Elon Musk announced again that he believes Tesla might achieve “full autonomy” this year, but it is not even clear what this means at this point.
Over the years, Musk has so often claimed that Tesla was on the verge of achieving “full self-driving capability” that it is hard to believe him now.
It’s not only hard to believe, but it’s also even hard to understand what the actual goal is at this point.
Tesla’s original promise was quite clear: Every car sold since 2016 will be able to drive entirely by itself at a level safer than humans through software updates in the future.
At times, “level 5 SAE” autonomy was mentioned by Musk, and being able to “go to sleep” while the car drives you around.
But since Tesla released its Full Self-Driving Beta (FSD Beta), these previous clear goals have become more vague and disappointing.
Tesla started using terms like “feature complete” and “capable of driving at a level safer than humans,” with FSD Beta, but it has become less clear how Tesla plans to get the FSD out of beta and into a product that can actually have usefulness, like a robot taxi service.
It looks like Tesla has softened its language after missing its goal and timeline a few times, and Musk has most recently stopped making timeline predictions until now.
During the conference call following the release of Tesla Q1 2023 financial results, Musk claimed that Tesla might achieve “full autonomy” this year:
For those that are using the FSD beta, I think you can see the improvements are really quite dramatic. There’ll be a little bit of two steps forward, one step back between releases for those trying the beta. But the trend is very clearly towards full self-driving, towards full autonomy. And I hesitate to say this, but I think we’ll do it this year.
The CEO is back with his prediction that it is coming “this year,” something that he has virtually said every year since 2018.
But what does he even consider “full autonomy” for Tesla at this point?
Electrek’s Take
That’s the bigger question for me because lately, it seems that he is only talking about FSD Beta driving better or safer than humans but based on what?
It’s clear that he is not talking about Tesla having a level 4 or 5 autonomous driving system approved by regulatory authorities, which was the original promise.
He is only talking about FSD Beta achieving a greater level of driving that he or Tesla considers safer than humans.
That’s not saying much because he keeps praising FSD Beta as if it’s incredible and many other FSD Beta users and I are not experiencing that incredible performance or the “quite dramatic” rate of improvements that he keeps talking about.
I’ve had FSD Beta for a year now, and I think the latest update is performing marginally better than the first version I got last year.
So unless he is talking about a more concrete goal like Tesla being approved for a robot taxi-like service, like Cruise and Waymo, with existing customer vehicles, I think Tesla achieving “full autonomy” might be not what people are hoping for.
Author: Fred Lambert
Source: Electrek
Top comment by A98u723
Liked by 14 people
I’ve driven approx 1,000 highway miles on the new stack. While there are some improvements (e.g. making room for the large vehicle next to you by moving towards the other side of your lane), there are still phantom braking events, the car struggles when traffic is busy and moving fast, and there’s this lane changing setup that is erratic and cumbersome: you have to set for minimal lane changes each time as it defaults to more frequent changes.
Those more frequent lane changes make no sense, either. The car will randomly change lanes when there’s no one to pass, nothing to gain, nowhere to go.
The pay attention nags are excessive. If you’re squinting without sunglasses it thinks you’re asleep. If you look at your screen for more than a second or two it nags. If you fiddle with your settings – like when you have to change settings for less frequent lane changes – for more than a handful of seconds, it nags. The nags are annoying enough that I considered opting out of beta for the drives.
Still have slowdowns to the exit ramp speed limit while staying on the highway, and exiting is often very erratic. A few times the car appeared to be following the outer line of the ramp, but unable to keep from going over that line into rumble strips upon exit. Good thing the wife wasn’t in the car with me.
Haven’t tried a local run yet, so no comments on that scenario.
But the Musk Timestamp Rule holds: ignore any timing predictions. It’s not happening this year.
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