This is a great summary IMO. By many accounts, Waymo is the industry leader in autonomous driving. They are testing "robotaxis" in Phoenix, public trials without a human safety driver. Meanwhile, Tesla struggles to navigate around parking lots. Yet some in this thread boldly assert Tesla FSD is years ahead of the competition. Talk about parroting Elon on this with no real-world evidence.I'd say Tesla is a little wreckless with FSD. They're deploying before its ready and who know if the hardware in cars now will ever be capable of real FSD. Paying $6-7k is just nuts for something that might never work. That's not saying FSD won't happen, but Telsa is taking an approach that requires significantly better computer vision AI than its competitors.
We've talked about these changes before, and I think it's an indication of (business) confusion rather than scumminess. They obviously rejiggered AP+FSD in a way they could claim to have delivered partial self-driving functionality this year. Elon is still flapping his gums that they will deliver on-roads FSD sometime next year (pending regulatory approval), but if you use Smart Summon as a baseline, that seems like quite a stretch of the imagination.Speaking of add-ons, I've never been a huge fan of how Tesla chargers for package upgrades. For example, when I bought the car, EAP was $5k at delivery and $6k after. On the other hand, FSD was $3k at delivery and $5k after. Outside of the new computer for FSD, everything else is just a software authorization. (To note, the new computer wasn't even a thing when I ordered, so it wasn't given such a huge hike due to the hardware upgrade.) Honestly, I don't think there's a way to look at it other than a tactic to push people to upgrade their options to avoid having to pay more later, and I think that's a pretty scummy thing to do.
Of course, I paid for FSD because I didn't want to pay more later, and what ended up happening? Tesla accidentally dropped it to $2k when doing the EAP to AP switch, and my friend, who ordered his car without FSD, ended up paying less to upgrade his car post-delivery than I paid for the feature at delivery. I still wish I would've just ordered AWD instead of FSD.
I don't have any problem with allowing people a choice of paying less now, or more later. The essential problem that you hint at is that FSD is vaporware. So not only did they get a free loan from all early adopters, they also changed pricing in a way that punished early adopters.
