Tesla Teardown Finds Electronics 6 Years Ahead of Toyota and VW (nikkei.com) 259
Elon Musk's Tesla technology is far ahead of the industry giants, a new report has concluded. From the report: This is the takeaway from Nikkei Business Publications' teardown of the Model 3, the most affordable car in the U.S. automaker's all-electric lineup, starting at about $33,000. What stands out most is Tesla's integrated central control unit, or "full self-driving computer." Also known as Hardware 3, this little piece of tech is the company's biggest weapon in the burgeoning EV market. It could end the auto industry supply chain as we know it. One stunned engineer from a major Japanese automaker examined the computer and declared, "We cannot do it." The module -- released last spring and found in all new Model 3, Model S and Model X vehicles -- includes two custom, 260-sq.-millimeter AI chips. Tesla developed the chips on its own, along with special software designed to complement the hardware. The computer powers the cars' self-driving capabilities as well as their advanced in-car "infotainment" system.
This kind of electronic platform, with a powerful computer at its core, holds the key to handling heavy data loads in tomorrow's smarter, more autonomous cars. Industry insiders expect such technology to take hold around 2025 at the earliest. That means Tesla beat its rivals by six years. The implications for the broader auto industry are huge and -- for some -- frightening. Tesla built this digital nerve center through a series of upgrades to the original Autopilot system it introduced in 2014. What was also called Hardware 1 was a driver-assistance system that allowed the car to follow others, mostly on highways, and automatically steer in a lane. Every two or three years, the company pushed the envelope further, culminating in the full self-driving computer.
This kind of electronic platform, with a powerful computer at its core, holds the key to handling heavy data loads in tomorrow's smarter, more autonomous cars. Industry insiders expect such technology to take hold around 2025 at the earliest. That means Tesla beat its rivals by six years. The implications for the broader auto industry are huge and -- for some -- frightening. Tesla built this digital nerve center through a series of upgrades to the original Autopilot system it introduced in 2014. What was also called Hardware 1 was a driver-assistance system that allowed the car to follow others, mostly on highways, and automatically steer in a lane. Every two or three years, the company pushed the envelope further, culminating in the full self-driving computer.
So what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Building reliable systems depends on having proven technology to ensure reliability, which is the opposite of the "release NOW, then patch, patch, patch, patch, patch, patch, patch, patch" mentality of silicon valley. This is the basis of the Toyota Production System, and it works.
Re:So what? (Score:4, Informative)
The "release, patch, path" thing you are quoting that is used by modern technology companies was *literally* invented by Toyota. "Continuous improvement" is one of principles of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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I'm not sure how patching buggy sottware on bleeding edge hardware fits the toyota production system. The Taguchi methods abhor the idea of patching - patching is waste that causes high social costs (which Taguchi seeks to minimize), and is an indication of bad design. Well designed systems use proven technology that does not impede performance.
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Well using the term Buggy Software gives it a negative connotation. It is more of incomplete software, where the software supplied will work fine, however patches will make it run better.
The problem is we are dealing with increasingly complex systems, and society is demanding perfection. Building a system based on the idea you cannot possible release a fully complete product, on day one, but you can get a working product out then offer improvements that will get you the rest of the way there is often a b
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The Taguchi methods specifically address the need to control variance.
Software that might need to be patched is indeed buggy; and that is already known. The variance is not well controlled. Without even measuring the bug rate to quantify the problem, anybody using the Toyota system will reject the acceptance of this as a normative business state. You don't even have the data needed to start an analysis; your production methods are not repeatable.
Taguchi methods require you to be able to quantify the social
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You're thinking of it the wrong way around. A software "patch" is more like iteratively designing waste and problems out of the system. You're getting thrown off by the idea that you can patch something that is already out the door, which the TPS system says is "bad/expensive". It just doesn't apply the same way to software.
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you can patch something that is already out the door, which the TPS system says is "bad/expensive". It just doesn't apply the same way to software.
You must work for Steam. Stop supporting the idea that software should be pushed out the door half-baked. It's not a better state of affairs than we had 20+ years ago.
Re: So what? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Sentry Mode + save clips on horn - not game-changing but very useful. :-)
New voice commands - especially, this winter: "my butt is freezing !"
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Yeah. The problem is that it isn't nearly as easy to turn off the seat heaters by voice command. I tried "my a** is burning", but Navigate on Autopilot just programmed a course for the nearest health clinic.
