A YouTuber let the Cybertruck close on his finger to test the new sensor update. It didn't go well.

EdibleFriend@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 735 points –
A YouTuber let the Cybertruck close on his finger to test the new sensor update. It didn't go well.
businessinsider.com
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Judkins said that after the finger test, a lead cybertruck engineer at Tesla said he did the video wrong.

The engineer told him the frunk increases in pressure every single time it closes and detects resistance, Judkins said. It's going to assume you want to close the frunk and maybe something like a bag is getting in the way, which would make it close harder.

Are you kidding me? You did the test wrong on a safety critical feature? No you dumbass engineer, you designed it wrong. Why in the holy fuck would you make a safety critical algorithm keep applying more pressure on subsequent attempts??? That's literally the opposite of what you do for safety.

The engineer told him the frunk increases in pressure every single time it closes and detects resistance, Judkins said. It’s going to assume you want to close the frunk and maybe something like a bag is getting in the way, which would make it close harder.

What the fuck kind of idiots are leading things over there? "Something's in the way. Better crush it!" What a bunch of morons putting everyone in danger.

"If it encounters resistance, the brushless motor increases in pressure until it closes fully." Guess the company:

  1. DeWalt
  2. Milwaukee
  3. Makita
  4. Tesla

Musk seems to be increasingly infecting the whole company with his idiocy.

The sane people were fired or left. I'm sure most of who's left are either stuck or like to lick elons taint.

Why the hell would it close harder if there is something in the way? That's not the correct behavior for a lid, that's the correct behavior for powered shears.

Tesla Cyber Truk* *includes free shears with every purchase

Maybe because they want the degradation of some mechanism to be less noticeable over time. And because they're dumb.

Never tried to force the closing of your trunk lid because there is a bag that is slightly over the limit and you need a little more pressure, even if the bag is a little pressed down ?

The assumption here is that if it is your finger which is in the way, you take it out the way and you are not that stupid to try to close it again if for some reason you are not able move it away, which to me seems to make a lot of sense.

We built it wrong as a joke

Cybertruck owners can have a finger guillotine. as a treat

Needs a lockout/tagout before putting your hands in the powered shears to get out your bags.

As if it wouldn't just close and break off the lockout anyway.

How many miles? Would you say, ten million?

My finger points.

  • Not that cybertruck owner

I wonder if the guy that designed autopilot had the same idea. "So when the car detects resistance up ahead in the form of a crowd or wall, it will accelerate to make sure it goes through!"

We deliberately made it fail critical. It's your fault for expecting fail safe!

I know I'm old school and all that, but why do people want to pay for automatically closing doors of any kind? Automatic opening of cargo spaces I get, if you have your bags full of hands or whatever, but once you put the stuff in there... Seem like such an incredibly unnecessary and costly feature, that also have a high chance of failing in the future. I don't get it.

Because taking stuff out is like putting stuff in, only in the reverse order.

Except when the stuff is in, you have free hands to close doors and hatches

I think we're on two different wavelengths.

Put stuff in: Stand next to closed car with no free hands, could use automatically opening doors.

Take stuff out: Open car. Pick up stuff out of the car. Stand next to open car with no free hands, could use automatically closing doors.

In the case where you took everything out though, there's no bags for it to get stuck on. There's no need for it to slam itself

Good question. My wife's RAV4 has a rear door that will only close if you press a button. You can't close it manually. Furthermore, it's on the door while it's open and my five foot tall wife can barely reach it. It's ridiculous.

Wouldn’t your wife have a hard time closing it manually too then?

You know, that's true and it didn't even occur to me. I guess she just wouldn't have bought it? (I would have been fine with that, I hate SUVs, even hybrids.)

We've got a 2019 Rav and I can't remember how, but you can adjust the height that the door opens to by some series of button pushes. We had to lower it so that it doesn't hit the frame of the garage door when opening it inside the garage. Maybe just adjust it so that it doesn't open all the way and it'll be easier for her to reach the button?

