ChatterBank0 min ago
Better Programming Needed ?
17 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/te chnolog y-44355 150
"The car moved to change lanes in heavy traffic on a San Francisco motorway last year, according to GM's report, but then aborted its manoeuvre when traffic in the lane it was leaving started moving.It then collided with the motorbike, which was moving into the space the car had been moving out of."
- yep that happens! - at least a fatality didn't happen. Trust me it ain't ever going to work!
"The car moved to change lanes in heavy traffic on a San Francisco motorway last year, according to GM's report, but then aborted its manoeuvre when traffic in the lane it was leaving started moving.It then collided with the motorbike, which was moving into the space the car had been moving out of."
- yep that happens! - at least a fatality didn't happen. Trust me it ain't ever going to work!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.YMB, I think we need a major breakthrough in programming which is showing no signs at the moment. Better and better hardware and much much more power but no actual change in software. I'm not ruling it out totally but we do need something beyond linear instruction execution for this to work. When I say never I mean at least a generation maybe two.
// the motorcyclist was partly at fault for the crash. And a police report did cite him for trying to pass the Cruise car. //
// it ain't ever going to work //
You are welcome to your opinion, but a lot of very smart people are working on this, and a lot of money and resources being used. They wouldn’t be expending $billions and all that effort if there was not a realistic prospect of success.
From the data collected so far, the so called self driving cars are in less accidents than manually driven cars.
// it ain't ever going to work //
You are welcome to your opinion, but a lot of very smart people are working on this, and a lot of money and resources being used. They wouldn’t be expending $billions and all that effort if there was not a realistic prospect of success.
From the data collected so far, the so called self driving cars are in less accidents than manually driven cars.
The trials at the moment are proof of concept, and they are passing. But it will take a lot more work before they are fully ready. My guess is 5-10 years. But it will happen.
When the death rate from car accidents drop as a result, they will probably try to ban manually driven cars from the highway.
When the death rate from car accidents drop as a result, they will probably try to ban manually driven cars from the highway.
"From the data collected so far, the so called self driving cars are in less accidents than manually driven cars. "
The big problem is the interim period. Once all cars are automated then there will be far less of a problem. In the interim someone has to try and program for every lunatic and incompetent behind the wheel and that has got to be virtually impossible with tech at the moment.
"but a lot of very smart people are working on this, and a lot of money and resources being used. "
Same for Cancer for a much longer period but nothing yet. Companies will be playing the long game probably to coincide with when batteries for electric vehicles become useful.
The big problem is the interim period. Once all cars are automated then there will be far less of a problem. In the interim someone has to try and program for every lunatic and incompetent behind the wheel and that has got to be virtually impossible with tech at the moment.
"but a lot of very smart people are working on this, and a lot of money and resources being used. "
Same for Cancer for a much longer period but nothing yet. Companies will be playing the long game probably to coincide with when batteries for electric vehicles become useful.
There was an article in our local paper the other day listing the four main causes of death in road accidents. Top of the list was using mobile phone/texting. The other three were driving under the influence of drugs/alcohol, driving at an inappropriate speed and not wearing a seat belt. Self-driving cars will remove at least three of those causes.
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