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Transportation Technology

Philadelphia Woman Gives Birth in Front Seat of Tesla on Autopilot (theguardian.com) 80

A Philadelphia mother has given birth to what is believed to be the world's first Tesla baby: an infant delivered in the front seat of an electric smart car while it was driving on autopilot. From a report: The remarkable delivery, reported by the Philadelphia Inquirer, took place in September while Yiran Sherry, 33, and her husband Keating Sherry, 34, were taking their three-year-old son Rafa to pre-school. Yiran Sherry's waters broke while the family was stuck in traffic. With contractions increasing rapidly and traffic barely moving, the couple realized they were not going to make it in time.

Keating Sherry placed the vehicle on autopilot after setting the navigation system to the hospital, 20 minutes away in the western suburb of Paoli. He said he laid one hand gently on the car's steering wheel as he attended to his wife. "She was squeezing my hand to the point where I thought she was going to shatter it," Keating Sherry told the Inquirer. "I was [saying] 'Yiran, OK, focus on your breathing.' That was advice to myself, as well. My adrenaline was pumping." Yiran Sherry said the decision over whether to try to wait to give birth until they reached the hospital was an agonising one. However, she said, she kept glancing at their estimated arrival time and saw it was barely moving.

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Philadelphia Woman Gives Birth in Front Seat of Tesla on Autopilot

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  • Time to cue the (Score:1, Offtopic)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 )

    Lauren Boebert jokes. [vanityfair.com]

  • In addition to being a really nice thing to do, it'd get Tesla some good publicity. And it'd be pocket change for him.
    • Musk should give the kid a Tesla on their 16th birthday, because there's no way the batteries in that car will still be good in 16 years.

      • Modern lithium ion batteries will have a lifespan around 2,000 cycles, which would translate to 400,000 miles if the car’s average range is around 200 miles. I think most people put around 15,000 miles a year on their car, which would translate to a 25 year lifespan. Still most people buying new cars won’t be driving them after 16 years. My current car is 10 years old, I bought it new, and it has almost 200,000 miles on it. I don’t think it’s going to last another 6 years without som

        • Most batteries die after ~10 years no matter if you use them or not. It's a chemical process. A similar thing can be said about tires. You should replace them after 6-8 years, no matter how much they are used up. So keeping a car in a garage waiting for your child to grow old enough to drive it is not so good idea.
          • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

            Most batteries die after ~10 years no matter if you use them or not.

            It very much depends on the type of battery. I've actually used a 30-year old dry cell battery and it worked, although not for more than an hour or so, admittedly.

    • Then everyone would start birthing children in Telsas :)

  • News at 11 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fermion ( 181285 ) on Monday December 20, 2021 @08:31PM (#62101329) Homepage Journal
    Giving birth in a parked car. Parked in the middle of the street, but still. I assume that labor lasted long enough that a parent concerned with their 3 year old kid might have pulled over. This is what is scary about the new tech. Now we are going to have a Tik Tok challenge of who can have a baby while driving.
    • This is what is scary about the new tech. Now we are going to have a Tik Tok challenge of who can have a baby while driving.

      Yea, those were already pretty popular. Now what would be cool is we can have some 9 month follow up videos.

    • Probably not even the first "cruise control with lane-keeping" baby born to idiots who didn't pull over.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      Also, sex! Or maybe that already happened?

  • by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Monday December 20, 2021 @08:58PM (#62101377)

    While I'm glad everything worked out, wouldn't it have been a much safer thing to do to just put the car in park and then deal with the baby? I can only speak for myself, but I think if I found out the reason the car in front of me wasn't moving was because a woman was having a baby, I'd be incline to let it slide.

    • Re:I mean (Score:4, Informative)

      by IdanceNmyCar ( 7335658 ) on Monday December 20, 2021 @09:32PM (#62101431)

      The car was moving though, in very slow conditions, conditions where auto-pilot is probably the most well suited for. I agree I would let it slide, but the usage of the system here seems hardly an significant risk. Assuming the driver doesn't freak and slam the accelerator.

      • I don't know which is worse; how stupid your comment is, or that you don't pronounce the s in significant.

        You should probably be placed in a safe, padded room, for a long long time. To protect the children.

        • Pick on the simple typo and turn it into a personal insult then. Great discourse, lovely ... brilliant ... ummm ...no.

          And to the poster's original point, slamming on the accelerator - if forward collision avoidance is activated on the car (and it is on by default), the car wouldn't jump forward like a 70s muscle car would.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Just illustrates how useless the Tesla attention monitoring is. The guy only needed one hand on the wheel, with his full attention being on his wife.

      • The guy was using all the technology he had available to him to move his wife closer and closer to a controlled space with professional clinical care quickly and safely.

        And you jump to the assumption that he wasn't paying any attention to the road?

        Without autopilot his only option would have been to pull over and stop in a horrible environment and wait for the professionals to battle the whole route to him (or, more likely, triage the case from a distance and just make him wait till the traffic cleared).

        He'
    • Park the car? Why not use the voice activated features of the Tesla to... I don't know... call and ambulance? Or does America carry its insanely high infant mortality rate and birth complication rate like a badge of honour?