I'll let her know about that. Thanks.

I actually sell these. You can manually lower the door to the height that works comfortably, then hold the automatic door button down for about 3 seconds. That should program the door to a new maximum height.

How do I set the height on my vehicle's adjustable power liftgate?

When the liftgate reaches the desired height, push the rear liftgate close-button once (button is located on the doorjamb of the rear liftgate, and only accessible when the liftgate is open). Press and hold the button until it beeps 4 times. Click here to view a video.

😎

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

here

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.

On older Toyotas the rear door has a strap inside that hangs down for people to grab onto and pull the door down to close.

My Subaru has a similar setup, and there’s a feature for changing the max height of the tailgate. You might wanna see if the same thing exists for you.

Because like you said, it's a nice to have feature. I like my wife's auto closing hatch for when I have a handful of boxes for that final grocery run and just walk away and it closes. It's literally just really nice convenience feature and if it fails, you go back to closing it manually.

I get it's nice to have, and if it somehow cost nothing I wouldn't mind having it in a car, if it's pretty much guaranteed that when it fails it doesn't prevent me from open/close manually. But I'd much rather not pay for neither the R&D, engineering, parts and manufacturing of it, only to end up with a more complex door mechanism that is more expensive to repair and more likely to break. When all it does is give me the slightest of conveniences. Best example of this is the motorized charging port lid on the Rivian. Like, whyyyy? Cheaper and longer lasting vehicles, please.

Wow-effect and nobody gets punished if it goes left.

It strikes me as exactly the kind of engineering call that Elon has tended to make, time after time. With zero training in an area, he gets a solution in his head crufted up from some set of pre-existing notions or points of view and then pushes to have them implemented. He will also go on to fire anyone who disagrees with him. I spoke with an engineer who worked on the gull wing doors, which the team had objected to, and not only did he force them through, he burst in on one of the finalization meetings where they had finally reached a design consensus and insisted they change the hinge. Given similar reports on his behavior regarding other products (including especially twitter), I have no reason to disbelieve this person.

5 year old me after it bounces back from my finger I accidentally put there- agaaaain! agaaain!

And the stupidest of all car owners is not smarter than a 5y old kid.

Must... break... finger... push mooooaaaa. ~Tesla

Safety critical? I'd rather have a trunk I can get to close than one I can stick my finger into four times in a row without pinching it. What do you think happens when you slam down a normal trunk on someone's finger?

Hey, @Killing_Spark, found a member of the Tesla software safety team!

Lol. Nah, the trucks are super dumb. I just know I'd want a trunk that would be able to close more than an overly sensitive pressure detection permanently preventing it. For that matter, I think it's dumb to attach a motor to a trunk.

It's like you didn't read or did read and didn't actually comprehend what the article or linked video was actually taking about.

You sure would make a great fit at Tesla's engineering and safety team.

Friendly challenge: respond to that user again, in no more words than the first time, but address his question :)

No thank you. I refuse to engage with a person trying to straw man and change topics from a software safety argument to a personal preference that goes nowhere but you feel free to engage if you wish.

Maybe you didn't comprehend it? The close force attempt increases with each unsuccessful attempt at closing. That way seems better than it eventually not working at all a few years down the line as all the electronics get more jankety be cause something gets a bit bent or worn out and it always detects a small amount of resistance so it quits closing all together.

Nobody wants to discuss the logic involved with having to open the door and then close it again for it to attempt to close harder and why that isn't the dire safety hazard that people are trying to make it out to be. These people are the reason why we have to have "no smoking" signs at gas pumps because apparently they'd leave their hand in the door after attempting to close it 3 or 4 times.

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Feel like this could have been demonstrated with a hot dog

Or a chicken drumstick for somewhat similar bone strength.

Is this the dipstick that tried it with a carrot, it cut the tip off and then said he was going to try it with his finger to be sure?

