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The only downside I can see is that Gibson might still be available for selection for us.The amount of deaths we have per year and the want for this to fail is remarkable.
Yes taxi drivers lorry drivers will be in trouble but the world changes and jobs we havent even heard of yet could be a mass employer in ten years.
More people alive less jobsOn the flip side these cars will overall be safer and kill far fewer people. So jobs lost but many lives saved.
Can't think of any innovation that has boosted traditional manual labour apart from our quest for cheap stuff from the EastThe amount of deaths we have per year and the want for this to fail is remarkable.
Yes taxi drivers lorry drivers will be in trouble but the world changes and jobs we havent even heard of yet could be a mass employer in ten years.
And the downside is?More people alive less jobs
Can't see how we sustain it ,rising population ,increased automation
All live on little plots with a cow and an allotment
Can't think of any innovation that has boosted traditional manual labour apart from our quest for cheap stuff from the East
And the downside is?
The tech is there, Tesla have it now, we just needs the change in the laws to use it.The tech simply isn't there yet and I suspect it's decades away. I'm talking about fully autonomous vehicles here.
The tech is there, Tesla have it now, we just needs the change in the laws to use it.
which bit don't they have? Their tech can drive completely autonomously, the human is just needed for legal reasons.They don't like.
which bit don't they have? Their tech can drive completely autonomously, the human is just needed for legal reasons.
Nope. They are miles away from that sort of tech yet, despite what Musk claims.
Tesla’s Autopilot is supposed to deliver full self-driving, so why does it feel stuck in the past?
I checked out Tesla's Autopilot — and there's no way it can drive a car by itself
I don't doubt we'll see self driving cars on motorways (likely the US) within the next decade or two. Urban areas are a completely different beast though.
Its weird that self driving cars haven't solved the laws of physics@Uber Victim Stepped Suddenly in Front of Self-Driving Car
It would appear you can't just step out in front of a moving car, even if a computer is driving.
Uber Victim Stepped Suddenly in Front of Self-Driving Car
It would appear you can't just step out in front of a moving car, even if a computer is driving.
According to what? Is the police chief making it up?They moved across three lanes of traffic before being hit. Definitely didn't step out. If a car can't detect that it should be absolutely nowhere near any road.
Aye, but don't hold your breath.Its weird that self driving cars haven't solved the laws of physics@
Anyone still in denial that self driving cars aren't inevitable really need to do a bit research. It is only a matter of time.
According to what? Is the police chief making it up?
The backup driver didn't detect them until the collision. Whether this a was self driving car or not seems to be irrelevant.
I questioned in a previous debate about them being allowed, as it was only a matter of time before something like this happened.
We're not seeing "computerisation" develop here. We're seeing ai. Its still in its infancy, has never been used in a commercial aircraft but will be flying planes in a couple of decades.Tezla and others in the same line need to learn to walk before it can run.
They are a long, long way from turning out a driverless car that can totally independently safely deal with all adverse situations in all countries and they’re already losing serious money with their normal business.
As mentioned the commercial aircraft industry haven’t achieved similar aims after more than thirty years and in addition computerisation has simply brought along its own new set of problems and resultant mishaps.
The complexity of the Worlds road systems presents a far greater challenge than that and I don’t see the numerous issues being mastered any time soon.
You also have to think that 30 years ago, it was 1988. The BBC Master computer with its 128k of RAM was seen as fairly advanced but it was about to make way for the next wave of computers like the Archimedes, Amiga and 286 PC. They just did not have the sensor quality, memory and processing power back then which really held things back. These things are no longer much of a problem.We're not seeing "computerisation" develop here. We're seeing ai. Its still in its infancy, has never been used in a commercial aircraft but will be flying planes in a couple of decades.