bonnie
I play a nice person on twitter.
Does that mean I am free to think less of people who think less of.... oh, never mind. I hate recursion anyway.
Y'all have a nice day! Think Less!
I think that's an endless loop - no recursion there.
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Does that mean I am free to think less of people who think less of.... oh, never mind. I hate recursion anyway.
Y'all have a nice day! Think Less!
Yes, feel free to think less of me for thinking less of him :smile:.Does that mean I am free to think less of people who think less of.... oh, never mind. I hate recursion anyway.
Y'all have a nice day! Think Less!
That corresponds with Elon's mention sometime in 2014 of probably building city superchargers for those without home charging (a situation that does not apply to OP though).We strategically place Superchargers along well-traveled highways and in congested city centers where home charging is difficult.
I recommend others do the same and do not listen to self appointed guardians of guilt.
“First principles” is a physics way of looking at the world…what that really means is that you boil things down to the most fundamental truths…and then reason up from there…that takes a lot more mental energy… - Elon Musk
I prefer to take the word of the company I bought the car from, in plain English, rather than letting someone on the forums tell me why I should feel "somewhat unethical" about using Supercharging.
And seeing how I spent $2000 for that right/privilege/opportunity, I will (continue) to use it as I see fit.
I recommend others do the same and do not listen to self appointed guardians of guilt.
Tesla does not say you can't do this. However, they also do not say you SHOULD do this (with the exception of if you have no home charging option). The analogy is also apt there in most "free" things. They don't limit explicitly how much you take, but they also don't encourage you to take with no restraints. Actually thinking more closely, I think this actually is closer to first principles, it strips away the situation to examine the fundamental issue at hand and is applicable to so many situations ("free" things with no explicit limits).I prefer to take the word of the company I bought the car from, in plain English, rather than letting someone on the forums tell me why I should feel "somewhat unethical" about using Supercharging.
And seeing how I spent $2000 for that right/privilege/opportunity, I will (continue) to use it as I see fit.
I recommend others do the same and do not listen to self appointed guardians of guilt.
Yes, feel free to think less of me for thinking less of him :smile:..
Tesla does not say you can't do this. However, they also do not say you SHOULD do this (with the exception of if you have no home charging option). The analogy is also apt there in most "free" things. They don't limit explicitly how much you take, but they also don't encourage you to take with no restraints.
It's fine you don't feel any guilt about this, but I think the OP does, or he would not ask here.
As you try to make others feel guilty by your words ... love the irony on this forum at times.
Tesla does not say you can't do this. However, they also do not say you SHOULD do this...
I almost hesitate to quote again; but this is a direct copy paste from that second page:
How often can I Supercharge?
Customers are free to use the network as much as they like.
I think of the "free for life" supercharger like an "all you can eat" buffet. Can you make repeated visits to the buffet? Yes. Are you hurting others if you take seconds, thirds, fourths, or even more? Not likely. Would I think you were strange if you told me you often skip breakfast and lunch in order to save money by getting all your days food at a fixed price dinner? Yes.
To carry the analogy further, while the restaurant calls it an "all you can eat" buffet, and won't stop you from going back for seconds or thirds, at some point they're going to start getting annoyed with you for abusing the system and costing them money. Is that fourths? Fifths?I think of the "free for life" supercharger like an "all you can eat" buffet. Can you make repeated visits to the buffet? Yes. Are you hurting others if you take seconds, thirds, fourths, or even more? Not likely. Would I think you were strange if you told me you often skip breakfast and lunch in order to save money by getting all your days food at a fixed price dinner? Yes.
Don't they realize that if people take them at their word their business won't work?
I think of the "free for life" supercharger like an "all you can eat" buffet. Can you make repeated visits to the buffet? Yes. Are you hurting others if you take seconds, thirds, fourths, or even more? Not likely. Would I think you were strange if you told me you often skip breakfast and lunch in order to save money by getting all your days food at a fixed price dinner? Yes.
There are tons of businesses that sell and size their products based on expected user under- consumption, rather than max-possible consumption.
Internet service
Cellphone service (Phone service for that matter)
Emergency Rooms
Insurance
Police force / Fire departments
That doesn't make them sleazy.
If you want to always be guaranteed a 200mb/s connection just for you, and a cellphone that is guaranteed not to drop out in a crowd - no matter what, and an emergency room bed that's always available the moment you walk in... etc... well, be prepared to pay many orders of magnitude higher for your services than what you're paying now.