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As somebody who has owned almost nothing but Toyotas, this is a bit disingenuous.
Case in point: My mom bought a 2019 Corolla Hatchback. Right afterwards, Toyota announces Android Auto will be coming to their cars. I've used Android Auto on non-Toyota cars, it's quite nice. Entune fucking sucks. Like really fucking sucks. Its navigation system is so bad that she doesn't even use it, opting for her phone instead. I do the same thing in her car because it literally requires two different apps to be installed o
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Yes, excellent point. However IMHO too much development cycle is now outside of sw companies. We've all unwillingly become software beta testers. I don't remember agreeing to being a beta tester the last time I bought software or a computer where the price included me paying for a software / OS license.
MS/Windows have been compared to motor vehicle production. It would not be acceptable for a car company to produce cars that all needed engine replacements, tires, etc., things failing on every vehicle, e
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The "release, patch, path" thing you are quoting that is used by modern technology companies was *literally* invented by Toyota. "Continuous improvement" is one of principles of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
No, because they waved their hands in the air three times and chanted Toyota only makes them a type of Cargo Cult, it doesn't mean their cult was founded by Toyota.
The first problem is that they all claim they improved the system, and they're teaching you their improved system, not Toyota's system. From there, the rest of problems have nothing to do with Toyota.
Re:So what? (Score:4, Insightful)
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None of the Toyota principles include "push something out there to install and patch patch patch the egregious bugs" but that is the current state of software development.
Re:So what? (Score:5, Insightful)
And yes, they keep patching. Not just because they have to fix past mistakes (I'm sure they have to) but also to continuously add improvements and new features. Where other automakers tell you "sorry, this year's model has that but we won't ever add it to your car", Tesla look ahead a little bit and build for future upgrades. Like the faster charging: all but the oldest models could take advantage of that after a software upgrade.
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I own a Tesla but it really scares me that the computer that controls my speed and steering wheel is also connected to Netflix and streaming radio. That means a breach at Netflix (which is after all just streaming videos so does not need military grade security) opens up the attack surface on a computer which can literally be taken over to drive me to death. I am not important in any way and dont have enemies so I am Ok with driving the Tesla but if I was I would want separate computers and systems for the
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Most cars have two CAN buses. One separate for engine management and the other for accessories. Not sure about Tesla though.
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Two buses only go so far if they both connect to the same CPU. The real question is whether they are on isolated CPUs too.
Re:So what? (Score:4, Informative)
But the computer for speed and steering wheel isn't connected to Netflix and streaming radio. If you'd read through to the article it clearly states:
The Model 3's "full self-driving computer" consists of two boards: one with custom AI chips for autonomous driving, and a media control unit for the "infotainment" system.
So while they're one "computer" the systems for entertainment and driving are actually two distinct, physically separate boards.
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And why would they do that? Killing a few rich people seems incredibly low value compared to dropping a bitcoin miner into the car's firmware.
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In some ways, the traditional auto industry habits of multiple computers communicating on a shared bus seems more reliable and maybe more economically flexible.
In terms of reliability, a fuckup in the HVAC or Infotainment computer doesn't keep my car from driving right. In terms of economics, I can get a nearly-complete sub-assembly from a parts supplier without having to design all of it from scratch yet still integrate it into the overall vehicle electronic intelligence.
I can also see, though, where it k
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Japan and Germany have been researching self-driving features for decades and decades, but they would never have got there. Huge established companies are too risk averse to pioneering something like that because they have too much to lose, both in reputation and assets.
Re: So what? (Score:2)
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> I mean, even Boeing didn't feel obligated to put good software into the 737 MAX, an airplane
And look what happened to Boeing.
There *is* accountability, but it tends to be in a form that is exactly wrong for teaching lessons effectively. It really is a tipping point culture.
Rather than small punishments applied immediately after making dangerous but profitable decisions, there are rewards for years, and then suddenly a *massive* punishment for going beyond a line that nobody could define until a compan
culminating in the full self-driving computer (Score:3, Informative)
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Until Tesla has a working self-driving car, it's entirely possible they'll figure out these advanced chips weren't the right thing to be building in after all. Future-proofing tends to not work.
who cares (Score:2)
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OK, so you'll know when it does what you want... when the advertisement makes the promise!
I don’t see any obvious typos (Score:5, Insightful)
That’s pretty good for something which was typed one-handed.
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Oh, you're in big trouble now, I got smacked down the other day for a similar comment.
