16 comments

  • maxdo 4 minutes ago
    German cars have lost their technological edge. They can't even build their own infotainment systems anymore. They're paying billions to China to do it for them.

    I can't overstate how catastrophically stupid this is. Paying what they consider smaller competitors real cash to build core software, instead of developing that capability in-house or acquiring a few startups with decent engineering talent.

    This isn't just a bad decision. It reveals a completely dysfunctional decision-making process and a total absence of technical ambition.

    People who say but "Porche/Mercedes/etc.." has this design. Luxury segment is not coming from nowhere. This is the same reason british luxury cars are gone essentially. It will take some time, but EU built cars will be in a constant decline.

    What's even more fun, they don't want to protect their own market the same way chinese did.

  • KnuthIsGod 49 minutes ago
    Global sales of Porsche, Audi, Mercedes and BMW brand ( BMW Group sales increased marginally, but includes) have all declined.

    The end is in sight for German cars as Chinese made electric cars take over.

    I have had several German cars. Never again ! Sticking to Japanese and probably Chinese cars in the future.

    German cars were decent once. Now they are notorious for poor long term reliability.

    • jacquesm 34 minutes ago
      I don't mind paying more for a European product, and as for the 'poor long term reliability': we don't know what the long term reliability of Chinese vehicles is yet.

      Not that it really matters, my car is 27 years old this year and I won't be getting another one but that has to do with wanting a car that is doing what I want it to do rather than what it wants to do.

      • dottjt 29 minutes ago
        I don't know if this is paranoia, but one fear I have for high-tech Chinese products is that if a world war were to start with China, that they'd have the ability to remotely disable these kinds of products.
        • jazzyjackson 0 minutes ago
          Certainly anything that downloads over the air updates. I'm not mad that our government turned down import of EVs from a country that became an adversary
        • anonzzzies 8 minutes ago
          I do not think it is paranoia. But we can have this from anywhere. American devices, EU devices; if I cannot analyse the firmware, ICs etc, what is going to guarantee these are not remotely exploitable. Even if Porsche never built such a thing on purpose, the car is connected so someone can break in, hack it and do stuff including possible overhead the battery so it ignites.

          It does not have to be on purpose quality wise either: I had 2 spicy pillows in my life (and I have a lot of gadgets, including fully Chinese ones); a Samsung flagship phone and a macbook air. Both just unannounced got very hot and broke open: no fire but still... So I would say it is possible for a state actor to remotely hack, take over and ignite your Samsung and Macbook as apparently it can already almost happen without hackers.

          What to do about it? Without just fully open sourcing hardware and software, I do not know. I mean that would not help a lot if no one reads it and finds the issues/vulnerabilities, but at least we stand a chance, vs now. Unplugging from internet is not really a thing, although, when it comes to cars and airplanes i would rather see it mandatory non connected.

          • jacquesm 5 minutes ago
            People don't realize that every device with a LiPo is only one (possibly malicious) update away from becoming a fuse.
        • jacquesm 27 minutes ago
          After the Israeli attack using pagers I think this is no longer paranoid at all.

          The same goes for Chinese built cloud connected hardware, especially if it is grid connected, contains heater elements or batteries. Inverters, solar panels, vehicles, 3D printers, the list is endless and all of these are either potential fire starters or ways to destabilize the grid. Used maliciously the potential for misery is pretty large. All this crap that wants to connect to the cloud from a country where your average citizen has very limited access to the internet should give you pause: if the Chinese government thinks these connections are A-ok then they must see some advantage, especially if all the services are supposedly free of charge.

          • eru 18 minutes ago
            > The same goes for Chinese built cloud connected hardware, [...]

            It goes even more for American built or American influenced hardware.

            • jacquesm 10 minutes ago
              Probably, yes, but this subthread is about war with China.
          • tehjoker 13 minutes ago
            China is much less likely to attack civilians. Don't project america and israel's way of war onto others. I would imagine part of their strategy is to win hearts ad minds. America just kills and kills and kills and wonders why we arent loved.
            • anonzzzies 5 minutes ago
              in case of war, you cannot know that; if they can blow up millions of phones or routers (setting houses on fire) or ignite cars? i agree with you that currently there would be no reason to even project such an image: better to win with trade and trinkets and dialog. I would say thats always the case but he ho.
            • jacquesm 7 minutes ago
              > China is much less likely to attack civilians.

