the question of sorts is when ?
you may all go to hell and i will go to Texas
hedge said:
the question of sorts is when ?
DubFalls said:
At some point TSLA will be held accountable for allowing people to use FSD/Autopilot in situations like this
Words like Full Self Driviny and Autopilot do not imply the need for human assistance
PWestAg18 said:
The more autopilot gets put out on the road by different manufacturers the less total accidents we'll see as small/stupid fender benders get eliminated, but the wrecks we do see will all be of the lethal variety like this. Will be interesting to see what happens to insurance prices and the legal/regulatory side of things.
As I've said before on this thread, I have zero desire to ever drive/ride in an autopilot vehicle. Not trusting my life to a coding glitch at 75 mph with cars on either side of me.
bmks270 said:PWestAg18 said:
The more autopilot gets put out on the road by different manufacturers the less total accidents we'll see as small/stupid fender benders get eliminated, but the wrecks we do see will all be of the lethal variety like this. Will be interesting to see what happens to insurance prices and the legal/regulatory side of things.
As I've said before on this thread, I have zero desire to ever drive/ride in an autopilot vehicle. Not trusting my life to a coding glitch at 75 mph with cars on either side of me.
Or you could just limit autopilot to lower speeds, where collision would have less energy, less likelihood of fatality, and more time for a human and autopilot sensors to react.
Tesla autopilot I think needs more regulation, preferably from Tesla so it cannot be enabled without a driver. Honestly I think it should limited to an advanced cruise control. Even with a driver, the driver feels a false sense of security and will become much less attentive and still have delayed reaction times if not actively driving and letting autopilot do the work.
PWestAg18 said:bmks270 said:PWestAg18 said:
The more autopilot gets put out on the road by different manufacturers the less total accidents we'll see as small/stupid fender benders get eliminated, but the wrecks we do see will all be of the lethal variety like this. Will be interesting to see what happens to insurance prices and the legal/regulatory side of things.
As I've said before on this thread, I have zero desire to ever drive/ride in an autopilot vehicle. Not trusting my life to a coding glitch at 75 mph with cars on either side of me.
Or you could just limit autopilot to lower speeds, where collision would have less energy, less likelihood of fatality, and more time for a human and autopilot sensors to react.
Tesla autopilot I think needs more regulation, preferably from Tesla so it cannot be enabled without a driver. Honestly I think it should limited to an advanced cruise control. Even with a driver, the driver feels a false sense of security and will become much less attentive and still have delayed reaction times if not actively driving and letting autopilot do the work.
While I agree with your stance on it, doesn't that sort of defeat the purpose of autopilot? Why would someone have autopilot if they're required to sit there 100% alert 100% of the time just like when they were driving? A ton of people hate commuting and hate driving, they want self driving cars so that they can turn their daily commute or long road trip into productive time (work on a computer, extra sleep, read a book, etc.) just like flying.
Why pay extra for the self-driving capability that provides little to no actual benefit over doing it themselves? Tesla is eventually going to run into a regulatory wall on this after more and more of these accidents add up, and it will be interesting to see what comes of the technology because of it.
NRD09 said:
I don't know how stuff like this happens, my dad has a model s and always signs up for the beta testing/ new release stuff, and his autopilot has always been super annoying as it requires driver input every minute or couple minutes, and if you don't it beeps at you like crazy. He says if you keep ignoring it it'll pull over and shut off. Also you can't engage autopilot unless the seatbelt is buckled. So if someone goes to great lengths to override those, can you really blame the car? The line gets pretty gray between that and bungee cording the wheel and putting a brick on the gas pedal
tv1113 said:
Great post on Reddit about Clov
https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/mtkyw2/clov_dd_no_bull****/
It was a direct listing instead of an IPO. If the "insiders" weren't selling shares, there would be no market. I still wouldn't buy here, but the insider selling claim doesn't really have merit here.Irish 2.0 said:cageybee77 said:
Anybody own COIN? Thoughts?
Not a great sign when insiders dump damn near everything at IPO.
The tweet was deleted, but here it is. Not sure if it's true
I think the batteries can explode. Some airlines won't allow them in their cargo area, iirc.Tomas Hermensa said:
That makes this sound made up. Firefighters shooting water on a car that everyone over 6 years old knows is electric?
Agreed, but I'm not sure all FDs have that foam fire ******ant stuff for electrical fires on their trucks.Tomas Hermensa said:
I get that and I get wanting to ask the manufacturer specific information when fighting a fire, but hosing down the electric fire with thousands of gallons of water as the first response sounds ridiculous.
Prognightmare said:Agreed, but I'm not sure all FDs have that foam fire ******ant stuff for electrical fires on their trucks.Tomas Hermensa said:
I get that and I get wanting to ask the manufacturer specific information when fighting a fire, but hosing down the electric fire with thousands of gallons of water as the first response sounds ridiculous.
a couple 4 cleanguard fire extinguishers on truck is probably pretty important these days with electrically powerd vehicles on the road.DubFalls said:Prognightmare said:Agreed, but I'm not sure all FDs have that foam fire ******ant stuff for electrical fires on their trucks.Tomas Hermensa said:
I get that and I get wanting to ask the manufacturer specific information when fighting a fire, but hosing down the electric fire with thousands of gallons of water as the first response sounds ridiculous.
A lot of that foam is pretty gnarly too from an environmental contamination standpoint.
I honestly don't have any idea. I was just speculating why water was used.BREwmaster said:
Do fire departments not have class C extinguishers on hand or the equivalent of the common household ABC (dry chemical)?? This is also fire fighting school 101 (putting out electrical fires).
This story might actually sense if they didn't even realize it was an electric vehicle and were trying water first, but it was an un-manned tesla.
The insider selling certainly has merit. There are 186M shares outstanding. The insiders did not sell a few million to create a market. They sold to cash in while the stock is hyped up.lobwedgephil said:It was a direct listing instead of an IPO. If the "insiders" weren't selling shares, there would be no market. I still wouldn't buy here, but the insider selling claim doesn't really have merit here.Irish 2.0 said:cageybee77 said:
Anybody own COIN? Thoughts?
Not a great sign when insiders dump damn near everything at IPO.
The tweet was deleted, but here it is. Not sure if it's true
So are we shorting TSLA at open? 4/23 700p?DeLaHonta said:
The fire department was following Tesla's own firefighting guidelines:
https://www.tesla.com/sites/default/files/downloads/Model_3_Emergency_Response_Guide_en.pdf
This is a really bad look for the company. I know people are speculating that AP/FSD wasn't turned on, but what is the alternative if nobody was in the driver seat? The passengers switched seats trying to escape, were unable to, and burned alive? The automatic safety braking failed (which might not had if they used lifts)?
Elon's unpaid Twitter PR department is working overtime on this one unsuccessfully.
I've shorted TSLA just once, and profitably, but never again. That stock is too unpredictable for me to try and profit off of things like this. I just watch from the sidelines now.Double_Bagger said:So are we shorting TSLA at open? 4/23 700p?DeLaHonta said:
The fire department was following Tesla's own firefighting guidelines:
https://www.tesla.com/sites/default/files/downloads/Model_3_Emergency_Response_Guide_en.pdf
This is a really bad look for the company. I know people are speculating that AP/FSD wasn't turned on, but what is the alternative if nobody was in the driver seat? The passengers switched seats trying to escape, were unable to, and burned alive? The automatic safety braking failed (which might not had if they used lifts)?
Elon's unpaid Twitter PR department is working overtime on this one unsuccessfully.