Tesla will likely be the market leader in self-driving technology and it's a good thing
Soon it will be undeniable that FSD is the most advanced and safest self-driving system on the planet and the haters just need to accept it. It's a good thing because it's literally saving human lives.
You might not like Teslas as a vehicle nor the company itself due to the CEO but the fact is that no other manufacturer offers equally capable self-driving system and this is unlikely to change anytime soon. If you've not been following this technology closely they just switched from human code to 100% neural nets and the difference between V11 and V12 cannot be overstated. It's still not perfect and probably never will be but it's really good and there's a good chance it's already safer driver than the average human. This is all done using only cameras. No radar, no LiDAR.
There's also rumors going around that Ford is about to licence the FSD software in their own vehicles and others are likely to follow so it will not be just Tesla's that are using it.
Tesla is stuck on level 2, and for years already (regardless how many times they renamed their system), and they are not expected to reach level 3 anytime soon.
Others have level 4 vehicles running driverless in some restricted environments, and Mercedes has recently started selling level 3 vehicles to private users.
Restricted environments. If Tesla use that as their criteria they’d meet that.
Fsd is cool. I’ve been using it for years but it either works like a dream or tries to kill you.
It’s not prime time but overall it’s more advanced than anyone else since it doesn’t use pre mapped paths.
Mercedes level 3 is highly conditional unlike Tesla.
The point being Tesla has an advanced system but ford would be an idiot it licensing it. Every time I think Tesla cracked the code, it tries to murder me.
Ah but you see, I have no desire whatsoever to argue with Tesla's marketing department. But posting an advertisement for whatever they are lying about this week on Unpopular Opinion is just shilling and deserves to be called out.
Literally today a Tesla on autodrive killed a person on a motorcycle.
The reason no one else offers it is because it's half baked, unfinished, permanently beta, and not safe to be on real roads.
Driving has 10,000 edge cases and every one needs to be tested and 100% perfect, and because of that self driving is a long ways away. Real car manufacturers know that, and know what Tesla is actually selling - a gimmick.
Driving has 10,000 edge cases and every one needs to be tested and 100% perfect, and because of that self driving is a long ways away.
This is the 'devil is in the details', as to why autodriving isn't there yet.
Having the code for every one of those edge cases in the office/lab via simulation has got to be a nightmare, and no way to be complete before releasing.
exactly. Anyone who has ever coded anything professionally knows how intense a problem like this is. There's a reason that no one, not even Google, Microsoft, or Apple have successfully done it. They may still be researching, but to think it's a simple problem that can be handwaved away with AI and models is incredibly naiive.
AI is just probability. This picture is probably a dog, with over 90% accuracy. Which is great when you're classifying cats and dogs - but we're doing real time live determinations of things while driving, and that's a completely different problem set. Now we need AI to predict with a much higher probability that there is a person in the street, or the street is dividing, or there is a construction zone, or the car ahead is starting to slow down, or.... 10,000 other edge cases.
I still don't understand how self driving vehicles hit things. Job #1 is don't hit things. If they can just do that they will be much better than human drivers.
That's why Tesla moved away from human code and instead they use neural nets to analyze video content of good human drivers. The point about edge cases still stands but the advantage Tesla has over most other manufacturers is that there's a ton of people already using FSD and reporting said edge cases back to Tesla so that they can be fixed.
There's also a possibility that going with human code along with radar/LiDAR is a dead end and once others realize this Tesla so far ahead that the rest can't catch up.
Tesla doesn't have a system called autodrive. They have autopilot and Full Self Driving and I'm speaking of the latter.
Self driving cars are not going to entirely stop traffic accidents either. Even with a system that's 10x better driver than a human there's still going to be 3000 deaths due to traffic accidents in the US alone.
Do you know how many traffic fatalities there are every day in the United States? FSD-related fatalities are rare, but they make the news every time. Someone dies roughly every 15min from a traffic accident, meaning about 10 people died in a car accident since you wrote this post.
I don't know about the efficacy of FSD or whatever, but many, many more people are killed by human driven cars than self-driving vehicles. Self-driving vehicles don't need to be perfect, they simply need to be better than humans, and, unfortunately, that's not a very high bar to clear.
I'm ambivalent about Tesla. I really, really dislike Musk. But I actually have a tremendous amount of respect for the ENGINEERS at Tesla that are making some of the safest cars on the road based on crash testing--including ICE vehicles. There's a lot of smart, hard-working people being underpaid and overworked to produce safe electric vehicles. I think they deserve praise.
I don’t know about the efficacy of FSD or whatever, but many, many more people are killed by human driven cars than self-driving vehicles.
"Self-driving" vehicles are so new to the market that this is a preposterous argument. They're surely less than 1% of the cars on the road and I'm being generous with that estimate.
Some of the things you can see FED doing in videos are completely ridiculous. It’s in no way safer than a typical driver. Blow stop signs, stop suddenly, pulls out and stops in intersections, ignores speed limits, can’t handle construction, can’t deal with fog, rain or snow properly.
Yes, this has been an issue with the previous versions. Not so much with the latest one. Ofcourse it'll still make mistakes but so do humans. No system will ever be 100% perfect.
Ford’s Blue Cruise is pretty dang good, I have a hard time imagining Tesla is doing a better job. Tesla also has major problems with its leadership, and that culture inevitably flows down to development teams, so I definitely don’t trust their software.
They're really different systems. Blue cruise is for highway use only on selected roads where as FSD can navigate in cities, residential areas, parking lots, around pedestrians and even on unmapped roads. While blue cruise may be very good at doing this one thing, FSD is much more capable all-around. I highly recommend checking out the video I linked above incase you're not up to date with it.
I'm one of the first people to shit on Tesla, but hasn't the company's philosophy always been that they are a software company that makes cars? I could see it happening.
To add on to the OP, I'd even argue that Tesla may stop making cars entirely and just move on to contracting out tech and software for major automakers. Looking at all the sales headaches the company's been facing these past few years, I wouldn't be surprised to see them pivot to just operating behind the scenes and let the established players deal with the user distribution side of things.
Oh yeah, I don't think it would happen anytime soon but what future does Tesla have otherwise? Elon's already tainted the brand for the company's most likely buyers and sales figures show it. Not many people want a Tesla car, but their tech is still desirable for many people (including other automakers who don't want to spend the resources on R&D that Tesla's already done