              They were pretty happy to attack their own civilians, I see no reason to think why that would be different abroad.

              > Don't project america and israel's way of war onto others.

              I'm not projecting, merely being cautious. Besides, I have no illusion about either America or Israel doing something similar, especially not with their current upper cadre but this subthread is about China).

              > I would imagine part of their strategy is to win hearts ad minds.

              I would imagine it isn't. See also: partnering with Putin in the war with Ukraine.

              > America just kills and kills and kills and wonders why we arent loved.

              Yes, but they're not alone in that.

        • longitudinal93 10 minutes ago
          Disabling them is one thing. Having them auto-drive to select locations and self-immolate is another entirely.
        • wslh 14 minutes ago
          The reverse is clear for Chinese people. Do you remember when, in the early 2000s, the US sold a Boeing 767 intended for Chinese presidential use, and Chinese authorities later reported finding numerous hidden listening devices on board? There is a Chinese Wikipedia article about the incident [1], but no dedicated English one. More information in English can be found here [2].

          [1] https://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-cn/%E6%B1%9F%E6%BE%A4%E6%B0%91%E...

          [2] https://www.flightglobal.com/chinese-vip-jet-was-bugged/4121...

    • thesmtsolver2 32 minutes ago
      • luigi23 26 minutes ago
        yes, because when cars were bad and chinese brands were cheap, it was virtuous to pinpoint human rights vs 'chinese cars are yucky and i want to look cool'.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrumental_and_intrinsic_val...

      • light_hue_1 20 minutes ago
        No one cared to begin with. Just look up the horrors involved with Apple phones. People want their fancy devices. Doesn't matter if slave labor is involved. Doesn't matter if we need to add nets to prevent laborers from killing themselves instead of putting up with the horrible conditions we force them into.
    • rr808 37 minutes ago
      Japanese and Chinese are very different buckets. What is the long term reliability of Chinese cars? Nobody knows.
      • thaumasiotes 29 minutes ago
        I wouldn't be too concerned.

        Hyundai used to be synonymous with "garbage".

        • linksnapzz 8 minutes ago
          People who have purchased Hyundai/Kia products w/ the GDI Theta II engine would, perhaps, take issue with "used to be".
          • Braxton1980 6 minutes ago
            One engine issue due to a manufacturing flaw shouldn't be enough to counter their massive change in produt lines over the years
        • dietr1ch 13 minutes ago
          Yeah maybe I'll get a Chinese car in 50yrs
    • cortesoft 17 minutes ago
      Are all German cars the same? Is there a reason they all declined together, in your opinion?
      • Braxton1980 7 minutes ago
        Hey. He has ancedtoal evidence he used to make a sweeping generalization about all cars based on country even though that grouping has little to no value in the cars themselves.
    • Braxton1980 9 minutes ago
      Does this also apply to electric cars? They use different platforms most of the time.
  • nxm 1 hour ago
    The key part is electrified and not pure electric.
    • CGMthrowaway 0 minutes ago
      I never understood the big push for full EVs over hybrid. Roughly speaking, a hybrid gets double the MPG of an ICE car, and a BEV gets double the MPGe of a hybrid. But BEVs require you to add a plug to your garage to get a rapid refuel, when your whole neighborhood gets them it strains the grid, you are range limited, etc...

      My hunch is there are some laws or regs somewhere that kept hybrids from really taking off (or rather, they were taking off.. then suddenly were suppressed).

      Europe is committed to the full EV route and that is not changing. But it's not taking hold in the US, and over the next few years the big thing we will see being sold is actually EREVs, which are BEVs with a gas generator attached to charge the battery (yes, really).

      Source: in the industry

    • King-Aaron 1 hour ago
      On this note: It was recently reported that Electrified vehicles in general outsold conventional ICE powered vehicles in Australia, claiming it has reached a 'tipping point' with consumers:

      https://www.drive.com.au/news/electrified-vehicles-have-offi...

      • hnburnsy 16 minutes ago
        Consumers don't realize they are getting the worst of both worlds with added weight, complexity, repairs, inefficiency, and costs along with potential reliability (ex-Toyota) Not to mention studies that show PHEV owners frequently don't plug in.
      • selcuka 58 minutes ago
        I wonder if fake hybrids [1] were counted as well.

