1024core
11 hours ago
I got a 2026 model Y recently and tried out FSD. It made enough errors in the first few trips that I am surprised it's being touted as a "robotaxi".
For example: travelling West on 15th street in SF, at Guerrero the leftmost lane turns into left turn only and the Tesla happily continued straight through.
That jolted me out of complacence and the next time it was in the wrong lane, I quickly took over and corrected it. It's happened a few times and I don't use FSD that much.
tonfreed
9 hours ago
I'm unsurprised by that. I'm really hoping it quickly improves now that more people are using it
imoverclocked
11 hours ago
You have to let it crash a few times so it can trigger an internal review of the route. /s
Having zero control of the software update process will stop me from ever owning a Tesla.
flowerthoughts
4 hours ago
My Mercedes has the opposite problem. It will notify me there's an OTA update and ask if I want to do it now, or not. If I just turned the car on, I probably don't want to do it now, so the question is silly. It's unclear if the "Later" option actually applies the update after I've turned the car off, or if it just means it'll nag me again later and the cycle repeats. At least it does map updates automatically.
johnasmith
11 hours ago
I'm curious, what does having control over the update process give you? Isn't it replacing one unauditable black box system for another? Are you concerned about a regression and don't want to be in the vanguard cohort?
imoverclocked
10 hours ago
Well, there is the "my car has been disabled in an inconvenient time/location" problem for one. It would be nice to have more audibility but I use iOS/macOS/etc so it would be disingenuous to claim that as a show-stopper.
If by "vanguard cohort" you mean "in the first wave to test the new software," then yes; I don't want to be in that group.
Incipient
6 hours ago
I feel like being concerned about your car being disabled at an inconvenient time, but not being as concerned about your phone/laptop isn't disingenuous.
They're entirely different products, costs, use cases, risk profiles.
imoverclocked
2 hours ago
For the most part, yes. I do fly with ForeFlight though. Losing it mid-flight would not be a disaster in its own right but the tech has saved my life a few times.
The ForeFlight team will send out a message giving an "all clear" or a "wait for us to update the app before updating to the next iOS/iPadOS release."
nrds
11 hours ago
As you observed, lane selection is basically the one thing that FSD is completely incapable of. But other things it does well. It's important to note this is completely incompatible with the narrative spun by Tesla haters, that it all comes down to LiDAR. LiDAR cannot help with lane selection.
esseph
11 hours ago
Why does Waymo not have a problem with it? It did really well in dense streets with people barely pulling over to stop and run into a storefront or picking people up from a restaurant. It would pause for a second, put on turning signals, and then pull around the stopped car. It did this several times, in fact in spots where I would have waited because its estimation of distance and obstacles in a 360deg around the vehicle is flat out better than me as a human. I was really impressed.
nrds
6 hours ago
Waymos stop in the middle of the street several times a day, behavior I've never seen or even heard of from FSD. And I'm not sure what it has to do with lane selection.
FSD goes around stopped vehicles without any problem too.
esseph
16 minutes ago
You're not sure what moving into a different lane has to do with lane selection?
barbazoo
11 hours ago
How does Waymo compare in these situations?