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Oh yea, the other guy did. Getting lost in all of this.He didn't.
And they never will. The cameras physically can't see a water drop directly in front of them because of, y'know, physics, and so have to look to other cues. This might be a neural network to look for where droplets are sliding over the lens as the edges will introduce very specific distortions, or looking for spray from other vehicles.They’ve never bloody worked satisfactorily for any extended period of time.
I don't think physics is the problem here. If you happen to have an IEEE membership you can read a paper on it hereAnd they never will. The cameras physically can't see a water drop directly in front of them because of, y'know, physics, and so have to look to other cues. This might be a neural network to look for where droplets are sliding over the lens as the edges will introduce very specific distortions, or looking for spray from other vehicles.
Oh, stop it. It's been 5 years, hundreds of thousands of vehicles and probably trillions of data points.I suspect getting it "just right" involves lots of iterations and lots of learning data on the part of the NN.
I kind of agree they can probably solve this at some point or get it good enough. However with only a finite amount of compute to train their models, I think they’ve focused on FSD Beta and ignored trying to fix rain.Oh, stop it. It's been 5 years, hundreds of thousands of vehicles and probably trillions of data points.
That entire article is based on the tweet posted somewhat ironically on this thread.Tesla auto wipers are about to get an update to fix their subpar performance — TESLARATI
Tesla’s auto wipers are about to get an update to fix their subpar performance after owners have been complaining about the effectiveness of the feature for some time.apple.news
Seeing as no timeline has been specified. They’ll either fix this at some point in the future, will have gone out of business or humans won’t be buying cars anymore so won’t care.The more gullible amongst us will continue to believe that one day Tesla will fix this. Just needs more time/compute/dojo/magic star dust
And they never will. The cameras physically can't see a water drop directly in front of them because of, y'know, physics, and so have to look to other cues. This might be a neural network to look for where droplets are sliding over the lens as the edges will introduce very specific distortions, or looking for spray from other vehicles.