Federal regulators are looking into Tesla’s new “Mad Max” Full Self Driving (FSD) mode, which ignores speed limits and reportedly may drive as fast as 85 miles per hour while weaving between lanes.
Let's put aside the Tesla vs. Waymo debate and talk about Wayve. The UK-based startup, founded in 2017, is yet another company that has autonomous-driving technology ambitions, but it's not building a ...
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I trust Tesla FSD enough for me to close my eyes. I'm now spoiled and want full autonomy
Two things can be true of Tesla's Full Self-Driving: It's an impressive piece of technology, and it still doesn't go far enough. FSD is Tesla's big bet. CEO Elon Musk and his most bullish investors ...
Photo by Monroe County Sheriff's Department, via New York Times Tesla has engaged in a pattern of taking credit for the successes of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, even though the car still ...
Tesla recently released crash data on their Supervised FSD system, reporting the average number of miles driven per collision for cars in different configurations and on different roads. This replaces ...
I’ve put over 200 km (125 miles) on Tesla’s latest ‘Full Self-Driving Supervised’ (FSD) v14 update, and I’ve gathered my thoughts in this article. In short, Tesla FSD v14 is an incremental improvement ...
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