3/25/2026 at 1:39:58 AM
It is absolutely stupid to talk about this as edisons revenge. If Tesla had the modern high power transistors needed to get high voltage dc out of the ac produced from a spinning turbine he would be all for high voltage dc too. Tesla understood that high voltage was needed for efficient long range transmission. He also understood that transformers were the inly remotely efficient way to climb up to and down from these high voltages. And transformers only work with ac. So he designed an ac system and even designed some better transformers for it.If there was anything like a high power transistor back then he would have used that. High power transistors that are robust enough to handle the grid were designed inly recently over 100 years after the tesla/edison ac/dc argument.
by hristov
3/25/2026 at 3:56:47 AM
>It is absolutely stupid to talk about this as edisons revenge. If Tesla had the modern high power transistors needed to get high voltage dc out of the ac produced from a spinning turbine he would be all for high voltage dc too.This!
The soon people realized these facts the better. The pervasive high rise buildings did not happen before the invention of modern cranes.
Exactly twenty years ago I was doing a novel research on GaN characterization, and my supervisors made a lot money with consulations around the world, and succesfully founded govt funded start-up company around the technology. Together with SiC, these are the two game changing power devices with wideband semiconductor technology that only maturing recently.
Heck, even the Nobel price winning blue LED discovery was only made feasible by GaN. Watch the excellent video made by Veritasium for this back story [1].
[1] Why It Was Almost Impossible to Make the Blue LED:
by teleforce
3/25/2026 at 10:24:59 AM
What are some novel processes or technologies you see becoming more important in the next 5-10 years?by da02
3/25/2026 at 6:15:01 AM
Does that mean when we run out of Ga there are no more LED TVs?by ta9000
3/25/2026 at 9:39:46 AM
Why would we run out of Ga?by AndrewDucker
3/25/2026 at 10:37:20 AM
There's a component of modern culture that trains and expects people to be extremely pessimistic about long term human development. It results in situations above, where without any further information people just assume by default that were going to run out of a thing and are on some collision course with not just a disaster, but every single conceivable one.(Gallium is a byproduct of aluminum production. We aren't going to run out.)
by mikkupikku
3/25/2026 at 4:15:41 AM
I've heard the EV charging has played a big role in the maturation of GaN / SiC.by mcbishop
3/25/2026 at 4:21:55 AM
Yes, EV and high frequency electronics (microwave, mmWave, photonics) that require very fast switching capability.by teleforce
3/25/2026 at 5:06:57 AM
And military radars love GaNby UltraSane
3/25/2026 at 4:52:18 AM
https://shrunk.ai/research-journals/f/cranes-skyhooks-and-it...by jibal
3/25/2026 at 3:30:31 AM
the internet really needs to stfu about tesla and get over that oatmeal comic that spawned a billion internet myths. dude was a decent inventor but suffered from chronic mental health issues and, in his lifetime, wasted so much time/energy/money and burned so many bridges with his horrible attitude. there's a reason most people didnt like him in his day, he was a depressed asshole who alienated everyone around him, and yes I know he was likely gay in a time when that wasn't cool. the fact still remains; his inventions are massively overblown by internet nerds.the podcaster Sebastian Major from "Our Fake History" did a looonnngg patreon episode on tesla and debunked most of the weird myths around tesla. Sebastian doesn't have a vendetta or anything, it's just amazing how much of the Tesla stuff is just nonsense or is viewed through a very weird bias nowadays. Major also briefly touches on the weird Edison stuff and how the internet has twisted Edison into a villain.
