Saturday, June 6

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving Features Are More Sophisticated, You Can Choose Your Own Level of aggressiveness.

Tesla is further enhancing the capabilities of the electric car they are proud of. One of them is the Full Self-Driving (FSD) feature which is currently still in Beta.

For your information, the Beta version is a program that is still being tested by the public. So the testers are consumers who are usually outside the company.

According Theverge.com, Tesla recently provided an update on this FSD feature. This update is embedded in the update version 10.3 which was released last October 2021.

See also: Jet Powered Tesla vs Model S Plaid – Who will win?

In this update they added three driving profiles that determine how aggressiveness the FSD is.

Such as when you see a stop sign that is usually at a crossroads, change lanes based on speed, a safe distance from the vehicle in front of you, and make decisions when the yellow Traffic Signaling Tool (APILL) lights up.

The three profiles are Chill, Average, and Assertive. In the photo uploaded to the Twitter account @DavidZipper shows a description of the Assertive profile.

It is written that a car that is a Tesla Model X if using this profile will have a closer distance to the vehicle in front of it.

See also: Tesla now accepts Dogecoin payments for its merchandise in web store

Then there is the possibility of vehicles changing lanes more often to overtake and adjust speed.

It is predictable if the other two profiles for setting the car’s aggressiveness are lower when driving as the name suggests.

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Michael Khan has been covering India’s evolving electric vehicle landscape for EVMagz.com since becoming a reporter in 2020, focusing on EV startups, battery manufacturing, charging infrastructure, and government policy across major Indian markets. With a background in international development and digital journalism, he brings a clear, balanced perspective to how technology, investment, and regulation are shaping the future of electric mobility in India. Outside of work, Michael enjoys early-morning yoga, city soundscape photography, and documenting local street food cultures.

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