What Does Tesla Autopilot “Beta” Mean?
Mike Barnard, an expert in robotics, might follow this up with a deeper look into the topic of “beta” as it regards Tesla Autopilot and other matters — to supplement his articles on why Tesla Autopilot is better than driver-assist features in competing brands’ cars and why Tesla’s approach to self-driving cars is better than Google’s and dramatically outdistances Google’s autopilot miles — but since Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk went on a tweetstorm about this yesterday, providing several interesting comments, I wanted to run down them in a quick summary for clarification.
I think the best approach in this case will be a simple bullet-point list, but first a little background: As Wikipedia nicely summarizes, “beta” in regards to technology is “the last testing release (or the preview release) in the software release life cycle before the ‘release’ version…. Typically it is the last version before a version of a software is fully released to all its actual customers.” That seems clear, right? But when does a product actually cross the line from “beta” version to “release version?#8221; Furthermore, does “beta” mean a technology isn’t ready for the masses, or just that the company wants to reach certain milestones (in use, experience, data, cost, etc.) before removing the label?
I think Elon’s tweets make it very clear what the story is with Tesla’s use of the term, so let’s just jump in. It all started with this article and tweet: