payroll is just as bad as artificially inflated real estate and artificially inflated stocks. We've seen them all fail with tragic results.

      Trying to equate demanding a living wage with stock market games is just... wow. Just wow.

      But hey, in the end it doesn't really matter. The United States will collapse, China will rise. Maybe they will recognize US nobility, maybe they won't. It's just a new empire replacing the old and corrupt one. We shall see if China too will flirt with individual freedoms, and if they'll get those confused with letting the rich and the powerful to oppress everyone else and sell the country piece by piece, like the US did.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    8. Re:Are they kidding? by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Detroit is still heavily populated by good hard working people, that will work long hard hours for good pay. Unfortunately, the unions made a mess of things.

      Yeah; they demanded good pay for long hard hours.

      ...

      If only the peons knew their place and worked for peanuts!

          You're overstating it. The base salary + benefits made a single employee cost $135,200/yr. That's not working for peanuts. How many of those out unemployed autoworkers would now be pay working for $35k to $65k, like the rest of the "peons" working for "peanuts". While that won't compete with China, Mexico, or Canada, it would begin to bridge the gap. Consider the costs of importing a vehicle from a manufacturing plant in another country. Not only are there the raw costs of transportation, but there's the tariffs involved.

            And lets not forget the turnaround time. If I ordered a custom vehicle, and it took 2 days to make it through assembly, I could have it in 1 to 5 days, depending on my proximity to the plant. Waiting for an international shipment could be weeks or months. Since we are a society who demands instant gratification, this would go a long way towards customer satisfaction.

          I'm far from saying "pay them peanuts". I'm saying if they worked for a honest salary, most would be happy, rather than looking at unemployment, or a minimum wage job. I've known a few ex-union auto workers, and while they'd love to have their union job back, they're happy to at least be working.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    9. Re:Are they kidding? by Isaac-1 · · Score: 1

      Automotive R&D takes real estate, think test tracks for speed, cornering, skid pads, inclines, vibration tests, not to mention their indoor equivalents. Have you priced real estate in Silicon Valley area, this is a place where you could buy a 50 year old sub 1,000 square foot house with a patch of grass in the front yard about the size of a typical car for just a little under $1,000,000 just before the housing crunch (I have not priced it post crunch), now imagine the price of a multi thousand acre test track complex.

    10. Re:Are they kidding? by Isaac-1 · · Score: 1

      It is the same reason there are no gas stations next to those west texas windmills. West Texas is a lot of vast nothingness, something you learn the first time you drive west of San Antonio (which is just barely in the eastern half of the state) on I-10 and see billboards advertising motels only 263 miles ahead.

    11. Re:Are they kidding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I googled a bit, but couldn't find any data for changes in automobile worker salaries for the last few decades. Perhaps the increases are out of line. I they pales compared to those of the CEOs, CTOs, and board members though.

    12. Re:Are they kidding? by JWSmythe · · Score: 2, Insightful

          Here's a reference. http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2008/11/should-we-really-bail-out-7320-per-hour.html. I know it's not as good as an official reference, but it is one. I can't find the link I used initially. 73.20 * 2080 = $151.840.

          Of course, that's not reflected in the employee's check. The benefits packages were huge (negotiated by the union), and there were pesky things like union dues. It may not matter to the guy working the line, but it's the figure that the auto manufacturer uses to decide how to operate.

          The thing is, corporations have to work for the best interest of the company and stock holders. That means if the cost of the employee is $150k/yr, and they can get an employee in Canada, Mexico, or China to do the same work for a fraction of that, and there's still a reduction in per-employee cost, then that's what they have to go with. Even the top level positions can be changed by the board of directors, if they aren't working in the best interest of the company. That's why you see so much work sent overseas. If I get 10 widgets per hour from an employee in the US, and that employee costs the company $73.20/hr, then the man hour cost is $7.32 per unit. If I can outsource the same work at $200/mo ($1.15/hr), the man hour cost drops to $0.115 per unit. As long as the cost of shipping and importing does not exceed $6.16, the overall cost per unit drops. Oddly enough, they avoid reflecting that cost in the price to the consumer. The price point of the unit is based on "What is the consumer willing to pay?" If consumers are willing to pay $100/unit, the price will remain $100/unit, which shows an increased profit for the company. The board of directors are happy. The shareholders are happy. The guy who was getting paid $7.32/unit is ... well ... unemployed.

          To adjust for this, the government could increase tariffs on imported items, to adjust for the cost difference to ensure that the jobs remained in the US.

          Relations with China have been touchy at best for years. If the US Gov't raised the tariff substantially, every corporation in America who deals with them would pitch a fit. Well, their lobbyists would "encourage" the decision to keep the tariff at a reasonable rate, to keep the cost per unit low.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    13. Re:Are they kidding? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are they kidding? Silicon Valley already doesn't do a lot of it's hardcore manufacturing. Neither does Detroit anymore.

      It's a globalized world out there now. There's no good reason that the Valley can't be the R&D center for even conventional cars. Nevermind bleeding edge EV cars. They just might not build them in California.

      An electric car would be no different from an iPod in this respect.

      From what I can see -- California, like my native Massachusetts, is hung up on the elitist ideal of the "creative class" - in other words they don't want to promote jobs that require getting one's clothes dirty and working up a sweat.
      GM, if it ever gets out of the government's clutches, Ford and a host of foreign name plates will be the builders of the cars of the future. It won't be Tesla who I think will be a foot note in history. Interesting technology but can't get the costs down to what the people can afford. See Doble steamers.

  7. They could say exactly the same thing about energy by Scareduck · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The same problems exist in the energy domain as well. California has steadily been making the state hostile to actual manufacturing, the technical domains (bioengineering, mechanical engineering, materials science) are only superficially relevant to Silicon Valley's prime skill set (microlithography, electrical engineering), and the business model is way off (what? There's no exit strategy? You mean we have to actually OPERATE THIS THING OVER THE LONG HAUL?).

    --

    Dog is my co-pilot.

  8. This one's easy by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    Silicon Valley has no idea how to build cars.

    Detroit knows how to build cars.

    It doesn't matter that it's a hybrid or a solar or a whatever. When it comes to manufacturing, Silicon Valley doesn't have any. Detroit does.

    1. Re:This one's easy by countSudoku() · · Score: 1

      Actually, you should read up some because there is a car manufacturing facility here call NUMMI. Your mileage may vary:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Motors#United_States

      Toyota built cars there until recently. Ask yourself this; where are the big three now? I used to drive an American car too, now I can afford a proper German one. Your mileage may vary. I'll take Silicon Valley over Detroit any day. I already did. You're joking though, right? Detroit knows how to build cheap, shitty cars, except for a precious few high-end vehicles like the upper end Cadillacs, the Viper, Corvette, and we'll I ran out of examples. Camaros, and Mustangs don't count as the suspension and exhaust systems are typically so restrictive that you have to completely replace them as soon as you drive off the lot. So, sorry but Detroit better start building some better cars. The Volt ain't it, Son.

      --
      This is the NSA, we're gonna geet U h@x0r5! Also, what is a h@x0r5?
    2. Re:This one's easy by afidel · · Score: 1

      To add to that a little, Detroit and the midwest has an entire infrastructure of industries around building physical things. My dad has customers in the southern US and when he goes down to call on them he finds broken process things that are obvious to him just from being in the industry for 20+ years. He often points these things out and tells them how they could improve the process which is probably why he keeps these clients despite not being able to call on them more than a handful of times a year. Fleeing from the unions might save some money but it also costs money by not being able to tap into the knowledge base that has built up over a hundred years.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    3. Re:This one's easy by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      So... you used to drive [cheap] American cars, now you drive a [non-cheap] German car. You then appear to claim that cheap priced American cars are cheap quality, and non-cheap quality American cars are not cheap priced. And yet, you only switched to a German car when you could afford it. In other words, your anecdotal comparison is between Cheap Priced/Cheaply Made American Cars and Expensive German Car.

      It's not like all German cars are well-made, either.

      And I'm not at all saying you need to drive American, just poking at your argument. You're perfectly free to drive whatever car you want, I don't care. It's no more patriotic to drive a Ford than a Toyota, or BMW, or whatever.

    4. Re:This one's easy by ickleberry · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Detroit knows how to build cars?

      They know how to take a huge inefficient crapheap of a petrol engine, throw it into a recycled chassis from the 80's, fill the said chassis with the latest gimmicks such as iPod connectors & OnStar then sell to the gullible public with some clever marketing.

      I'll never understand how those fuckers manage to make a car with a 5 or 6 litre petrol engine that handles worse than a bus. And by bus I mean a decent Mercedes or Van Hool bus, I'd really hate to see their own attempt at making a bus

    5. Re:This one's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fleeing from the unions might save some money but it also costs money by not being able to tap into the knowledge base that has built up over a hundred years.

      Like how to stuff a ballot box, how to intimidate non-union workers, how to bribe local politicians, how to hide the bodies, how to coast on seniority to a job you're not skilled enough for ... I could go on, but seriously? What knowledge base to you honestly think a Union brings to a particular factory?

    6. Re:This one's easy by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Van Hool bus

      Van Hool are a coachbuilder. They don't make the chassis. The Van Hool-bodied Volvo B10Ms were excellent, though. I wonder where M8 SKY and 12 EWO are now?

    7. Re:This one's easy by afidel · · Score: 1

      Didn't say the unions did, I was talking about the midwest. There are literally thousands of businesses large and small that have specialties and focus on how to make manufacturing more efficient here. My dad's business at first glance sells chemicals, but the real value add he brings is knowing how those chemicals fit into the customers business and how the customer can improve their process to be more efficient. He's literally walked into businesses, spent a few hours looking over how they are doing a process, and saved them hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Some guy who hasn't had a couple decades of seeing how stuff is done both bad and good won't be able to bring that kind of advice to the client, and that's the situation with 80+% of the vendors in the south because they just don't have the experience base.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    8. Re:This one's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, gotcha. I misunderstood the statement I quoted, then. My apologies.