OpenPilot? (Score:2)
It's still kinda shit, but I can guarantee you Geohot has spent significantly less money then Tesla developing their driving tech.
What are they skipping? (Score:3)
While I haven't had any experience with Tesla directly. My experience with Uber and GE/Northrop (aerospace) makes me think that there is something that got skipped.
Is this fully ISO26262 certified? Do they have a full V&V test suite from MIL to HIL? Are they doing any sort of lab testing or is this all out in the road testing?
Is there a more technical teardown of the boards? What are the "AI Chips" a bunch of add accumulates?
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Not just ISO 26262 for functional safety; don't forget ISO 21448 for SOTIF and ISO 21434 for automotive cybersecurity.
And have fun with SOTIF, because it's still essentially a research topic... nobody knows how to rigorously verify machine learning systems; state of the art is to simply throw simulation hours (or real hours) at things; it's not deterministic or reproducible yet.
Yes, really, custom AI chips (Score:5, Informative)
When the articles says "AI chips" custom-made for the purpose, I translate it as "Some high-end FPGAs with the part number sanded off."
It would only have taken you a few seconds to Google it and find out whether the above is true or not. It's not.
Tesla hired Jim Keller away from AMD back in 2016, and developed a custom chip designed to accelerate neural nets. It includes lots of licensed features, but the neural net accelerators were designed by the Tesla team. And it's a complete new chip being fabbed by Samsung.
https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/22/18511594/tesla-new-self-driving-chip-is-here-and-this-is-your-best-look-yet [theverge.com]
https://electrek.co/2020/02/07/tesla-self-driving-computer-designer-jim-keller-confident-solving-autonomous-driving/ [electrek.co]
https://www.guru3d.com/news-story/tesla-develops-own-self-driving-ai-chip-removes-nvidia.html [guru3d.com]
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While Tesla does incorporate FPGAs in their cars, they are also known to have built at least one ASIC.
https://www.theverge.com/2019/... [theverge.com]
The Model 3 starts at $40k (Score:2)
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The base RWD available on their website is a Standard Range+ (SR+) that includes basic autopilot for $40k. The additional $7k is for full self-driving (FSD), which most people don't get much added benefit (besides Navigate-on-AP, parking assist, and summon) quite yet since the full FSD functionality is still pending release.
You can still order the off-menu Standard Range (SR) over the phone for $36.2k (up slightly from the original $35k), but that does not include even basic autopilot or traffic-aware cruis
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if the Model 3 really started at $33k
It starts. If you want to put it in gear and drive, that will be another $10k.
wondered that too (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been wondering the same.
I got a new car a year ago, and I test-drove a lot of cars before picking, including many of the newest models.
I was utterly surprised for what shit they put in as infotainment and onboard computer systems. Slow, laggy, low resolution, terrible response times, crappy touch screens. None of that stuff is more recent then 2010, I'm sure of that.
On paper, car makers have understood that they're now basically building a frame around a computer. They have the concept cars and all. But the supply chains aren't there, the ecosystem isn't there to deliver on that.
Tesla did it right, by stepping out of the common car maker supply chain. As a newcomer, your biggest asset is that you're not yet stuck in dependency hell and backwards compatability purgatory.
"We cannot do it" because... (Score:3, Interesting)
If he says so. Can't believe that loyalty to external supply chains holds everywhere else.
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High Tech Death (Score:2)
Now look at what full self drive does (Score:3)
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FTA, this is why automakers will fail. (Score:2)
For suppliers that depend on these components, and their employees, this is a matter of life and death.
So big automakers apparently feel obliged to continue using complicated webs of dozens of ECUs, while we only found a few in the Model 3. Put another way, the supply chains that have helped today's auto giants grow are now beginning to hamper their ability to innovate.
Tesla will continue to eat the big automaker's lunch until they are willing to break their development silos and take an integrated approach. Tesla is destined to continue its meteoric rise and will become one on the largest, if not the largest, automaker.
I want old tech in my car (Score:2)
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I'll take a 20 year old Toyota over a brand new Tesla any day.
Thanks for polluting our air. We all appreciate it.
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Keeping one car running for 20 years (especially if well cared-for) saves on overall emissions and pollution over buying something new. No matter how energy efficient the vehicle is.
The gap is even smaller if your car is running on coal-generated electric.
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The low hanging fruit of emissions reduction was picked well before 20 years ago. As long as the car is maintained, the difference between a 20 year old car and a new one is nit picking.