by chrneu
3/25/2026 at 10:02:36 AM
People need heroes. It's like the Keanu Reeves or Musk era, all the ""badass"" stories about this or that soldier / local hero / w/e that are very often overblown and get further and further away from the initial facts every time they resurface. No hate here, just noticing there is a weird visceral need to distill stories to their most essential, good vs evil, and the Tesla v Edison thing embodies this perfectly I think.by elar_verole
3/25/2026 at 4:56:04 AM
We’re talking about Nikola Tesla, not Elon Musk, and I don’t think Musk is gay.by aaronbrethorst
3/25/2026 at 7:41:57 AM
I think you need to read the post you are responding to again.by beAbU
3/25/2026 at 8:06:42 AM
[flagged]by aaronbrethorst
3/25/2026 at 4:02:24 AM
Tesla was an outstanding technologist, but a poor businessman. He had a "vision" (actually more than one) about how his ideas could transform the world. Some of his ideas were amazing, but he was swindled out of his patents because the investors knew he had a passion and wanted to see them in use. The polyphase AC motor or fluorescent light bulb could have made him millions.IMHO, the vision he had about universal free electricity (transmitted wirelessly) was the dumbest. It was a novel idea, and he invested a lot (his time and other people's money) in it. The problem with his idea is that there was no way to monetize it (and profit from it). (There were also the technical issues of the power loss over distance (1/R^2), the harm to the environment, and the interference with radio communications.)
Edison was quite a villain. He stole many of his "inventions", and orchestrated a PR campaign against Tesla touting the "evils" of AC power. AFAIK, the electric chair was either invented or inspired by him.
I know these things because I've read many books on various topics related to Tesla, and all of this knowledge predates the Internet.
by anonymousiam
3/25/2026 at 5:42:55 AM
Essentially none of this is true. The war of the currents was between Edison and Westinghouse, not Tesla. Tesla's downfall was that he turned into a crackpot who rejected modern science, such as Maxwell's equations, and started defrauding investors. Edison was an outspoken opponent of the death penalty, and the electric chair used AC simply because it is much more deadly.by fsh
3/25/2026 at 10:39:36 AM
> The war of the currents was between Edison and Westinghouse [...]Thank you for quashing the gross misinformation. I was going to post this, but searched and found your comment. `\m/`
(I learned of the "Current War" in the 70's, since the Edison Museum was in my "backyard" -- and was a common destination of local school field trips.)
by chipster_f00
3/25/2026 at 5:39:42 AM
Edison did not invent the electric chair. When the inventors were trying to choose between using AC or DC he helped them decide on AC as part of his PR campaign.by HWR_14
3/25/2026 at 1:43:35 AM
Also, if anything would have been Edison's revenge it would have been HVDC, where they're sending power long distances with DC. (But as you said, even there it wouldn't make a ton of sense, since they were arguing in a different era).by arijun
3/25/2026 at 3:09:51 AM
The two primary reasons to do that are to allow the intertie of two AC grids that are not otherwise synchronized, and to take advantage of "earth return" paths when necessary to double the capacity of the line. The latter you may need to consider just to make the line cost effective over an equivalent AC span.by themafia
3/25/2026 at 10:09:23 AM
> If there was anything like a high power transistor back then he would have used that.Mercury arc rectifiers were used long before his death.
by mr_toad
3/25/2026 at 10:46:04 AM
Yes, but a rectifier only rectifies. That's not going to give you DC-DC conversion - let alone converting it to a higher voltage for long-distance transmission.by crote
3/25/2026 at 2:45:45 AM
It's just a fun title, you are overthinking itby Georgelemental
3/25/2026 at 5:37:45 AM
It was Westinghouse who pushed the AC grid against his rival Edison's DC approach. Tesla was a minor figure working for both of them for a bit.by fsh
3/25/2026 at 5:26:59 AM
sure, and also Montezuma didn't actually plan on diarrhea ruining people's vacations, but vernacular usage being what it is we have the phrase Montezuma's revenge.I only found Edison in the headline, I didn't find it anywhere in the body, nor did I find Tesla. Glancing through the article it almost seems like someone tried to make a catchy headline to get clicks.
by bryanrasmussen
3/25/2026 at 2:34:58 AM
Agreed, for the IEEE to go down this route is more than a little weird.by jacquesm
3/25/2026 at 1:49:49 AM
Tesla also design the modern induction motor which needs ac. Though these days we often run them on a phase generator which has a dc step.by bluGill