Published , by TJ Denzer
Published , by TJ Denzer
It’s amazing to think that technology has come to the point where smart driver assistance systems in vehicles like the Tesla can autopilot the car, but we’re nowhere near being able to take our eyes off the road as they do. That was the unfortunate lesson demonstrated in a fatal Tesla Model X accident from 2018 where it was recently revealed that the driver was playing a game on his smartphone with the vehicle on autopilot when he crashed and was killed.
It was in March 2018 that Apple Engineer Walter Huang was driving his Tesla Model X. As reported by NBC, Walter had the vehicle in Autopilot Mode while he was playing a smartphone game. According to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the vehicle autopilot systems became confused when it passed through a paved area between the freeway travel lanes and an exit ramp. The vehicle pulled to the left at 71 miles-per-hour, its forward collision system did not alert Huang, and the emergency brake did not engage. Huang did not brake either. Many factors were reportedly involved, but the fact that Huang was playing a game at the time was only just revealed.
Tesla has stated that that Autopilot in its vehicles is only intended to assist drivers, not yet take over entirely for them, and that drivers must be expected to take control at any moment to deal with whatever issue may arise. The NTSB has argued that this is not enough and that Tesla needs to create better monitoring systems to more effectively force drivers to pay attention. The NTSB has made recommendations to several vehicle makers, including lockout systems that would keep cellphone games from being played while driving and alert systems that would pull driver attention back to the road. According to the NTSB, only Tesla has ignored these recommendations.
Tesla continues to be a growingly popular vehicle brand, with Tesla stocks having recently reached an all-time high just three weeks ago. Despite some setbacks, the vehicles continue to be a trendsetter in electric car design. Even so, it should come as no surprise: Teslas are not yet advanced enough to drive for you while you play video games, so don’t. [Featured Image via NBC Bay Area]