a_unique_person
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning
All painted car exteriors have the same advice for caring for the finish as the Cybertruck.
It is a failure as a truck, though.
It is a failure as a truck, though.
It's a free trial. Lots of companies give out free trials in an attempt to hook more people to buy their products. Of course, most free trials don't have the potential to kill people.
What's interesting is why Tesla are suddenly doing this (and mandating the demo on delivery at the cost of huge inconvenience to their sales staff). I suspect they are in desperate need of the money a bump in take up of FSD would provide.
https://qz.com/elon-musk-tesla-electric-vehicle-deliveries-sales-q1-1851380928
while the stock continues to drop, not only sales but also deliveries fell short of expectations
as far as fsd goes, as much as people think it's cool and novel, or you could even pitch that it's safer than people, the pricing is pretty nuts. if they can get a lot of consumers to commit to it, there's a lot of money to be made. question is, if it's really even ready for that kind of rollout, does it function well enough to justify that kind of cost?
https://qz.com/elon-musk-tesla-electric-vehicle-deliveries-sales-q1-1851380928
while the stock continues to drop, not only sales but also deliveries fell short of expectations
as far as fsd goes, as much as people think it's cool and novel, or you could even pitch that it's safer than people, the pricing is pretty nuts. if they can get a lot of consumers to commit to it, there's a lot of money to be made. question is, if it's really even ready for that kind of rollout, does it function well enough to justify that kind of cost?
Considering Shalamar's post above stating his required significant interventions 5 times in 60 miles, does it function well enough even if it were free?
For me, intermittent intervention is the worst of both worlds. I need to be fully tuned out, as on a plane, train, or bus, or as a passenger in a car someone else is driving. Or I need to be fully tuned in, fully engaged in driving the car. Passively observing while the car drives itself, supposedly ready to intervene the moment it deviates, pretty much guarantees my mind will be wandering and inattentive at the moment of truth.
With any luck I'll be dead, before continuously driving your own car finally goes out of fashion.
For me, intermittent intervention is the worst of both worlds. I need to be fully tuned out, as on a plane, train, or bus, or as a passenger in a car someone else is driving. Or I need to be fully tuned in, fully engaged in driving the car. Passively observing while the car drives itself, supposedly ready to intervene the moment it deviates, pretty much guarantees my mind will be wandering and inattentive at the moment of truth.
With any luck I'll be dead, before continuously driving your own car finally goes out of fashion.
I think this largely describes me, as well. I don't necessarily need to be fully tuned in, so to speak, but I do need to be in continuous control to keep paying attention to the things I need to be paying attention to, even if I do let my mind wander on longer stretches where I don't need to turn or be as wary of traffic as I pay attention to those things habitually. Needing to passively observe while the car drives itself, supposedly ready to intervene in case of problems, pretty much defeats much of the point of self-driving and would definitely raise the chances of getting into an accident, for me.
For me, intermittent intervention is the worst of both worlds. I need to be fully tuned out, as on a plane, train, or bus, or as a passenger in a car someone else is driving. Or I need to be fully tuned in, fully engaged in driving the car. Passively observing while the car drives itself, supposedly ready to intervene the moment it deviates, pretty much guarantees my mind will be wandering and inattentive at the moment of truth.
With any luck I'll be dead, before continuously driving your own car finally goes out of fashion.
For me, intermittent intervention is the worst of both worlds. I need to be fully tuned out, as on a plane, train, or bus, or as a passenger in a car someone else is driving. Or I need to be fully tuned in, fully engaged in driving the car. Passively observing while the car drives itself, supposedly ready to intervene the moment it deviates, pretty much guarantees my mind will be wandering and inattentive at the moment of truth.
With any luck I'll be dead, before continuously driving your own car finally goes out of fashion.
If you say so. It's the constant little course corrections that keep me alert and engaged with the act of driving. Sitting doing nothing while having to pay attention in case something happens is my personal hell.I find the lane keeping and distance keeping to be fine on modern cars for rural highways as long as the center stripe is easily visible. I'm still "driving" though, I just don't have that fatigue that creeps in by constantly having to make little course corrections on a long journey.
If you say so. It's the constant little course corrections that keep me alert and engaged with the act of driving. Sitting doing nothing while having to pay attention in case something happens is my personal hell.
But that's why it's being supplied for free - to improve its performance. The more people use it the more data they have to tune the AI. The 'significant interventions' are not bad thing. It will learn from its mistakes.Considering Shalamar's post above stating his required significant interventions 5 times in 60 miles, does it function well enough even if it were free?
I know what you mean. That's why I swore never to buy a car with automatic transmission.If you say so. It's the constant little course corrections that keep me alert and engaged with the act of driving.
If you think that's bad, try being a passenger. Nothing worse than constantly paying attention in case something happens, knowing that you can't take over if it does!Sitting doing nothing while having to pay attention in case something happens is my personal hell.
But that's why it's being supplied for free - to improve its performance. The more people use it the more data they have to tune the AI. The 'significant interventions' are not bad thing. It will learn from its mistakes.
This thread is about Tesla, but let's not ignore all the other car companies that are working on FSD.
28 Self-Driving Car Companies You Should Know
But of course nobody's excoriating them for advancing driving technology to the next level, because...
This is the main point for me. Fair enough a Tesla driver making an informed decision if it only affected themselves, when they want to involve the rest of us, not so fair.i'm not sure when i consented to being on the same road as this alpha test
But that's why it's being supplied for free - to improve its performance. The more people use it the more data they have to tune the AI. The 'significant interventions' are not bad thing. It will learn from its mistakes.
This thread is about Tesla, but let's not ignore all the other car companies that are working on FSD.
28 Self-Driving Car Companies You Should Know
But of course nobody's excoriating them for advancing driving technology to the next level, because...
It's not being supplied for free, it's a free trial.But that's why it's being supplied for free
- to improve its performance.
The more people use it the more data they have to tune the AI. The 'significant interventions' are not bad thing. It will learn from its mistakes.
This thread is about Tesla, but let's not ignore all the other car companies that are working on FSD.
28 Self-Driving Car Companies You Should Know
But of course nobody's excoriating them for advancing driving technology to the next level, because...