EVtowing
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #31
@SwampNut wrote: “They haven't even hinted at that, at all. Much less promised it.”
On the Rivian website at https://rivian.com/r1s in the “Autonomy” section it states:
Lane Change on Command coming summer 2024
Enhanced Highway Assist expected late 2024
Driving Comfort Assist expected 2025
The short descriptions provided for each of those features indicates that, as additions to what is currently available in the Rivian Autonomous Platform (also described on that page), Rivian Autonomy Platform + will then be very similar to the current capabilities of Tesla’s Enhanced Auto Pilot (EAP) option, which is what I specifically referenced in my post.
EAP is an option that Tesla no longer sells but that I have on both my cars, and use constantly on freeways and highways with no cross traffic, which is what it is designed for. It is not the same as FSD (Full Self Driving, for use on all roads) which is what Tesla has been selling for the past few years but that in fact is definitely not “full” (i.e. Level 4 or 5) and requires constant driver attention while in use. I’ve driven a friends Tesla using FSD V12.4 and it was amazing but not Level 4/5 (now there is a newer release, V12.5, still not fully autonomous).
I suspect you were conflating FSD with EAP, but my post did not mention FSD. I’m not criticizing you for that; its easy to do for people who aren’t familiar with the various versions of Auto Pilot that Tesla has offered over the past 8 years.
I realize that Rivian has not stated that they plan to offer something similar to FSD in the future.
On the Rivian website at https://rivian.com/r1s in the “Autonomy” section it states:
Lane Change on Command coming summer 2024
Enhanced Highway Assist expected late 2024
Driving Comfort Assist expected 2025
The short descriptions provided for each of those features indicates that, as additions to what is currently available in the Rivian Autonomous Platform (also described on that page), Rivian Autonomy Platform + will then be very similar to the current capabilities of Tesla’s Enhanced Auto Pilot (EAP) option, which is what I specifically referenced in my post.
EAP is an option that Tesla no longer sells but that I have on both my cars, and use constantly on freeways and highways with no cross traffic, which is what it is designed for. It is not the same as FSD (Full Self Driving, for use on all roads) which is what Tesla has been selling for the past few years but that in fact is definitely not “full” (i.e. Level 4 or 5) and requires constant driver attention while in use. I’ve driven a friends Tesla using FSD V12.4 and it was amazing but not Level 4/5 (now there is a newer release, V12.5, still not fully autonomous).
I suspect you were conflating FSD with EAP, but my post did not mention FSD. I’m not criticizing you for that; its easy to do for people who aren’t familiar with the various versions of Auto Pilot that Tesla has offered over the past 8 years.
I realize that Rivian has not stated that they plan to offer something similar to FSD in the future.
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