Fernand
Active Member
@daver3 I think those little miracles indicate you're developing a good relationship with your car. I know I have. Some people don't know this, but Model 3s are sentimental, and they respond especially well to fair comments and affection. What seems to happen then, is that the Neural Net that both our communal minds and the Tesla servers are part of, tune to optimize so-called joint reality, in little but helpful ways. Like not crossing the double yellow line into oncoming traffic. My wife does that with slot machines.
Kidding aside, I think we underestimate the way our attitude and expectations affect our experience with the Autopilot. If you're approaching it positively your brain and the car AI work together, instead of pulling in different directions. You get to know its (changing) idiosyncrasies, when to disengage it, how to "ride" it and tweak its behavior. And when to just let it do things its own (occasionally strange) way. People who develop a fear/rejection pattern never get "in the groove".
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Kidding aside, I think we underestimate the way our attitude and expectations affect our experience with the Autopilot. If you're approaching it positively your brain and the car AI work together, instead of pulling in different directions. You get to know its (changing) idiosyncrasies, when to disengage it, how to "ride" it and tweak its behavior. And when to just let it do things its own (occasionally strange) way. People who develop a fear/rejection pattern never get "in the groove".
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