I don't see "dipstick" in the wild very often, but I always appreciate it. Are you English by any chance?

I am not. I had a vulgar word there, and decided to tone it down a little.

A baby carrot

It takes about the same force to bite through a baby carrot as it does to bite through a finger

As long as the carrot is pretty close to the size of the finger you're wishing to stimulate

I wish I didn't know that

This isn’t true, and I know it as a fact. I’m not gonna tell you how I know, but I know.

Biting through a human finger bone takes much more force than it does to bite through a fucking carrot.

Joints exist though

Ever eaten oxtail? Even after it’s cooked, tendons and shit is really hard to bite through. Way harder than a damn carrot.

Tendon after 6 or so hours simmering or 1 hour in a pressure cooker and you got my favorite pho add in.

Having done my time as an Army medic, this is incorrect. It takes more force than that, but less than you might think. A good 25 kilos with some velocity behind it will easily sever a phalange. Up it to 50 or 80 kilos and you can claim an arm or shin. Mass is the real killer. I’ve seen a vehicle at comically slow speed absolutely yeet someone because it had several tons of momentum behind it.

Casual readers might remember a recent very low-speed collision that nonetheless caused a catastrophic failure due to the tens of thousands of tons of weight. The MV Dali vs. the Francis Scott Key Bridge, if you didn't guess. It struck the bridge at about 8 mph.

Fortunately I don't think that's strictly accurate. Try biting through a chicken wing its not as easy as a carrot.

I wish I didn't read that, and then read it again repeatedly trying to process what I just read. Lol. I'm sorry.

He did demonstrate it that way, specifically with a carrot. And it somewhat worked. The problem is they programmed it to do more and more pressure every time it fails meaning that doing the carrot first actually caused a safety issue. He only moved onto his finger because the safety feature seemed to be working.

The engineer told him the frunk increases in pressure every single time it closes and detects resistance, Judkins said. It's going to assume you want to close the frunk and maybe something like a bag is getting in the way, which would make it close harder.

Geniuses.

Because I am the bag commander. If I want the bag to fit, and it doesn't fit, I'd better crush it!

With that association - can Apple, Tesla etc marketing be generalized into something to be put into law?

To fucking ban those companies and make their patents public domain (or make them expire, not sure of the term).

I don't care if a Google or two get stomped as a bonus.

He tested it with multiple similar objects.

Then he wouldn't get nearly as many views. Or have articles written about him

Wouldn't get so many YouTube views right...

There's plenty of dumb to go around, but the word frunk by itself is the dumbest thing about this story.

Let me guess: Front trunk? Please tell me I'm wrong.

I could, but then I'd be a liar.

It's actually short for "fore bunk" because you can sleep in there

There's no way I'm sleeping in an area that needs lockout/tagout to enter safely.

So much dumb I’m inspired to re-write old song lyrics, like:

What they dunna goo with all that junk All that junk in side that FRUNK

or

My trunks / fore bunks / My stupid cyber FRUNKS

Don't kink shame. There is nothing wrong with 'frunking'. Come closer, I'll get the lube.

Man youtubers are dumb as hell. Use a stick or something

He used a banana, an organic dildo, and a carrot. It snapped the carrot and then he decided to try with his arm, hand, and finger.

It snapped the tip of the carrot, which wouldn't be a lot of resistance

Based on what it didn't cut through, his finger should have been safe but apparently Tesla designed the thing to keep increasing the pressure if it detects resistance each time until it can close, which is absolutely baffling. I don't know of any other safety feature that turns down the safety the more it activates. The fact that it reacts to the exact same conditions differently each time should, in itself, be deeply concerning for any safety feature.

It might have been dumb of him to try it, but that doesn't change that it's still unsafe.

I wonder if FSD backs up after running over a pedestrian to confirn that 'Yup, it was something with the road there' before continuing to drive forward again.

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organic dildo

He slammed his peantus in the hood?

