“FSD Beta 9.2 is actually not great imo,” Musk wrote in a tweet about the latest beta of Full Self-Driving. “But Autopilot/AI team is rallying to improve as fast as possible. We’re trying to have a single stack for both highway and city streets, but it requires massive NN [neural network] retraining.” He did add, however, that he’s tested the subsequent version, 9.3, and that it’s “much improved.”
Tesla recently responded to scrutiny about its record of safety by enabling cameras inside the cabins of some of its vehicles so that it can monitor and ensure the operator is paying attention when driver assistance is enabled.
Technical challenges — The problem for Tesla is that it was over-optimistic in its early projections. Teaching a computer to follow lane markings on a road proved easy; everything since has been anything but. Humans are unpredictable, and computers struggle to figure out how to safely navigate around them. The margin of error also has to be very low — Musk wants FSD to be 1,000 percent safer than a human driver — so cars from Google’s Waymo and others tend to drive very cautiously (read: slowly).
Despite the hurdles, Waymo and others have begun testing their vehicles with actual customers to some success. And nobody is denying that autonomous driving, when it does arrive, will offer major benefits to society. It’s just that Musk’s delays are the same story on a different day.