Who owns it? (Score:4, Interesting)
Who owns that computer — and the software running on it?
In at least one case, Tesla has (remotely) disabled the functionality in a used car, because the new owner didn't pay for the software [jalopnik.com]...
Supposedly, that was a "miscommunication" — and the feature is now restored [theverge.com], but the question remains: does the owner of the vehicle own the software too, or just the hardware? The term "repossession" just got a new meaning too...
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Nobody owns software.
The author of the software, Tesla in this case, owns the copyright for the software. The DMCA ensures that if copyright owners place a work under DRM, then they can grant or remove privileges to that work at any time and for any reason.
The customer enters into a license agreement with Tesla to access the software. Since much of the car's hardware is useless without the software, the user uses the car only with Tesla's permission.
So the customer "owns" little more than a brick. They must
Ah, the license (Score:2)
I know licenses — they are a great method to stop people from decompiling and otherwise reverse-engineering the software. Because, if you owned it, you could do it. Fine.
But any such license ought to be perpetual and transferable — which, in the case of Tesla, it evidently isn't. That Tesla restored the functionality after a public outcry is irrelevant — the fact, they built in the capability to remotely disable
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But any such license ought to be perpetual and transferable
If you want that, write your representatives in congress. Good luck.
But, but those are made by the Evil KKKorporation$ — not the benevolent genius Elon Musk, who's doing it all just to save the world...
Welcome to the real world, where things are more complex than a single good/bad boolean attribute.
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Thank you for your kind wishes, but I'm not from the Left — that is, I do not seek to make things I dislike illegal .
Prematurely ahead tends to end up behind. (Score:2)
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So.. they put an overpowered, centralized computer with custom 'AI' chips into their cars with the hope that they can power software that has not been written yet?
Yes and No - Tesla has replaced computer modules before in situations where owners purchased and base model and later wanted autopilot features. Part of the design is to enable them to replace those models easily and cheaply (in terms of labor) in the field; if they need to in order to deliver on the features.
Compare that to say replaceing the BCM module in your typical 2012-present car; you probably have a lots wiring to do and the ECM, Infotainment, instrument cluster, etc all probably need to at least
This isn't a surprise to me. (Score:2)
When engineers and designers are given the task of creating a new thing with zero concern for having to re-use existing tooling, supply chains and out of date institutionalized systems, great things can happen.
This is also why SpaceX is able to perform so much better than Boeing.
Tesla is still a buy in my opinion. (But I expect a general market crash/correction soon)
Pedestrian anti collision, Toyota vs tesla (Score:4, Informative)
AAA tested collision avoidance
"Unfortunately, the results of the tests were very much a mixed bag. For the Chevy Malibu, while it detected the adult pedestrian at 20mph (32km/h) an average of 2.1 seconds and 63 feet (19.2m) before impact, in five tests it failed to actually apply the brakes enough to reduce the speed significantly before each collision took place. The Tesla Model 3 managed little better; it also hit the pedestrian dummy in each of five runs.
On average, the Chevy slowed by 2.8mph (4.5km/h) and alerted the driver on average 1.4 seconds and 41.7 feet (12.7m) before impact. In two runs, there was no braking at all, even though the system detected the pedestrian dummy.
The Honda Accord performed better. Although it notified the driver much closer to the pedestrian (time-to-collision at 0.7 seconds, distance 32 feet/9.7m), it also prevented the impact from occurring in three of five runs and slowed the car to 0.6mph (1km/h) in a fourth.
Best of all was the Toyota Camry. It gave a visual notification at 1.2 seconds and 35.5 feet (10.8m) before impact. But the Camry also stopped completely before reaching the dummy in each of five runs."
So Tesla's 6 year advantage in electronics results in 100% kills. Well done Tesla. https://arstechnica.com/cars/2... [arstechnica.com]
Re:Pedestrian anti collision, Toyota vs tesla (Score:4, Informative)
So Tesla's 6 year advantage in electronics results in 100% kills. Well done Tesla.
Also from the article you selectively quoted from:
None of the four cars was able to successfully identify two pedestrians standing together in the middle of the roadway; none alerted its driver or mitigated a crash. And when AAA tested each of the four cars at 25mph in low-light conditions—an hour after sunset with no ambient street lighting, but the car's low-beam headlights on—none was able to detect a pedestrian to alert the driver or slow the car to prevent an impact.
