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  2. Tesla Autopilot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Autopilot

    Tesla Autopilot in operation, 2017. Tesla Autopilot is an advanced driver-assistance system (ADAS) developed by Tesla that amounts to partial vehicle automation (Level 2 automation, as defined by SAE International). Tesla provides "Base Autopilot" on all vehicles, which includes Autosteer, and traffic-aware cruise control.

  3. Tesla Autopilot hardware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Autopilot_hardware

    Tesla Autopilot, an advanced driver-assistance system for Tesla vehicles, uses a suite of sensors and an onboard computer. It has undergone several hardware changes and versions since 2014, most notably moving to an all-camera-based system by 2023, in contrast with ADAS from other companies, which include radar and sometimes lidar sensors.

  4. List of Tesla Autopilot crashes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tesla_Autopilot...

    On January 20, 2016, Gao Yaning, the driver of a Tesla Model S in Handan, Hebei, China, was killed when his car crashed into a stationary truck. [5] The Tesla was following a car in the far left lane of a multi-lane highway; the car in front moved to the right lane to avoid a truck stopped on the left shoulder, and the Tesla, which the driver's father believes was in Autopilot mode, did not ...

  5. Tesla Dojo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Dojo

    Tesla operates several massively parallel computing clusters for developing its Autopilot advanced driver assistance system. Its primary unnamed cluster using 5,760 Nvidia A100 graphics processing units (GPUs) was touted by Andrej Karpathy in 2021 at the fourth International Joint Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CCVPR 2021) to be "roughly the number five supercomputer in ...

  6. Tesla, Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla,_Inc.

    Tesla, Inc. (/ ˈ t ɛ s l ə / ⓘ TESS-lə or / ˈ t ɛ z l ə / TEZ-lə [a]) is an American multinational automotive and clean energy company. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, it designs, manufactures and sells battery electric vehicles (BEVs), stationary battery energy storage devices from home to grid-scale, solar panels and solar shingles, and related products and services.

  7. Elon Musk's Crash Course - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elon_Musk's_Crash_Course

    Elon Musk's Crash Course is a 2022 New York Times–FX documentary film directed and produced by Emma Schwartz with reporting by Cade Metz and Neal Boudette. [1] The documentary explores the promises made by Tesla's CEO Elon Musk in regards to self-driving cars and contrasts that with the fatal accidents that have occurred using the technology.

  8. Self-driving car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-driving_car

    Initially, Tesla stated that the vehicle was so badly damaged from the impact that their recorder was not able to determine whether the car had been on Autopilot at the time. However, the car failed to take evasive action. Another fatal Autopilot crash occurred in May in Florida in a Tesla Model S [221] [222] that crashed into a tractor-trailer.

  9. Tesla Model S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Model_S

    In 2014, Tesla introduced Autopilot, an advanced driver-assistance system developed by the automaker that amounts to partial vehicle automation. [ 174 ] [ 175 ] Every Model S produced from September 2014 onward included the Autopilot hardware , [ 176 ] and it was officially released in October 2015 as a software update.