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Teslas Are Teaching Each Other How to Drive Better Than You

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Categories Latest Popular Editor's Picks Community Debate Central Featured Future Health Science Singularity University Tech Video Central Video Post Can DNA Hard Drives Solve Our Looming Data Storage Crisis? Soon We’ll All Love Robots the Way Japan Loves Robots 8 Ways AI Will Profoundly Change City Life by 2030 Elon Musk Is Right: We Can Insure Against Extinction by Colonizing Space Faster Fashion: How Making Clothes Has Become Like Making Software Robot Babies From Japan Raise Questions About How Parents Bond With AI Self-Driving Car Sensors Just Got Smaller, Cheaper, and Better All at Once The Astonishing Healthcare Tech of the Future Is Arriving How We'll Stop Future Pandemics? Engineer Vaccines From the Ground Up How to Train Thousands of Surgeons at the Same Time in Virtual Reality Detecting Cancer Early With Nanosensors and a Urine Test We'll Soon Trust AI More Than Doctors to Diagnose Disease 5 Billion People Need Better Healthcare — Technology Will Help Deliver It How Humans Can Live 100 Healthy Years Health Devices Are All Too Hackable—Here’s What You Need to Know What Is the Meaning of Life If Society Doesn’t Need You to Work Anymore? Taking the Pulse of Medtech With the Exponential Medicine MEDy Awards The Future of Surgery Is Robotic, Data-Driven, and Artificially Intelligent  Robotic Tissue-Slicing Microscopes and DIY Crowd Science to Accelerate Research Writing the First Human Genome by 2026 Is Synthetic Biology's Grand Challenge 2 Your Tesla can drive itself. Not just on the highway, not under strict guidance, but everywhere. Or at least, it will have all the necessary gadgets to do so soon. We are excited to announce that, as of today, all Tesla vehicles produced in our factory – including Model 3 – will have the hardware needed for full self-driving capability at a safety level substantially greater than that of a human driver. –Tesla Blog Now that all Teslas will have the sensors necessary for full autonomy, the next step is to teach the cars’ software all the rules of the road. And Tesla plans to have its cars teach those to each other. The cars will come stock with a new computer—40 times more powerful than the current offering—running a neural net. Tesla will roll out new autonomous features via software updates. They’ll test the software by running it in the background and comparing its decisions to the driver’s. When it proves safer-than-human, they’ll hit the switch. It’s a literal race against the machines. A race we’re better off losing as soon as possible. Tesla’s fleet learning abilities pretty much ensure they’ll be one of the leaders in effective autonomous driving and safety in coming years. Not even Uber will have the same critical mass of autonomous vehicles on the road learning and improving in myriad situations daily. But this week’s promise of an entirely self-driving fleet—exactly on schedule as announced three years ago—comes with a damn big caveat. Even with well-proven software, Tesla can’t let you let your car drive itself. At least not yet. This week’s self-driving announcement also began to put added pressure on regulators. From Tesla’s Autopilot page: Please note that Self-Driving functionality is dependent upon extensive software validation and regulatory approval, which may vary widely by jurisdiction. It is not possible to know exactly when each element of the functionality described above will be available, as this is highly dependent on local regulatory approval. As with most swiftly advancing technologies, government agencies are reacting conservatively to self-driving technology while just about every major software titan and car manufacturer is full steam ahead. We’ve reached the age of swift technological progress where software can be developed and delivered to your car over the air, improving on its own in real time, but we have to wait for government approval to switch it on. This is exciting. By any measure. And it should be exciting to just about anyone. (Exceptions include those who drive for a living, auto insurance actuaries, and those responsible for regulating autonomous vehicles.) What’s it going to look like when a consumer’s car can drive itself, but local regulations prohibit them from doing so?   Image Credit: Tesla Motors About Latest Posts Follow meDigital Engagement Manager at Singularity UniversityMatthew focuses on digital content strategies and social media for Singularity Hub and Singularity University, constantly wondering about the future of digital media and information distribution. Previously, he was a co-founder and Director of Communications for IDEAco, an educational Singularity University Labs nonprofit. Follow me Teslas Are Teaching Each Other How to Drive Better Than You - October 21, 2016 Taking the Pulse of Medtech With the Exponential Medicine MEDy Awards - October 11, 2016 Adorable Robot Assistant Pepper Now Available in the US - August 17, 2016

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