        [1] https://www.carscoops.com/2025/10/toyota-accuses-rivals-of-s...

    • loeg 30 minutes ago
      About 2/3 of these are BEVs and the other 1/3 are PHEVs:

      > In 2025, 34.4 per cent of Porsche cars delivered worldwide were electrified (+7.4 percentage points), with 22.2 per cent being fully electric and 12.1 per cent being plug-in hybrids.

    • tbrownaw 1 hour ago
      "electrified" is full-electric plus plug-in hybrid.

      Does this mean that a non-plug-in hybrid would be in the "pure combustion-engined" bucket, or that they don't make those?

      • kulahan 57 minutes ago
        I believe the only non-plug in hybrid they make is the 911 with the T-Hybrid system in it. It uses motors to assist performance, but is not a plug-in.

        It’s probably just an incredibly small number of sales?

    • cbdevidal 1 hour ago
      I came here to say this. Also includes hybrids.
  • bnchrch 1 hour ago
    While the headline is interesting.

    I think the table at the end of the article is more so.

    - Worldwide sales -10% YoY

    - China sales -26% YoY

    And when you cross compare Porsche saying they sold more EV powertrains than their gas equivalents against China's new found foothold as the market leader in consumer electric cars (BYD, NIO, Xiaomi, etc...)

    Then I think you see an early indication not just of electric car dominance, but of the (very potential) rise of China as the premier automotive super power.

    • andyst 1 hour ago
      in the australian market theres often comparison between how BYD/(chinese brands) may unseat Tesla (as the scale EV first mover), but I haven't seen what I think is the prize, which is BYD want to take on Toyota as the de facto king of global car making. They want the whole car market, not just EV and are already setup to take that on.
    • itsthecourier 13 minutes ago
      great analysis
    • mrits 1 hour ago
      I don’t think anyone is going to keep an advantage in car manufacturing. The way we build them might totally change in a short duration with the rapid advancement in robotics
      • kulahan 54 minutes ago
        Most advancements in robotics have been for highly generalized robots. We’ve been using robotics to build cars for like 50+ years. They’re extremely good.
    • appplication 1 hour ago
      China may become the superpower on volume but I would be surprised if the upper quartile (by price) of western buyers were interested in Chinese vehicles. Too much quality issues across the board on Chinese made products, unless you have a trusted non-Chinese company with stringent quality control (e.g. Apple model).

      I’m sure they can handily win the lower end of the market though. And yes I’m aware many western manufacturers are shit tier quality.

      • ericd 55 minutes ago
        I don’t think this is accurate, Chinese firms are increasingly moving up the quality chain. You might want to look at some of the reviews of Xiaomi’s recently launched car. Also, Tesla Shanghai is one of their best factories, much better quality scores than Fremont iirc.

        Having a totally local, integrated supply chain pays dividends in a lot of ways, as does leading in production volume. Tim Cook also gave that interview where he was just talking about the incredibly deep bench of industrial talent that you just can’t find outside China at this point - that labor cost wasn’t why they produced there.

        • appplication 44 minutes ago
          The issue is not actual quality, it’s perceived quality. Chinese companies will fight decades of history and negative perception to reach top of the market consumers, a segment obsessed with perception.
          • kjellsbells 4 minutes ago
            Then again, it's been done before.

            - Japanese consumer goods were perceived as junk until the tipping point was reached, and then they were perceived as high-quality, easily equalling or surpassing Western goods. That took ~30 years (1950 to 1980, say). Older readers will recall the controversy over Akio Morita's (Morita-san being the founder of Sony) statements in the book "The Japan that can Say No" (see [0]), which seems strangely prescient in the sense that it ignited a lot of (US) debate around dependence on foreign semiconductors.

            - Then there was Taiwan, again, a 30 year cycle from about 1970 to 2000. Taiwan used to be known for cheap textiles, consumer dross, and suchlike. Not now...

            My point is that the way to get better at products is to make them and make them and make them, and eventually an export-led country reaches a tipping point where the consumers flip over, and their perception changes.

