Whilst a wheel wobble & veering somewhere it's not supposed to go looks bad, it's very difficult to do worse than the average human driver in terms of safety.
It's statistically unlikely that we'd see an issue like this on the first day of a limited deployment if FSD was hitting those numbers.
Waymo seems to be the furthest ahead in my complete outsider opinion. I feel like everyone else is a way distant second.
Assuming the Austin robotaxi service continues to go smoothly, I expect Tesla will leapfrog both of them in the next 12 months. Tesla's cost-effective approach (cameras) combined with the fact that they have already scaled vehicle production positions them really well.
Media (and therefore people who trust it too much) will point out places where each of the services goes wrong, but the reality is that likely all of them are already much safer than human drivers if you define "safety" in terms of severe accidents per million miles.
More than a million people die each year from automobile accidents with humans behind the wheel.
Will sound engineering prevail over brain rot the C-suite? I am skeptical.
Someone will own the platform that coordinate car movement, and then all cars will need to pay to get onto this coordination platform that will tell each car how to drive, which route to take, etc. Each car know what all the other cars in its area will be doing, so that mass coordination is possible. This is how you can get a completely full highway but all traveling at 65 mph 1 feet away from each other.
I suppose the solution is to seal in all roads then with high walls; what dystopian future.
Car ownership definitely isn’t going away. Sharing a vehicle with the general public gets old fast if you have the means to avoid it.
There are also many reasons people use cars for more than going from point A to point B on a purely transactional basis. Many professions need to leave things in the car or truck like tools or even your laptop. Having to take everything you own into every building in case the self-driving car gets called back home for service or whatever isn’t going to work.
Then local Gov will charge more to allow non robot cars on the road ( less wear and tear on the roads, fewer roads needed due to more reliably predictable drivers and fewer accidents).
Then lastly manufactures will get to a point that they need to simplify their production range and will pretty much only produce self driving.
lastly, culturally the demand will change. the ipad generation dont want to have learn to drive or have to spend their screen time driving. the damand from them alone will push for self driving cars.
Also authorities are getting giddy when a human tries to drive on railways, so it's effectively illegal to drive in certain places where the ride sharing is the default mode of transportation. It's also very privacy focused, even though there are cameras everywhere you can just buy an anonymous travel pass that you top-up every once in a while. It also allows you to hop between rides for free or at discount.
In the larger cities they often use hyperloop, so you never get stuck in the traffic.
This conflation and mixing of words is something which Tesla seems to do intentionally (Full Self Driving, Autonomy, etc), or am I being cynical about that?
Presumably if there were an incident they would be trying to remedy any situation.
karlgkk•3h ago
> 10-or-so cars
> human driver behind the wheel (except in this beta)
> invitation based (apparently a very limited audience)
> geofenced not only to a city, but to a small handful of neighborhoods
> early reports suggest disengagement requires remote re-engagement
I hope they get there, more competition in this space is good. But, this is pathetic. They're so far behind Waymo it isn't even funny.
jamessinghal•3h ago
jen20•3h ago
jamessinghal•3h ago
darth_avocado•3h ago
blackjack_•3h ago
trainsarebetter•2h ago
jfoster•1h ago
Are you looking at the feeds from the cars to reach 32? Each screen is from the cameras around a single car, so you're actually only seeing 5 cars from that.
jsight•2h ago
If they are still doing this in 3 months, it'd be a bad sign, of course. Their plan is for rapid growth next year.
We'll see if they are able to do that.
__m•2h ago
smallmancontrov•2h ago
- Me, if I wanted to be equally ham-handed in throwing the comparison for Tesla.
In reality, we are seeing two bets on two different approaches. Do you scale up supervised driving to maximize data collection/diversity and then go unsupervised? Or do you go unsupervised and then scale up problem solving as you go? The cool thing is that both of these approaches are being tried so we will find out. If you want to place a bet of your own, you can find the casino in your favorite brokerage app!
In any case, the videos of what is possible with supervised FSD are quite amazing, certainly not "pathetic," and what remains to be seen is if they can successfully navigate the supervised->unsupervised jump, which is certainly not trivial.
Arc de Triomphe: https://youtu.be/o2xKpbKZLVA?t=7
Busy China: https://youtu.be/ybBpRN4Hqbc?t=13
Manhattan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qafr3RrJRfU
jfoster•1h ago
jnsaff2•1h ago
jfoster•1h ago