    9. Re:This one's easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Detroit knows how to build crap .

      There, I fixed it for you.

    10. Re:This one's easy by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Corvettes are built in Kentucky. Have been since 1981.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  9. This article doesn't make a great argument. by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Although it makes some concessions to the idea, the article ultimately struggles around the idea that where things are prototyped/engineered isn't necessarily where they will be built.

    And I agree, Silicon Valley is a terrible place to build a manufacturing plant. Cost of living is too expensive and you can't reasonably expect to pay factory workers wages that will allow them to compete for housing with programmers and engineers.

    However, the article makes an awful case that engineering around green cars can't/won't happen in Silicon Valley. They point out that Tesla has to work to attract the kind of specialized engineers they need to move out there. But you know what? The point is, you can convince them to move out there. It might cost you, but you can do it if it's important enough. Good luck convincing the best and the brightest that they want to live in Detroit instead, despite a much cheaper cost of living.

    1. Re:This article doesn't make a great argument. by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      They point out that Tesla has to work to attract the kind of specialized engineers they need to move out there.

      And even that is probably a bit fluffed up in terms of being a metric. Tesla works hard to attract the best and the brightest because they want the absolute cream of the crop for their engineers. SpaceX is just as picky with it's engineers. These companies don't shop worldwide because there are no engineers in California. They shop worldwide because they want the smartest sons of bitches money can buy working for them

      If quantity of engineers (non software/electrical) is a problem for any start ups in California, they aren't looking hard enough. California has some of the best mechanical, systems, aerospace, and materials engineering schools on the planet: Cal Poly- San Luis Obispo, UC Davis, UCLA, UC Berkley, Stanford, UC Irvine, Cal Poly - Pomona, Cal Tech, and even SJSU all have wonderful engineering programs that are as diverse as they are rigorous. Each one of those schools still turns out a few hundred (if not thousand) new, talented engineers a year. Stack on top of the the fact that Orange County and the Silicon Valley also have very developed aerospace and robotics industries chugging along inside their borders, and you will start to realize just what a diverse pool of engineering and design talent (both electrical and mechanical) exists in California. Quite frankly, if Musk or anyone else is having trouble finding engineering talent in California in any discipline, they aren't looking hard enough.

    2. Re:This article doesn't make a great argument. by mehtars · · Score: 1

      Having great engineers that just recently graduated from college doesn't really mean squat with manufacturing. You need to have engineers with experience more than anything. A guy working for Ford of GM for 20+ years probably can help bring the tesla car to market much quicker and easily than someone fresh out of university Especially with manufacturing, a lot of the basics on machine tool handling and fixture design isn't taught anymore in Mechanical Engineering classes--- a much greater emphasis is put on theoretical stuff. The best universities that actually deal with the stuff you need to run CNCs and other machines is actually taught in the midwest -- Univ Michigan, Perdue, Iowa, etc.

    3. Re:This article doesn't make a great argument. by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 1

      You need to have engineers with experience more than anything.

      Apparently you missed the part of my post where I talked about the already developed industries in California that employ thousands of engineers who work already work on everything from manufacturing to theoretical, computer designs...

      The best universities that actually deal with the stuff you need to run CNCs and other machines is actually taught in the midwest -- Univ Michigan, Perdue, Iowa, etc.

      Yeah, actually we teach a lot of that here too. In fact, in my design-centric education, even I had at least three classes where I worked in machine shops and programmed CNC machines. The folks I knew in degree programs centered on manufacturing and engineering often spent more time in machine shops than most of my peers spent developing mathematical models for their theoretical designs....so not, it's not just taught in the midwest. California has an incredibly rich and diverse education system and industrial landscape. Far more than most folk realize.

  10. The Green Car Detroit? ISOTP! by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

    The Green Car Detroit sounds like the name for one of those awful hipster bands. Silicon Valley sounds like a porn star. And everyone knows that hipsters don't have dicks, so I guess it makes since that they aren't related.

    --
    (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
  11. NSS tag? by boristdog · · Score: 1

    Where's the No Shit, Sherlock Tag?

  12. Err, So Cal? by bhcompy · · Score: 1

    Silicon Valley has the flashy ones, but companies like Fisker that are pushing the envelope on the industry are expanding in So Cal. Production will almost always be elsewhere, though, since costs here are so ridiculous, especially for union labor.

  13. Outsorucing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's so different about the economics of automobile outsourcing compared to computer and consumer electronics outsourcing? Why is it that above 15-25k units it makes sense for auto manufacturers to do it in house, yet all the widget companies farm out their millions of units to Asia?

    1. Re:Outsorucing by JimFive · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1. Bulk. A car is big, shipping is expensive.
      2. If your part isn't at the assembly plant when it is needed and GM has to shut down the line, your company gets charged about $2000 per minute (might be more, now). With "Just in Time" inventory practices, no supplier would be willing to risk a long transport time.
      3. Logistics (related to 2) When I worked for an auto supplier, orders were finalized no more than 3 weeks out. When I worked for the paper products company, product from China was shipped 3-6 months out.
      --
      JimFive

      --
      Please stop using the word theory when you mean hypothesis.
    2. Re:Outsorucing by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      1. Bulk. A car is big, shipping is expensive. JimFive

      Not only is it big, it's mostly air. Shipping too much air is what makes the shipping too expensive.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    3. Re:Outsorucing by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      During and after the second world war, many car manufacturers shipped "CKD" (Completely Knocked Down) cars to foreign countries. These arrived as crates of bits that could be quickly and easily assembled by local labour in simple workshops. It doesn't take a lot to put a Morris Minor together, and they were considerably harder to assemble than a modern car as anyone who has ever done a body-off restoration will tell you.

  14. the three reasons by Surt · · Score: 3, Informative

    From the article:
    Long cycles, faraway profits

    Wrong kind of engineers

    Painful place to build things

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  15. Customisation by Rough3dg3 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I agree with many of the points made in the article. The one point that got my attention (and then got me thinking) was "These days, it takes $1 billion or more to design, engineer, test, certify, and launch a brand-new vehicle. And that takes roughly five years." My point is that I am eagerly looking forward to the time I can buy a car online with a build specification similar to the options I am offered when I visit Dell's or some other company's website. How long before we get PnP components for cars like we do with computer components? Car manufacturing will generate more business when we have more adaptable parts that can be ordered, created and delivered within two weeks of visiting Ford's website.

    --
    Is this thing on?
    1. Re:Customisation by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      My point is that I am eagerly looking forward to the time I can buy a car online with a build specification similar to the options I am offered when I visit Dell's or some other company's website. How long before we get PnP components for cars like we do with computer components?

      Have you actually ever ordered a new car? You might try it, because the auto companies were offering shedloads of options and high customization long before Micheal Dell's parents were a gleam in his grandparent's eyes.

    2. Re:Customisation by Rough3dg3 · · Score: 1

      Apologies! I probably didn't convey my point properly. I'm not meaning paint colour, air conditioning or the size of alloy wheels you want. I'm talking about choosing your car's engine, chassis, the kind of gear stick you want (for us UK residents of course ;P). I wasn't complaining about the current state of car customisation, I just wait for the day complete customisation of car's components is similar to that of a PC.

      --
      Is this thing on?
    3. Re:Customisation by corbettw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That would kill the franchise car dealer system, so none of the big automotive players will jump on board this concept. It would take a start-up that doesn't have any entrenched interests in their supply and/or sales chains to make something like this a reality. And considering the costs involved in designing a plant that can handle these kinds of orders, I just don't see a start-up having the necessary cash on hand to pull it off.

      In other words, ain't gonna happen.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    4. Re:Customisation by urusan · · Score: 1

      While this is an interesting thought, I don't think it will be practical. Here's some thoughts on why:
      1. It's more complex/expensive to assemble a customized car than a stock car. This could get quite costly.
      2. It's more difficult to deal with testing and regulation.

    5. Re:Customisation by Rough3dg3 · · Score: 1

      I don't deny major dealers would be against such a move but the natural evolution of a consumer driven market wears down even the most stubborn capitalist ideology. Car manufacturers adapted seatbelts and air bags after they had their day of kicking and screaming that it would force consumers away. Mega-industries will never change a financially beneficial situation unless forced to. The banking sector continued fine after ATM's took the place of bank clerks dispensing cash to customers.

      --
      Is this thing on?
    6. Re:Customisation by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      They used to do that level of customization, it led to crappy build quality and problems with maintenance and service because so many different options were one or three offs.

      Like my truck, you could pick between 7 transmissions, 5 engines, 4 chassis, 2 drive layouts (2WD, 4WD), 6 different gear ratios, 3 or 4 suspensions and I think 3 different levels of interior.

      I custom ordered it in the spring of '91 and still drive it, although with third party seats, new wheels and engine mods I installed in 2004.

      80,000 original miles.

    7. Re:Customisation by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      No, you did convey your point properly, if inadvertently. You haven't ordered a new car, probably ever, and are absolutely clueless as to the level of customization available. Your second just hammers that home again.

    8. Re:Customisation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, he did say he's from the UK, so it's probably not GM's options he's talking about. Not every company does it the same way. For some you really only get 2 variants, with a small number of packages you can add on. But for others the customization goes deep. For example, I recall going through the web page for Mini and seeing a lot more options than I'd seen for US car companies; it's not so much that they had things you couldn't get from other companies, it's that the features weren't in large bundles, which meant you had many more combinations of choices available. Similarly, I've seen that sort of thing every now and then when just checking wiki for an overview of a car, and then finding out there are 8 engines to pick from and 5 transmissions.

