People want to drive electric cars. They want to experience the smooth, quiet power electric cars offer. They want to stop paying for gasoline. They want to spend less on repairs and maintenance. And they want to do their part to stop spewing tailpipe emissions into the air for their family and neighbors to breathe.
What they don’t want to do is be standing in the pouring rain trying to get an EV charger to work. They don’t want to have a welter of apps on their phones or a pocketful of charging cards in order to charge their cars when they need to. They want pretty much the same experience they are used to at the gas pump – drive up, pay, fill the tank, and go.
They don’t want desperate phone calls or text messages to some faceless customer service rep begging to have a public charger activated. What good is a public charger if the public can’t use it?
The…
Read the full article originally published at cleantechnica.com.