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m5aNxvjYu6o

          • itsthecourier 10 minutes ago
            just got an etron because my partner wanted a xpeng, guy is super happy in that xpeng and I gotta say, he's right
        • coredev_ 44 minutes ago
          From what I've heard, the quality is pretty good. The problem is when something breaks, you can be waiting for (sometimes very expensive) parts for months while not being able to use your car.
          • ehnto 36 minutes ago
            That's not particularly unique amongst car manufacturers.
            • Marsymars 24 minutes ago
              Maybe I got lucky, but I drove a 2011 model Ford from 2013-2025, and the worst part delay I experienced in that time was when they had to get next-day parts from a nearby city.
          • tharkun__ 42 minutes ago
            You're speaking of Tesla here, correct?
        • IncreasePosts 28 minutes ago
          it took Japan about 25 years of very directed industrial strategy to take the "made in Japan" label from indicating junk to the average American, to indicating a premium/reliable product. China might get there in even less than 25 years but you'll probably still find people holding onto old "chinesium" beliefs long after they should
          • Marsymars 21 minutes ago
            A key for Japan is also that for various product categories, they don't export (or maybe manufacture at all - I'm just not really familiar with their non-export goods) low-quality goods - I assume because it isn't economical to compete at the low end of the market.

            Even though China can compete at the top of many markets, they still also compete at the bottom, which taints their reputation.

          • jacquesm 19 minutes ago
            Japan never was a threat during that time to countries around it. China is very much a threat to other countries around it and I would feel pretty bad about materially financing yet another war.
      • jacquesm 31 minutes ago
        The (potential, no experience) quality issues are to me far outweighed by the enabling of yet another country to become a superpower which will then sooner or later result in yet another confrontation. Russia should have taught at least Europe that this sort of trade can only backfire in the longer term. Yes, I realize, China is the world's factory now, but there is no reason that can not change. I'm trying really hard to buy European made products and to use European services where possible. There are still a couple of hard nuts to crack but I'll get there.
      • p1necone 39 minutes ago
        Chinese electronics manufacturing now is like Japan in the 60s/70s - I give it like a decade max before "Made in China" is widely understood to mean "High Quality" rather than the "Cheap Junk" connotation it still has today.
      • sdwr 1 hour ago
        Selling the most cars will eventually translate into making the best cars, with the compounding experience and network effects.
        • linksnapzz 4 minutes ago
          At the time the US was making the most cars in the world...quality varied widely, to be generous.
        • willturman 1 hour ago
          You'd think so, but also, Tesla.
          • kulahan 55 minutes ago
            They don’t sell anywhere near the most cars, and their market share is shrinking. They also are a very VERY young manufacturer. This isn’t the right example to use imo.

            Maybe Jeep? Very popular, dogwater quality. They take nearly half of the Consumer Reports “top 10 worst cars on the road” almost every year.

        • appplication 56 minutes ago
          > Selling the most x will eventually translate into making the best x

          It’s a theory for sure, but I don’t think that’s a common strategy for modern capitalism.

          • andyferris 45 minutes ago
            What about for socialism with Chinese charateristics?
      • woooooo 31 minutes ago
        The upper quartile are in the US and they're not allowed to buy Chinese cars, so you are right by default.

        That notwithstanding, Xiaomi cars are nicer than Teslas. They're called "the Apple of China" for a reason.

        • IncreasePosts 27 minutes ago
          They can't buy Chinese cars now, but I imagine the next Democratic president might want to knock Elon musk down a peg or two.
      • idiot900 43 minutes ago
        This was once said about Japanese cars. I don’t want a Chinese car now, but I probably will not too long from now.
      • light_hue_1 14 minutes ago
        Nothing to do with quality. It's all image.

        When Americans discover again how crappy their cars are compared to what's available elsewhere, like we did with Japan, there will be a reckoning once more. And again American cars will become the laughing stock they really are.

        In the meantime, this incredibly short sighted protectionism will end just like the last round did. Further hollowing out our industrial base and permanently giving away large parts of a massive market.

        And I'm sure all of the people involved in this insanity will want a bailout too.

  • anonymousiam 1 hour ago
  • sklargh 1 hour ago
    I think Porsche is really in trouble here.

    I’m not anti-EV but the electric Macan and Cayenne look awful. They are under equipped technologically relative to their Chinese peers (heck basically anything).

