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Transportation Technology

Tesla Quietly Drops 'Full Self-Driving' Option As It Adds $45,000 Model 3 (arstechnica.com) 101

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Elon Musk took to Twitter on Thursday evening to inform his followers of a new addition to the Model 3 lineup. This is not the long-awaited $35,000 version, however; the mid-range Model 3 starts at $45,000. Musk also revealed that the Model 3 ordering process has been simplified and now has fewer options. One that's missing -- from all new Tesla orders, not just the Model 3 -- is the controversial "full self-driving" option. The reason? It was "causing too much confusion," Musk tweeted. The mid-range Model 3s will be rear-wheel drive only, prompting some to wonder if the company was using software to limit battery capacity on existing RWD inventory in order to get it out of the door. But Tesla says it's able to build these slightly cheaper cars by using the same battery pack as the more expensive, longer-range cars but with fewer cells inside (so no future software upgrades can increase their range at a later date). While Tesla is promoting the car as costing as little as $30,700 by factoring in "gas savings" and all federal and local tax incentives, it did also announce last week that any new Tesla delivered after October 15th might not ship before the beginning of next year. As Ars Technica notes, "Any new Tesla delivered after January 1st 2019 (but before July 1st 2019) is only eligible for a $3,750 IRS credit."
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Tesla Quietly Drops 'Full Self-Driving' Option As It Adds $45,000 Model 3

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  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @04:35PM (#57506498) Homepage Journal
    You mean "it doesn't work". Autonomous driving is a joke and will never happen. I can't wait until the new Tesla "AI chip" arrives though.
    • by Spy Handler ( 822350 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @04:38PM (#57506518) Homepage Journal

      Elon is correct, it was pulled because of too much confusion. The autopilot kept getting too confused by white colored objects and pedestrians.

      • The real issue was that the name was a poor choice. People put far too much confidence in it. Maybe that was going to happen no matter what since people are lazy, stupid fools, but the name probably exacerbated this greatly. Call it “Driver Assist” or something like that. It’s not supposed to drive you around or be flawless, but to react to a dangerous situation before you can when it’s capable of that.
        • by Koby77 ( 992785 )
          Of course, if they labelled it truthfully, how many people would have bought "Driver Assist" instead of "Autopilot" ? It seems like a classic bait and switch to me to gain market share early, and then walk back the name later.
          • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @06:02PM (#57506894)

            Well, lets get a few things strait. Autopilot and Full Self Driving are two completely different products Tesla sells.

            Autopilot: Is available today, you can pay for it still, and it will work just as advertised. It is getting better and better with software updates (lane merging is smoother since 9.0, it detects objects around you more accurately, and will soon have "Drive on Nav" which will enable the Tesla to move between freeway to freeway intersections, weave through traffic to get around slow drivers, and find your Freeway exit.

            Autopilot (for those of you who have never been in a cockpit), is a perfectly valid name for what the technology does, almost too perfect. Why?

            1. Like autopilot, the actual pilot is required to be at the controls and aware 100% of the time. Pilots do this. They do not turn on autopilot on a 12 hour flight and go to schmooze with the hot flight attendants.

            2. Like autopilot, its primary use is major causeways for the majority of the trip, not all of the trip. Sure. Autopilots could handle takeoff and landing, but pilots do this manually. Just like Tesla. Tesla say to use Autopilot on freeways. Tesla Autopilot doesn't handle stop signs and red lights yet, so surface driving (like when a plane taxis around the airport and takes off) is specifically in the hands of the pilot. See the similarities?

            3. Like autopilot, it can help you avoid impacts. It isn't perfect, and can warn the pilot of impending crashes ("Pull up!", "Terrain").

            Full Self Driving: This is a separate and independent feature of making the Autopilot handle self recharges (through equipped Supercharging stations), allowing it to handle itself on the vast majority of roads (including surface streets), and ultimately allowing someone to call their car to them from across the country with no driver required. This is the product Tesla took out of their "new car ordering" system, but allows you to add later (just as those who purchased a Tesla without the FSD option were and are still able to do.

            Just thought I would clear all that up :)

            • Do you have to fly much, perhaps for business?

              If so, I'll just leave these statements alone and let you think these things if you want to:

              --
              1. They do not turn on autopilot on a 12 hour flight and go to schmooze with the hot flight attendants.

              2. takeoff and landing, but pilots do this manually. Just like Tesla.

              3. Like autopilot, it can help you avoid impacts... warn the pilot of impending crashes ("Pull up!", "Terrain").
              --

        • by Anonymous Coward

          It's a flawed design from inception to execution. The idea that people "wouldn't drive, but would be ready to take over from a computer in an instant when they 'sensed' that it wasn't functioning safely" IS RETARDED, PERIOD.

          In no way is that a naming problem.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          No. You're confusing EAP and FSD. EAP exists, is usable, and is a driver assist, not full self driving. FSD is in development, cannot be activated by users, and is what it says on the tin - full self driving, not a driver assist.

        • The real issue was that the name was a poor choice. People put far too much confidence in it. Maybe that was going to happen no matter what since people are lazy, stupid fools, but the name probably exacerbated this greatly. Call it “Driver Assist” or something like that. It’s not supposed to drive you around or be flawless, but to react to a dangerous situation before you can when it’s capable of that.

          You obviously never read the feature description for Full Self Driving feature (FSD) described here. It was not a poor choice of a name, it was actually named very accurately for what it was supposed to. Here are some quotes of the said description which appeared when ordering it:
          "All you will need to do is get in and tell the car where to go."
          "Your Tesla will figure out the optimal route, navigate urban streets (even without lane markings), manage complex intersections with traffic lights, stop signs and r

      • Full self-driving != Enhanced Autopilot.

        Enhanced Autopilot is still and option, and drives millions of miles without issue.

    • There are autonomous Waymo vehicles on the road today - people take them on a regular basis. The question isn't if 'autonomous driving will happen'. The question is really how quickly it will become pervasive, and that is partially dependent on how well autonomous vehicles will perform in 'challenging' cities like New York and Boston and not only in places like Phoenix.

      ]{

  • by Paul King ( 2953311 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @04:44PM (#57506536)

    "any new Tesla delivered after October 15th might not ship before the beginning of next year."

    To all those doubters as to Musk's genius he's only gone and invented a time machine, shipping cars weeks after they get delivered.

  • by crow ( 16139 ) on Friday October 19, 2018 @07:44PM (#57507262) Homepage Journal

    The removal of FSD is probably a mix of a number of factors:

    • Most people aren't buying it
    • The current price doesn't cover the hardware upgrade costs
    • They might be afraid of lawsuits if FSD isn't available soon

    I don't see Tesla worrying about the last factor much--not because it isn't an issue, but because it's just not how the company operates. The real issue is probably that they are expecting the hardware upgrade to cost $5000, and the FSD package was only $3000. They were probably seeing a significant uptick in FSD orders after they announced the hardware upgrades would probably cost $5K for people who hadn't ordered it.

    I would also note that the FSD option has gone away for the Model S/X purchasers, too, though the reporting has focused on the Model 3.

  • The feds finally told Musk to stop selling snake oil. Let's see how well the people who got scammed by FSD will do getting their refunds as unsecured creditors during bankruptcy. They'll have to get in line with the others who never will have gotten their Model 3 refunds. And even those poor sods who paid for their car in full and have yet to receive it.

    So many different interests will feel screwed when Tesla implodes. I fear the biggest fallout will be the damage done to the true environmentally sustain

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