I was studying in the LW Study Hall, and during our break someone posted this link to the official hyperloop announcement:
http://www.spacex.com/sites/spacex/files/hyperloop_alpha-20130812.pdf
One member was doubtful it would get past regulations, and another said "tentative p>0.05 that a hyperloop gets made by 2100", which was met with "p>0.05 that uploading people and moving them between bodies will be available by 2100".
It struck me that people might be interested in betting on things like this, or at least having a conversation about it.
A few predictions to start:
- Tesla Motors / SpaceX / Elon Musk will create a working hyperloop by 2100.
- Tesla Motors / SpaceX / Elon Musk will create a working hyperloop by 2050.
- Tesla Motors / SpaceX / Elon Musk will create a working hyperloop by 2030.
- The cost projections of the hyperloop are underestimates by at least an order of magnitude.
- When and if a hyperloop-like transit system is built (or not), the US will not be the first country to build it.
- One of the first really big (>5bn$) hyperloops will go across a body of water.
- If a hyperloop is created, it will be predominately (>50%) solar-powered.
I thought this was an interesting critical take. Portions are certainly mind-killing, eg you can completely ignore everything he says about rich entrepreneurs, but overall it seemed sound. Especially the proving-too-much argument; the projections involve doing multiple revolutionary things, each of which would be a significant breakthroughs on its own. The fact that Musk isn't putting money into doing any of those suggests it would not be as easy/cheap as predicted (not just in a "add a factor of 5" way, but in a "the current predictions are meaningless" way).
Also, the fact he's proposing it for California seems strange. There are places with cheaper, flatter land where you could do a proof of concept before moving into a politically complicated, expensive, earthquake-prone state like California. I've seen Texas (Houston-Dallas-San Antonio) and Alberta (Edmonton-Calgary) proposed, both of which sound like much better locations.
Some points from the article you linked: