From the article: "In the U.S., hybrid demand significantly exceeds production capacity, leading to tight inventories at dealerships, Miyazaki said."
I'll further my point about hybrid being such a low-hanging, realistic solution.
The core technology has been there since the late 90s. Every single major manufacture can quickly produce them. This doesn't have to be just daily family cars, the luxury market (Ferrari) and the 4x4 segment can also take advantage of this. There is already a hybrid Tundra available.
Lets take London for e.g. there are about 2.5 Million cars, lets assume if all of all them were to be hybrid, you would have SIGNIFICANT reduction in fuel consumption and costs to the owners, without ANY lifestyle change. You are not giving anything up as there is something available for everyone's taste.
No range anxiety.
I seriously do not understand why governments don't take this seriously.
Absolutely +1 for private offices. Have been arguing for this for years now. I am actually surprised and puzzled why engineers did not demand this earlier..???
Good points but these are just surface level news that I was aware of. I am talking about internal business decisions.
Additionally the industry is big and global, both horizontally and vertically.
Much bigger than just Big Tech.
For e.g. AWS lay offs does not give a full picture of that sector as investment in data center real estate is hot in certain markets. However many are cautious about new big projects this year.
I completely understand where you're coming from but for a better future, try to fight through it for at least a year or two. Such is life, work is work. Not all of it is glamourous.
You are very early into your career and in a pretty great spot. Don't waste it.
Big tech experience will open a lot of opportunities for you and this includes non-career or financial opportunities.
You should still continue with your pet projects. Remember we underestimate what can be achieved in a year.
This is so true and really sad. Their bias was really appalling, downright revolting during the recent Elections in Turkey.
As a life rule now, I look for and only read independent work, and I suggest you do the same. This is the only way now.
Newsletters and reader-supported Journalists/Authors. Personal blogs of some economists and business reporters. Podcasts.
You'd be surprised but there are some really good Finance/business info on Twitter (X), basically people in the frontlines of the industry giving you pure, fluff-free information, the "FinTwit" community is pretty active.
I reviewed peoples Resumes on Fiverr! It was only for people in the tech industry. I would thoroughly review them and give 2-3 pages worth of feedback.