      (My own car is a 2002 model and basically had no options other than 'sedan or hatchback, manual or automatic, base model or fast model' and an attempt to upsell me on fancy rims...)

  16. Central Oklahoma by Sooner+Boomer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Forget Cali, come to Central Oklahoma! Our GM plant closed last year; the facility and knowledgeable manpower are available. Decently low cost of living, decently high wages, right-to-work (not that I'm anti-union). Plenty of inexpensive power (natural gas-fired electrical plants) and good weather. Heck, we even have earthquakes.

    --
    Chaos maximizes locally around me.
    1. Re:Central Oklahoma by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      It came down to a choice between closing our plant, or a unionized one. Boy, good thing we passed that right-to-work! Employers like GM really appreciate how much easier it is to close plants based here. :-{

    2. Re:Central Oklahoma by jjbenz · · Score: 1

      The former GM plant in Janesville is sitting empty and the Chrysler engine plant in Kenosha is being shut down this week.

  17. Getting back the classic index. by whoever57 · · Score: 1

    >>>Feedback on this comment system?

    Yeah it sucks. And it's slow (CPU intensive). And I can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times.

    Go to Preferences, then click on "Layout" under "Dynamic Index" and then select "Use Classic Index"

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    1. Re:Getting back the classic index. by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      BZZT! Still not giving me the classic index!

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    2. Re:Getting back the classic index. by idontgno · · Score: 1

      Exit and restart your browser.

      No, really. I know it sounds like typical brain-dead "please reboot your computer" tech support script-mongering, but at least for me (on Firefox 3.6.11), that made the difference. Set the UI, as mentioned above. Then exit the browser and restart it.

      Don't know why, but that worked for me. YMMV.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    3. Re:Getting back the classic index. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>click on "Layout" under "Dynamic Index" and then select "Use Classic Index"

      Yeah that's what I meant when I said, "can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times."

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    4. Re:Getting back the classic index. by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      Surprise, surprise, that didn't work either!

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    5. Re:Getting back the classic index. by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Yeah that's what I meant when I said, "can't get back to the classic (plain text) index even though I've un-checked and checked it multiple times."

      OK, so try "Preferences", "General" (under "Classic Index") and then select "Use Classic Index". I was able to switch back to the classic index using some combination of selections, so it is indeed possible. I did not have to logoff/logon or exit my browser.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    6. Re:Getting back the classic index. by rustl · · Score: 1

      Go to Preferences, then click on "Layout" under "Dynamic Index" and then select "Use Classic Index"

      That didn't work for me. I got it back by clicking the reply box on the side, this brings up a preferences window. Untick the top 2 boxes, dynamic stuff, save and it all came back as normal.

    7. Re:Getting back the classic index. by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      It's slower, shows you less posts, and provides less information, and locks up firefox for 5 seconds as it waits to download... something.

      I had to click the classic preferences a couple times and restart the browser, and then close the tab with slashdot in it to work.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  18. Designed in California. Made in [not California] by perpenso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Like the fine print on Apple and other hi tech company product packaging tells us: Designed in California. Made in [not California].

    Regarding the electric cars companies currently in California. Maybe some cars will be built in California while the company is still in a start up and "prototyping" mode (this can be years after starting to sell to early adopters). However when the company matures and the company perspective evolves from development to manufacturing the factories will move out of state. Especially if viable competitors appear.

    Silicon Valley may be a hub for design but other parts of the country have far more expertise in nuts-and-bolts manufacturing. The components of a car may be incredibly hi tech but auto manufacturing will largely remain bolting and welding components together.

  19. BSOD by tedgyz · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Picture this - Blue Screen Of Death doing 75 on the interstate
    Ok, I know it is an article about Silicon Valley, but it's a good joke.

    Seriously, building cars takes a discipline and patience that most haxx0rs can't grok. We are spoiled by the quick returns within the virtual realm of computers and networks.

    --
    "No matter where you go, there you are." -- Buckaroo Banzai
    1. Re:BSOD by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      I guess AMD, Intel, Applied Materials, Cisco, HP and all the rest lack a discipline and patience that you can only find in Detroit.

      Oh, wait...

  20. This is what will happen. by AnonymousClown · · Score: 1
    All those Silicon Valley car makers will be bought out by one of the big manufacturers: GM, Ford, or Chrysler (The Japanese will design their own versions in house). They will then completely fuck it up like they always do and the Japanese, Chinese and maybe even the Indians will come in and eat their lunch. Then the big 3 will bitch and moan to Congress about unfair competition or some such crap and get yet another bailout.

    Musk and others will sell out in a heartbeat for the right price.

    This is the way it has been and always shall be.

    --
    RIP America

    July 4, 1776 - September 11, 2001

    1. Re:This is what will happen. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      The rising car companies are Korean, they are going to eat the Big Three and the Japanese industry's lunch in the Americas.

  21. NPR wrong? by iamhassi · · Score: 1
    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    1. Re:NPR wrong? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Besides the fact that one event does not qualify as a lot, I would actually argue that NPR was right in its firing for two very different reasons. Number one, it can hire whoever it wants if the big shots think he/she fits into the company, and can fire whoever it wants if the same big shots think he/she doesn't. It's called capitalism. Number two, for a news analyst, that was a retarded comment that calls into question how he analyzes news. Every muslim is a danger to upstanding Americans? Reminds of how black people were viewed in the fifties, or the Irish in the 19th century: substituting race/appearance for a rational judgment of risk. In other words, he seems like a lousy analyst.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  22. High taxes and mostly corollas by __aatirs3925 · · Score: 0

    A lot of businesses here are leaving the state because the government keeps increasing taxes. You can't make jobs by increasing taxes, and you can't keep businesses if you do the same. Plus if you drive around here you'll mostly see Corollas driven around because when you move from another country you want a car that is affordable and can be run into the ground until the axles come off. It's not a stereotype that indians all drive corollas it's just common sense that immigrants would buy something that will keep them steady while they are here permanently or temporarily. Would you want to spend $20-$50k for an electric car that had to have its batteries replaced at least once or twice in its lifetime? What about the maintenance for it? Not all mechanics are certified or want to be certified to work with high-voltage vehicles so you have to bring it back in to the dealership to get anything repaired and it aint cheap. Logically, in this location, it's just not possible to get the ball rolling with electric cars. As liberal as this place is, there's too few who can and will pay for electric cars, even if they guaranteed two hours on a charge.

  23. On par for the linked site by pavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Slashdot has posted several articles from greencarreports.com (all submitted by thecarchik), many of which have been pretty poor, including the one about cambered tires improving efficiency while completely neglecting the fact that it ruins handling, a study showing that hyrid cars don't save enough gas to cover extra cost by conveniently only looking at the first 5 year of the cars use.

    I've added them to my ignored links list.

    1. Re:On par for the linked site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a completely valid assumption, given tha tmost people replace cars inside of 6 years. that number, by the way, average age of trade-in, is a bit higher as a function of this recession. However, given that pickups have the oldest average age on the road (almost ten versus 7 and change) that the analysis over 5 years is relevant to most new car purchasers. Oh yeah, about the camber, the small part that the story should have highlighted but didn't is that with digital aids to steering, cambered tires can be digitally compensated for. It's a bigger deal than you think. However, the article did, to your (minimal) credit, gloss over that part.

    2. Re:On par for the linked site by pavon · · Score: 1

      Except that if you sell the car after 5 years, then the amount you get for it should be included when determining the total cost/benefit, but the study left that out. Hybrids generally have higher resell value than comparable vehicles, which could have very well changed the conclusion if considered.

    3. Re:On par for the linked site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cambered tires improving efficiency while completely neglecting the fact that it ruins handling,

      right. negative camber ruins handling. that is why racecars have negative camber, because it makes them handle worse.

  24. Imported engineers by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    TFA is saying that one of the reasons the valley won't manufacture cars is because they'll have to import engineers from elsewhere since the ones already in the place are only qualified in microelectronics and aren't qualified in the heavy duty engineering needed for manufacturing.

    Silicon Valley's already full of imported engineers who were brought in to work as coders. I'm one of them. I don't see why they couldn't import the necessary skills. The valley is a very attractive proposition to someone living in India, or in England as was the case for me.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
    1. Re:Imported engineers by nomadic · · Score: 1

      The valley is a very attractive proposition to someone living in India, or in England as was the case for me.

      Or, maybe, Detroit. The lie that America doesn't have qualified engineers is corporate propaganda.

    2. Re:Imported engineers by weiserfireman · · Score: 1

      It is one thing to bring in enough engineers to do design work, or the modest scale production that Tesla currently does.

      It is another thing to bring in the 100's of engineers needed to operate a manufacturing plant of the scale to build even 50,000-100,000 cars per year. The skill set of engineers who have been writing code for many years doesn't translate to production and manufacturing engineering in heavy industry.

      The greatest concentrations of those types of engineers is in communities that already have automotive or other industrial factories. You would have to recruit them and pay them a high enough wage to make them want to move away from their current homes and be able to afford comparable homes in the Silicon Valley region.

      Those kinds of wage scales will make Tesla's dreams of selling $15-$20k cars unobtainable.

    3. Re:Imported engineers by Facegarden · · Score: 1

      TFA is saying that one of the reasons the valley won't manufacture cars is because they'll have to import engineers from elsewhere since the ones already in the place are only qualified in microelectronics and aren't qualified in the heavy duty engineering needed for manufacturing.

      Silicon Valley's already full of imported engineers who were brought in to work as coders. I'm one of them. I don't see why they couldn't import the necessary skills. The valley is a very attractive proposition to someone living in India, or in England as was the case for me.

