Assuming they don't channel their inner-Elon and that they actually hit their October target.... What's the odds that a new end-to-end model will require more compute horsepower in the car than the 3x can handle? Obviously the real compute intensive part is training the model, but how much additional compute will likely be needed in-vehicle? Anyone know or care to speculate?If they nail their new model as they're touting, I'll have to pick one up around black friday.
I don't think the compute power will drastically change for the ML models. The computer horsepower will change when they want to start solving the model on a larger field of vision (further away from the vehicle).Assuming they don't channel their inner-Elon and that they actually hit their October target.... What's the odds that a new end-to-end model will require more compute horsepower in the car than the 3x can handle? Obviously the real compute intensive part is training the model, but how much additional compute will likely be needed in-vehicle? Anyone know or care to speculate?
the model only uses the 3 cameras, and common data such as acceleration, yaw, roll etc. other data like BSM and Radar can be incorporated in the vehicle specific code.Question that may or may not be public knowledge.. Does "the model" actually take advantage of all the inputs available to it for a given vehicle? My understanding is that the bluecruise capable vehicles like the properly-equipped F150s are using 4 cameras (front, back, side mirrors) and however many IR and radars.. Does "the model" use all of that, or does it fall back to a common denominator that works for all supported vehicles along with the comma 3x's included 2 cameras?
Just curious because it would obviously be best to know that all available input is being consumed for safety reasons if nothing else. We were amazed with what Mobileye etc could accomplish in our Model S just using the front-facing cameras, but safety obviously improved once the software started using data from the other cameras available.
BC uses 5 radars and the windshield camera. These are 4 blis radars at the corners (including blis in the taillights) and the CCM cruise radar. Yes the comma device can see these signals if desired, but uses its own cameras for visual. The 360 cams are not used for BC. If they were it would actually be able to track straight in the lane by verifying position using the mirror cams and looking at the relation of the tires vs the lines (if you run a 360 cam calibration you can see that the system can utilize them, but limited compute capabilities causes it to either/or where it uses the compute - in calibration mode it's running its system on all 4 360 cams to fuse the image and post process it). It'd be substantially better if it used the cams, but its got limited compute. The data from the radars is rather limited basically reporting an angular direction and range to an object.Question that may or may not be public knowledge.. Does "the model" actually take advantage of all the inputs available to it for a given vehicle? My understanding is that the bluecruise capable vehicles like the properly-equipped F150s are using 4 cameras (front, back, side mirrors) and however many IR and radars.. Does "the model" use all of that, or does it fall back to a common denominator that works for all supported vehicles along with the comma 3x's included 2 cameras?
Just curious because it would obviously be best to know that all available input is being consumed for safety reasons if nothing else. We were amazed with what Mobileye etc could accomplish in our Model S just using the front-facing cameras, but safety obviously improved once the software started using data from the other cameras available.
See attachment:I was curious what settings are the most common changes were to the stock installation of it.
if you enable "experimental longitudinal control alpha" and "experimental mode" it will attempt to recognize and stop for red lights and stop signs. It has about a 30% success rate on stop signs and about 60% on red lights.Does Bluepilot recognize stop signs and stop lights? Or is it mostly designed to follow someone else and slow down with them?
maybe I should have thought more carefully about my naming. the experimental branch of bluepilot is not related to the experimental mode inside the software. Shame on me for not choosing a different name. Right now the experimental branch is almost identical to stable. I plan to start working on the nuisance alarms next week.And what is enabled in experimental mode (just the reduced nuisance “steering limit exceeded”? (Just what was covered in post #2?))
It's based on the situation. Anytime you are detected near or at an intersection it swaps to wide angle, then goes back to narrow when you leave the intersection.And is there a reason the camera goes from zoom 1 (in calm mode) to ultra wide view on the screen too (with zoom 1 I cant see the hood, with ultra wide I can see almost to my dash)?
It also pushes the collision warning alert. Maybe a few others. We can make it push anything we can find in the canbus logs. Just not a high priority right now.Also is the only message that the comma can push to the F150 dashboard is the “keep hands on steering wheel” even when something else is going on like pay attention or others?
Check your battery status too.Some advise needed. I purchased a topdon smart scanner with scope. The smart their best android based scanner. It uses a VCI obd. It's rated for CAN FD.
2/3 of my modules are not available.
I'm starting to suspect the 3x.
I'm plan on unplug the connection at the ipma.
Has anyone else seen issues when trying to access the CAN? I'm at the beginning of my search for the issue.
Are you saying modules on a particular bus are missing or are you expecting to see truck wide module reporting? Here's the modules/busses on my PBThat's good to know. I have a major cut on my index finger and replacing the truck to stock involves all fingers on deck.
Do you know if non OEM scanners work on CAN FD? My scanner has a VCI that supports J2534, DoIP, CanFD, D-PDU, and RP1210 protocol.
I'm asking all around because I haven't used a non OEM diagnostic tool on this 2022 hybrid. The scanner is shop quality equal to alot of snap-on stuff.
Figures I need company support ant it's the weekend.