Fact of the day: the Ford Edsel ("a 1950s flop so notorious that it’s taught in business schools to this day") outsold the Cybertruck 2:1, "in a country with half the population."

https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/history/ford-introduces-edsel

(h/t Luke Savage in the American Prospect, https://prospect.org/2026/01/30/teslas-wile-e-coyote-moment-is-here/)

Strowger Patents Automatic Dial Telephone System | History | Research Starters | EBSCO Research

<p>The Strowger Patents Automatic Dial Telephone System revolutionized telephone communication by allowing users to bypass manual operators, addressing concerns over privacy, reliability, and fairness. Invented by Almon Strowger, a Kansas City undertaker, the system emerged in response to his belief that operators were deliberately obstructing his business by mishandling calls. In 1891, Strowger patented an automatic switching system capable of connecting up to ninety-nine telephones, significantly enhancing the efficiency of call routing. </p> <p>The system employed a mechanical arm activated by electric pulses from buttons pressed by the caller, allowing for direct dialing without operator interference. Although initial implementations faced challenges, subsequent refinements led to the successful installation of the first Strowger system in LaPorte, Indiana, in 1892. Over time, the technology gained credibility, eventually becoming widely adopted by telephone companies, including the American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT&T). The Strowger system laid the groundwork for modern automatic dialing technology, marking a pivotal shift in how telephone services were delivered and fundamentally changing user interaction with telephony.</p>

EBSCO

@pluralistic The Edsel would be a huge success for any small startup. The thing is, Tesla is still a small startup, but it's bizarrely overvalued so it gets compared to what was at the time the leading carmaker.

Note that Tesla is apparently leaving the car market in favor of robots.

Tesla workers shared sensitive images recorded by customer cars

Tesla Inc assures its millions of electric car owners that their privacy “is and will always be enormously important to us.” The cameras it builds <a href="https://www.reuters.com/legal/elon-musks-2018-tweet-tesla-union-campaign-illegal-us-court-rules-2023-03-31/" target="_blank">into vehicles</a> to assist driving, it notes on its website, are “designed from the ground up to protect your privacy.”

Reuters
@Npars01 @nitpicking @pluralistic if anyone deserves what they signed up for, it’s Tesla owners. Just sayin’.
@DrSuzanne I agree, but by "Tesla owners" I mean people who bought its stock at absurd pricing. Vehicle owners were ... less obviously gullible.
@Npars01 @nitpicking @pluralistic The devil used to wear Prada; now it is in your car. #deletetesla

@Npars01 @nitpicking @pluralistic Which is why Teslas do not have other expensive systems to support self driving such as LIDAR.

Those systems are not much use for surveillance, only useful for autonomous vehicle operation.

https://mastodon.social/@the_wub/115909064737963755