      Yeah, that was a pretty weak point. ALL of the engineers ONLY do microelectronics? I'm pretty sure that a smart Silicon Valley company can find enough engineers skilled with real world electrical systems to make a car.
      -Taylor

      --
      Worldwide Military budgets: $2100 billion. Worldwide Space Exploration budgets: $38 billion. Really, world? Really?
    4. Re:Imported engineers by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      they'll have to import engineers from elsewhere since the ones already in the place are only qualified in microelectronics and aren't qualified in the heavy duty engineering needed for manufacturing

      There seems to be some serious ignorance on manufacturing in California. There are several equipment manufacturers in California who produce the heavy manufacturing tooling used for micro-electronics manufacturing. As someone with experience installing and maintaining these machines I can assure everyone that the mechanical engineers in California will have no problem designing and building cars.

      While places like Detroit do have better expertise in automotive specific engineering, i.e. chassis, the engineers in California are far from devoid of knowledge and expertise in heavy equipment and mechanical engineering. The heavy machines designed and manufactured in California today are considerably more complicated than a car.

  25. Apparently it will by Lynchburg, VA by silvercloak · · Score: 2, Informative
  26. The NUMMI plant by Animats · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Tesla has the advantage of taking over the NUMMI plant in Fremont, CA, a big, successful auto plant shut down for the 2008 recession, when Toyota, for the first time, had to close plants. They're only using a fraction of the plant, but they own all the buildings (although not all the land; they didn't buy all the parking lots). There are plenty of laid-off auto workers living nearby, so a workforce is available.

    The cost differential with China has narrowed. It turns out that once wages in China reach a quarter of the US level, China manufacturing stops being competitive. The transport costs, the delays, and the quality problems make outsourcing manufacturing less attractive. With wages rising in the coastal provinces in China, (and wages dropping in the US) that wage level has been reached in some industries.

    Also, with all the foreclosures, bay area house prices have dropped. Maybe by a factor of 2.

    Operating in Detroit has its own problems. The weather is harsh. Crime is high. Most of the people with competence and ambition moved out when the jobs did.

    Don't worry about the rare earth supply problem. Mountain Pass, California is already coming back on line.

    1. Re:The NUMMI plant by durdur · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The Bay Area is still hugely expensive to live in, by most measures. Not just housing but many other things are expensive and it is in a high tax state/region. So wages tend to be higher here, too. It is not a low cost place to operate a business. Many local high-tech firms find the advantages of being here outweigh the costs, but these companies also typically have large offshore development centers, so a lot of their labor is non-local.

  27. Not so easy. by MaWeiTao · · Score: 2, Interesting

    One of the big advantages Silicon Valley has enjoyed is it's proximity to Asia. And likely it's one of the reasons why Silicon Valley is where it is. They enjoy easier access to the high technology coming out of Japan, South Korea and Taiwan and the manufacturing resources of China.

    The automotive industry is an entirely different beast. The technology isn't nearly as concentrated as it might be with computers or consumer electronics. A company could draw on manufacturing, expertise and technology from Europe, Asia and within the United States. So why even bother putting up with the high taxes and regulations present in California? The company could be based anywhere.

    And building a car, especially a green car, is a far more complex undertaking than a lot of people seem to realize. I expect we're going to see a lot of investors burned in ventures that end up not working out. Even Tesla, which has gotten far further than most is struggled. Too many start ups have impractical pie-in-the-sky ambitions. Unrealistically lightweight vehicles with amazing fuel economy that manage, by magic, to meet all crash-worthiness requirements. And they simply don't have the resources to build aerodynamic bodies cheaply and efficiently. I expect that in the end it's going to be the major automakers who will bring practical green cars to the market.

    The big limiting factor is the battery. If someone manages to produce batteries that store far more energy and can be charged quickly it would revolutionize the automotive industry. We wouldn't need hundreds of pounds worth of batteries or hybrid drivetrains and we'd still get a practical 300+ mile range out of these cars.

    1. Re:Not so easy. by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      One of the big advantages Silicon Valley has enjoyed is it's proximity to Asia. And likely it's one of the reasons why Silicon Valley is where it is.

      I've never heard that theory before.

      Usually it's attributed to the proximity of Berkeley and Stanford and/or year-round moderate weather conditions that avoid both snow and "you really need air conditioning" heat.

    2. Re:Not so easy. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      We wouldn't need hundreds of pounds worth of batteries or hybrid drivetrains and we'd still get a practical 300+ mile range out of these cars.

      We could just make the cars lighter and fit a small diesel engine to them. I'll take 70mpg and a 500 mile tank range over an electric car that will get me half-way to where I want to go.

      Electric cars are not the future. Especially not in California, where they don't even have enough electric power to keep the lights on all the time.

    3. Re:Not so easy. by serbanp · · Score: 1

      One of the big advantages Silicon Valley has enjoyed is it's proximity to Asia. And likely it's one of the reasons why Silicon Valley is where it is.

      Sounds nice but it's probably not true. When SV emerged as the center of innovation in all things electronics and computing, there was nothing interesting in Japan and China was still hurting through its "cultural revolution"...

    4. Re:Not so easy. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      For shipping, most high tech stuff goes by air and a lot of Pacific Rim high tech goes to Anchorage where it gets put on another plane for the next leg.

      Detroit to Anchorage - 2973 miles

      San Francisco to Anchorage - 2016

      Anchorage to Tokyo - 3496

      Anchorage to Hong Kong - 5093

      So Detroit adds almost a thousand air miles to moving crap to the other side of the Pacific Rim

  28. Only one of the reasons makes sense by Locke2005 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Painful place to build things". Silicon Valley is a very expensive, over-regulated place to do business. The only advantage it holds for current business is the critical mass of engineers that make it easy to cannibalize talent from other companies. Electric vehicle companies would likely adopt a model similar to Apple, wherein design work is done in-house in the Silicon Valley, but manufacturing is done in Taiwan or China. Also, the high efficiency vehicles of the future won't be 4-wheel cars; the safety standards for motorcycles are far less restrictive than those for automobiles, and any 3-wheel vehicle can be classified as a motorcycle. There are also several full electric motorcycles coming out now (e.g. Zero Motors).

    The "It takes $1 billion and 5 years to launch a new vehicle" is simply bullshit. It make take that long if you do it the way Detroit does it, but history has shown that Detroit is doing it wrong! Modern businesses are no longer the huge vertically integrated monopolies of the early industrial age; it is now possible to buy everything from out of house. "Wrong kind of engineers" is also bullshit -- create a demand for automotive engineers and Stanford and Berkly will train them! Granted, there is a 4-year lag, but the reason there is a Silicon Valley in the first place is because the world-class universities in the area created a pool of world-class engineers. Again, having engineers that are trained to do things "the GM way" is a disadvantage, not an advantage.

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    1. Re:Only one of the reasons makes sense by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I like that you didn't let your startling low amount of knowledge on the auto industry stop you from posting.

      So no matter how bad the rest of my day goes, I can rest assure I will never be as stupid as your post makes you look.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Only one of the reasons makes sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "It takes $1 billion and 5 years to launch a new vehicle" is simply bullshit. It make take that long if you do it the way Detroit does it, but history has shown that Detroit is doing it wrong! Modern businesses are no longer the huge vertically integrated monopolies of the early industrial age; it is now possible to buy everything from out of house. "Wrong kind of engineers" is also bullshit -- create a demand for automotive engineers and Stanford and Berkly will train them! Granted, there is a 4-year lag, but the reason there is a Silicon Valley in the first place is because the world-class universities in the area created a pool of world-class engineers. Again, having engineers that are trained to do things "the GM way" is a disadvantage, not an advantage.

      Spoken like a true armchair CEO. Just so you know, the auto industry is already one of the most horizontally stratified industries out there. If you think they're vertically integrated, you're entirely wrong. Why do you think every auto maker nearly had a heart attack when GM/Chrysler were in dire straights. They all used the same suppliers. If one major supplier collapsed, the entire industry would take a hit. Don't believe me? Do some research.

      Tesla is trying to change that. They're trying a more vertically integrated strategy. But everyone in the auto industry that actually understands how things work is laughing at them. Remember when they took hundreds of millions in government loans? Don't expect to ever see that back.

      Oh, and you say that engineers will come... well Tesla tried that too. HQ based in California and tried to do R&D there. Only they realized the talent wasn't around... so they moved everything to Detroit.

      Everyone thinks they know how to run an industry. Until you're actually put in charge or look into the details does one actually realize the difficulty of the task.

  29. News of Detroit's death greatly exaggerated by sjbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Are they kidding? Silicon Valley already doesn't do a lot of it's hardcore manufacturing. Neither does Detroit anymore.

    Detroit doesn't do manufacturing? That would be news to those of us who live in Detroit. Despite all its problems, Detroit still is the beating heart of manufacturing in the US. EVERY automobile company has a presence in Detroit. Every major auto supplier has a presence in Detroit, many headquartered here. There is still heaping gobs of manufacturing jobs throughout Michigan even despite the recent problems. Major defense contractors like General Dynamics as well as lots of biomedical engineering goes on in Detroit. It's also one of the top 5 finance hubs in the US.

    Silicon Valley won't be the Detroit of green cars because Detroit will be almost certainly be the Detroit of green cars. Little known fact: Detroit metro has the FOURTH highest amount of high tech employment in the US. Detroit already has huge expertise in building cars, existing infrastructure, tons of engineering talent, idle manufacturing capacity and a work force in need of employment. Michigan is investing huge into battery manufacturing. Silicon Valley will get involved to be sure - especially in the electronics that are going to be an ever more important part of the vehicles. Not to say things are roses in Michigan; they aren't but anyone who thinks Michigan is out of the manufacturing business doesn't understand manufacturing.

    There's no good reason that the Valley can't be the R&D center for even conventional cars.

    Sure there is. The engineering talent and the companies that need it already live elsewhere. Moving to Silicon Valley would require uprooting a lot of existing investments, people to relocate to a place with no particular advantages in technologies specific to automobiles besides electronics and software. There is auto R&D that occurs in California already but Silicon Valley isn't remotely the only place with engineering talent in the US. Could it happen? Sure. Likely? Very very doubtful.

