Developers understand one thing better than anyone else:
software always eats hardware.
Electric vehicles are the clearest proof of that idea.
Modern EVs aren’t just cars — they’re distributed systems on wheels. Batteries act like energy APIs, motors behave predictably, and over-the-air updates continuously improve performance without visiting a workshop.
Why does this matter?
⚙️ Fewer mechanical failures
⚡ Higher efficiency per unit of energy
📡 Remote diagnostics & updates
🔐 Security and firmware now matter
In the same way smartphones replaced feature phones, EVs are quietly replacing internal combustion vehicles — not because they’re “green,” but because they’re architecturally better.
The interesting part isn’t if EVs will dominate.
It’s how fast legacy systems can adapt.
👉 I’ve broken down EV architecture, real-world costs, and charging ecosystems here:
[Once you view cars as software platforms, the transition becomes obvious.]

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