I'm a owner of a Toyota Prius Prime 2020 (Score:2)
It's my first and last Toyota
I can confirm, that Toyota is behind any other car manufacturer in term of electronic for at least 20 years late
So how do humans do it? (Score:4, Informative)
I *think* what you're saying is that for a car to be autonomous it has to have a 3D representation of its surroundings and I would agree with you.
However, lidar is only one way of determining the distance and angle (leading to their position) of the objects around a vehicle and they motion relative to the vehicle. Humans don't have lidar jet are quite successful at driving cars cooperatively (that is to say without hitting each other).
The problem I have iwith lidar is that it has to be weather dependent - I can't see it working in February here in the Great White North where snow/ice/slush accumulates on vehicles. I also have to question it's performance when the sun is low on the horizon. Millimeter wave radar seems to avoid these issues but has issues of its own (https://www.mwrf.com/technologies/systems/article/21848511/top-advantages-and-challenges-of-millimeterwave-radars-in-autonomous-vehicles).
When we get autonomous vehicles, there won't be only one sensor AND, I expect that in challenging weather conditions, that the vehicles will slow down significantly (as humans are supposed to) to work within the limitations of the sensors.
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It is quite annoying, snow showers of severe enough density will piss off my lidar and then it goes into disabled state until the car is restarted.
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Cant you drive your own car?
While driving in whiteout conditions, I wouldn't trust Automatic driving yet. As a human with many many years of driving experience. While driving in Heavy Snow, often many rules of the road are put aside for much safer alternatives.
Eg. Drive in the middle of the road. If it is a 4 lane highway, it becomes a 2 lane. A normal 2 Lane road, becomes 1 1/2 Lane. As the snow covers the edges of the roads, you need to drive a bit more in the middle and do not pass unless really needed.
Re: So how do humans do it? (Score:2)
Also when knowing to break these rules, you have to know not to be stupid about it. If you see cars at an intersection, you should probably stop for that yellow, while you may be crossing the yellow line, you should always be ready to move back.
This got me thinking - are traffic lights programmed to slow down when the weather conditions are bad i.e. to produce a bigger delay between cars being stopped in one direction and cars being given the green light in the other?
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The problem is if you look at our driving laws a lot of them have clauses like "if it is safe to do so."
The trouble of course is that is a judgement call. So stop for a yellow light, if it is safe to do so. Okay well for computers are good at applying rules not exercising judgement. So the you or I might very quickly calcuate that we are in 4,000LB pickup traveling at 40mph there is a yellow light in 150ft, we can stop what might be considered "quick" but not short/abrupt/panic, there passenger car behind
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There is probably a button somewhere, but for many people learning where it is would require reading, so they're not going to do it. Aliteracy is in plague proportions.
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The problem I have iwith lidar is that it has to be weather dependent - I can't see it working
Stop waving your hands and asserting technical limits, that's stupid-sauce.
I expect that in challenging weather conditions, that the vehicles will slow down significantly
Not because of the sensors, because of traction, and the existence of non-autonomous vehicles and obstacles.
Too good is bad (Score:3)
Autonomous cars when they arrive will be driving on the same road as other non autonomous cars. So having the autonomous cars use the same sensors the other people are using - normal spectrum video makes sense. if an autonomous car starts seeing stuff other people on the road are not seeing and starts reacting to it, it will cause confusion and accidents even if the autonomous car was right.
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Yet some how millions of humans manage to drive cars every day without running into sunlit semi-trailers...
So obviously LIDAR is NOT required for operating a motor vehicle. You can make up any bullshit you like but the reality is humans with two camera (eyes) that see the visual light spectrum (as defined by those human eyes) and two pickup mics (ears) as well as a little bit a tactile feedback, manage to perform the task of driving with an acceptable error rate.
Therefore it must be at least POSSIBLE to do
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Driving home in a blinding snowstorm, Autopilot was not available on my card due to "Adverse Weather Conditions Detected, Autopilot Not Available". The point is that the Tesla solution while having limitations is rapidly improving.
There will be times when LIDAR cannot be trusted as well. I would rather have an affordable cameras+Radar solution today than wait for a LIDAR s
Re:Anti-Trust (Score:5, Informative)
The EU has no beef with Tesla, except for the autopilot which doesn't fully conform to EU regulations.
