
Austin | オースティン
13.3K posts

Austin | オースティン
@Austinomu
美容師歴約15年 | ワーホリ2ヵ国🇳🇿🇦🇺 | 40代主夫業×在宅個人事業主 | 趣味はキャンプ・家庭菜園・釣り | テスラモデルY2026年3月納車











これはwww インスタの丁寧ライフスタイル発信系インフルエンサーテスラオーナーの皆様におかれましては、ぜひモーニングルーティーンに組み込んでいただきたくwwwwww




先々月オーダー入れたテスラYLモデルの納車が、6月末までに間に合わないと今日はっきり言われました! 充電無料3年間はおまけ程度に考えてたのでまあ良いですけど、間に合う詐欺だったな笑 界隈は荒れそうな...😇 こんなんだったら充電料分賄うためにスペースX買っておけば良かったな笑 #tesla





My 7-year-old son thinks it’s completely normal for me to play chess with him while Tesla FSD drives us. But the more I think about this… it hit me. To him, Tesla FSD may not look like some amazing piece of technology... to him it’s just normal life. He never experienced a world where every second in a car required the driver to be fully focused on steering, braking, and navigating. For him, he sees a car that safely handles the driving while Dad spends that time talking with him, teaching him, laughing with him, or playing a game of chess. That’s a pretty big shift when you really think about it. Every generation grows up taking for granted things that once seemed impossible. The internet. Smartphones. Video calls. Now we’re watching the beginning of that same transition with autonomy. For many adults, FSD still feels futuristic. For kids growing up today, it’s become the way cars work. What’s fascinating is that the biggest change is what people do with the time it gives back. Instead of staring at the road for hours, families can spend more time together, learn, work, relax, or simply enjoy the ride. My son doesn’t see autonomy as a breakthrough, like me. He sees this as normal. And that’s how I know the future is here.