    An electric car would be no different from an iPod in this respect.

    Right, because building iPods makes Apple/HP/etc perfectly suited to get into the auto manufacturing business. No difference whatsoever... [/sarcasm]

    1. Re:News of Detroit's death greatly exaggerated by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Every major auto supplier has a presence in Detroit, many headquartered here

      The operative word here is HEADQUARTERS. It's like how everyone has offices in Walmart's home city despite the fact that all of the factories are actually in CHINA.

      The home office doesn't have to be where the stuff is actually made.

      Acting like it does is really ignorant on NPRs part.

      Detroit globalized like everyone else.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:News of Detroit's death greatly exaggerated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of those car companies trying to make a go of it in California have been attempting to pull Engineers from Michigan. Their success rate is low, because the spouses or the technical workers themselves have several generations fo family in Michigan.

      And don't get too wrapped up in the 'electronics' expertise on the coast. Great for laptops and consumer electronics, but no expertise in engine/powertrain control systems or emmisions. Even fully electric vehicles are more from the power side of electronics, 1.2 gigawats you know, than delacate cpu and ram chips used in calculatorss.
       
        but they'll be there for all the in-vehicle dvd media systems, for sure.

  30. National Propaganda Radio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NPR employs a lot of folks that are actually capable of believing that CA is a viable site for heavy industry; when you love CA as much a they do you're liable to ascribe more credit that is actually warranted. The one industry still thriving in CA are the dock cranes unloading Chinese goods. Everything else is gone or on the way out. This includes the rare earth mining operations which happen to be crucial to the manufacture of coal-powered cars. The mining gear was packed up from the sites and shipped directly to Chinese mines.

    Yes I know there are plans to reopen Mountain Pass. All they need are investors willing to dump billions into a mine in California instead of China. Good luck with that.

    Bottom line; NPR is just making shit up.

  31. where are the profits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    On one hand it is correct, but the question we have to ask is where are the profits? Did MS or Apple or Google get rich from building and operating heavy manufacturing plants or from design and sales. I think we all know the answer. Intel would be the closest to a heavy manufacuter in silicon valley, and only by a far stretch of the imagination. With this in mind Silcon valley may be the design hub of the new auto industry, and may in fact have some boutique marques, but certainly will not likely see huge number of cars being built, if for no other reason, as stated, that heavy large scale manufacturing is not huge profit is.

    Beyond profit, there is the issue of quality of life. For example on the gulf coast there are nice neighborhoods, but they are hugely polluted. People live there because they are often semiskilled and can only work and afford to live in these areas, or are highly skill and receive huge paychecks to tolerate the pollution. Then there are area that are pretty clean where professionals tend to live. Some of these are suburbs that are not going allow heavy manufacturing, others are in the city where heavy manufacturing has been banished. I suspect Silicon Valley is going to be one of those places that is not going accept the long term loss of quality of life for short term profits. Again, unless one is trying to employ large numbers of unskilled workers, this is not a compromise one has to make. Such workers can migrate to areas of the country or state where such compromises are considered acceptable.

    So it could be that California will be center of design and engineering, just like Kia has a design center, for cars, and therefore will have most of the high paying jobs and profits, while the cars are built elsewhere. This is not a bad thing. It is like the comment said about liberals. Liberals do try to develop new ways to maximize profits, while a conservative, if we are to believe the comment, will simply try to do anything for a buck, even if it is not profitable or safe or socially acceptable.

  32. Re:They could say exactly the same thing about ene by dwye · · Score: 1

    the technical domains (bioengineering, mechanical engineering, materials science) are only superficially relevant to Silicon Valley's prime skill set (microlithography, electrical engineering)

    Materials Science only superficially relevant to microlithography?

    I would point out that none of your S.V. Skill Sets were native to the Valley, but were imported, and were importable because of the presence of Stanford, which is rather more than just a school of microlithography and another of microelectronics engineering.

    OTOH, your other points look good, alas.

  33. Michigan is 4th in high tech employment by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Good luck convincing the best and the brightest that they want to live in Detroit instead, despite a much cheaper cost of living.

    To use your own logic, "you can convince them to move out there. It might cost you, but you can do it if it's important enough."

    Detroit has a FAR worse reputation than it deserves. Michigan is actually an amazing place to live and much of the manufacturing doesn't actually take place in Detroit itself. The summers are beautiful and the winters have lots of activities for those not afraid to step outside, you are never more than about 80 miles from the coast of one of the Great Lakes, cost of living is reasonable, and believe it or not a lot of the best and brightest are ALREADY HERE. Michigan has the 4th highest amount of high tech employment in the US among major metro areas. You think those people are here against their will?

    1. Re:Michigan is 4th in high tech employment by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      You think those people are here against their will?

      Not exactly, but I bet you could get an awful lot of them to move to San Jose if you could offer them a similar standard of living. Midwestern winters suck if you prefer non-winter sports, and they extra suck if you have to commute more than a few miles, plows and salt nonwithstanding. If you prefer water sports, let's be honest, the beach on a Great Lake is not like the Pacific Ocean.

      I know some people who are engineers in the automotive industry and have a passion for cars. They live in the Detroit area because that's where a lot of those jobs are now. I assure you they don't live in Detroit for any other reason and would much prefer to live elsewhere. Elsewhere in the Midwest, even. It's very possible that these people are not representative of everyone who lives in the region, but short of taking my next vacation to Detroit and doing some interviews they're what I have to base my opinions on.

      Maybe it's different if you grew up there.

    2. Re:Michigan is 4th in high tech employment by AltairDusk · · Score: 1

      Having visited the region this summer I can't say much about inner Detroit as I only drove through but the area surrounding it is actually very nice. Go north more and it's beautiful. Another plus, they actually know how to drive out there, unlike my area of NJ.

    3. Re:Michigan is 4th in high tech employment by winwar · · Score: 1

      "Not exactly, but I bet you could get an awful lot of them to move to San Jose if you could offer them a similar standard of living. Midwestern winters suck if you prefer non-winter sports, and they extra suck if you have to commute more than a few miles, plows and salt nonwithstanding. If you prefer water sports, let's be honest, the beach on a Great Lake is not like the Pacific Ocean."

      But San Jose isn't exactly a great improvement over the midwest. When I think of places I would like to live in California, I never even think of San Jose. You might as well locate in South Carolina.

      But in the end people will go to the jobs. Location is highly overrated. Of course there is no reason that you have to have all of your engineers located where you build your cars.

  34. Re:silicon valley doesn't build most of its silico by JonySuede · · Score: 1

    why wont you go away if you don't like it here
    and is there a way to block all your nyms ?

    --
    Jehovah be praised, Oracle was not selected
  35. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by LWATCDR · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But I doubt that it will be Detroit. Texas and other states without the UAW controlling the governments will get the majority of new factories.
     

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  36. Manufacturing in Michigan by sjbe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Operating in Detroit has its own problems. The weather is harsh. Crime is high. Most of the people with competence and ambition moved out when the jobs did.

    Bullshit. The weather is fine unless you are a huge sissy and in case you didn't know, manufacturing occurs indoors. The workforce and engineering talent ALREADY lives here. Crime is not particularly high in most of Michigan. Since you are obviously ignorant about how things work in Detroit, most of the manufacturing does not take place in high crime areas. Very few companies actually make anything in Detroit proper - everyone moved out to the suburbs LONG ago. Oakland County (the one immediately to the north of Detroit proper) is one of the wealthiest counties in the entire country and one of only 10 or so with a AAA credit rating.

    The dumbest comment though is the last one you made. No one with any competence in Detroit? Spoken like an ignorant jackass who doesn't actually know anything about Detroit or what goes on there. Michigan has the 4th highest amount of high tech employment of any major metro area in the US. The place is absolutely crawling with engineering talent. Might not be as glamorous as microchips and software but make no mistake that there are a LOT of very smart people in Michigan.

    1. Re:Manufacturing in Michigan by zvar · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but I have to set you straight on the crime rate. Detroit and Flint are in the top 5 highest crime rates in the country. See http://www.infoplease.com/us/cities/safest-dangerous-cities.html to see. Yes the crime rate is better than 5 years ago, but to ignore it saying Michigan crime rate isn't high is almost a lie.

      Of course I do agree with you for everything else. I moved to Flint from Ft. Worth about 8 years ago. I love the climate here. The need to turn on the a/c for only about a week the whole year is awesome. Just about everyone I talk to, and I work in retail, so that is a very large cross sampling, hates winter. I'm the odd-ball that loves it when it snows.

  37. Re:They could say exactly the same thing about ene by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

    the technical domains (bioengineering, mechanical engineering, materials science) are only superficially relevant to Silicon Valley's prime skill set (microlithography, electrical engineering)

    Silicon Valley is pretty close to one of the nation's more significant biotech centers (South San Francisco.) Northern California, generally, is a pretty big area for bioengineering.

  38. Well what are they? by emuls · · Score: 1

    ...for three main reasons

    And from an earlier story

    Google has been asked to do four things before the Canadian Government would consider the matter resolved.

    What are these three or four things?!?

  39. What about the valley's aerospace industry? by OrangeTide · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These days, it takes $1 billion or more to design, engineer, test, certify, and launch a brand-new vehicle. And that takes roughly five years.

    How long do you think it takes to make a missile or satellite ? It's something silicon valley has been doing for year. If you want a more mainstream example, how long do you think it takes to make a cell phone from scratch? It's not just a bunch of desks and a few smart coders. It takes industrial design to go through iterations of the device, radio designers to simulate many iterations, and finally it has to be tested by government(s) and by carriers before the phone is finally able to ship. 2 years for this is considered "speed of light", if you have to redesign late in the process it can stretch out further.