Someone somewhere is going to do this now. They'll probably be from Florida.

Then it's his own damn fault. Even if he tries suing, he will lose.

That's why you get "don't put living animals in the microwave oven" in the instructions.

If Tesla didn't explicitely wrote "don't put your f***ing finger in the way on purpose after multiple attempts to close it!" he may have a chance.

He will plead a trauma from the loss of trust in his beloved car brand and the credibility damage on his Youtube channel and ask for M$.

No, it snapped the carrot before the update. After the update, it only snapped the very tip. That's a pretty important detail imo.

So you're confirming that it snapped the carrot? And then he tried it with body parts.

Yes, it snapped the thin tip of the carrot. I didn't watch the video, but it sounded like he went from safest to least safe, so produce first and body parts afterward (arm, then hand, then finger).

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We live in an age where the notion of "thinking something through before doing it", also known as "common sense" has been replaced with the need to get it out there onto the internet as fast as possible before someone else beats you to it. The need for social gratification on the internet beats the need for self-preservation.

The first time I recall realizing this what when another YouTube dipship picked up a Portuguese Man-o-war and people got pissy when it was pointed out how lucky he was to not have been stung and how it was sheer dumb luck that he was still alive

People defended him saying "He didn't know it was dangerous, he didn't know what it was..." And that's the whole fucking point... We used to live in a society were people were smart enough to not touch shit that they don't know if it's dangerous or not. The concept of erring on the side of caution is now abandoned because of stupidity and social media credits.

"we used to" No the fuck we didn't. Humans have always been dumb, shortsighted, and curious. The internet just makes it really easy to see the ones that fuck up enough to be entertaining.

Yeah. You're right that we've always been dumb and stupid and would do stupid shit to impress our peer group

But I firmly believe social media has inflated the definition of "peer group" to include "internet followers", which jacks the whole stupidity up to 11.

For example, you're a nineties kid walking through the mall with your friends in your JNKO jeans and your slap-it watch. One of your friends decides he's going to be an idiot by balancing on the railing of the second floor and you all have a good laugh. Edit: If his friends hadn't been there, would he have done it? I doubt it. But now his "friends" don't have to be there, because they're just random followers to give him social media points.

That's sort of what I meant. Its not the we didn't do dumb shit as kids, its that social media credit has motivated people to do dumb shit when they normally wouldn't.

Edit: also, WE grew out of it. Nowadays they are socially and financially incentivized to NOT grow out of that phase.

Yeah. No one ever gave me AdSense dollars for nearly busting my fucking head.

Truth. As an 80s kid / 90s teen, I feel pretty lucky to be alive. I'm grateful for the few times in my life when common sense kicked in, and I said no.

Same. Was thirteen in 89. Graduated in 94. Hit Y2K at 23. Basically peak Clerks/Dazed and Confused generation.

To make matters worse I grew up in a small town where there was nothing better to do THAN do stupid shit with friends.

Its the same wirh Being First To Market.

But in the financial world your failed risk hurts more than your family.

Sticks don't get clicks.

I would have preferred a 'will it blend' format with the ultimate test being the Cybertruck's own keyfob (you have one job!)

The keyfob is either just a credit card sized thing, or your phone. There is no fob.

Didn't the model 3 have one that was a miniature car? You'd think they would allow that as an option for the cyber truck.

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A Tesla engineer said the test was done wrong because the frunk increases in pressure every time.

"You are holding it wrong!" 🤣

Of course it just keeps hitting harder when things are in the way.

Literally Tesla's response

I'm sure these "engineers" were confused everytime they saw an elevator door not mercilessly crush people.

This breakthrough technology could finally provide a way to teach people on the MTA not to hold the doors.

Nope, but they probably know that an elevator doors and a car lid are two completely different thing with different use cases and security concerns.

They sure did not know about the "not crushing human limbs" part.

Obviously.

