- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
The hyperloop is dead for real this time::Hyperloop One is shutting down its operations. The company was founded in 2014 promising pods that would carry passengers at airline speeds through nearly airless tubes. Turns out, it wasn’t really viable.
Yes, it’s dead this time too, as it was all the other times it was mentioned, and also when it was announced.
Hyperloop was a scam from the beginning, it never had a chance of succeeding, even if it wasn’t a scam.
So Yes, it is really really dead now, and it always was.
It was literally a pipedream.I remember hearing about it in a super slick video posted by the yt channel ColdFusion, it went on an on about how Elon was an entrepeneur, but just regurgitated the same marketing crap that was shoved out from Musk.
I also remember the Virgin Hyperloop presentation where and older speaker spoke about how the hyperloop was going to be like the internet, routing pods like packets in a network.
It allways sounded dumb, back when I first heard about it, and all the times since.
Invest in rail, not idiotic gadger bahns…
I would be very skeptical about a channel that called itself ColdFusion. Like I’d expect it to represent about zero critical thinking skills.
Branson wants to be on the edge too, trying to catch the next big thing. Mostly copying what others are doing. He is just a manchild, using his ressources as toys, seemingly based on very little knowledge. Don’t expect to much from him either. At least Branson doesn’t seem repulsive like Musk, but he is for sure no tech genius. Although he may be good at running a business in an area he understands.
I mean, pretty much any engineering student who’s taken Fluid Dynamics I and a physics/dynamics series could tell you that trying to maintain a high vacuum along hundreds of miles of tube, then accelerating things inside that tube to 700mph (when KE=1/2m v^2), was probably a very very bad idea. the sheer accurate tolerances that would need to be maintained between each tube joint, and the quality of the air seals, along the entire length of tube is just insane.
Yeah. It was always such a weird idea.
My brother worked at Virgin Hyperloop, and I think pretty much everyone there felt similarly that building trains of any kind was a worthwhile ambition, even if this particular implementation was a quixotic and unrealistic approach to high-speed rail development. But you take work where you find it. Hopefully the Brightline trains will demonstrate that a more conventional approach just makes more sense, and lead to more tried-and-tested rail projects.
Before everyone gets ahead of themselves like in the last thread on this, this is not a Musk company. This is a separate startup based on the same (dumb) idea, that was later bought by Richard Branson’s Virgin. It’s IP is going to the Dubai company that is it’s biggest investor, so I’m sure they’ll actually build one with slave labor and all that.
Nobody is ever going to build one that works anyway.
It might work almost once
Unless they harness my lead at work’s ability to suck they’ll never get enough vac.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Hyperloop One, the futuristic transportation startup that promised to whisk us through nearly airless tubes at airline speeds, is shutting down, according to Bloomberg.
Musk theorized that aerodynamic aluminum capsules filled with passengers or cargo could be propelled through a nearly airless tube at speeds of up to 760mph.
The company came out of the gate strong, with tens of millions of dollars of funding and a bold vision of hyperloop systems all around the globe.
A year later, another co-founder, Shervin Pishevar, was ousted amid allegations of sexual assault and misconduct.
During the pandemic, nearly all of the top executives and founders left Hyperloop One, which also shed the Virgin from its name after the company decided to eschew passenger trips in favor of cargo.
The Boring Company, Musk’s tunneling operation, is still digging underground passageways in Las Vegas — but for Teslas, not hyperloops.
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