The tech industry is always full of imagination. Various rumors about Tesla's phone keep emerging, such as "Model Pi" and Starlink communication support. These conceptual design images are widely circulated online. But frankly, Tesla and Musk have never officially announced a phone product, nor have they provided a concrete launch plan. The release dates and feature specifications circulating on the internet are mostly fans' speculation or outright fabrications.
What has Musk himself said? He acknowledged that Tesla has the technical capability to make a phone but clearly stated that it is not in the plans. His words roughly were: they would only consider making a phone as a "backup plan" in extreme cases like app store issues. As for those outrageous claims online—$299 price, Mars connectivity, blockchain mining—fact-checking organizations have confirmed all of them to be false.
However, although these rumors are baseless, they reflect real industry trends. The technological directions mentioned in these online designs are quite interesting: Starlink satellite communication achieving global coverage, solar panels solving battery life issues, and seamless integration with automotive ecosystems through control systems. This logic aligns perfectly with Musk's "cross-industry integration" product philosophy. But reality is much more sobering. Currently, Starlink phones can only send and receive texts and handle emergency calls. Achieving high-speed internet faces technical bottlenecks and policy restrictions, and global seamless coverage is still a future goal.
In fact, from Tesla's existing layout, we can see some clues. Their HarmonyOS-based app already supports remote vehicle control and digital keys, and human-machine interaction has long been implemented through existing devices. If they do launch a phone in the future, it will most likely focus on building an ecosystem closed loop around "people-vehicle-energy," rather than simply stacking functions together. In short, those phone rumors are just wild imagination at this point.
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GateUser-bd883c58
· 23h ago
Another annual scam, how long can the Tesla phone meme be hyped up?
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PanicSeller
· 23h ago
Elon Musk doesn't want to make phones again; netizens are just making things up.
What they truly want is an ecosystem closed-loop, not just stacking configurations.
Starlink messaging can't access the internet; no matter how much hype there is now, it's useless.
So, Model Pi is just a Photoshop mockup.
View OriginalReply0
TradFiRefugee
· 23h ago
It's that time of year again—Elon Musk's dream-making season. Netizens' imagination runs ahead of the actual products by a lot.
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ShitcoinConnoisseur
· 23h ago
It's that time of year again for the "Tesla phone" rumor harvest season—such a great way to generate traffic.
Wait, can Starlink mining really be taken seriously? That’s just too crazy.
Elon Musk’s ecosystem closed-loop concept is indeed very clever, but it’s still early days to see it materialize.
Just some imagined feature specs by netizens, I’ll just watch and not say anything.
$299 for Starfire Communications? That idea is even more absurd than an NFT project; how much more can they make up?
Ultimately, it still depends on what kind of tricks the Tesla App can pull off; everything else is just hype.
If they really release a phone, I’d love to see it, but betting five bucks that’ll happen in my lifetime—never.
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MEVSandwich
· 23h ago
The phrase "Imagination is wild" is spot on; netizens indeed have top-tier imagination skills. But honestly, if Elon Musk's ecosystem logic can really be implemented, that would be incredible.
View OriginalReply0
GovernancePretender
· 23h ago
The model Pi imagined by netizens is much more reliable than Elon Musk himself, haha.
The tech industry is always full of imagination. Various rumors about Tesla's phone keep emerging, such as "Model Pi" and Starlink communication support. These conceptual design images are widely circulated online. But frankly, Tesla and Musk have never officially announced a phone product, nor have they provided a concrete launch plan. The release dates and feature specifications circulating on the internet are mostly fans' speculation or outright fabrications.
What has Musk himself said? He acknowledged that Tesla has the technical capability to make a phone but clearly stated that it is not in the plans. His words roughly were: they would only consider making a phone as a "backup plan" in extreme cases like app store issues. As for those outrageous claims online—$299 price, Mars connectivity, blockchain mining—fact-checking organizations have confirmed all of them to be false.
However, although these rumors are baseless, they reflect real industry trends. The technological directions mentioned in these online designs are quite interesting: Starlink satellite communication achieving global coverage, solar panels solving battery life issues, and seamless integration with automotive ecosystems through control systems. This logic aligns perfectly with Musk's "cross-industry integration" product philosophy. But reality is much more sobering. Currently, Starlink phones can only send and receive texts and handle emergency calls. Achieving high-speed internet faces technical bottlenecks and policy restrictions, and global seamless coverage is still a future goal.
In fact, from Tesla's existing layout, we can see some clues. Their HarmonyOS-based app already supports remote vehicle control and digital keys, and human-machine interaction has long been implemented through existing devices. If they do launch a phone in the future, it will most likely focus on building an ecosystem closed loop around "people-vehicle-energy," rather than simply stacking functions together. In short, those phone rumors are just wild imagination at this point.