Even with evidence staring them in the face, carriage companies still did not pivot, assuming cars were a fad. For carriage companies this was the “denial and drift” phase of disruption.
The Tipping Point: Ford’s Model T and Mass Production (1908–1925) The Ford Model T introduced in 1908 was affordable ($825 to as little as $260 by the 1920s), durable and easy to repair, and made using assembly line mass production. Within 15 years tens of millions of Americans owned cars. Horse-related businesses — not only the carriage makers, but the entire ecosystem of blacksmiths, stables, and feed suppliers — began collapsing. Cities banned horses from downtown areas due to waste, disease, and congestion. This was like the arrival of Google, the iPhone or ChatGPT: a phase shift.
Early Autos Were Niche and Experimental (1890s–1905) The first cars (steam, electric, and early gas) were expensive, unreliable, and slow. They were built by 19th century mechanical nerds. And the few that were sold were considered toys for other nerds and the rich. (Carl Benz patented the first internal combustion engine in 1886. In 1893 Frank Duryea drove the first car in the U.S.)
These early cars coexisted with a massive horse-powered economy. Horses pulled wagons, delivered goods, powered streetcars, and people. The first automakers used the only design they knew: the carriage. Drivers sat up high like they did in a carriage when they had to see over the horses.
For the first 15 years carriage makers, teamsters, and stable owners saw no immediate threat. Like AI today: autos were powerful, new, buggy, unreliable and not yet mainstream.
There was already a revolution in electric transportation -- 100 years ago -- and gas won.The article shown above reminds me of the current revolution in electric transportation ...
And the first hydrocarbon-powered cars were designed to run on renewable fuels: Ford's on ethanol and Diesel's on peanut oil.There was already a revolution in electric transportation -- 100 years ago -- and gas won.
Rare earth magnets and lithium (and other techs) batteries did not exist back thenThere was already a revolution in electric transportation -- 100 years ago -- and gas won.
Neither did fuel injection or ECUs.Rare earth magnets and lithium (and other techs) batteries did not exist back then
Yes, and without poor people paying for rich people's cars, there would be no market for them....it's been relying on subsidies...
Not always, sometimes militaries act without orders.Might as well. Conflicts are the result of failed diplomacy!
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/thailand-cambodia-1.7593789Why they are attacking civilians is beyond me. Ordinary people. trying to go about their daily business and suddenly that is a torrent of rocket propelled grenades. Not that the F16 make much sense either.