Quizzes & Puzzles41 mins ago
Driverless Car
Shown on TV the other evening and has clocked 150,000 miles on public roads without an accident. I believe it was designed by Google. How come the motor manufacturers are not getting involved to produce their own version?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by rov1100. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."How come the motor manufacturers are not getting involved to produce their own version?"
I think they are to some extent, but Google has much more spare cash and the right kind of expertise. I'm pretty sure that none of the car manufacturers design their own GPS systems. It doesn't make economic sense.
I think they are to some extent, but Google has much more spare cash and the right kind of expertise. I'm pretty sure that none of the car manufacturers design their own GPS systems. It doesn't make economic sense.
Surely they could sell them with an "at the owners own risk" clause. Unless they manage to price us all off the roads I suspect it has to come eventually. Can't say it looks that stylish with a spinning detector on the roof though. Still, I'd be happy being driven everywhere rather than have to drive myself. And getting back from the pub would suddenly no longer be any problem ! Can it park itself though ?
Well I've seen MS Windows try to get off the hook by asking the PC owner to ok every time something they can't know about is about to run (not so common now admittedly) and in work they don't care enough about staff to ensure the hot water from the tap isn't scalding, so put up warning signs instead. I'd suspect there is a 'pass the blame on to the public' way around these things somehow. It always seems to be the case.
-- answer removed --