It "looks" like they are making acquisitions here and there like Instagram. Investing in Social media companies are not my thing.qwerty said:i dont know about FB, i doubt they will be around in 50 years.
It "looks" like they are making acquisitions here and there like Instagram. Investing in Social media companies are not my thing.qwerty said:i dont know about FB, i doubt they will be around in 50 years.
irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
eyephone said:It "looks" like they are making acquisitions here in there like Instagram. Investing in Social media companies are not my thing.qwerty said:i dont know about FB, i doubt they will be around in 50 years.
irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
irvinehomeowner said:I envision cars with solar panel roofs that are efficient enough to drive the powertrain without having to plug in.
#thatsthepipedream
A lot of companies have started pouring more money into their hydrogen fuel cell technology then electric (from an R&D perspective). Hyundai has their Fuel Cell vehicle coming out sometime soon (2015 Tuscon). I think ultimately the goal, until you figure out a way to get entirely green, is to be as diverse as possible from an energy spectrum. Have a wide variety of options so that your overall energy costs as a country are never overly dependent on one area. A lot of progress has been made in this arena (in addition to the fact that we have found new ways to tap into various fuel sources...see fracking) is why manufacturing has been returning to the US (as we have a huge energy cost advantage that outweighs a higher cost of labor).eyephone said:irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
Plug-in is the way to go, not pure EV. A lot of car makers have or will soon release plug-in vehicles.
Bullsback said:A lot of companies have started pouring more money into their hydrogen fuel cell technology then electric (from an R&D perspective). Hyundai has their Fuel Cell vehicle coming out sometime soon (2015 Tuscon). I think ultimately the goal, until you figure out a way to get entirely green, is to be as diverse as possible from an energy spectrum. Have a wide variety of options so that your overall energy costs as a country are never overly dependent on one area. A lot of progress has been made in this arena (in addition to the fact that we have found new ways to tap into various fuel sources...see fracking) is why manufacturing has been returning to the US (as we have a huge energy cost advantage that outweighs a higher cost of labor).eyephone said:irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
Plug-in is the way to go, not pure EV. A lot of car makers have or will soon release plug-in vehicles.
The cost isn't much better either. I think the vehicles I had saw were going to be pretty expensive. Not sure what the Tuscon is but supposedly Honda has a vehicle coming out and it was in a Tesla price range. At that point, I don't know why you wouldn't go with that (in current conditions). Being an early adopter on this stuff tends to be expensive. Buy an EV1 early and you probably paid through your butt for something that stopped being utilized pretty early. This will likely be the same. Where does it get to, who knows. Still a lot of R&D to go.eyephone said:Bullsback said:A lot of companies have started pouring more money into their hydrogen fuel cell technology then electric (from an R&D perspective). Hyundai has their Fuel Cell vehicle coming out sometime soon (2015 Tuscon). I think ultimately the goal, until you figure out a way to get entirely green, is to be as diverse as possible from an energy spectrum. Have a wide variety of options so that your overall energy costs as a country are never overly dependent on one area. A lot of progress has been made in this arena (in addition to the fact that we have found new ways to tap into various fuel sources...see fracking) is why manufacturing has been returning to the US (as we have a huge energy cost advantage that outweighs a higher cost of labor).eyephone said:irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
Plug-in is the way to go, not pure EV. A lot of car makers have or will soon release plug-in vehicles.
Estimate to fill up hydrogen fuel cell car is $50 for 300 miles. (Rip off)
irvinehomeowner said:On the Hyundai H cell... the lease includes fuel too right?
