We'll know Tesla is serious about robotaxis when it starts hiring remote operators.
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The Emperor of the Reply Guys must see to the welfare of his realmElon has better things to do, like shitpost on twitter.
Counter-Point: beginner driversFair point. But it seems many of these systems make boneheaded mistakes that virtually no human driver will make - that doesn't engender confidence, and when there are multiple such vehicles around, instead of one or two, how will that scale?
I'm probably sounding super negative - I'm not, really, I would LOVE, LOVE a real Level 5 AV... my life would change in so many ways for the better (as would that of my immediate family)... but, I think we're a long, long way from that, and idiots like Musk announcing robotaxis and FSD any minute now... it's irresponsible and, in Tesla's case, fraudulent that they've been selling vapourware for a decade or so now.
Why do you love two huge corporations?This article is pure clickbait just so he can gain views by calling Tesla 'Checkers' and Google 'Chess' i love both companies and find this sad.
The only data advantage Tesla has is more pictures on the camera roll. Waymo vehicles have entire sensor arrays collecting far more detailed information about the world. State of the art ML algorithms for image recognition have error rates in the low percents. Even a 0.1% error rate could be deadly in a FSD context. The Tesla strategy will likely never produce safe FSD and instead remain a–to be fair, relatively advanced–driver assist.I don't think robotaxis are going to be a niche business. In 20 years we'll be subscribing to a robotaxi service instead of buying a new car.
Waymo vehicles cost somewhere around $200k. Their service area is limited. It is a niche because of cost and area. The company can expand service areas, and the cost per vehicle will drop, but it's going to be linear growth (at best).
Tesla's solution with vision only is only about $6k (Tesla charges $3k to upgrade the self driving computer, and I'm guessing that 6-8 cameras is only another $3k).
Good AI requires good samples. Waymo doesn't have good samples, so they are leaning on more data and human oversight. Tesla has hundreds of millions of miles of driving data. The current 12.3 FSD is very good. It's not good enough, but it's amazingly good. The problem is that Tesla is chasing 9s. Two years ago it was 99% good, last year is was 99.9% good, this year it's 99.99% good. The issue is that Tesla needs probably something like 99.99999% good to match a human driver.
The bigger issue is that even if Tesla's solution is better than an average human driver, each mistake will be amplified by the media as "a human wouldn't have made this mistake". I think FSD will be as good as a human driver in two years, but I don't think that's going to be good enough.
The bottom line is that Tesla robotaxis are 3-4 years out, not 3-4 months out.
LolWith Tesla you have a mountain of publicly available info, via tons of youtube videos and writeups on social media.
This timing of this announcement was only made to garner support for the upcoming (June 13) votes on Musk's pay package, whether Tesla will re-incorporate in Texas, and his brother Kimbal Musk's and Rupert Murdoch's son James board of directors positions.Musk announced that Tesla would unveil a purpose-built robotaxi on August 8
Which is funny considering the CyberStuck manages to be $100k for a piece of junk. They could have easily fit LiDAR in the budget had they not, like, completely failed to engineer an actual truck. F150 Lightning is a superior vehicle in literally every way at half cost. What's that 50k even going to??A large part of the reason that Tesla didn't go with it was cost - they simply would never have been able to fit it to all their cars like they could and can with cameras.
I sound like a broken record to myself, but I keep coming back to this - why is there no regulatory body signing off on the use of such software on public roads? Why is there not a mandatory minimum standard somewhere that must be met before anyone is free to release their self-driving software on public roadways, and all types of roads?
This isn't even specific to Tesla. I'm talking about for anyone. It just feels crazy to me that we seemingly let any auto company release any version of self-driving software on public roads, and our assurances as the general public that it works well enough is basically the company saying, "trust me, bro."
That was my thought when I read "City officials can erect a geofence to keep Waymo vehicles away from emergency scenes.""This makes sense for other reasons, too. It would give Tesla time to introduce itself to local officials and offer training to local police and fire departments."
I know this isn't a quote, and it's Timothy's words - but, imagine the chutzpah needed to expect local law enforcement and first responders to adjust to your private company's playthings deployed on public roads (before they're ready), and not the other way around (ie. your vehicles need to adjust to them).
You are making fun ofThis is not true. Cars behind will maintain an appropriate stopping distance which allows them time to react, as mandated by the highway code.
I doubt the geofence gets set by the firefighter on the scene. Presumably it's done by an SFFD dispatcher in an office somewhere. Even if you assume self-driving vehicles are working perfectly, it's still helpful to have a way to route them away from areas that get congested due to a big fire or car crash.That was my thought when I read "City officials can erect a geofence to keep Waymo vehicles away from emergency scenes."
Absolutely the wrong mindset and approach. If there's a fire or some other emergency, the response crew has more immediate and important things to do than pull up some app, open the map, and draw up a restricted area. Not to mention situations can quickly evolve and that area could change with it. The cars need to able to handle the situations as they currently are.
If by "wait" you mean "testing on public roads and killing people," sure.It seems like the other way round to me. Waymo has put its cars into the checkers tournament. Tesla hasn't entered that tournament; it wants to wait until its cars can play chess.
Easily solved, add cowctachers to the front of Firetrucks and Ambulances; both trucks are already made of base super duty structure. The driverless cars will be out of the way one way or another.According to San Francisco Fire Department records, several Waymo or Cruise vehicles blocked narrow roads, forcing fire trucks to take detours en route to fires. AVs got stuck near firefighting operations, forcing firefighters to work around them as they positioned hoses and ladders. A few AVs parked in front of fire stations, trapping fire trucks inside.