But let's face it: if the car lid would never close if something is in the way, some other dumb youtuber would have made a video about it and here there would be a discussion about how stupid are the engineers to not let the lid close even if a bag in slightly on on the way and the user know what they are doing.

You're missing the point of a safety feature. The car shouldn't, by itself, close the lid if something's in the way. It should allow the user to push it down, or disable it temporarily, to do so.

The point of a safety feature in any system is to prevent unexpected situation from having unexpected consequences, not to be a magic solution that accommodate for brainless people. In one direction, you can make the judgement call and force the thing down, in the other direction you lose a finger.

You’re missing the point of a safety feature. The car shouldn’t, by itself, close the lid if something’s in the way. It should allow the user to push it down, or disable it temporarily, to do so.

I get the safety feature. The point is that here I am saying to the car to close the lid even if something is in the way. I made a conscious decision to do so, and more than one time, so I expect the car to do it. But I agree that it could have been designed in a better way.

The point of a safety feature in any system is to prevent unexpected situation from having unexpected consequences, not to be a magic solution that accommodate for brainless people. In one direction, you can make the judgement call and force the thing down, in the other direction you lose a finger.

Which is exactly what happened here. He made the judgement call to ignore the safety feature (and probably ignored how the feature works)

It that point why not just have some blades slide out on the third try?

Why bother when the door itself is an effective guillotine?

He did the test wrong because he's experimenting with "safety" algorithms that the manufacturer has provided little-to-no documentation on and is having to come up with answers on his own. Maybe he wouldn't be "doing it wrong" if Tesla hadn't over-engineered every aspect of their piece of shit truck in the first place. This thing is a solution in search of a problem, and it'll chop your fingers off until it finds it.

This thing is a solution in search of a problem

Most general question, what is the main purpose of this car? Why should people buy it?

It is a tank.

Steel walls for rich guys who want to protect their asses from masses of poor people around.

What should the door of your tank do if you want to close it, but some bonehead does not move his fingers out, repeatedly?

Now hurry, finally! This rich guy wants to get away from here! BAM!!

If it increases in pressure every time, I’m now curious how many times you need to close the trunk to cut a finger off

That was very nearly my exact same thought. Maybe not for curious children with carrot-sized fingers, but for adults, how convenient! Business competitor's body won't quite fit in your fancy frunk? Just while away on your phone for about 10 minutes, let the cat do its magic, and off go the legs! Travel-sized!

I wonder if you can get the frunk to critical velocity at the touch of a fly by constantly pumping it up like a pump action gun.

He forgot to turn on Finger Safe Mode™️ before closing the trunk

But this feature requires an extra monthly subscription, that wasn't included with the package of the YouTubers

They're gonna add this in and call it "Jeremy mode", just like the existing Joe Mode

Judkins said that after the finger test, a lead cybertruck engineer at Tesla said he did the video wrong.

lmao

Well apparently it's programmed to bypass the safety system after 3 attempts under the assumption that the user knows best.

This seems like a really dumb choice, but I can see why an engineer would want to point out that it's not incompetent engineering but an incompetent business department.

If you're implementing it, it's your responsibility, end of story.

if you don't implement it, it will get implemented by someone else anyway and you're putting your job at risk

Someone will be blamed, if you carry it out then you share the blame.

That's called accountability and that's why engineers get paid extra. Ethic classes are not the part of engineering degrees in the USA very obviously, I shouldn't be surprised

How can you talk about personal responsibility while blaming engineers for the fact that this guy intentionally closed his finger in a car door?

Please read the comment I was originally answering to.

I did read it and I'm also reading it in the context of the article and the rabid group-think here claiming that a potential injury after closing your hand in a door four times in a row is somehow the companies fault or the fault of the engineering department.

If you think disabling or weakening safety features after multiple attempts is OK, there is nothing left to discuss with you on this topic.

If you have to rely on the appeal to emotion fallacy to do the heavy lifting for your argument, I suppose you're correct that there's nothing left to discuss.