With my work having charging stations, I'm looking at the Ford Fusion Plug-In and the Prius Plug-In. Like the fact that the Fusion goes ~20 miles on EV mode, which is perfect for my commute, which is all city, roughly 10-12 or so miles each way. Then on weekend driving we tend to drive and wouldn't get as much benefit of the plug-in, however, with the tax incentives, the price of a Fusion Plug-In vs. the Hybrid essentially becomes a wash, so at that point, why not just go for the plug-in.OpenToTheSky said:Bullsback said:A lot of companies have started pouring more money into their hydrogen fuel cell technology then electric (from an R&D perspective). Hyundai has their Fuel Cell vehicle coming out sometime soon (2015 Tuscon).eyephone said:irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
Plug-in is the way to go, not pure EV. A lot of car makers have or will soon release plug-in vehicles.
I've been on the waiting list for the Hyundai fuel cell car for months. The car actually started shipping this past June: http://www.edmunds.com/car-news/tus...yundai-tucson-fuel-cell-vehicle-delivery.html
There are two dealers in Southern California that are leasing them (lease only). Hyundai is producing a total of 50 (fifty) cars for the 2015 model year. If EVs aren't ready for primetime, fuel cell isn't even in dress rehearsal.
As a second car, hard to beat a pure EV. And hard to justify not getting one, unless you have a job with a lengthy (35+ mile) or unpredictable commute.
If a plug-in is your bag, my counsel is to get one soon. The state recently added more green stickers but there are only ~3,000 left even after adding to the allocation:http://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/carpool/carpool.htm
Per budget trailer bill, SB 853 (Statutes 2014, chapter 27), the green decal limit has been increased by 15,000 to a total of 55,000 stickers.
As of August 25, 2014, 52,034 "green" stickers have been issued. Green stickers are valid through January 1, 2019.
Bullsback said:With my work having charging stations, I'm looking at the Ford Fusion Plug-In and the Prius Plug-In. Like the fact that the Fusion goes ~20 miles on EV mode, which is perfect for my commute, which is all city, roughly 10-12 or so miles each way. Then on weekend driving we tend to drive and wouldn't get as much benefit of the plug-in, however, with the tax incentives, the price of a Fusion Plug-In vs. the Hybrid essentially becomes a wash, so at that point, why not just go for the plug-in.OpenToTheSky said:Bullsback said:A lot of companies have started pouring more money into their hydrogen fuel cell technology then electric (from an R&D perspective). Hyundai has their Fuel Cell vehicle coming out sometime soon (2015 Tuscon).eyephone said:irvinehomeowner said:In 50 years, when EV is ARMtime, won't XOM be dead too?
Plug-in is the way to go, not pure EV. A lot of car makers have or will soon release plug-in vehicles.
I've been on the waiting list for the Hyundai fuel cell car for months. The car actually started shipping this past June: http://www.edmunds.com/car-news/tus...yundai-tucson-fuel-cell-vehicle-delivery.html
There are two dealers in Southern California that are leasing them (lease only). Hyundai is producing a total of 50 (fifty) cars for the 2015 model year. If EVs aren't ready for primetime, fuel cell isn't even in dress rehearsal.
As a second car, hard to beat a pure EV. And hard to justify not getting one, unless you have a job with a lengthy (35+ mile) or unpredictable commute.
If a plug-in is your bag, my counsel is to get one soon. The state recently added more green stickers but there are only ~3,000 left even after adding to the allocation:http://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/carpool/carpool.htm
Per budget trailer bill, SB 853 (Statutes 2014, chapter 27), the green decal limit has been increased by 15,000 to a total of 55,000 stickers.
As of August 25, 2014, 52,034 "green" stickers have been issued. Green stickers are valid through January 1, 2019.
zubs said:After all that's said and done, the only strategy I'm employing now is to buy and hold.
I had bought stock in MAR of 2009 when the S&P hit 666, and sold at the end of 2009. That was a mistake.
So now I just use Warren Buffets strategy, which is to buy a good company and hold it til I'm 70...I should be a billionaire by then.
By good company I mean one that will still be around in 50 years.
ob1 said:Another CNBC piece predicting doom:
"Two experts warn correction could total 60%"
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101950613
Scary.
ob1 said:Another CNBC piece predicting doom:
"Two experts warn correction could total 60%"
http://www.cnbc.com/id/101950613
Scary.