174 points

They got an army of thousands of Indians to watch the road for you?

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61 points

No, you’re thinking of Amazon.

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82 points

They got an army of thousands of Amazonians to watch the road for you?

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16 points
Deleted by creator
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3 points

Ah, the ol’ reddit swi- oh wait…

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0 points

Time for snoo-snoo?

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26 points

No they just got a few dozens good lawyers instead if the lawsuits costts less than the profits and you get publicity out of it then that’s business for ya

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21 points

The best lawyers are going to use AI to create their legal arguments. And you know what AI stands for. Always Indians.

No matter how you slice it, it’s Indians all the way down.

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4 points

This is the best comment I’ve read on Lemmy in the 6 months I’ve been here.

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142 points

don’t come with a requirement that drivers watch the road

Seems it’s like every other Mercedes then

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44 points

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2 points

Hey I’m watching it on my mirrors.

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93 points

And they managed to do it without us obsessing about their CEO several times a day? I refuse to believe that!

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86 points
*

As of April 11, there were 65 Mercedes autonomous vehicles available for sale in California, Fortune has learned through an open records request submitted to the state’s DMV. One of those has since been sold, which marks the first sale of an autonomous Mercedes in California, according to the DMV. Mercedes would not confirm sales numbers. Select Mercedes dealerships in Nevada are also offering the cars with the new technology, known as “level 3” autonomous driving.

Drivers can activate Mercedes’s technology, called Drive Pilot, when certain conditions are met, including in heavy traffic jams, during the daytime, on spec ific California and Nevada freeways, and when the car is traveling less than 40 mph. Drivers can focus on other activities until the vehicle alerts them to resume control. The technology does not work on roads that haven’t been pre-approved by Mercedes, including on freeways in other states.

U.S. customers can buy a yearly subscription of Drive Pilot in 2024 EQS sedans and S-Class car models for $2,500.

Mercedes is also working on developing level 4 capabilities. The automaker’s chief technology officer Markus Schäfer expects that level 4 autonomous technology will be available to consumers by 2030, Automotive News reported.

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57 points

Hmm, so only on a very small number of predetermined routes, and at very slow speeds for those roads.

Still impressive, but not as impressive as the headline makes out.

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50 points

And definitely not worth the $2500 a year they’re asking for the feature.

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33 points

Chances are, If you can afford the car, then that amount is nothing to you.

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17 points
*

If they assume full liability for any collisions while the feature is active (and it looks like they do), then I can see that being fair.

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4 points

Come on, you have been able to pay the price of that Mercedes in the first place.

These 2500 are not going to hurt.

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6 points

Yes, but it’s actually level 3.

Not the Tesla “full self driving - no wait we actually lied to you, you need to be alert at all times” bullshit.

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2 points

We’ll wait and see i guess

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28 points

I’ve seen this headline a few times and the details are laughably bad. The only reason this can be getting any press is because the headline is good clickbait. But 40 mph top speed on approved roads in 2 states only if a car is in front of you in the daytime is entirely useless. I guess it’s a good first step maybe? But trying to write headlines like this is big news is sad.

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37 points

40 mph top speed on approved roads in 2 states only if a car is in front of you in the daytime is entirely useless.

It’s specifically designed to navigate traffic congestion, which happens under 30 mph. It can keep up with the lane, deal with lane changes, honk if someone backs into you, let ambulances through, things like that. Not sure why the article presents it as generic driving.

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7 points

The reason this gets attention is because it’s the first level 3 sold to consumers.

The tech is hard, of course it’s gonna start out with laughingly limited capabilities. But it’s the first step towards more automation.

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4 points
*

It’s starting in California where there are a meaningful number of high earners who are spending hours per day in 4 lane bumper to bumper traffic.

Having actual autonomy during those hours is still shit. But it’s a hell of a lot less shit than the tedium of the high attention requirements of sitting in traffic at a crawl.

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3 points

Fucking subscription. No.

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69 points

U.S. customers can buy a yearly subscription of Drive Pilot in 2024 EQS sedans and S-Class car models for $2,500

yeah, fuck that.

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36 points

Those cars cost well over $100k each. The demographic buying that doesn’t care about $2500.

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23 points

They’re also accepting full liability if anything happens while using this feature so it’s actually a type of insurance

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4 points

I wonder how much cheaper it will make auto insurance. I also wonder if this will open transportation options those who have lost a license.

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2 points

Ok, then I’ll do it if I don’t have to pay for other insurance on the car.

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2 points

I kinda like that system because eventually people will put their own OSes on the car, which the manufacturer obviously can’t cover. Having separate insurance/service eliminates having to pay for it if you’re accepting the liability yourself.

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1 point

The conditions for the system to work are such that if you could find a policy to cover only those conditions, it’d probably just be like a couple dollars a month. Even behaving “badly” you would be unlikely to have an accident and even if you caused an accident, it’s probably just going to be a couple thousand in property damage with no medical implication.

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13 points

Have you seen Tesla’s price for full self driving? And they don’t take liability

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0 points
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Deleted by creator
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12 points

I think you can afford that if you own an EQS

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