Personally, I learned long ago not to close my hand in a door after the first attempt. I suppose there's a reason why some people need safety warnings not to use their toaster in the bathtub, and we should all live by those standards.

I don't understand what "appeal to emotion" you're talking about.

You seem to project given what you wrote in your second paragraph however, given that's not even remotely relevant to the conversation here. I hope you're not ever in charge of anything that matters.

Your entire argument is an appeal to emotion as if logic should be ignored in this situation simply because "safety" when in reality someone would need to close their body part in a door four times in a row before they were even remotely at risk of being injured.

You followed that fallacy up with an ad hominem by claiming that I must be dumb because I don't blindly support your emotional argument about safety even though you have yet to explain how this is even unsafe in a real world scenario. My second paragraph highlighted similar scenarios where exceptionally special people might injure themselves by doing something idiotic and dangerous that no average person would ever do, yet we must still be warned about.

Care to take a crack at making an argument without relying on fallacies the whole time?

Judkins said that after the finger test, a lead cybertruck engineer at Tesla said he did the video wrong.

Our truck doesn't work as advertised but that kids video skills are just shit.

-tesla rep

If you read the article, it's not a statement with entirely no merit.

The engineers prioritized an algorithm which is far more likely to be useful in real world scenarios where you keep trying to cram a bunch of stuff in the frunk and close it (who hasn't done this?) rather than the edge case of repeatedly testing it with vegetables until you stick your finger in it.

Anyway, I suppose it's back to the drawing board.

This is why you keep your safety features consistent. If they want bag close mode, then make it where you hold instead of press a button or something. It "happening automatically" is just unpredictable to most, not magical

In addition, what if the person noticed the obstructions and then moved them away, and then accidentally got a finger in there? That's a realistic scenario too.

There should be no algorithm. It should be done by a human. There are no amount of lines of code I will ever make up for knowing intent and what the current situation is.

If it's going to be closed by software it needs to prioritize safety 100% of the time. If more pressure is needed and that pressure needs to come from a human.

Youre constantly forcing your trunk closed? That doesn't sound normal to me actually, and sounds like the opposite of what I would want. Hello, groceries, important things, stuff I don't want stolen so goes in the trunk?

"... and if I were you, I would try not to make the same mistake again, mister".

Title: Idiot Cybertruck Owner.

That's all you need for the title.

I don't think you even need idiot, it's kinda redundant.

Saw a video of the other day of some guy that bought a cybertruck, and his review can basically be summarized as "it has a ton of issues, there's rust all over it, it's incredibly dangerous, definitely worth the $100,000"

Bought it to begin with so his intelligence is suspect at the outset

What person with an automated cargo door closure mechanism has thought "stop protecting my stuff and just fucking close"?

I'll admit it annoys me when there's something in the way that keeps my door from latching and it reopens, but I'd rather have to clear the door and shut it manually than it force itself closed and jams the door or break my shit.

Its just like elevators, really. You put your hand in to stop the doors closing, they open again before touching your arm. Next time they close gently on your arm. Third time, the doors snap shut and the elevator ascends without further warning, resulting in traumatic amputation.

Wait what? Are there actually elevators "programmed" this way‽ (can this behavior even be changed in the controller?)

Because I have never "tested" this behavior per se (I mean you mostly want your elevator to move anyway so you ideally remove the obstruction the first time it didn't fully close...)

I've seen cases where it takes some time to the group of people in the elevator to figure out the obstruction. Because it won't even touch the object, just reopen again and again.

So no, elevators don't do that, and I assume the parent comment is sarcastic.

Thats what I was hoping, but it was presented so deadpan that theres enough countries in the world that this could theoretically be true for some of them

I was joking, commenting on the absurdity of a safety system that deliberately gets less safe each time it triggers. Can you imagine the crush injuries and lawsuits if that were true? Not to mention all those movie scenes where someone repeatedly stops the elevator so they can confess their love to someone? They would end in tragedy.