    Porsche sort of sold its soul for this tech-forward design but it doesn’t deliver any meaningful benefits, these cars don’t even have level 2+ highway cruise control. In the meantime I get a bunch of crap screens and lose all the glorious physical buttons and I don’t even have a fun engine rumble to make up for it?

    So, the cars are ugly and uncool (I grant a matter of taste), aren’t selling in their target market (China) won’t sell meaningfully in their backup market (US) and they’re behind GM, Tesla and BYD in all regards on quality of life stuff.

    Not a recipe for endurance.

    • qiqitori 1 hour ago
      I keep seeing "underequipped technologically relative to their Chinese peers" on HN. What kind of stuff is missing? This is not a loaded question, I only drive a couple times a month, and the vehicle I'm driving is an older Prius, so I probably lack imagination. EVs are supposed to be technologically pretty simple, most of an EV's value being in the battery packs. I've been thinking about upgrading, perhaps to a Nissan Sakura (which probably doesn't have a lot of bells and whistles either).

      Now I kinda wish my Prius had a 3.5mm aux-in jack but I get by with an FM transmitter.

      • kulahan 42 minutes ago
        In terms of features I see on high end cars… (no clue if these are available in Chinese cars, just to help you get an idea of what exists)

        1. Backup camera with lines that move as you turn the wheel

        2. Camera setup that lets you see how close you are to curbs, other cars, etc. from a plethora of unexpected angles (you can get a top-down view of your car! Pretty cool.)

        3. Automatic parking when parallel parking

        4. “Reverse actions” feature, where you press a button after very carefully getting into a spot, and the car replays it in reverse to get you out of said spot

        5. Lots of remote features tied to an app. The ability to look through cameras, auto-record videos when people get close, lock and unlock and view status of the car. Remote tracking via GPS in case it’s stolen.

        6. Turn on your turn signal, your dash changes to a live video feed of that side of the car

        7. Chairs with heating and cooling, massaging, and auto-inertia-damping features

        8. Bluetooth and Apple CarPlay plus Android auto

        9. Road-scanning cameras which adjust suspension live based on upcoming road conditions

        10. Crash preparation features like Benz’s Pink Noise or auto-recording a minute of video to assist with crash investigations

        There are probably may I’m forgetting.

        • charlie0 3 minutes ago
          Lol, 1 to 4 is just called "knowing how to drive". These cameras aren't a serious value add unless you're driving a massive tank, err car.
        • jjmarr 18 minutes ago
          I have 1 and 8 on my cheap RAV4 from 7 years ago. Heated seats too.
        • itsthecourier 6 minutes ago
          saw an xpeng playing music outside the car, not inside, for beach parties

          and, this is not a joke, truly: the seat gave me a massage.

      • sklargh 1 hour ago
        I think a few things.

        1. They do not have robust self-driving capability. At this level of expense I expect hands-free major highway driving.

        2. They’ve removed a lot of physical buttons that improve quality of life, the level of technology in the cabin is simply overwhelming.

        3. They’ve done a great job with the driving experience of the EVs but they have poor range relative to the competition.

        • astrojams 17 minutes ago
          I have a 2022 Porsche 911. It has a lot of physical controls for things in the cabin like climate control, suspension settings, cruise control, dashboard view, and audio. The car also has an auto steer and cruise control option which will accelerate and brake for you while also keeping the car in the lane. It can go from a stop to whatever speed you set it to. It’s great for traffic on the highway. That’s not too shabby for a 2022 non EV car. Current model Mercedes have level 4 driving automation where you can take your eyes off the road. I don’t think Tesla even has this level of driving automation yet.
        • dboreham 8 minutes ago
          Porsche buyers don't want self driving. The button thing is industry wide MBA group think that is being walked back. Their haptic buttons are actually not bad. Car manufacturers are shit at software, presumably because they don't feel the need to pay top euro for talent. Again an industry wide syndrome. Heck GM think it's smart to delete Apple carplay from their vehicles. The only electronics feature all buyers want.
        • dineol 26 minutes ago
          I hate touch/sensor buttons and sliders. Give me back my physical buttons and spinning controls. Also, same for electrical speedometers/tachometers, etc
      • bravoetch 23 minutes ago
        I don't want to make an exhaustive list, the summary is that standard features on many new cars are expensive options on Porsche's. And that's if they're available at all. Adaptive cruise control is one example.

