- Tue Jan 14, 2025 12:41 pm
#4905
Dual FSD Versions in One Update Game Changer or Too Complicated
Tesla just dropped a bombshell with the 2024.45.25.15 update dual FSD versions. V13.2.4 for HW4 and V12.6.1 for HW3. This could be huge, streamlining updates and getting advancements out faster. But is it really that simple
Decoupling FSD updates from main firmware brilliant move or potential recipe for instability Will this lead to more frequent, smaller updates, or a chaotic mix of versions on the road
V12.6.1 boasts improvements rivaling V13. End-to-end highway driving, better city street behavior, customizable speed profiles. Has anyone with HW3 received this yet What are your initial impressions Is it truly comparable to V13
This separate update path raises some interesting questions. Will HW3 owners eventually get all the V13 features, or is this a way to maintain a performance gap between hardware versions Could this strategy create a tiered FSD experience
Lets discuss the potential long-term implications of this dual version approach. Will it accelerate FSD development, or fragment the user base What are the potential benefits and drawbacks
Tesla just dropped a bombshell with the 2024.45.25.15 update dual FSD versions. V13.2.4 for HW4 and V12.6.1 for HW3. This could be huge, streamlining updates and getting advancements out faster. But is it really that simple
Decoupling FSD updates from main firmware brilliant move or potential recipe for instability Will this lead to more frequent, smaller updates, or a chaotic mix of versions on the road
V12.6.1 boasts improvements rivaling V13. End-to-end highway driving, better city street behavior, customizable speed profiles. Has anyone with HW3 received this yet What are your initial impressions Is it truly comparable to V13
This separate update path raises some interesting questions. Will HW3 owners eventually get all the V13 features, or is this a way to maintain a performance gap between hardware versions Could this strategy create a tiered FSD experience
Lets discuss the potential long-term implications of this dual version approach. Will it accelerate FSD development, or fragment the user base What are the potential benefits and drawbacks
