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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: October 25th, 2023

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  • >“Production volume is decreasing, so dispatch contracts are terminated in line with that,” the spokesperson said of the employees, hired through dispatch agencies, at Honda’s venture with China’s state-owned Guangzhou Automobile Group.

    Least convoluted employment relationship, maybe ever

    For Toyota at least it sounds like they’re cutting older models. Really hope the Yaris keeps on trucking!

    Anyway, I’ve always been a bit surprised at how well Japanese products sell in China; the Japanese did not treat them particularly well for nearly half a century of colonialism to put it mildly

    Then again, French, British, and American products are all popular there too, so maybe they hold grudges less than I would




  • stav_and_nickBtoElectric Vehicles@gearhead.townPolestar 3 review
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    10 months ago

    Personally, I think that Volvo should have tried to be Porsche; the ones I see most around here at the XC60s and 90s, which seem more naturally higher market than creating a completely new brand

    Let Polestar be a BMW fighter and let Volvo move upmarket. Makes more sense than creating a brand new one

    idk



  • Imagine how much better everything would be if governments weren’t cowards and mandated hybrid systems in everything back in the early 2000s after they were proven to be viable.

    More peppy economy cars, maybe 1/3rd less fuel consumption globally, less smog and shit in our cities. And unlike with EVs, where I can see how there’s large groups of people with concerns or issues, realistically how many people would stake out there and say “yes, I would like a less fuel efficient car”

    Sure, cars would be a bit larger and more expensive; but realistically they’ve gotten larger and more expensive anyway











  • Ignoring everything else; I’d expect at least two Chinese brands in the top 2 eventually as China develops based purely on population size. The last 200 years were basically an anomaly and China will probably reclaim it’s usual place as a major economic centre of gravity. Imo it already has to an extent

    Besides that, I’m not surprised because the entire western automaker strategy for a long time in China was rather lazy. Because domestic brands were so weak, VW et al could upcharge incredible basic features that they had already developed

    Naturally, that strategy couldn’t last forever. Heated seats aren’t exactly cutting edge tech. It was inevitable that Chinese OEMs would eventually develop things like that and rather than proactively fight that many foreign OEMs only reacted once it was too late