A national survey of consumer attitudes towards plug-in electric vehicles suggests that people would prefer control to convenience in many charging scenarios, and also that renewable energy sources are an important component.
The survey, released today by researchers Brandon Schoettle and Michael Sivak of the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, includes responses from 542 people. Although a majority of the participants have never owned or ridden in an electric vehicle, 17 percent had some prior experience with the technology.
Among the report's findings:
- To manage the costs and electricity demand at home, 73 percent of people would elect optimized charging vs. on-demand charging. Optimized charging allows the system to manage and plan vehicle charging, for example, charging at off-peak times.
- A majority of 65 percent said they'd prefer to prioritize renewable energy sources rather than settle for standard optimized charging.
- Nearly all—84 percent—would like to be able to "reverse charge," or feed electricity from their vehicle back to the public grid in exchange for reduced rates or other compensation. Reverse charging could also help reduce power plants' load during peak times.
"We noticed that people tend to prefer the things that give them the most control, rather than the most convenience," Schoettle said. "For example, respondents seemed to think that a traditional cable was the best way to recharge, even though inductive wireless charging could enable a self-fueling vehicle. A person wouldn't be required."
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Rosco P. Coltrane on Sunday November 20 2016, @01:25PM
People would like to take control of their phones. Very much so. The trouble is, Google and Apple, made it extra-hard from the get-go. How many phones can be rooted, and how many owners of these phones are technically able, and willing to void their warranty, to do so? Not very many unfortunately. But I can't count the number of people who tell me "I'd like to do this-or-that on my phone, but the app says it needs a rooted phone, and I don't know what that is".
Thank "do-no-evil" Google for that...
(Score: 2) by Nollij on Tuesday November 22 2016, @11:47AM
You blame Google, but things like locked bootloaders are largely because of the carrier, or occasionally the manufacturer.
Only the Nexus/Pixel line would be locked because of Google, and even then it was probably a compromise with the carrier.
Phones don't come rooted out of the box for the same reason you shouldn't use root as your daily logon.