Tesla Pi Phone: price, release date, and everything we know
Elon Musk claimed that he would make an alternative phone if Twitter is removed from app stores. Here’s what we know about the rumored Tesla Phone. …
Ever since he tweeted about it in November 2022, Elon Musk fans have been patiently waiting for more news regarding whatās been unofficially dubbed the Tesla Phone or the Tesla Pi Phone. Other than the initial tweet (which, even when it was published, didnāt provide much information to go on), thereās no official news out there about the Tesla Pi Phone. And while smartphone manufacturers often play things close to the vest until theyāre ready to make their products public, there are still plenty of rumors regarding the smartphone.
Hereās everything we know so far about the Tesla Pi, but remember to take all unconfirmed information with a healthy amount of skepticism.
Tesla Phone design
There are a lot of rumored designs out there for the Tesla Phone, but the problem is that all of them are pure fan speculation. There arenāt any leaks from manufacturers, and there havenāt been any hardware teases, so thereās very little to go off of in any official capacity.
Most fan creations envision the Tesla Phone looking similar to the major flagships from Google, Apple, and Samsung: a square design, a handful of buttons on the outer edges, and three to four rear cameras.
If Tesla were to be the manufacturer of a phone funded by Elon Musk (which thereās no evidence to suggest that would even be the case), we can likely expect it to share some design principles with other Tesla products. By that logic, the smartphone would likely have a sleek, minimalist design meant to look like a luxury device.
The photo above shows a fan-made render from Antonio De Rosa, and it provides an interesting idea of what a Tesla Phone could look like: itās equipped with a quad-camera system, metal body, and a prominent Tesla logo to tie the whole package together. Other renders throughout this article offer additional Tesla Phone concepts. Theyāre fun to look at, but once again, arenāt based on any legitimate leaks or rumors.
Tesla Phone specs
As with the rest of the details surrounding the Tesla Pi Phone, there isnāt any spec information making the internet rounds that canāt be boiled down to simple fan speculation. Rumor has it that the phone will run on one of Telsaās octa-core processors used to run the screens inside the companyās cars, which seems to be one of the only substantial things spec-wise that could set it apart from the rest of the major smartphones on the market today.
There are a few rumors that Tesla fans keep repeating whenever the Tesla Phone pops into conversation. Many believe that a Tesla Pi Phone could connect to Muskās Starlink satellite internet service, as well as use solar charging technology to refuel its battery. Theyāre fascinating concepts, but at this point, thatās all they are ā concepts.
Tesla Phone software
In terms of the Tesla Piās operating system, fan rumors say that itāll run on something called āTeslaOS,ā an operating system that doesnāt currently exist. The internal computers for Telsas run on a custom version of Linux, but itās not called TeslaOS. Linux phones certainly exist, such as the Pinephone or the Volla Phone, but they havenāt grabbed much of a hold on the market in the way that AndroidOS has. If the Tesla Pi were to run on a version of Linux, the same as Tesla cars, it could potentially be the first device using Linux to break through into the mainstream. However, thereās nothing to suggest thatās even the case.
If the Tesla Phone is in the works, it seems equally likely that it would use a version of Android. The operating system is pretty malleable and is able to be used across plenty of different devices while also feeling unique to each phone manufacturer. Musk, hwever, claims to be uninterested in engaging with the āduopolyā that he perceives Google and Apple to have on the mobile industry, so using Android would be pretty hypocritical. On the other hand, Musk tends to flip-flop back and forth on a lot of his beliefs, so thereās no telling which way things would go.
Tesla Phone price and release date
There is currently no official release date for the Tesla Phone. There is some completely unfounded speculation that itāll be launching sometime in early 2023, but thereās not a shred of evidence to support that claim. In fact, thereās a lot more evidence pointing toward a much more distant Tesla Pi Phone release ā if one is even coming at all. Smartphones take a long time to manufacture, and if Musk is looking to launch his own device and first had the idea to do it in late November 2022, we shouldnāt expect it to launch until 2024 at the very earliest.
While major companies like Google, Samsung, and Apple launch a new flagship phone every year, the companies have plenty of experience in smartphone production, something that Elon Musk and the companies he currently owns donāt have. If the Tesla Phone is also being aimed to launch alongside a custom OS made entirely from scratch, the time for production is likely going to get even longer. At the end of the day, thereās nothing suggesting that the Tesla Pi Phone would be coming anytime soon, if at all.
And what about the Tesla Phoneās price? If we had to guess, itāll probably cost at least $1,000, like most of the best phones available today. But at this point, speculating on the Tesla Phoneās price is a pretty pointless exercise.