    • How about using technology to achieve the earliest safe arrival at the point of professional clinical care possible?

      And pulling off to the side of the road during gridlocked traffic conditions is hardly going to speed this. Most likely quite the opposite.

      And there are a large number of driver assistance technologies in cars that are much safer than humans in gridlocked traffic conditions. Especially those that look in all 6 directions at the same time (something humans aren't very good at it seems, can't th
  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Monday December 20, 2021 @09:43PM (#62101443)

    ... placed the vehicle on autopilot after setting the navigation system to the hospital, 20 minutes away

    Autopilot has no navigation features. It can hold the lane and avoid crashing into stuff. It will happily drive right by the exit the hospital, much less deliver you to the ER.

    This story is less than truthful.

    • Note also the estimated arrival time was "barely moving." That indicates traffic was moving close to the posted speed limit. If the car was bogged down in traffic as the author contends, then the ETA would be moving quickly.
      • There are two types of ETA indicator (assuming common word usage). Estimate time OF arrival and estimated time UNTIL arrival. Both are usually displayed. Probably the latter being referred to, based on context.

      • Her name is Chinese (Eastern Turkic origin), and her husband's name is English. I'd be very cautious about assigning narrow meaning to either of their grammatical choices.

        Notice that she isn't quoted; she is paraphrased. The person paraphrasing likely missed the finer details, and didn't ask. That's typical, ss you will learn if you are ever paraphrased!

    • This story is less than truthful.

      Because the actions described in the story were stupid absolutely does not imply that the story is untruthful.

      And according to the summary, the baby was born in the passenger seat, and there was a driver with one hand on the steering wheel during the portion of the story where auto-[cruise-control] was engaged. It doesn't say anything about not making turns, or there not being a driver.

      It's like "... on a computer!" But just, "with cruise control!"

      • by Askmum ( 1038780 )
        I'm not reading anywhere if she was sitting behind the wheel or on the passenger's seat. If she was behind the wheel, this is something notable. Even if the car does not steer itself, the passenger can steer and if the car brakes and accelerates on its own, that is a thing.
        If she was sitting on the passenger's seat then this is not worth mentioning more than that she got out of bed that morning.
        • It says right in the summary that she wasn't behind the wheel; her husband was.

          There was a driver in the driver seat, with a hand on the wheel, operating the car while it was in it's lane-keeping-cruise-control mode.

          • by Askmum ( 1038780 )
            It says "He said he laid one hand gently on the car's steering wheel as he attended to his wife." It doesn't say in which seat he was. I don't know how you drive, but I rarely gently lay one hand on the car's steering wheel when I'm driving. That's just not the kind of emotion I convey to my car.
            But I could be different in that respect
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Depends if they had the "full self driving" beta. That can navigate, although it's not very reliable.

      It was supposed to only be available to "good" drivers, as determined from the driving data that Tesla harvests from its customers. The car watches the driver's every move, records things like sharp braking events, and reports it all back to Tesla.

    • ... placed the vehicle on autopilot after setting the navigation system to the hospital, 20 minutes away

      Autopilot has no navigation features. It can hold the lane and avoid crashing into stuff. It will happily drive right by the exit the hospital, much less deliver you to the ER.

      This story is less than truthful.

      Maybe they run FSD beta - but that would require looking in front almost constantly as the camera is watching the driver like an angry mother-in-law.

      But FSD has NoA and if it was on the freeway, it could work (while on the freeway, not on city streets).

    • <quote>
      <p>Autopilot has no navigation features. It can hold the lane and avoid crashing into stuff. It will happily drive right by the exit the hospital, much less deliver you to the ER.</p></quote>

      Navigate on Autopilot (NoA) is a thing. Has been for years. Published and working long before the Full Self Driving (Beta). I personally NoA in a Tesla Model S (2017) model for several journeys (at least in terms of motorway interchanges). And in the UK, and it is known for working bet
      • Based on your "knowledge" of the facts (which are just patently wrong)? Thin ice, sir, that is what you are on. ... Pease don't spout off about things you don't know anything about.

        I own a 2019 Model Y without FSD. You can enter a GPS destination and the driver can navigate based on the instructions that it gives. The Autopilot feature cannot take input from the navigation. It will hold the lane and adjust the speed and that's all.

        Navigate on Autopilot (NoA) is a thing. Has been for years. Published and working long before the Full Self Driving (Beta)

        Does anyone have any idea what this guy is talking about?

  • Ewww. I'd hate to be the person that has to detail that car.
  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Monday December 20, 2021 @10:34PM (#62101501) Homepage
    I mean wtf is with people these days? It's like no one has common sense anymore.
    • Stopping? That's very early 1400s era thinking. In the late 1400s we invented things call "ambulances".

  • Waters breaking from cabin compartment leaking into battery compartment...

  • Sorry....ps I haven't.
  • I think Spider Robinson would agree! I wonder if Elon can build one?
  • Maybe as a middle name?
  • by McGruber ( 1417641 ) on Tuesday December 21, 2021 @01:03PM (#62103297)
    How well did the Tesla's white interior clear up?

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