Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released
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The future is going to suck.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
The future is going to suck.
If you live long enough, you will reach a time when you’re too old to drive yourself, your kids and grandkids don’t want to drive you, the human taxi/ride share/bus/train drivers have all been put out of business by self-driving AI, so your only means of going anywhere is to rely on self-driving AI anyway.
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@Axtremus said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
The future is going to suck.
If you live long enough, you will reach a time when you’re too old to drive yourself, your kids and grandkids don’t want to drive you, the human taxi/ride share/bus/train drivers have all been put out of business by self-driving AI, so your only means of going anywhere is to rely on self-driving AI anyway.
Like I said...
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30 minutes on FSD....
Link to video -
Watching these videos, and they are, for the most part, pretty impressive, I don't see how "Full Self-Driving" is really any easier than just doing it by yourself.
Maybe it's becauseI'm an old fart, but it strikes me as being more work than just putting your feet on the pedals and turning the wheel. As I was watching, I always thought, "Is it going to stop? C'mon, man. STOP!!" I don't need that.That said, I love the adaptive cruise control in my car. It makes all kinds of driving so much easier, but requires little more, if any, attention than regular driving.
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@George-K said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
Watching these videos, and they are, for the most part, pretty impressive, I don't see how "Full Self-Driving" is really any easier than just doing it by yourself.
Maybe it's becauseI'm an old fart, but it strikes me as being more work than just putting your feet on the pedals and turning the wheel. As I was watching, I always thought, "Is it going to stop? C'mon, man. STOP!!" I don't need that.That said, I love the adaptive cruise control in my car. It makes all kinds of driving so much easier, but requires little more, if any, attention than regular driving.
The endgame is cars that don’t need a driver and talk to each other.
No intersection lights. Higher throughout, given the same infrastructure. And probably a fraction of the 40K or so deaths per year on roads. (Not sure about that number - but you get the point. )
Owning a car in the future will be somewhat akin to owning a horse today.
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@xenon said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
The endgame is cars that don’t need a driver and talk to each other.
I still want Star Trek’s transporter.
No intersection lights.
Not without outlawing pedestrians and cyclists. We will still need signal lights, if only for the luddites who insist on retaining their freedom to walk or pedal with their own two feet without electromechanical aid.
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If self driving is supposed to be a success, we should be surprised when it does something wrong, not when it does something right.
I kind of agree with George that its utility is limited when you still have to be ready to take over in any second.
I want my self driving car to have a bed that I can sleep in and a desk I can work at while it drives me to the desired location.
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@George-K it took me a while to get used to adaptive cruise, but now I love it. The only drawback is that someties you will get stuck behind someone who is going slower than you wnt to (that's pretty much everybody for me) and you dont notice when you could have passed them on the right.
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@Klaus said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
I kind of agree with George that its utility is limited when you still have to be ready to take over in any second.
I will be even more impressed when the self-driving AI providers accept all legal liability otherwise borne by the human driver for whenever the vehicle is not manually taken off auto pilot.
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@Klaus said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
If self driving is supposed to be a success, we should be surprised when it does something wrong, not when it does something right.
I kind of agree with George that its utility is limited when you still have to be ready to take over in any second.
I want my self driving car to have a bed that I can sleep in and a desk I can work at while it drives me to the desired location.
So, basically a train.
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@xenon said in Tesla "Full Self-Driving" Beta released:
No intersection lights. Higher throughout, given the same infrastructure. And probably a fraction of the 40K or so deaths per year on roads.
I agree. I was reading that alot of traffic jams are not because of too many cars on the road, but because the cars are going different speeds. Almost like a "Slinky" toy. One car slows. The one behind reacts, behind that one reacts a bit slower, until eventually a car comes to a stop.
Link to video -
@taiwan_girl that's interesting. Not unusual to be driving the "expressways" in Chicago and things slow to a crawl for no apparent reason. I just shake my head and wonder what that was all about. This makes it a bit more clear.
Also, the psychology of driving in "wolf packs." If you look at how traffic is bunched up on expressways, you'll see it come in waves (assuming the flow is steady and fast). I try to stay between them.