You say a whole lot of words to show that you don't really understand how the levels of autonomy work...hph6203 said:
No code gets deactivated going from a level 4 system to a level 2 system. That is not what delineates a level 4 system from a level 2 system. It is activating code that delineates a level 4 system from a level 2 system. That code is the driver monitoring system that requires the driver to pay attention and have the capacity to take over immediately from the autonomous drive system.Quote:
There is nothing a level 4 system can do that a level 2 system can't other than have no driver in the seat.
Level 4: No driver monitoring (No person in the seat)
Level 3: Driver presence sensor activated (a person in the seat)
Level 2: Driver attention and presence sensor activated (i.e. an in-cabin camera that tracks the driver's eyes and/or a requirement to show their presence through touching/slightly turning the wheel, dependent upon on the manufacturer)
That's it. There are no other limitations to what the system can do. That doesn't mean every level 2 or 3 system can do everything a level 4 system can do, but there's nothing preventing it from doing everything a level 4 system can do other than the above-mentioned driver monitoring systems being activated for each level. That's why I say they don't have to develop or deploy a level 3 system because it provides no utility to the company and limited utility to the consumer while presenting increased litigation risk to the company.
When I say a level 2 system can have the same reliability as a level 4 system what I'm saying is that the driver in the seat can be superfluous to the operation of the vehicle, but still be required to be in the seat and ready to intervene if the system does not perform properly. Meaning that on a fleet-wide basis the system can have an average rate of human intervention every 1,000,000 miles at which point Tesla says to the regulators "Our system is operating at a level beyond human capacity, approve it for level 4 operation." While never building or deploying a level 3 system, because it is not necessary for their intended goal of removing drivers from vehicles, nor is it beneficial to them as a company to do that other than to drive adoption of their software/provide freedom to their customers that can be easily achieved by dialing down the rate of nag from their autonomous system as it improves.
And your first paragraph is pure gibberish. Do you even understand how coding a system like this works?
BTW...
This is so wrong it's giving me tired head.Quote:
There is nothing a level 4 system can do that a level 2 system can't other than have no driver in the seat.
JFC...just...stop.
It's not just having a ****ing person in the seat that delineates the two - it's a LARGE amount of functionality.