Any battery based on current tech that you could easily move from your car to your apartment to charge would not be large enough to provide (psychologically) useful range. Then we would be right back to scary articles and Youtube videos saying things like "the Nissan TotesEV has only 40 miles of range. Anyone caught dead driving this vehicle will literally die on the side of a snowy road!"
Most products you can buy are marketed to some subset of the population and only usable by a portion of the population. Porch swings are only useful to people with porches. Even if they cost $1, folks without porches probably wouldn't buy many. Slip-N-Slides are only useful to limber youth with access to water and a bit of a downhill slope. Unfortunately now that I have water and my only downhill slope I'm no longer as limber or youthful as I used to be. Bummer.
Lower income folks are pretty much locked out of all markets, mostly because of how much money it costs to be poor. For example, if you have a couple kids figure out how many loads of laundry you do per week. Now figure out how much that would cost (in time and money) at your local laundromat if you can't pull together enough money at one time to afford a washing machine.
Most products you can buy are marketed to some subset of the population and only usable by a portion of the population. Porch swings are only useful to people with porches. Even if they cost $1, folks without porches probably wouldn't buy many. Slip-N-Slides are only useful to limber youth with access to water and a bit of a downhill slope. Unfortunately now that I have water and my only downhill slope I'm no longer as limber or youthful as I used to be. Bummer.
Lower income folks are pretty much locked out of all markets, mostly because of how much money it costs to be poor. For example, if you have a couple kids figure out how many loads of laundry you do per week. Now figure out how much that would cost (in time and money) at your local laundromat if you can't pull together enough money at one time to afford a washing machine.