well, let's look at this:It 'just works' with human input, which to me is why Tesla chose not to go that way as they are single minded about self driving. All I'm doing is answering the much repeated question about why they didn't include a $5 rain sensor. It wouldn't allow them to reach a self-driving car, seems logical to me.
They have attempted a solution that remove the requirement for a human to operate the sensitivity control that's required with these rain sensors on even the most advanced alternative cars. I doubt even the most vocal pro-Tesla user (might be me) would argue that it is 100% perfect, some may find it adequate, some not.
By making it mandatory with Tesla Vision it has to be perfect.
you might have same sensor (which is not in the car at all) being adjusted with already existing computer. no human involvement, happy days, win win, fsd or something.
same applied camera for high beam - others have it working with 99.999% accuracy. while in tesla with all its bloody cameras all over the place it's like roll of dice every time. why it cannot get it straight? it's almost as simple as:
Code:
if LightsInFront(1) {
SwitchOffHighBeam(1);
}
else {
SwitchOffHighBeam(0);
}
sh!t, need to sell this to Tesla AI team...
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