this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
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No Stupid Questions

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The reason I ask, is I've been seeing alot of news and cases of Tesla's self driving acting up and being a point of contention. But back in 2016-17 my ex's uncle and aunt got a Model X when they first dropped and they "auto-drove" us like 50 miles without any noticeable issue.

Was i just gambling my life or has the tech somehow gotten worse?

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[–] fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

You're not wrong, but that's not really what I meant although perhaps I didn't explain it very well.

Another way to say the same thing, if you group together all the various components or aspects of "driving", 95% of them might be solved relatively easily, but getting the last 5% right is extraordinarily difficult.

It's deceiving because the first time you saw a Level 2 car in 2018 it's natural to think that if they've made so much progress seemingly overnight, then surely in the next few years we will have Level 6 cars.

I do take your point that humans are also good drivers 95% of the time and mistakes only occur within 5% of situations. The issue there is the imperative that autonomous cars must be better than a human in all circumstances. If a human makes, on average, 5 serious mistakes every 500,000km, but an autonomous car makes 6, you'd probably not want to put your family in that autonomous car.

[–] FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

well, to be fair, I'm pretty ardently apposed to self driving cars- i wouldn't put my family in one even if it was better than humans.

The reason being is that all it takes is one bug in one code and your entire family is fucked; and with the way corporations are now handling updates, I frankly don't trust them to maintain it properly at all. (AKA forced updates, with shit-for-testing cloudstrike, for example; could have been prevented, but they just had to push that update globally, all at the same time, to everyone. imagine a malicious admin doing a terror attack by making all your cars crash. or some intern pushing the wrong code and suddenly your car is bricked. I'll keep my dumb car, thank you very much.)

Yeah. I tend to agree.

Being able to drive without killing someone is only one aspect of an autonomous vehicle, and security is one that I'm not confident about in the least.

I've noticed that my wife's Level 2 car is just hopeless outside of the city. Sure that's where most people live and it's fine for most people.

Driving on country roads it spends more time having self-disabled it's autonomous features than not, simply because it can't see the road or what have you.