Germany, the #1 car country in the EU, has embraced Tesla, with the next Gigafactory planned in that very country. The rest of its car industry (you know, small mom-and-pop shops few people have heard about, such as Mercedes-Benz, BMW, VW, Audi, Porsche...) is probably not too happy about it, but seems to prefer learning from Tesla and having them nearby over losing that battle to imported cars.
Plus, of course, the real car industry isn't those big names, but the ones you've really never heard about. Several of them are in the "above 100,000 employees" heavy-hitting class. Tesla does source components from these companies, and they don't much care who wins or loses in the brand game.
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For some reason it is supposed to be built in the middle of a forest instead of some former heavy industry site of which there are plenty.
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it is a industrial site. and it does not contain a forest. it contains a tree plantation with zero biodiversity .
Re:Anti-Trust (Score:4, Interesting)
It is a forest by German standards. We don't have many real forests left.
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VW got a lot of egg on its face for falsify its environmental features in clean diesel.
When the Prius came out there was a lot of push back from EU. I saw a lot of stupid advertisements showing how much the Prius sucked.
Tesla is small enough of a company to not be a serious competitor to the EU Car makers, but having them close for additional workers, and having new methods. Is probably handy.
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No one has ever been fined for vertical integration. Not sure if you're trolling about Telsa or trolling about the EU, but your comment makes no sense in either context.
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Anti-trust is using your monopoly in one vertical market to take over another.
No, anti-trust violations are not limited to those involving vertical markets. Horizontal restraints are a thing with the DOJ/FTC.
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Do you have any idea how much sensor data a modern car processes constantly?
Not to mention that your navigation system and real time traffic information need Internet connectivity, your music library can now be stored right in the car, you expect bluetooth and hands-free, voice recognition, automatic climate control and a hundred other features that you can barely remember it has but use all the time.
That's not done with a few knobs and switches, you know?
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That's not done with a few knobs and switches, you know?
Funny, my car has none of those "features" and yet to adjust what I want or need is done via buttons and switches. Want to change to a preset radio station? Button. Volume control? Easily reachable knob. Want to open the trunk while I'm getting out of the car? Button. Want to adjust my side mirrors? Switch for left or right. Turn the overhead light on? Switch. Climate control? Big knobs. Rear window defroster? Button.
Then again, my navigation
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Funny, my car has none of those "features" and yet to adjust what I want or need is done via buttons and switches.
We were talking about computers.
Guess what - all of those buttons you mention are connected to an in-car bus that's connected to the onboard computer. You think that trunk button has a wire running to a switch in the trunk? Nope, it doesn't.
And that's not even new. The CAN bus is from the 80s, so unless you own an actual oldtimer, your car isn't as dumb and simple as you think it is.
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TFA has Full Self-driving computer... Not a Full Self driving car.
The computer can fully drive the car. And there are features which are available today, Including options that it will unpark itself and drive up to you, be able drive on auto pilot, or more advanced exit-to-exit full self driving options. The computer can fully drive the car. However the software is limited so it will disable options which they cannot fully trust the software. So the car isn't fully self driving. But the computer is capa
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I took that popular MOOC course in programming a self-driving car, we did the same thing.
You only need a small embedded processor for a self-driving computer.
The hard parts are all in the environmental awareness, same as with a human driver; actually steering the car is easy. Where to steer it to? Hard.
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Not really, but it would have been nice if Tesla had included a secondary charge port under a cover in the bumper so that building a charging trailer could be a third-party opportunity — outsource the risk and all.
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Just remember: in a Tesla, this thing that drives your car also has an Internet connection through which it self-updates.
Re:Secrecy is dangerous. Black boxes are not cool! (Score:5, Informative)
In addition, software signing is a thing, and the update mechanism has thus far proved secure. Apple do OTA updates to iPhones, along many other companies and their tech. Why fear monger? IF Teslas had a track record of being rogue updated then I could understand your alarmist viewpoint. No system is perfect, but these, we can (and do) rely on.
Re:Secrecy is dangerous. Black boxes are not cool! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd be much more worried about the privacy implications of owning a tesla (and by extension, starlink once that coems online). Constant surveillance? check. Remotely disabling features? check.
Fun anecdote: wife worked at a car dealership which sold a used Tesla. A week or so after the sale, the original owner called the dealership to complain that he was getting notifications from Tesla every time the new owner charged up.
It's bad enough that we're getting tracked, surveilled, and monetized by our electronic devices -- I'd really appreciate my car at least being on *my side*.
