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Nina's Blog - Thursday 29th January 2026

Thursday 29th January 2026, 11:40

Today's must do task is to tidy up my bedroom and hanging spaces. But before I get started on that here is today's post.

I've been expecting this for some time:
Tesla discontinues Model X and S vehicles ...

“It’s time to basically bring the Model S and X programs to an end,” Musk said. “We expect to wind down S and X production next quarter.”

The model S and X factory in Fremont, California would be converted to produce Tesla’s upcoming Optimus robot, Musk said.

Tesla’s most recent quarterly earnings report showed slumping vehicle sales and declining revenue as Musk pins the company’s futures on AI and robotics. The earnings report described Tesla’s chaotic year as a “transition from a hardware-centric business to a physical AI company”.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jan/28/tesla-q4-earnings-estimates-elon-musk

So will Tesla itself survive?
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Boeing · 36-40
I was more Tesla positive but once you scratch the surface, it doesn't appear to be a sustainable source of power, digging the earth and extracting these minerals necessary to build the batteries etc.

To my understanding, Earth is a living organism in itself and is greatly disturbed by us sucking its liquids underneath its surface in such invasive ways and in such quantities.
I trust in the wisdom of nature and that elements are where they're needed to be for reasons, temperature regulations, stability, etc so it makes me so skeptical all these we're doing.
Gasoline it's the same, but at least is not pretending to be ecological.

I wanted to believe there is something positive going to come through the electric vehicles but I am not sure...
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
@Boeing All those things dug out of the ground to make EVs can be re-used to make more EVs (or other things like computers and mobile phones) when they wear out unlike oil which once burned is gone for ever.
Boeing · 36-40
@ninalanyon so what is your main concern for not liking them? The idea we will be dependable to such huge companies ? I mean we already are, to big car companies and gasoline stations, etc
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@ninalanyon Well, the metals can be re-used.

Mosty of th rest can't: the plastics, adhesives, paints, insulating laquers etc., the cars' and wind-turbines' lubricants and hydraulic fluids; and most of those are made from petroleum derivatives.

Even supposedly "recyclable" plastics - which are by no means all plastics - can be salvaged only a few times as they degrade.
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
@Boeing I don't dislike Tesla the company (most of the time at least) and I'm very fond of my car but Elon Musk has reached the point where he has outlived his usefulness to the company and is just flailing around trying things.

He was the right person at the right time at the beginning of Tesla and he pushed them into creating EVs that people actually wanted to buy and that in turn kicked the other car makers into the EV business. But now he is in the position that a lot of us find ourselves in: he had one good idea and the ability to push it through and this has convinced him that it was only his ability that made it happen rather than the confluence of people and circumstances, so he behaves as though all his ideas will be equally successful.

And of course the man is a neo-Nazi who should not be allowed anywhere near politics.

I'm not fond of really large companies at all, I think they have a distorting effect on society. However, some companies need to be big or they simply cannot operate efficiently enough to be useful and to continue to improve but in some cases this means they get so much power that they lose the direction and ethics that made them useful to the world.

I worked for most of my career in a multinational engineering company. It has about 120 000 employees around the world and is a major player in the markets it operates in; but it has a number of equally large competitors who make products serving those same markets so it has to be efficient, competitive, and forward thinking. Luckily it is also not in the business of selling mass market products to the general public so it is not so subject to changing fashions, many of the products it made over fifty years ago are still in use and are still maintainable and maintained. This is the kind of company that I think one can be at least pleased to work for, perhaps a little proud, and actually believe that one's job increases the sum of human happiness.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@ninalanyon I wonder how much Tesla is losing simply by competition, as the number of EV makers increases, and relatively low-cost cars become more widely available.

I think his 'Cybertruck' an expensive mistake because its practical use is limited, and it is not road-legal in many of the countries where the Tesla saloons do sell.
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
@ArishMell It depends on what you mean by losing. It isn't losing money, it's just not making as much as the stock market speculators want it to. It is losing market share to companies like VW and BYD. Some will say that this is because VW and BYD make smaller cheaper EVs that people can afford to buy but while this is true most of their European sales in similar sized vehicles to the Tesla Model 3, the VW ID.4 is VW's best selling EV I think.