Eh... taxis services could actually scale pretty hard. Lots of people only own cars because their is no other choice.I don’t see how Tesla’s “camera only” approach ever works. They need more sensors which Musk forced them to take out.
And “robotaxis” is not some liquid gold industry! It is a pretty niche business that “doesn’t scale” because the taxi business just isn’t that big.
@peterford ...I'll be honest, I stopped listening at "CyberStuck". As you're a subscriber and member for 19 years, can we try and have a mature discussion? Or do you dislike Micro$oft as well?
This comment is so level and reasonable and probably how most engineers would feel about it.
But it’s being downvoted because Ars commenters hate Musk, so anything he’s involved with must be a priori BAD. (Probably why an article like this is written in the first place—to pander to the base, which drives engagement.)
100% the first bit. It's really obviousIt's been downvoted because the OP fundamentally missed the main point of the article: Waymo is succeeding by solving the easy problems first and incrementally moving on to the harder problems. There's no law that says Waymo has to simultaneously have cars in Phoenix AND Duluth. If Waymo can make it work in Phoenix, but it doesn't work in Duluth, that's OK. They may even have a viable business by solving the easy cases.
So maybe try thinking for yourself instead of just blindly rooting for Team Musk and getting all pissy when legitimate criticisms are discussed.
This isnt how the real world works though. Many companies will do training with emergency services (ES) to help them react to new threats and issues. My company which builds windfarms will train with ES on how to respond to calls about our turbines and substations. This is common and ES needs to adjust to new real world changes they cannot stay stuck in one point in time."This makes sense for other reasons, too. It would give Tesla time to introduce itself to local officials and offer training to local police and fire departments."
I know this isn't a quote, and it's Timothy's words - but, imagine the chutzpah needed to expect local law enforcement and first responders to adjust to your private company's playthings deployed on public roads (before they're ready), and not the other way around (ie. your vehicles need to adjust to them).
Check your bingo cards, we've got the "this is bullshit just driving engagement" guy who is here, engaging with the content he so desperately wants everything to think is pandering nonsense.This comment is so level and reasonable and probably how most engineers would feel about it.
But it’s being downvoted because Ars commenters hate Musk, so anything he’s involved with must be a priori BAD. (Probably why an article like this is written in the first place—to pander to the base, which drives engagement.)
EDIT: It's one thing to advise/train ES on new, fixed, structures in their operating area that may pose special problems/threats/whatever. It's quite another to expect ES and roadworkers etc. to have to deal with any number of different AVs, each with their own disparate way of having ES handle them.This isnt how the real world works though. Many companies will do training with emergency services (ES) to help them react to new threats and issues. My company which builds windfarms will train with ES on how to respond to calls about our turbines and substations. This is common and ES needs to adjust to new real world changes they cannot stay stuck in one point in time.
If there is a taxis service that will send a small, single seat, electric car that is cheaper and more efficient that my general purpose gas powered car, it's not operating in my area."Robo-taxis" already exist. They're called taxis. Why do people own cars instead of using taxis and ride-shares all the time?
Your timeline is hilarious though.
Good thing Tesla has said single seater, cheap EV.If there is a taxis service that will send a small, single seat, electric car that is cheaper and more efficient that my general purpose gas powered car, it's not operating in my area.
The point of a taxis service is that if you cut out the driver, you can make a very small and efficient car perfect for a commuter that runs on a battery. I'd happily take a single seat commuter car instead of buying a large gas powered car that sits in a parking lot for 98% of its existence.
Hell, just wander into any city if you are confused on this point. Uber only makes ordering a taxi easier without introducing any real cost savings, and that alone was enough for Uber to suddenly become a large portion of city traffic and cause more urban dwellers to ditch their cars.
If you can make taking a single seat electric taxi to work cheaper than taking your 4 door gas powered car, you just tapped into a business a few tens of millions strong in the US, and a hundreds of millions (billions?) strong world wide.
Drive for 10 minutes in Massachusetts, and you'll know why we're all begging for non-human drivers in cars...Knowing I will be downvoted on a science site but who wants this? WTF are we doing killing beta test guinea pigs and spending billions on something the majority of people don't want? We have opened the door to master control with subscription services for literally everything in our lives. You will have money automatically taken from your bank account to pay for vehicles and other devices that you no longer own. What's the end game here? As much as I have followed tech and embrace science and knowledge for the good of mankind, who wants this dystopian world? All This self driving tech does is drive up the cost of basic transportation to the point most of us will just keep driving older and more worn out vehicles on the road. If that is acceptable to the few who stand to gain most ( read private equity firms, big tech) then enjoy sharing the road with old tech. For the record we own a hybrid car and base model pickup for my construction business ...
Merica.I sound like a broken record to myself, but I keep coming back to this - why is there no regulatory body signing off on the use of such software on public roads? Why is there not a mandatory minimum standard somewhere that must be met before anyone is free to release their self-driving software on public roadways, and all types of roads?
This isn't even specific to Tesla. I'm talking about for anyone. It just feels crazy to me that we seemingly let any auto company release any version of self-driving software on public roads, and our assurances as the general public that it works well enough is basically the company saying, "trust me, bro."