evan_aggie said:
I like some of your points, but you are trying to argue some holistic view of "best autonomous" driving regardless of it exists in a lab or is productized.
Don't overlook that some of these systems that are better and in R&D have no immediate path to commercialization in 200,000 vehicles. I rode in Aptiv's "autonomous" BMW with a safety driver in the front and an engineer watching their data stream and Lidar feedback....all while going 10mph in traffic.
Tesla has the best autonomous package available today to a consumer, and you can't argue that. It may not be the case in 5 years, but tell me another car that can be bought which drives itself on a highway and takes exits based on nav. I'll check back in 2021....maybe.
If I offer s**t for sale, it may be the best and only s**t available, but at the end of the day it's still s**t.
What Tesla has done could be easily commercialized and rolled out in upcoming model years into hundreds of thousands of vehicles by other manufacturers. They're not doing that because their systems are not 100% capable and those other manufactures aren't taking any chances. They tend to do things right or not at all, and fit good reason. a) You're taking about people's lives and b) going the wrong route could prove incredibly costly.
A perfect example of the difference between all other vehicle manufacturers and Tesla is in their touch screens. Musk wanted a huge screen and couldn't understand why other cars didn't have one. After all, laptops had big screens, and they were really durable. Then Tesla went shopping for giant car screens and found out no one made them. Other manufacturers use smaller screens because they are automotive grade and built to withstand some insane conditions that laptop and computer screens simply can't. Going bigger with automotive grade is just not economically feasible.
Musk said **** it and went with the best thing they could get. It was like 17" and had really good durability specs. It was a screen designed for industrial, but not automotive, conditions. It has some impressive operating specs until you look at exactly what automotive grade is. It's just barely sorry of the lowest automotive grade. Tesla tested, thought it worked fine, and ran with it.
Turns out they didn't work really well and ran into all kinds of thermal issues. Tesla was replacing them left and right. That's where their cabin overheat protection came from, which mitigated some of the worst problems. They still had problems with banding though, and they started telling customers late last year to pound sand on warrantied screen replacements, calling the remaining issues,"cosmetic." Now they're trying to develop an in-house screen. They're supposedly rolling those out, but they may just be remanufactured screens.
Long story short, other automakers tested having and used proven products with incredibly high standards for their tech. Tesla went the cheapest, coolest route. Only of them has spent a ton of money mitigating and warranting an issue they have yet to solve, all the while pissing of their customer base.
Tesla may be selling Autopilot right now, but they may also end up eating a ton of money later on with hardware or sensor upgrades the same way that ate money on screen replacements. It may be, "productized," but it could also end up as an albatross, whereas those systems still in the lab actually pan out profitably.