        Where I live, luxury cars are just status now. I don't think that's enough to keep gen Z and gen A interested.

      • jayknight 1 hour ago
        See this MKBHD video for an idea of features in Chinese EVs.

        https://youtu.be/Mb6H7trzMfI

        • qiqitori 28 minutes ago
          Watched it! I know it's from a US perspective, but where I live (Japan), $42000 is quite a lot! Definitely premium car territory. (E.g., Lexus RX base model)

          IMO the car has a lot of bells and whistles that many drivers (probably!) don't really care about. But I guess car fans like this kind of stuff. The active noise cancelling feature might be nice, but wouldn't be surprised if we see regulation on that matter at some point. You kind of need to be alert of your surroundings, etc.

      • djd20 53 minutes ago
        Clearly porsche is missing the built in karaoke.
    • GlacierFox 1 hour ago
      EV cars are mostly just appliances now. Not sure how the prestigious Porsche badge (or any other really) can stand out into the future.
    • netsharc 1 hour ago
      There's probably still plenty of value in the name, who knows if the audience who are impressed if you say "I've got a Porsche" vs "I got a Zeekr/BYD/Xiaomi" is growing or shrinking, if it shrinks fast enough, then Porsche is in trouble.

      It's like bragging about having a Hermes bag vs a Temu brand bag. Yeah it's all irrational, but if the world was a rational place we'd not have a man-child threatening wars and invasion because he didn't get the peace prize he wanted...

  • joeel84 23 minutes ago
    I just buy japanese cars/vehicles these days. With that being said a lot of them are manufactured stateside - especially larger vehicles. I had a Mitsu I was very happy with. I've also purchased Hyundai made in Korea and it is wonderful but not much better that what was built in Iowa.
  • reader9274 1 hour ago
  • twodave 28 minutes ago
    I’ll be honest, kind of tired of every automotive-related thread turning into blowing smoke up China’s ass. It’s become almost as predictable as what goes on in Windows-related threads.
  • dzonga 1 hour ago
    a lot of these luxury brands have been eating off china the past few years

    but now they've lost their luster since china makes cars better than most luxury brands and china has a moat in EVs

    so what's left is either the US or emerging markets

    • rr808 1 hour ago
      > china makes cars better than most luxury brands

      More like China makes cheaper cars which is enough for most people.

      • mullingitover 1 hour ago
        Believe it or not, people aren't buying Audis in China because they're thrifty.

        China was a huge market for Audi in the past as luxury status symbol. However, now Chinese buyers are so enamored with new tech-heavy Chinese luxury cars that Audi had to go make a whole sub-brand specific to the Chinese market just to stay in the game[1].

        [1] https://www.audi-mediacenter.com/en/press-releases/double-de...

      • temp8830 1 hour ago
        Google "Zeekr 9X" and then come back here if you still feel this way.
        • rr808 56 minutes ago
          That is ugly AF and there is no way I'd buy that over a Porsche.

          Zeekr 001 is prettier outside but inside still is terrible. https://www.datocms-assets.com/143770/1728613060-rectangle-4...

          • kulahan 51 minutes ago
            Calling it ugly is weird. It’s a copy-paste of a rolls Royce phantom, slapped on an SUV frame, with the cheapest possible interior they could design.

            There are much better ways to insult this garbage product. :)

      • Ylpertnodi 41 minutes ago
        Watching my very, very MAGA 'friends' purchasing byd's is hilarious. I've also, of late, noticed fewer and fewer Teslas around.
        • bullfightonmars 29 minutes ago
          You have MAGA friends outside the United States?
  • jsight 1 hour ago
    Is this shocking? Obviously including PHEVs helps a bit, but even outside of this it is exactly what should be happening. Their biggest sellers are SUVs, and at these price points, the EVs can be substantially than their ICE counterparts. For 2026, they probably won't even need the PHEVs to get there, since the Cayenne EV is the best EV that they've built so far.
    • bz_bz_bz 45 minutes ago
      Given that they walked back many of their BEV goals in mid-to-late 2025, some may find this surprising. The K1 was supposed to be all electric vehicle when it was announced, and they are now going to release it as a gas & PHEV first instead.
  • itsthecourier 24 minutes ago
    I was reading about Porsche this week on reddit. lots of complaints about Taycans.

    always have been a fan of Porsche.

    hope they find the way forward

  • moomoo11 37 minutes ago
    I used to really be into cars up to a few years ago.

