Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by atx2bos 597 days ago
to my knowledge, Tesla has gone the computer vision route where they are solely relying on cameras and algorithms, while Waymo went the way of more traditional LIDAR and other scanners to close achieve the safe full self drive.

The disadvantage of using the LIDAR and full sensor stack is largely price.

2 comments

The advantage is that it works.
So does Tesla’s. I use it daily. From home going through a busy city, onto a major highway with rush hour traffic, into a downtown area to work. It can do this without me touching the wheel or pedal for the entire length of the drive. I have a hw4 S plaid and it’s made dramatic improvements over this last year. I’m blown away at how good it is (also blown away by waymo).
The difference is you are in the driver's seat paying attention at all times and ready to intervene. That's the expectation set by the system.

It's the fundamental difference between partial autonomy and full autonomy.

Waymo also has drivers. They are just remote and they intervene when needed. Waymois is also bound to highly mapped roads in a few cities.

Don’t get me wrong waymo is impressive, I use it as much as possible. The future looks amazing. Do you also agree Tesla’s self driving is impressive?

Well, we know exactly how Waymo's remote operators help out: https://waymo.com/blog/2024/05/fleet-response/. They can't prevent accidents in real time like the Tesla drivers do and can't "control" or "drive" the vehicles.

Tesla FSD is impressive for a driver assist system. But that's all it is — a driver assist. They need orders of magnitude improvement to match Waymo's performance and go driverless.

Is it reliable enough that you don't need to supervise it? What's your estimate of the miles per intervention?
It still needs to be supervised for the edge cases, but the standard city roads and highways are a solved problem. I think some of the complex roads where you have to quickly cross two way traffic that doesn’t stop can be difficult, I don’t use fsd in that situation, it’s even hard for a human. Sometimes I’ll give it a nudge when it’s being too safe. There’s a construction area that I hit which would have caused the car to take a non optimal path, so I take over there on a regular basis, those issues do get fixed though. That’s about the only issues I have. It can now do things like drive down my long private unmapped driveway without issues.

My work is about 10 miles way in the Seattle area. I can go to and from with zero interventions until I get to my works parking garage

You kind of have it correct, but Tesla is using vision, AI, and huge amounts of data. It’s like the chat-gpt of autonomous driving.

The data is the most important part, to solve real world driving everywhere, you need huge amounts of data for all the edge cases. Tesla has millions of cars on the road gathering this data, vs a couple of thousand for Waymo

Data quantity is useless if the data is of low quality. You need to be able to judge the car's performance in simulations to guide training. Elon admitted in the latest quarterly this is a huge problem for Tesla -- they have to do many millions of miles of simulations to compare two models. Higher fidelity data would cut this number by many orders of magnitude.
You either didn't understand what Elon said, or are deliberately misinterpreting what he said - I listened to the earnings call myself. He said it's taking longer to train the models because the miles between interventions is getting so large that it takes a while to see which model is better when they're comparing different models. It's not a "huge problem", it's a good problem.
3rd party testing has Tesla at 13 miles between intervention. Even Elon only promises 10,000 miles between interventions later this year: https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1842029594570006992
> Tesla has millions of cars on the road gathering this data, vs a couple of thousand for Waymo

Except that Alphabet has been mapping and scanning for years, since before Waymo. And, Waymo vehicles are on the road while waiting for a fare, so they can use that time for mapping, while Teslas are reliant on where their owners go.