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And that is the kicker. As the implementation of the eventual FSD has improved, the cost has increased. The dilemma is whether to buy an immature FSD-capability now at the current price, or wait until it is more mature and a higher price.Ok thanks. That's what I thought but it was implied I should add it to my order now to save money. I'm not sure I need fsd at this point. If they released it where it was truly autonomous I would be interested.
And that is the kicker. As the implementation of the eventual FSD has improved, the cost has increased. The dilemma is whether to buy an immature FSD-capability now at the current price, or wait until it is more mature and a higher price.
For most people, you will not have the car when or if FSD ever happens. If the FSD followed the driver not the car, it would make more sense.
If you get a loan, including FSD in the original price allow you to include it in the loan, but you pay interest for it.I just ordered my model y and obviously fsd is an option.
I know the price may change but does it cost more to upgrade it after the purchase?
I understand the logic of this, but I don’t agree that “it makes more sense”. I think it makes less sense for an option to be attached to an owner, not a vehicle. I bought optional red exterior, but that colour is attached to the car, not to me. Similarly, I bought optional FSD-capability for the car. The FSD-capability is part of the car, not part of me.
If FSD-capability were attached to the person, purchasers would essentially be locked in to owning a Tesla. With the FSD-capability being attached to the car, I could sell my SR+ with FSD-capability, and expect a higher price for my car. I could then buy another Tesla, or I could buy a different brand.
Imagine the outrage if buyers of FSD-capability decided to buy a non-Tesla car and therefore had no use for the FSD-capability, but because FSD-capability were attached to the person, not the car, the person lost the value of having purchased FSD-capability.
you have a point, but the computer you buy is not a microsoft computer.When I buy a software licence for Microsoft office it is not attached to the computer. I can buy a new computer and transfer the licence to the new computer. The operating system stays with the computer (That is the built in software to make the car function). FSD is like an add-on licence and should be transferable.
you have a point, but the computer you buy is not a microsoft computer.
Maybe a Microsoft surface?
You are correct of course regarding computers, but the computer marketplace is very different from the automobile marketplace generally, even more different from the BEV marketplace, and more different still from Tesla.When I buy a software licence for Microsoft office it is not attached to the computer. I can buy a new computer and transfer the licence to the new computer. The operating system stays with the computer (That is the built in software to make the car function). FSD is like an add-on licence and should be transferable.