No, elevators are infinitely patient, and will never close the doors on any object large enough to be a crush hazard. Dog leashes, yes sometimes, but not arms and feet.

It's a joke about how the safety system on the car works. From another comment in this thread:

Based on what it didn't cut through, his finger should have been safe but apparently Tesla designed the thing to keep increasing the pressure if it detects resistance each time until it can close, which is absolutely baffling. I don't know of any other safety feature that turns down the safety the more it activates. The fact that it reacts to the exact same conditions differently each time should, in itself, be deeply concerning for any safety feature.

What person with an automated cargo door closure mechanism has thought “stop protecting my stuff and just fucking close”?

The same person that sometime need to force the door to close because even if his things are in the way, he know there will not be damages, just a bag a little more pressed. Or some more trashed trash you are taking to the landfill

I’ll admit it annoys me when there’s something in the way that keeps my door from latching and it reopens, but I’d rather have to clear the door and shut it manually than it force itself closed and jams the door or break my shit.

Which is what the system assume in this case. It stops 3 times, the 4th it suppose that the human know what he is doing.

The cybertruck is the dumbest tech product and that's after you compare it to the Vision Pro and AI pin

It could be a lot better if it were able to get through tough terrains like wet beach sand. Or if the body didn't rust after touching moisture. Or if it was able to survive a car wash.

Also it would have been neat if they had some automotive professionals working there to tell them that the accelerator pedal needs to come back up when your foot is off it.

A Tamagotchi has a better lifespan.

Just some minor flaws.... For a supposedly high end car. My old Subaru is better for off roading than it is.

Do we also have something like r/dontputyourdickinthat on lemmy?

that car looks like shit

I saw my first cybertruck in person the other day. It looks incredibly dumb in promotional photos, but it's astonishing how much stupider it looks in traffic surrounded by normal vehicles.

The stupidest thing about it to me is that it's not really functional as a truck but look at it

I love when owners show off how "practical" that truck bed is - when it has about the same carrying capacity as my roadster's trunk.

are owners actually doing this or is it just haters like me saying that they are? I assume they are all getting stuck in sand

The crazy part to me is that he tried a carrot and it didn't open for it. Yet he thought it was a good idea to try his finger which it about the same size.

This is live example of how IQ doesn’t correlate with „success” though who knows if this funny test would even correlate with what we mean when we think of intelligence in this example

Maybe the greed for views and fanboism wins over no matter the brains

The YouTuber started the video by closing the frunk on produce like a carrot, cucumber, and banana before the update was installed. The frunk chopped all of the produce when it was placed in the frunk.

...

The YouTuber then tried the same test with the update installed and was impressed with the improvement.

"With just a software update, the Tesla Cybertruck frunk is way safer," he said. "We witnessed it destroy a ton of vegetables, and then post-update did nothing."

He didn't do a finger until building confidence first. He also tried an arm and then his hand before finally trying his finger.

So not as crazy as the article made it out to be, and his finger wasn't seriously hurt either, but it hurt enough that he didn't want to try it again after getting info from the engineer about it getting stronger after each failed attempt.

getting stronger after each failed attempt.

Why would that be a decided upon outcome? There's gotta be a reason for that intention

If a bag or something is blocking the latch, then you may want it to try again harder. Or if the latch is a little bent, it may need more force to close properly.

That said, I honestly don't like automatic latches and whatnot, I prefer to close doors myself because there's less stuff to break.

This is sad. The cybertruck is a deathtrap on wheels and somehow "money" got it to pass any "money" to safety tests is beyond me...

somehow "money" got it to pass any "money" to safety tests is beyond me...

This sentence brought to you by Stroke™️. Have you had a stroke lately?™️

Stroke is not a joke mate, we lost many good people that way

Yeah but we lost some shitty ones that way too so it balances out

When I initially heard about the Cybertruck I was really hoping it would stay a concept and never get made.

