Why does it take a million fucking years for technology to be developed and mass produced? We won't see this for 20 years.
This technology exists, it's ripe for the taking.
They could use this for electric cars and cell phones.
Nolan Gonzalez
Because it's a matter of cost and profit margins. If they can pay less and make more off basic shit they're going to produce basic shit.
You have: -Basic tier -mid tier -high tier
Basic is cheap trash, mid is where the focus is, and high is meant for egotistical dumbasses who pay 3x the cost of mid to feel special for minimal gains.
Basic is leftovers used to create a cheaper product and high is just there to drain money to fuel mid tier.
Tl;Dr money.
Justin Gutierrez
>new types of batteries which last a super long time and recharge in seconds gee this again? only hear about this "revolutionairy" new battery tech on a monthly basis. fake, and gay. even if it isn't fake and gay, it will never ever reach the market for consumers.
Brayden Nguyen
because government regulations
Brandon Wood
Bechause of the jews.
Elijah Turner
>Lithium-air means using oxygen as the oxidiser, rather than a material.
I don't think someone knows how batteries work.
Brandon Hall
>I don't think someone knows how batteries work. You're right, user, good thing the aliens left tons of those artifacts behind.
Julian Ross
>Why does it take a million fucking years for technology to be developed and mass produced?
| |> |3 | |
Brody Davis
I wish we lived under free market capitalism with no central banks, where companies would be able to save a massive amount of money with zero inflation so they would be able to do long term projects like high tech batteries.
Ayden Fisher
>it will never ever reach the market for consumers. Yes.
We know.
OP is asking WHY?
Kevin Ward
If batteries aren't disposable then battery companies will lose money.
Thomas Clark
Phone and car companies don't give a shit about that.
Andrew Moore
They would have no incentive to.
The only way to increase value for shareholders on a quarterly basis is to make minimal technological improvements available at a slow and steady rate, and market each tiny increase in performance as indispensable to play whichever lame fps currently heads the steam sales chart.
Which is precisely what you get.
Blake Cruz
but they do most likely to break and need replacing (after headphone jack and screen) phones are spy devices anyways, so having them in more peoples hands the better.
cars are unimportant as oil is infinitely cheaper and surprisingly, less dangerous.
Daniel Campbell
Holy shit this is such old news. Post when theres actually a concrete product coming out or kys
Ryder Bennett
You're retarded. That's not how reality works
Thomas Ross
This is all fake spread sheet designs with no real world prototypes because they don't work.
People make up something that looks good on paper, they found sheep to give them money to develop it, then they declare the company bankrupt then go live a comfortable life.
Josiah Long
Because that's marketing hype. It's like if transistors were promoted as "super fast machinery that can emulate massive worlds and can be as small as 10 atoms" 50 years ago. These popscience articles refer to potential, not what we can functionally do with them
Jaxson Flores
>Why does it take a million fucking years for technology to be developed and mass produced?
hmmmmm.... really makes you think ... .. .
Robert Wilson
>decentralized currency >stable Pick one. This is basically bitcoin, and it's value fluctuates between 300 and 900 USD every year. I do think it would be much more stable if it was globally used as a daily currency by millions of people, but that will never happen.
Kevin Rodriguez
No, they do not. That's expensive to produce and would not sell as often as parts which you need to replace. See what "planned obsolescence" is. Welcome to consumerism. Everyone has a phone or wants one already, phone companies don't need to achieve anything else.
Joseph Young
seems like a terrible business plan to sell a truly futureproof phone
Leo Lewis
Is this another ultra-mega-hypercapacitor?
Henry Martinez
no apparently
Christopher Hughes
what does think of this?
Brayden Cox
Dunno about biz, but any economist with sense would point out that it's turboretardation and naive beyond all reason
Brandon Hall
Oh, does it mean we can finally start fitting phones with 32 cores?