Why the Tesla phone isnāt going to happen
After purchasing Twitter and appointing himself CEO, Elon Musk made some (what can generously be called) controversial changes to the site and its rules. Heās aiming to make Twitter a place where his ideas of free speech can be allowed, which has ultimately resulted in providing āamnestyā to previously banned accounts from white supremacists, conspiracy theorists, and other people who were in violation of Twitterās old terms of service.
Musk claimed in a tweet that Apple has āthreatened to withhold Twitter from its App Storeā but didnāt tell him why. The Twitter CEO also claimed that Apple has āmostly stopped advertisingā on the social media site, but also canāt seem to figure out why. Apparently, the worldās richest man is unable to understand why a company like Apple would want to take some cautionary steps away from the gasoline heās pouring on Twitter.
Responding to a tweet from podcaster Liz Wheeler, Musk said that if Apple and Google were to remove Twitter from their app stores, heād ā¦ make an āalternative phone.ā There is no shortage of comments under his tweet egging him on, saying how that would be a great idea.
That would be true if, by āgreat idea,ā the commenters mean a complete disaster on just about every front. According to Wheeler, āthe man builds rockets to Marsā [he actually does not], so āa silly little smartphone should be easy, right?ā Wrong.
Elon Musk seems to think that Apple and Google have a āduopolyā over the smartphone market. While the two companies do control a lot of the industry, theyāre far from the only major companies making successful smartphones. Samsung, Tecno, Huawei, Motorola, Oppo, OnePlus, and plenty of others are making some of the worldās most popular devices. However, they simply havenāt broken through in the U.S. and Europe (with Samsung as an exception) in the same way that Apple and Google have. In Asia and Africa, however, itās a completely different story.
As a basic principle, Musk is coming from a place of misunderstanding as a result of being only partially informed about the smartphone industry, a place he seems pretty comfortable coming from. Simply put, Elon Muskās potential future smartphone wouldnāt just need to compete with Apple and Google. Instead, it would need to compete with a full, global market of excellent devices made by already established companies that are constantly innovating in the space.
Based on his underwhelming success in a good portion of the companies that he owns ā like the internal reports of Twitterās potential impending bankruptcy, the Boring Companyās overall lack of results, and Neuralinkās ridiculous proposed $10 million implant surgery ā thereās no real precedent that a phone made by a company Musk owns would be successful. Obviously, Teslaās success is the exception to that, but Tesla seems to operate the best outside of Muskās influence. Musk frequently overpromises with all of his businesses, Tesla included, which generally makes the company look bad and like itās at the whim of a child whoās spitballing ideas at all times.
Muskās one legitimate point is that Apple and Google have something of a chokehold on the app store market on iOS and Android. If they were to take Twitter off their platforms, the app would likely die a quick death as most users would jump ship to the plethora of other social media apps on the stores.
If that were to happen, Musk would allegedly make some company start working on an āalternative smartphoneā that would boast having Twitter on it as a major feature. At that point, however, Twitter would be completely dead in the water ā save for its browser users made up of stubborn Elon Musk fans ā so it would hardly be a selling point to a general audience that would have already moved on to new apps.
On top of all that, the Musk/Tesla phone would still need to compete with the rest of the smartphone market to be successful ā and to commit to the years-long and multimillion-dollar process of making a new phone (complete with a brand new operating system and app store). There have been plenty of smartphone companies led by a single figurehead that have marketed themselves as alternative options to Apple and Google ā like Carl Pei with Nothing ā but theyāre all still niche products that donāt seriously compete in the way they set out to.
Microsoft tried charting its own course with Windows Phone years ago, but that project ultimately failed after less than 10 years. If Microsoft couldnāt do it, what reason is there to think Musk could?
It would be a major financial ask for Musk to request that his fans to ditch their iPhones, Pixels, and Galaxy phones to buy his new smartphone.
While Musk has an extraordinarily dedicated core group of fans, they almost certainly arenāt enough to support a newcomer to the mobile industry ā and especially not one that rivals Apple and Google. Given how prominently established both companies are in the U.S. market, it would be a major financial ask for Musk to request his fans to ditch their iPhones, Pixels, and Galaxy phones to buy his new smartphone.
Musk is constantly making promises that sound good on paper to his fans. But these promises often never materialize. He promised more than 10 years ago that weād have humans walking on Mars at this point, which, last I checked, still hasnāt happened. Similarly, I wouldnāt be surprised if this fabled Tesla Phone is more smoke and mirrors.
Currently, Musk seems a little tied up losing money with Twitter, so it feels unlikely that heād jump headfirst into the smartphone industry, even if Apple and Google were to take it off their app stores. It seems like a much easier and cheaper solution would be to simply follow the companiesā app store rules regarding hate speech and adult content. But what do I know? I didnāt get forced to buy Twitter, Elon Musk did.
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