Imo manufacturers need to do the opposite and release more concept cars. Some of the coolest looking cars you can never own. Just look at these masterpieces

Hyundai N vision 74

Mazda Furai (rip)

I was so upset when Hyundai said that they weren't actually going to release the N Vision. I was really excited for that one cause they put so much work into making it look like an actual car you'd see on the road. I thought for sure it was coming out.

There's always the new 400Z if you want a modern sports car with retro styling. But even that one still looks too modern... :/

"Data sent to HQ. Thank you for your participation"

“Cave Johnson here. Fact: the key to any successful cooperative test is trust. And as our data clearly shows, humans, cannot be trusted. The solution? Robots!”

"An update: It turns out the robots learned how to lie and can no longer be trusted. They tried to take over the testing mainframe and I'll be damned if I let them get their hands on my equipment! So I sent in a couple of interns to take care of it. Go earn those recommendations! I told them.

"Anyway, it's back to humans. This time new and upgraded with our state-of-the-art Aperture brain chips. The boys out-did themselves this time, increases testing compliance by 150%! Let's see those humans just try to lie now!"

The worst part of the article is them using the term frunk unironically.

I think frunk is a good word. What would you call a trunk that is in the front of the car.

A normal trunk in the back isn't a "bunk".

Why is frunk a good name for the front? It's silly.

Well traditionally, cars only had one trunk, now it is common that they have two. The need arose to distinguish them, and 'front trunk' easily collapses into a nice single syllable portmanteau that makes communication simple and concise; the language evolves and a new word is born.

That's just a normal word a this point, I've seen it in use for years in car tests.

Are there any crashes already involving pedestrians? I really wonder how broken those pedestrians are after the hit. I think the chance to survive a hit from a Cybertruck is minimal.

And I am even surprised that it is allowed on your streets.

Murica, vehicles with sharp edges and assault rifles at walmart is where freedom is at.

To be fair, the survivability of being hit by any big US pickup is pretty small. Perhaps the cybertruck is even worse though.

Pickups are explicitly exempted from a lot of crash/pedestrian safety laws in the US (I think related to them being classed as commercial vehicles), despite every other car on the road there being a pickup.

It's going to assume you want to close the frunk and maybe something like a bag is getting in the way, which would make it close harder.

What's next? When you press the brake padel the car is going to assume that you want to slow down? Wow, that's some fantastic wisdom from Tesla!

By tesla's logic, it'll assume that you want to slow down, and will speed up to make you slow down faster

The harder you push the pedal the more you want your speed to decrease, obviously. But if you push it hard enough then the decrease from your current speed to Zero is no longer enough. So now the engineers need to decide if you'll speed up first, so the decrease from the new speed to zero is larger, or if it'll slam you into reverse instead.

Masterful gambit, sir.

I was just thinking "I feel like this meme was already made" lol

All things being equal, however, I'd rather they do the version more likely to remove themselves from the gene pool.

.....the frunk?

Front + trunk

This isn't the first EV to do this. It's not even the first Tesla to do it.

Is it not called a bonnet?

Bonnets cover the engine, evs don't have engines, and their motors and other important components aren't always centrally located nor do they need much regular maintenance so the front is sometimes made into a storage compartment, the frunk.

I hate that term, trunk doesn't inherently mean on the back. It's just a container for storage. Going by that naming convention a traditional car trunk should be called a bunk (back + trunk)

Just the tip to see how it feels bay bay

Oh no I saw a video where it chopped a carrot without stopping

I don’t have the courage to click the link….

THAT'S THIS!!!

He went through a bunch of vegetables and, admittedly, it was pretty impressive how it handled them. But then with no hesitation it took off the tip of the carrot and he still decided to try his finger

So that's incredibly stupid, lol if it crushes and cuts a carrot why couldn't do it with a finger

I get the idea automation, its great when it saves time and effort but when it represents a minuscule chance of chopping a limb off you it should never be implemented to the public.