Re:Secrecy is dangerous. Black boxes are not cool! (Score:5, Informative)
As far as the privacy implications go: this site [tesla.com] will help you understand what Tesla collect and what they don't, how they use and share it, and what is anonymized. I have read it from back to front to best understand what options in the various screens I wanted to disable. I found nothing egregious for my own privacy expectations, but there are the terms and conditions, for you to decide for yourself. You can always disable some or all of the data collection aspects, and Tesla anonymizes the data they use for purposes that do not include servicing your account for you. Some will doubt they actually do that, but I hope they don't. The stock price has skyrocketed recently, and lawsuits can be lucrative
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They only have to make it better than humans.
Re:Secrecy is dangerous. Black boxes are not cool! (Score:5, Informative)
Set car to diag ( some say it's not required ) /. - you are supposed to know what to do next or you can leave the /. membership card at the front desk on your way out )
Connect to Internal Ethernet switch
IPs as follows (/24 subnet) :
- Center console computer: 192.168.90.100
- Dashboard computer (S/X only): 192.168.90.101
- Internet GW: 192.168.90.102 ( VPN tunnel uses 192.168.20.0/24 )
- FSD computer: 192.168.90.103
Enjoy
( this is
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~ $40k for the cheapest Model 3 ( order SR+ RWD on website, as soon as you get the confirmation email call Tesla to switch order to the $35K SR ). .25% lower rate than advertised if you get a EV. ( for whoever does not already know, DCU is everything that remains of the once mighty Digital Equipment Corporation )
If you want to finance it, check out Digital Federal Credit Union ( dcu.org ) - they'll give a
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The remotely disabled feature in question was never purchased - it was turned on in error and Tesla turned it off when an audit revealed the error. Moreover Tesla restored it.
>running software developed without testing for physical multidimensional environments.
Huh? It was and is tested. Other than the rumor mill and inaccurate news stories, the Tesla Autopilot and Navigate on Autopilot do not claim to be foolproof or Full Self Driving. I use it every
Re:Full self driving and robotaxis by 2020 (Score:4, Insightful)
110010001000 is a troll. He seems to intensely dislike Elon Musk. Mod him up if you wish, but he is playing you for a fool.
One of his main games is to heap sarcastic praise on Elon Musk and his companies, hoping to get upmodded. Below are some examples of his "sarcastic praise", and some examples of what he really thinks of Musk.
https://yro.slashdot.org/story... [slashdot.org]
Exactly. It is the cult of Musk. Tech people like Rei and Windbourne and Bruce think that "technologists" are going to solve all our problems. The real fact is that Musk is a flim flam artist who made a lot of money selling a scummy company we all hated (PayPal)
https://news.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]
Perfect example: we don't have self driving cars. You just think we do, because of hucksters like Elon Musk. Complete fraud.
https://science.slashdot.org/s... [slashdot.org]
Musk better stick to launching space junk into LEO.
https://hardware.slashdot.org/... [slashdot.org]
We won't all be extinct. Some of us will be living on Musk's Mars Colony. We will survive. Not sure about you guys stuck on this rock in a gravity well.
Yeah but we won't be stuck because we will have Musk's rocket to take us around the Universe.
People like you used to say that Humans could never fly. What you don't realize is, if you can dream it, you can do it. The good thing is people like you will be left here on Earth while we are out colonizing the Universe with our SpaceX Starships.
It isn't slavery when your overlord is benevolent. He only wants the best for Humanity. That is why he co-founded PayPal.
https://science.slashdot.org/s... [slashdot.org]
Space Nutters ignore the only important issue: there are no other habitable places we can reach. Ever. We can't travel faster than the speed of light (or even an appreciable percentage) so forget even going outside our system. They keep talking about Mars, or the Moon, but how are you going to live there? Forget the radiation, lack of air, water, etc. What about the differences in gravity? The human biological system has evolved to live here on Earth. Here is a tip for your kids: you aren't going anywhere. Try to make the Earth a better place because there is nowhere to escape to.
https://tech.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]
This is a huge win for SpaceX. Everything Musk touches turns to gold. I hear he is going to be building a Hyperloop between NYC and DC soon, and offer rides for a $1 on his LA tunnel.
What are you "betting" on? He is just another scam artist who brought us the lovely Paypal. Remember them? Shady company #1. Now he has baboozled taxpayer money into his newest schemes. The house of cards is falling though.
SpaceX is going to take us to the Holy Land: Mars