    The Kindle took 4 years to develop in secret before it was released, and it's not a very complicated product. There are plenty of businesses in the valley that know that hardware is a long term investment, and that you have to put up a whole lot of capital to make it happen.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  40. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by couchslug · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Silicon Valley may be a hub for design but other parts of the country have far more expertise in nuts-and-bolts manufacturing."

    Lower wages, low energy costs, low cost of living, and no unions make South Carolina competitive. BMW didn't locate here by mistake, nor did Boeing.

    Price yourself out of the market and the market will adapt.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  41. Re:silicon valley doesn't build most of its silico by AltairDusk · · Score: 1

    I think some anger management classes would do you a lot of good...

  42. Bice, except the article was by geekoid · · Score: 1

    talking abut the technology that cars will need. Yeah, no one is going to start a new car plant just using SV engineers. But the SV is ideal place to develop the bits that will be needed.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  43. Nice article, not mirrored in reality by lelitsch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Nice polemic, and echoed widely. On the other hand, California leads the entire US by "value added by manufacturing" and on its own dwarfs the entirety of the Southern states the authors hold up as an example. For example, according to the US Census Bureau, California created $254bln in added manufacturing value with 1.3 million workers in 2008, South Carolina: $37bln with 230000 workers. If you crunch the numbers, you'll also see that California produces more value per worker than most other states. And until the meltdown last year, one of the primary car factories in the US was Nuumi in Fremont, CA, actually the Toyota plant Tesla bought.

    Yes, once prices come down and everyone can do it, it'll probably electric car manufacturing will probably move to other states and California will get started on the next thing. But to get this off the ground initially, Silicon Valley is a great spot, because all the expertise you need to debug the process is within a two hour drive.

    And by the way, Porsche, Mercedes, Audi, and BMW main factories are in Germany's most expensive areas, very few are in the more depressed parts (although Wolfsburg is really depressing).

    1. Re:Nice article, not mirrored in reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NUMMI was actually a joint GM/Toyota venture until both of them abandoned it the last year or so. It's kind of interesting how competing companies (GM and Toyota, and now Toyota and Tesla) are willing to work together.

    2. Re:Nice article, not mirrored in reality by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      Don't spoil their doom and gloom with facts. ;)

      California is a GDP monster and while it is true that in recent decades the number of people employed in manufacturing jobs has decreased in California they still employ a huge number and I suspect part of the reason manufacturing is moving elsewhere is not due to cost of living, taxes or regulations, it is because of competition for employees. Other technical industries in California are sucking up all the engineers and manufacturing has to compete with these other industries.

      And as far as the arguments that California has only micro-electronic engineers, pure BS, there are companies like Lam Research and Applied Materials that make the machines used for micro-electronic manufacturing and anyone who has worked on the machines knows they are heavy duty machines with a ton of mechanical engineering put into them.

      But there are a lot of people who want to see California fail for political reasons, there is plenty of hate from all directions directed at California, but even with their economic problems today their GDP puts pretty much everyone else to shame. Hell, they are supporting some of the other states with Federal tax dollars taken from California.

  44. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by lgw · · Score: 1

    Well, Tesla has the former NUMMI plant, with room to grow by quite a bit. That's a full-size auto manufacturing facility right next door to Silly Valley.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  45. Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by turkeyfish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Obama did save the US auto-industry, despite republican efforts to kill it, whether he gets any credit for it or not. However, Americans and in particular the auto makers in Detroit will need to make the most of their last chance to survive. This has less to do with politics than with a a willingness and wisdom to adopt a progressive mindset that isn't afraid to change with the times. This piece was all fluff, with no real substantiation or analysis of any of the claims that "the more things change the more they stay the same" (see the closing line [in French]). Seems as if its become popular to believe that competition only requires adopting conservative philosophies and borrowing money from foreigners is all that is needed to stay competitive, with no need to put in the effort to make the changes or investments in education and infrastructure to stay in the game.

    Tesla is partnering with Toyota and everyone knows that Toyota does know something about electric vehicles and does have deep pockets, if for no other reason that US taxpayers give them an indirect advantage by being so deeply in debt that their appreciating currency is worth more and more. Hence, they can buy more cheaply (from their perspective) to invest in joint ventures with Tesla and others. For geographic reasons alone, California would be an excellent location for Toyota to expand in the US, since they already have manufacturing plants in the southeastern US. Say what you will about California's progressive politics, but they have a far better educated workforce (assuming Meg Whtiman isn't successful in her promise to dismantle the University System) that is much better able to adapt and utilize to the new technologies that are the future of the auto industry, lots of electronics and experimentation with light-weight composite materials. Like anything else in life, you get what you pay for and for that better quality work force and higher standard of living for workers, one pays a bit more, yes. However, the piece makes the error in thinking that means it won't be cost effective. So long as they can use these advantages California offers to innovate faster than their competition and increase their productivity relative to their competitors, which these days is all about industrial robotics production, rather than reemploying armies of less-than high tech factory workers to do the same job, they will do just fine. Off-shoring jobs with minimal assembly and manufacturing in the US has been and continues be to the preferred republican approach to drive corporate profits, but this is rapidly reaching a point of limited returns, since ultimately it robs American consumers of buying power, the primary reason we now see so few jobs. Likewise, the notion that you will need big steel plants close by is yesterday's thinking, which is what is expressed in this PR piece, and why, if Detroit doesn't get its act together soon, it won't be much of a player in the automotive business going forward.

    There will be a big shift from a petroleum based automotive industry to an electricity based automotive industry. The only real question is who will be the one to make the money.

    Asia is way out ahead of the US in these technologies and it is unclear if America will ever again be a dominant player in the automotive industry, especially in a US auto industry that is unwilling or unable to keep up with technological progress and unable to break the lock and interconnecting web of entanglements with the oil industry. Consequently, California is well positioned with both its high tech base and forward looking industries, compared to Detroit. Likewise, it has lots of nearly free sunshine and wind and its citizenry is busy making use of it to get off their addiction to foreign oil.

    Frankly, this piece displays a rather ignorant smugness of conservative status-quo thinking that Detroit and America can't afford to have, if they want to stay competitive. Sure, the politics of big oil and PR will keep Detroit in the game for some time to com

    1. Re:Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Obama did save the US auto-industry

      Obama saved the unions at GM and Chrysler. He saved the names GM and Chrysler. He destroyed the bondholders, who by law own the company's assets when it goes bankrupt. He destroyed and continues to destroy the principle of rule by law. He preserved the principle of legally protected union thuggery.

      Had GM and Chrysler gone bankrupt, the assets, if they were capable of productive use (which is saying if they were capable of doing more good than harm) would have been sold to organizations capable of running them at a profit. Instead they continue to bleed the economy, disguising losses with money from the government.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    2. Re:Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      Republican efforts to kill the auto industry? You've GOT to be fucking kidding. Just because they were against bailing out companies that ran themselves into the ground through incompetent management, low quality products, and overpaid union workers does NOT mean that they were trying to "kill" the industry, merely make then accountable for their actions. I find it amusing that Democrats such as yourself screamed bloody murder about bailing out banks (which, while distasteful, prevented the collapse of the financial industry which would make it virtually impossible for people to buy cars, homes, or go to college for several years until we had a new banking industry), yet you're cheering on bailing out the auto industry which knew for well over a decade that they were going to go bust if they didn't make changes and they never did.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    3. Re:Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by fredrated · · Score: 1

      "Democrats such as yourself screamed bloody murder about bailing out banks"
      Really? All I hear are the tea baggers, the lunatic arm of the Republican party, repeatedly denouncing the bank bailout and blaming the democrats.

    4. Re:Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "He destroyed and continues to destroy the principle of rule by law"

      Huh? That is a pretty broad damning statement. Care to back it up with examples?

      "Had GM and Chrysler gone bankrupt, the assets, if they were capable of productive use (which is saying if they were capable of doing more good than harm) would have been sold to organizations capable of running them at a profit. "

      And what do you think the rest of the world would be doing while our auto industry was out of action for 5-10 years trying to reclaim market share, re-branding, and forming new business models? And what organization has the capital to buy GM, a GM deep in debt, who isn't already in competition with GM? Why would they want a bunch of factories and car designs that have proven themselves not as workable/marketable as their own?

      Slightly offtopic, but about unions:

      I'm always curious when I read posts from people that are anti-union (I'm assuming by your tone), what type of system they think would work better to balance the wages and rights of workers against the profit motivation of companies?

      Companies attempt to push wages and benefits down as low as they can go. It is a very easy and straightforward way to increase profit. What market force (or other force) would keep wages and benefits at a living level?

      If you look at pre-union America, worker conditions and salary were horrible. Because every company was basically paying minimum wage, even if a worker chose to leave, he wouldn't find anything better. Companies had no incentive to raise wages or improve conditions.

      Prior to unions, there was no concept of the weekend. What market force would have created weekends?

      There are a ton of factors involved in America's manufacturing decline. And I'd rank unions pretty low on the list. Take Germany as an example of a nearly 100% unionized car work force, who's economy is in pretty great shape.

    5. Re:Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by sysrammer · · Score: 1

      Good piece, there. I may not agree with all of it, but it was a good read.

      thx, sr

      --
      His ignorance covered the whole earth like a blanket, and there was hardly a hole in it anywhere. - Mark Twain
    6. Re:Trapped by narrow ideology and thinking. by sysrammer · · Score: 1

      I'm not clear on this...

      "He destroyed the bondholders" ...I don't know how that all worked out.

      From the wiki, I see...