    These days, I think it is just far better to do without a car. I like being very local, and if I really need to go somewhere outside my city (SF) I'll just not lol.

    I'll take a flight to visit my parents or my closest friends. Everyone else, we can just meet online.

    I have no friends in SF, so I'm just sorta dissolved into the neighborhood. When I did have a car, I'd go on long drives but looking back that was just a waste of time. Maybe I'll drive again when I've "made it" but until then, gimme some Brooks lol.

  • ggm 1 hour ago
    I think a lot of people are missing a point here. Cars are not (just) use-values. They are expression of desire. They are, for some brands, classic Veblen Goods.

    Porche possibly could sell more by putting the price up

    They put their marque behind EV and Hybrid. It worked. Their brand sold well. This is in contradistinction to vendors who won't think about this market niche in positives, but are being dragged into it.

    • 9JollyOtter 42 minutes ago
      This is true for quite a number of brands of vehicles. Also I don't understand what a modern Porsche is. Porsche to me was always a Rear Engined, (normally) RWD sports car i.e. the 911. I am personally on the look for a 944 (believe it or not they are cheaper than JDM cars of a similar vintage).

      When I see a Porsche SUV, to me that isn't a Porsche. It looks like any other SUV on the road with Porsche badge on it. It akin to someone putting a Apple Sticker over Dell Logo on their laptop.

      The same happens when you see a Bentley or Rolls Royce SUV.

      > They put their marque behind EV and Hybrid. It worked. Their brand sold well.

      They are losing money. Sales are down and they are planning to move back to ICE and are postponing or cancelling EV projects.

      https://finance.yahoo.com/news/porsche-loses-1-1-billion-220...

    • bz_bz_bz 25 minutes ago
      Did it work? I'm not sure the financial or car community would agree. They already walked back their BEV strategy:

      "Due to market conditions, the new SUV series above the Cayenne, which was previously planned to be fully electric, will initially be offered exclusively as combustion engine and plug-in hybrid at market launch. In addition, current models such as the Panamera and the Cayenne will be available with combustion engines and plug-in hybrids well into the 2030s."

      https://newsroom.porsche.com/en/2025/company/porsche-realign...

    • loeg 28 minutes ago
      They have starkly raised their prices. The base 911 is nearly 40% more expensive than it was in 2020.
    • kulahan 53 minutes ago
      This is pretty much exactly what they’re doing. They even admit in TFA that their dedication to the customer experience is part of the reason for declining sales - spending time on quality action rather than immediately profitable ones.
  • lofaszvanitt 54 minutes ago
    And they all look the same and ugly as hell.
  • jadenpeterson 1 hour ago
    As someone who is eco-conscious, it's difficult to understand my social obligation to purchase a hybrid or electric vehicle. I've been driving the same shitty 2008 Hummer H2 (10-14 MPG) for years and I want to switch to electric, but I'm torn because it would put me further into personal debt to do so (and there's something to be said for the ecological impact of debt computing).

    Obviously, there's a crapton of nuance here to unpack, but I'm fascinated by the tension between personal responsibility and the role of corporations here, and how those interact.

    • skhameneh 49 minutes ago
      This does read/interpret a bit odd, because the Hummer H2 doesn’t strike me as a reliable vehicle and I’ve generally heard of them to be cost sinks (completely disregarding the horrible efficiency).

      Why not start off looking at the cheapest EV or PHEV that you can find without high mileage that’ll fit your daily driving habits, then give it a test drive? Consider how much monthly expenses will cost (might save ~90% on fuel) and then consider if you like the driving characteristics more.

      • jadenpeterson 40 minutes ago
        Yeah it's not the... best. I bought it kind of on a lark, and the sunk cost made me reluctant to let go it.

        Any brand recommendations? I'm really not one for 'smart' features, though I know they're kind of intrinsic to electric vehicles.

    • peterldowns 53 minutes ago
      Excellent bait, really top notch stuff — no notes.