SergeyKa an hour ago

Elon: buys some TSLA TSLA: wheeeee!!!! Shorts: oh sh!t, damage control now! Opinion piece writer: here, thx for the dough! NBCs and Reuters: posted, thx for the dough! HNs and Reddits: thx for engagement!

Nothing newsworthy has actually happened, we're just feeding the trolls in shorts, and sending the clicks to justify the dough.

quantified 7 hours ago

Still, since "full self-driving" is allowed to mean "not at all full self-driving" by our laws and courts, the driver is responsible for any accidents here.

BinaryIgor 7 hours ago

I sometimes wonder whether we will ever solve all edge cases like the one described here; maybe, autonomous driving will always remain semi and almost there, but never quite fully

  • Zigurd 6 hours ago

    Fully enough for SFO: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45264562

    And Nashville: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45275415

    Waymo actually works, and is likely to be at or near breakeven financially.

    • yorwba 6 hours ago

      Waymo uses remote operators to resolve situations that the car can't handle on its own (maybe that includes train crossings), so it doesn't need to be fully self-driving: https://waymo.com/blog/2024/05/fleet-response/

      The SFO permit also involves an initial phase using human safety drivers in the car: https://www.sf.gov/news-mayor-lurie-takes-key-step-toward-la...

      Waymo actually works because they don't insist on automating what they cannot automate safely yet.

      • Zigurd 5 hours ago

        Nobody hasn't got remote operators. The difference is whether there are a few enough of them for the fleet that scaling service areas doesn't break the bank.

        • yorwba 4 hours ago

          Does Tesla have remote operators for their "FSD" cars sold to private individuals? That would be news to me.

          • Zigurd 3 hours ago

            FSD for private cars requires you to be the monitor. Not remotely. But sitting right there in the driver's seat with your eyes being monitored for attention.

            Tesla Robo taxis have remote monitors and have a safety driver, either in the passenger seat or in the driver's seat.

            I've seen it suggested that Tesla remotely monitors demo rides. But they don't officially say so.

  • dotcoma 7 hours ago

    Not a fan of self-driving cars (nor of cars in general), but isn't Waymo quite a bit ahead of Tesla?

    • bediger4000 7 hours ago

      You're missing the ELOphaNt in the room.

duxup 7 hours ago

I'm sure it's more complicated than it seems (or maybe not), but that video is pretty damning. It's not like something is blocking the car's view, the lights and crossing bars are very visible. Car just doesn't notice / keeps going.

  • jerlam 6 hours ago

    I'm trying to understand if there is a situation where driving into a red and white stripe with flashing lights on it is correct. Does the Tesla think that because there isn't anything below the crossing arm, that the arm is actually farther away? Or it looks vaguely similar to the back of a trailer, but not enough so that is ignored?

    • duxup 6 hours ago

      Yeah I'm wondering the same, is the just ... baseline obstacle avoidance somehow being bypassed or failing? Those arms are right there.

      It's very strange. Even if it doesn't see it as a RR crossing, there's arms right there.

FireBeyond 7 hours ago

Doesn't surprise me, yes, things have evolved, but 18 months ago in Pennsylvania, watching Tesla show a train crossing as an erratic conga line of trucks and an equally erratic looking traffic light.

  • nrds 3 hours ago

    You're talking about the visualization app. This has almost nothing to do with FSD besides being fed by the same cameras and maybe some similar preprocessing.