How so?It’s also stirred up a hornets nest.
A bunch of Teslastans claim it can’t be accurate, despite the fact that it is.How so?
Got it! Must be a big nest with over 11 million views.A bunch of Teslastans claim it can’t be accurate, despite the fact that it is.
Main complaints:
1) There’s a clip in which AP disengaged and then was re-engaged. Why it disengaged is anybody’s guess, and actually an indicator of Tesla having a problem, since Mark touched neither the brake nor accelerator, but therefore everything must be a lie.
2) It’s not using FSD. Woe is me. Not that FSD suddenly develops magical powers to see through fog or anything with only vision, but something something “FSD IS GREAT”?
3) “if you love teaching kids, why tear down their hero?”
4) “careful, Elon is vengeful”
That’s basically the summary of the responses from the Tesla corner as far as I can gather.
Go to X and search “elonmusk markrober” and you’ll get the gist. Basically what I said, plus two others:Got it! Must be a big nest with over 11 million views.
I don't do X, so thank you very much for the summation!Go to X and search “elonmusk markrober” and you’ll get the gist. Basically what I said, plus two others:
1) why make my kids watch other kids get run over by a Tesla, that’s evil (it’s a mannequin ffs, and illustrates the point)
2) obviously mark is a sellout, not an engineer, who only cares about putting Tesla in a bad light, despite the fact that he owns one
In short: lots of people inhaling tons of copium trying to square how Elon could say “vision is all you need” and then discover… it isn’t. Evidently that cognitive dissonance can be painful.
"Even a human could be deceived into believing it was the road ahead and plow right through it. Would the Tesla have stopped if it had encountered a printed brick wall? Perhaps, but it appears that they deliberately manipulated the system in a scenario that would never happen in real life."The video was intriguing until the final part. While we all recognize the advantages of using lidar or radar over vision alone, the last example is not a compelling one. Even a human could be deceived into believing it was the road ahead and plow right through it. Would the Tesla have stopped if it had encountered a printed brick wall? Perhaps, but it appears that they deliberately manipulated the system in a scenario that would never happen in real life.
FSD undoubtedly has its flaws and limitations, but even I found the final example to be absurd. They effectively demonstrated the point in the other examples comparing lidar and vision alone.
Best part of the video was using lidar to map out the Disney rides![]()
Go drive around town and send me a picture of a road where this EXACT scenario is. We don’t live in a cartoon world.But was it not the case that the LIDAR equipped car DID stop in time? If so, doesn't seem like "manipulation" to me.
I think both conditions co-exist; namely, a valid functional test that does not occur in reality.Go drive around town and send me a picture of a road where this EXACT scenario is. We don’t live in a cartoon world.
All the other examples proved the differences between LiDAR and vision only with possible real world scenarios. The last example was purely for clicks and it worked.
It's happened before! Underestimate humanity at your own peril.Go drive around town and send me a picture of a road where this EXACT scenario is. We don’t live in a cartoon world.
All the other examples proved the differences between LiDAR and vision only with possible real world scenarios. The last example was purely for clicks and it worked.
An adjacent example is the back of a semi truck. Can sometimes match the color of the sky. I don't have a dog in the fight, but the point of the last example like the rest is that edge cases do exist.Go drive around town and send me a picture of a road where this EXACT scenario is. We don’t live in a cartoon world.
All the other examples proved the differences between LiDAR and vision only with possible real world scenarios. The last example was purely for clicks and it worked.
But you see, the point is that LiDAR is not subject to the same limitations as a vision-only approach, or even as a human. You're illustrating the point brilliantly, without meaning to.Go drive around town and send me a picture of a road where this EXACT scenario is. We don’t live in a cartoon world.
All the other examples proved the differences between LiDAR and vision only with possible real world scenarios. The last example was purely for clicks and it worked.