chaosmarine92
Well-known member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2024
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 212
- Reaction score
- 313
- Location
- Knoxville, TN
- Vehicles
- cybertruck
FSD either can't read speed signs or chooses to ignore them constantly in my area. About 60% of the time it has the wrong speed limit so the profiles are useless to me. In my neighborhood it thinks the limit is 55mph. On the highway near me it thinks the limit is 45mph. This is true with both FSD and TACC. Hence why FSD is useless to me.You do have speed control by learning the profiles. Sloth won’t speed. Ever. Chill only goes a couple over. Standard or Hurry drives like a normal person. Mad Max is just that. I agreed with your position at first but have come to appreciate a nuanced ( Ai?) approach to speed relative to conditions and traffic. It’s smarter than imposing rules-based behavior, which is essentially what demanding manual speed control is asking for. That’s a regression as we approach (maybe?) unsupervised self driving. There’s a lot to occur between now and then, more than just software and navigation improvements, such as working out the legal liability framework, but this is how it learns. If we pen in its autonomy, more responsibility remains with the driver, and FSD’s advancement is perhaps thereby constrained.
I also get that supervised means what it says, but it’s a bit like watching a three year old. Gotta let them make mistakes and get a few scabs, intervening when required to head off a bad event (or speeding ticket). But we do have the tools to help FSD avoid tickets if we understand this interim phase’s limitations and ramifications for the next level of FSD.
You can participate in moving forward or not, totally your call, and I respect that. But do it based on facts.
Maybe it works great in your area, but it doesn't in mine. Taking away the manual speed control made it useless to me. It is literally easier to just drive myself than to supervise FSD and constantly correct it's speed.
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