Tesla's API pricing is Watch online Womb Raider (2003) full movielive, and the news is not good for third party app developers.
On Thursday, the company revealed third party API pricing, which varies related to the type of data the app requires. Streaming vehicle signals to the app, for example, cost $1 per 150,000 signals; performing commands on a Tesla device costs $1 per 1,000 requests; polling a limited set of data from the vehicle costs $1 per 500 requests, and waking up the vehicle from sleep costs $1 per 50 requests.
Tesla got an official API (application programming interface) in October 2023 after years of developers having to rely on an unofficial API. But access was free — until now.
This can be hard to put into perspective if you're a regular user, but for some third-party app developers, these prices are a deal breaker. On Reddit (via Electrek), the developer of popular third-party app Tessie said it would cost them $60 million per year to keep operating at current API pricing rates.
SEE ALSO: The story in which we highlight yet another Tesla Cybertruck recallTessie is an app that offers a comprehensive set of information on your Tesla car, such as real-world range, battery health, and charging times. It also allows the user to perform certain commands on the car. According to the developer, Tessie makes an API call to a car every 30 seconds when the car is "awake and busy."
"Assuming someone leaves Sentry on (common) and the car stays busy, and there are 43,829 minutes in a month, that's 87,658 calls per month. At $1 per 500 requests, that's $175 for one month for one vehicle - not counting wakes or commands. In the worst case, where all vehicles are subscribed and all vehicles have Sentry on, it's actually 470,000 vehicles * $175 = $82,250,000 per month or $987,000,000 per year."
Tessie is a paid app, but these costs are obviously unsustainable. The Tessie developer said they plan to circumvent this by using "direct car communication over IP and BLE," which will require a "wild amount of effort."
Tyler Corsair, founder of another popular Tesla app Teslascope, also voiced his opinion in the same Reddit thread. "The current rates will put the majority (if not all) third-party services, including my own. To provide the same frequency of data would cost Teslascope 7.5x its monthly revenue."
And the developer of another third party app, Teslemetry, said it would cost him "25x revenue at this point."
Tesla does not provide a way for the media to send inquiries, so we can't ask about the reasoning behind these rates. If nothing changes, however, it appears that a lot of third-party apps are going out of business.
With this move, Tesla appears to be going the same path as X (ex-Twitter), and Reddit, which put a lot of developers out of business when they drastically increased API pricing for third party apps.
Topics Tesla
This weightlifter dances at the Olympics for a very important reasonThis Reese's machine lets you exchange your trash Halloween candy for peanut butter cupsEarth’s carbon levels are likely their highest in 15 million yearsHow to watch Apple unveil new iPads on Oct. 30Red Dead Redemption 2 is the latest video game to get blackjack wrongApple reveals redesigned iPad Pro tablets with USBSound the alarms: Simone Biles finally met Zac EfronFacebook bans farPinterest launches promoted clips to cash in on growing number of video postsMichael Phelps and Katie Ledecky restage their iconic #TBT photoSony reveals the 20 iconic games coming with the PlayStation ClassicRPGnet gaming forum formally bans Donald Trump support on the websiteAirbnb activates disaster response site for Louisiana floodingJ.K. Rowling makes 'Harry Potter' joke about Olympics eventThere's no need to update AirPower or AirPods when you have Lana Del ReyPeople are losing their minds over the world's most successful Olympic couplePlease Apple, don't kill MagSafeThe moments that prove Usain Bolt is the greatest showmanDisrupting your body's internal clock could make you more vulnerable to colds and flusDonald Trump still hasn't spent a dime on commercials, but he promises to start Marvel is bringing you a 'Last Jedi' Star Wars comic Mozzarella stick chips are here and how have we lived without them? Uma Thurman shares her Weinstein story, and talks about Tarantino Women in tech: They way we talk about the issue matters 'Pioneers of African Toad's mushroom head is in fact his head, not a hat, Nintendo confirms Snapchat launches Snap Store, in Former Apple CEO John Sculley on Steve Jobs, networks, and regulation 'Harry Potter' books are still flying off the shelves with 500 million copies sold 'Insignificant Mysteries' reveals the truth behind life's curiosities TiVo will let you skip the football and watch just the Super Bowl commercials What's a hashtag? A digital weapon to bring us together and divide us 'This is Us': Why we're addicted to crying with this show about Jack's death It's not just you – the TV went dead during the Super Bowl Lyft brings pre Bitcoin drops below $9,000 on (potentially) bad news from India How Mammoth Media is trying to reinvent entertainment for teens What it's like to live as a tea drinker in a coffee drinker's world Release of Nunes memo overloads House website 'This is Us' recap: 15 times I screamed 'nope!' as Jack died
1.7423s , 10130.90625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch online Womb Raider (2003) full movie】,Co-creation Information Network