      "Not surprisingly, any recapitalization (typically through bankruptcy) would all but wipe out the value of existing common stock shares, which have declined significantly already.[41]" ...and, apparently from your post, you consider bankruptcy would have been better than what did happen.

      thx, sr

      --
      His ignorance covered the whole earth like a blanket, and there was hardly a hole in it anywhere. - Mark Twain
  46. Hello, Supervillains! by coldsalmon · · Score: 1

    America's government and business leaders continue to ignore the documented threat of supervillains. The article doesn't even mention the possibility of Christopher Walken causing a catastrophic "double earthquake" and simultaneous flood to wipe out all industry in the Valley. What kind of catastrophe will it take to make our leaders consider a top-hat-wearing megalomaniac in a dirigible a credible threat?

  47. Ignorant Comment by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    California leads the world in the manufacturing of high tech equipment, software, and movie production, not to mention the manufacture of fruits and vegetables.

    Try to do something positive for California and rebuild it, rather than tearing it down for a few conservative political brownie talking points, and California will be just fine.

    1. Re:Ignorant Comment by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 3, Informative

      Huh? Leads the world in manufacture of what? Go talk to the few Bay Area machine shops still left standing and ask them about manufacturing of high tech equipment. Go talk to a chip maker like Parallax and ask them their opinion on setting up fab in California. Wasn't there just an article on /. about how movies are being made anywhere except California? Heck, they're moving completely out of the U.S. altogether. You really think New Zealand is home to so many huge-budget films just because Peter Jackson was born there? You really think a movie exec signing a $100 million check cares where some dude was born? There are very few companies actually coding software here in the U.S., even California. My landlord got let go from his 20+ years at the IBM Almaden research center to get replaced by Indians, in India.

      I am doing things for California. I own a small business and I'm not giving up on it. I help out when I can with candidates I feel are genuine, like John Dennis up in San Francisco. I am hoping to be working with several volunteer groups on real reforms for the state's utterly failed legislature. But I have to admit, the state is only worth so much money to me. If things keep going the way they are going, I will move elsewhere, probably Austin.

      It is my opinion that your ignorance and holding on to victories of the past and refusing to face the brutal facts of reality are more damaging to this state than almost anything else. We are in crisis, and the worst is yet to come.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    2. Re:Ignorant Comment by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1
      California leads the world in ... movie production, not to mention the manufacture of fruits

      Remember, correlation != causation.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  48. Laughable comment by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    but supporting polluting oil companies to perpetuate a 150 year old internal combustion engine technology is progressive. Yeah, right.

    1. Re:Laughable comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Laughable comment"

      How could you write that and NOT get the joke?
      What's another name for liberal? Progressive Doh!

    2. Re:Laughable comment by turkeyfish · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sorry these days, there is such a dearth of reason coming from conservatives that its too easy to miss the sarcasm.

      I did laugh in a sense though, didn't I?

  49. Mississippi Taxes by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Then you ought to move to the progressive state of Mississippi, where taxes are extremely low and as a result they have a history of out-competing California in every industry and technology, especially health care, high tech, and environmental technologies.

    The republican love for low taxes for billionaires, blinds them at seeing what is plainly evident in front of their face. I guess those billionaires who run the republican party have its rank and file so tightly grabbed by their gonadal arteries that it has cut of the blood flow to their brains. The reality is that if Californian tax dollars were not flowing to Red States like Mississippi, Mississippi would be even poorer than it is. What on earth are you complaining about?

    1. Re:Mississippi Taxes by stdarg · · Score: 1

      "California" does not pay taxes that go to Mississippi. The top 1% of income earners pay 38% of all federal income tax. It just so happens that a lot of that 1% live in nice places like NYC or LA, not rural Mississippi.

      It's really arrogant and wrong to get all high and mighty because your *neighbor* pays a lot of taxes. I mean maybe you are one of those people, but the typical Californian is not.

  50. Re:They could say exactly the same thing about ene by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    California has steadily been making the state hostile to actual manufacturing

    after seeing how polluted and poisoned it made other countries and states (and our earlier history).

  51. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Doesn't really matter to the investors. They are interested in returns rather than the interests of the average Joe, whether he is in Bangladesh or Dearborn, Michigan.

    The important thing is that the enterprise starts and succeeds in California rather than elsewhere, because that is what keeps the bulk of the cash flowing back to predominantly California investors. There are a lot of backers of Tesla Motors in Hollywood that are going to make a lot of money if they succeed, as they will have the potential to transfer oil company and Saudi Arabian profits into their own pockets. The potential for profits are enormous and that is why big oil is doing everything it possibly can to stop companies like Tesla Motors from succeeding. Unfortunately, for them Toyota is partnering with Tesla and they already have technology now coming on line globally to transfer a sizable chunk of oil company profits into their own as well.

    People who don't think so are going to feel pretty foolish, as they watch as others whiz by on the freeways driving cars that can take them across the country for as little as $25 - $50 to "fill up", and they are still shucking out $3.50 or more per gallon to get their gas guzzler just to work and back, with no chance to take that cross-country vacation because they invested all their cash in gasoline.

  52. No big deal by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Fox has been doing this kind of stuff for years, its just that they got so good at it that they have finally forced other networks to start acting the same way. Get with the party program or get out. Its the new American way. As privatizationg continues you might as well get used to it.

  53. Re:Are you kidding? by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Texas is rapidly becoming one of the poorest states in the nation. There is less and less buying power in Texas. Manufacturers would do better to focus on markets where they can make money. The marketing types at most major corporations have already begun to figure this out.

  54. But they were smart enough to by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    partner with Toyota and no one can say Toyota doesn't know how to compete with Detroit. Detroit needs to control its smugness or it will again find itself begging for a bailout, which will be a hard act to pull off the next time their execs underestimate the competition.

  55. Funny by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    It doesn't seem to have bothered the Koreans or Japanese much.

  56. Old Thinking by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Composites rather than steel will be the future of cars, just as it now is in aeronautics.

  57. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by perpenso · · Score: 1

    Doesn't really matter to the investors. They are interested in returns rather than the interests of the average Joe, whether he is in Bangladesh or Dearborn, Michigan.

    The important thing is that the enterprise starts and succeeds in California rather than elsewhere, because that is what keeps the bulk of the cash flowing back to predominantly California investors.

    The above does not seem to make sense. If investors are interested in returns they don't care where manufacturing takes place. Also where manufacturing takes place, in the US at least, does not impede profits flowing back to California investors. As for the "Hollywood" influence, with film production increasingly leaving California I don't think Hollywood's involvement suggests manufacturing in California.

  58. Simply false by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    California is already ramping up more and more solar and wind. Only the first wave is beginning to come on line. Lots of sunshine in California, with no need to send money to the Saudi's, Venezuelans, and Mexicans, nor pay for occupying armies to keep the oil spigots flowing, or taxes to mitigate environmental damage associated with petroleum.

    Electric cars will only speed this up dramatically, especially if some of the initial production is in California, as it will be an increased incentive for locals to buy local made products. California is on the right track, its just that huge oil-company money is holding it back, but not for long.

  59. Ignorance is Bliss by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Tesla Motors was smart to partner with Toyota, who may ultimate be investing in them to ultimately buy them out. If Detroit thinks it can stay smug about Toyota, they will again be doing more than whistling as they walk past graveyards, they will become one.

  60. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    The manufacturing can take place elsewhere, just as the movies can be made elsewhere. The critical issues is where the profits wind up, not the manufacturing. Typically, the profits wind up in the hands of the first investors in, who tend to be the ones who where their when things got off the ground. Hollywood still must have some pull as does Silicon Valley. Schwartznegger the governor is from California. You really think that some of his friends aren't from Hollywood either?

  61. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by Caerdwyn · · Score: 1
    The keys about the NUMMI plant are:
    1. It already existed, along with workers already here
    2. A huge tax exemption was given to Tesla to persuade them not to leave

    Point 1 means you don't have to build the plant, get permits, etc., you just have to move in. It also means there is a workforce with relevant skills and who had been managing the cost of living (either by being long-term homeowners or living in by-local-standards moderately priced housing in the East Bay), and which can be reemployed without the burden of the UAW agreements which Tesla is not bound to. Both of those conditions are significant.

    Part 2 is because without tax credits and other subsidies, it is FAR too expensive here in California to do a manufacturing business. The regulatory burden here is very high, as are taxes and fees (even if you form your corporation as, say a Nevada or Delaware corp, you're still paying 9%+ sales tax, very high non-income-related taxes, along with other fees). It just plain makes no financial sense to manufacture anything in California without either heavy tax relief or for which the cost of transportation exceeds the increased tax/regulatory burden. Those subsidies exist because otherwise Tesla would have been a high-visibility spotlight on the harsh business climate for manufacturers of physical goods here, and nobody in the state wanted that embarrassment. It's hard to claim to be a high-tech capital when the best and brightest are fleeing to places that want them more and tax them less. (If I ever decide to take a shot at manufacturing the product ideas I have in my head, it will absolutely not be in California.)

    Several of my relatives worked in the NUMMI plant before it was NUMMI (it was Ford at the time). A bit of family history there.

    --
    Everybody gets what the majority deserves.
  62. Silicon Valley is the right place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tesla happened in SV because the rest of the country doesn't have the start-up mentality. Better to do your design work here and then manufacture elsewhere. Going to Detroit is a mistake - old ways of doing things and lack of vision are pretty ingrained - look at the Volt.

  63. Exit strategy by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Will the last person out please turn off the lights?

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  64. In a country with freedom of movement by brokeninside · · Score: 1

    That you decide to live in California with its "high" taxes rather than Texas or Florida with their "0" taxes speaks volumes.

    1. Re:In a country with freedom of movement by lgw · · Score: 1

      I follow my career from place to place. Calistupid is just another stop along the line, not anyplace I would choose to live given more financial freedom. I'll be moving back to a state with no income taxes soon enough - hopefully before the rioting, burning, and looting start here (I'm imagining things will go down like Greece and France here once the budget is actually cut).

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  65. I question whether SV does much innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SV has well-earned laurels from the past. But I have to wonder if this is still true. Sure, there have been a number of small things rolled out. But nothing like there was before.

    In the 1970's, you had the explosion of innovation based on the newly created computer chip.

    In the 1980's, you had the explosion based on personal computers.

    In the 1990's, you had yet another explosion based on the Internet.

    In the 2000's, you had, mmm, what? The dot-com crash?

    Seriously, sure, there's fru-fru like Twitter and Facebook. But nothing like the three decades before. In comparison, things seem positively dead around here. Sure, there's still money to be made. But nothing world-changing really happened in the 00's.

    I have to wonder between all of the fly-by-night artists, the lawyers and the H1-B's whether there's still any innovation left.

  66. Wrong kind of programmers, too. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article says:

    Wrong kind of engineers ...

    Silicon Valley may have proficient coders oozing out of every condo complex, but it lacks--and isn't likely to develop--large numbers of engineers with the right mix of automotive mechatronics and high-voltage systems skills.

    But it misses a point: Silicon Valley has the wrong kind of PROGRAMMERS, too. In particular, the valley's levels of software reliability and bug density are far too poor.

    I started my programming career in Southeastern Michigan, and spent 15 of the first 20 years of it in the auto industry, so I know whereof I speak. ANY bit of software written for the auto industry is almost certainly life-critical. Some examples, from my own experience (mainly keeping the nightmare scenarios from happening):

      - A bug in the idle speed control results in a line of cars that tends to stall after a car length or two when accelerating from a stop sign.
      - A bug in the airbag testing software fires a proof-sample airbag while the worker is leaning over it on the test fixture (rather than after he's out of the chamber, the doors are closed, and the alarm has sounded for the required time).
      - A bug in the plant energy management system blacks out all the lights in the factory while the workers are interacting with the still-operating machinery.
      - A bug in the alarm system doesn't signal when the "flame curtain" over one end of the annealing oven fails. With no warning the plant soon fills (starting near the ceiling) with hot, carbon-monixide laden, "reducing atmosphere" gas, poisoning hundreds of workers before reaching lower-explosive-limit at an ignition source and blowing acres of roof into the next county.

    And so on.

    When I moved to Silicon valley I was ASTOUNDED at the low level of software reliability here. Design-for-reliability and even debugging subordinated to "feature velocity". Product shipped with hundreds, or thousands, of bugs. Business models that MONETIZED bugs - by selling contracts to fix them (creating the incentive to ship them for fixing later). And so on. (And open source isn't a cure for this: While it doesn't ship until the original programmer or team is happy with it, it mostly gets its reliability by accelerating the fixes, not by annealing the code into crystalline perfection BEFORE it first ships.)

    Ship a bug in a car's software and you incur the cost of a RECALL.

    At the first place I worked here in the valley one of my colleagues said I was the only guy he'd trust to program his pacemaker. Another said "["Rod"] takes three times as long to write code - but his stuff usually works the first time." (Which is not true: When you do it right - which involves getting the bugs out right away - you can code and debug blazingly fast. I would only deliver when something was finished to my satisfaction - after hundreds of debugging iterations. But my delivery of a completed project would be compared to single iterations of the others' debugging.)

    Thus I gravitated (back) to "the hard side of the force" - moving into chip design. (It's of comparable complexity to a large application these days. And it's about the only function in the valley where Detroit-level reliability is valued: Eliminating a silicon spin is about equivalent to eliminating a recall in cost to the company, but it shows up in time-to-market savings.)

    So while there are some other programmers like me available here, an auto company attempting to staff-up in Silicon Valley won't be looking for the sort of programmer that constitutes the bulk of the Valley's programming culture. (They'll do well to hire from "back home" in the rust belt or people transplanted from there, hardware designers, or programmers of medical, telecom, or MIL products.) Worse, the middle-managers here who administer the programmers are steeped in - actually the creators of - this software-unreliability culture. If the new auto company's personnel execs don't figure this out in time you can imagine the debacle when the product hits market - or the delays and cost during the delicate venture-funded stage as they try to retrofit quality into their firmware - or rip it out and replace it.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Wrong kind of programmers, too. by flyingkillerrobots · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. Pretty please?

      --
      "It is a good thing for an uneducated man to read books of quotations..." -Winston Churchill
    2. Re:Wrong kind of programmers, too. by oldCoder · · Score: 1

      Lots of real-time and embedded code is life-critical and has the requirements you talked about. Of course, social networking websites are the opposite. But aircraft, satellites, military, medical equipment, telecom, and so on are just as critical. Look at the reliability inside your laser printer software. This software are made in the Silicon Valley and other tech centers on the west coast, from LA to Seattle.

      --

      I18N == Intergalacticization
  67. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by lgw · · Score: 1

    I'm just saying, despite all the obstacles, Tesla has a union-free auto plant already built, on a heavy rail line. So you can't say it's not possible.

    I don't understand why people would start any company in Cali, let alone heavy industry, but oddly enough they do.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  68. Utah, period. by Pezbian · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Plenty of space, plenty of people, plenty of talent, strong work ethic principles from both the Mormons and the Mexicans, plenty of rail access and roads for transport....

    It's called The Beehive State for a very good reason. Build outside of the liquefaction zones and you're golden.

    --
    In a world of the blind, the one-eyed man is king--and the two-eyed man is a heretic.
  69. Laughable Understanding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That internal combustion engine you disdain is more efficient over the lifecycle of the auto than any other means of transportation.

    I know you think stuff like the Prius is green, but its not. Its a device to make mushy brained people feel better about themselves.

    1. Re:Laughable Understanding by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      That internal combustion engine you disdain is more efficient over the lifecycle of the auto than any other means of transportation.

      Sail boats

      Bicycles

      Feet

      Kayaks

    2. Re:Laughable Understanding by jtev · · Score: 1

      Land sailing is only practical in certain locations. I'm not sure if California is one of them, as I have never lived there. Also, the wind is rather unreliable. Sail boats suffer from only being usable in certain locations as well, limiting their ability to be used in non-coastal areas.

      Bicycles use energy from humans. While there are many benefits to the human providing the energy this has two huge drawbacks. The first is that it requires that the human become physically conditioned to its use, the second is that fuel for humans is more expensive than fuel for internal combustion engines.

      Feet: see bicycles, only even more so.

      kayaks: only usable on waterways, see bicycles for energy analysis.

      --
      That which is done from love exists beyond good and evil
    3. Re:Laughable Understanding by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      I thought we were talking about transport, not just land transport. I ride a bicycle to and from work (20 km per day). It uses the energy I would have consumed anyway and mostly wasted.

  70. BTU per citizen? by FrankHS · · Score: 1

    It could be low because it doesn't get very cold here in California.

    1. Re:BTU per citizen? by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      They are using all energy used by California divided by all the people who live in California. Climates won't make a difference when evaluating energy used in manufacturing.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

  71. Aircraft are harder than cars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    East Bay:
    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - Livermore, CA
    Aero Precision Industries - Livermore, CA
    Peregrine Falcon Corporation - Pleasanton, CA
    Alameda Aerospace - Alameda, CA
    Erg Materials & Aerospace Corporation - Berkeley, CA
    Ocellus Inc - Livermore, CA
    Inspace Systems - Oakland, CA
    Braxton Technologies - Pleasanton, CA
    General Dynamics Corporation - San Leandro, CA

    Pennisula:
    L 3 Communications - San Carlos, CA
    Peninsula Avionics, LLC - Mountain View, CA
    Northrop Grumman - Oakland & San Francisco, CA
    Ideal Aerosmith, Inc - Menlo Park, CA

    South Bay:
    Space Systems/Loral - Palo Alta, CA
    Honeywell International - Fremont, CA

    Santa Cruz:
    Lockheed Martin Space Systems - Boulder Creek, CA

  72. Possibly would give a new meaning to Mo-town by Yergle143 · · Score: 1

    A good idea. Many other states would be good as well. And you know what, the powers that bee are going to ship the jobs to Cathay no matter what we say.

    1. Re:Possibly would give a new meaning to Mo-town by Pezbian · · Score: 1

      I never even thought of Mo-town, but you are right. Salt Lake City has been called that.

      Idaho would be another good state, other than the biting cold. That didn't faze Micron or HP, though. Actually, Micron has a chip plant in Lehi, Utah.

      Another Utah upside: The engineers you have easiest access to are building rockets and missiles for ATK. With the space program getting the shaft, ATK has layoffs quite often and I'm sure there are those who just don't want to deal with it anymore. Most of those live in Brigham City and commute to the remote ATK facility in Promontory.

      Once the FrontRunner commuter rail system receives the planned Brigham City extension from Ogden, these people will have a way as far down as Provo that doesn't involve I-15.

      It's like a snake ready to strike.

      --
      In a world of the blind, the one-eyed man is king--and the two-eyed man is a heretic.
  73. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by xaxa · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The article mentions England/UK twice:
    "Executives confirmed that the company recruits literally all over the world for engineers with the right mix of experience, including from England’s ample supply of Formula 1 race-car engineers."
    "The company developed its groundbreaking Roadster smartly, by adapting and reusing large portions of an existing car—the Lotus Elise sports car—and outsourcing much of that work to Lotus itself, along with the manufacturing (in the U.K.)."

    Perhaps the "green car Detroit" won't even be in the USA.

  74. Re:Are you kidding? by stdarg · · Score: 1

    But if jobs move to Texas, buying power will increase. Kind of like China over the past 20-30 years.

  75. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You seriously think the *unions* are controlling the governments? How deluded can one become?

  76. Re:Designed in California. Made in [not California by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

    Any state that has a law that requires me to join a Union if I want a certain job is controlled by the union.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  77. Green ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real "Green Car" looks like this: http://hembrow.blogspot.com/search/label/sinner%20mango