Autonomous Audi TT Conquers Pike's Peak 187
fergus07 writes "After a year long research program, this week Audi revealed that its Autonomous TTS car had completed the 12.42-mile Pike's Peak mountain course in 27 minutes. An expert driver in the same car would take around 17 minutes — now we have a benchmark, the race is on, and it's almost inevitable that a computer will one day outdrive the best of our species, and it may be sooner than you think."
This is how it's done (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TKgeCQGu_ug (Ari Vatanen with peugeot 405 T16, Pikes-Peak 1990)
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Bah! Stupid "the narrative" (Score:5, Insightful)
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This is Slashdot, dammit, we're supposed to be talking about the tech the car uses, the sensor fields, blind spots, known bugs, and so forth. What do we get? A typical journalist "the narrative" story, where humanity is in a race against robots which will surely supplant us. Guh, it's like a rejected 1950s sci-fi manuscript. Bonus points for using the tech-y "benchmark" phrase like the car is some sort of Crysis.
Yeah, like that's news. It's a certainty, that humanity will either exploit itself to extinction, or be surpassed by AI creatures of our own making.
All we can hope for, is that those AI creatures will find us amusing, and perhaps, wether out of pity, curiosity or boredom,will guide us in our otherwise futile attempt to keep this planet habitable for human-like life forms. Of course we must remember, that those AI creatures will be the "humanity" of that era, and if anybody will carry human/Earth legacy to t
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Everybody imagines AI. I find IA (intelligence amplification) another possibility. Perhaps the nascent superintelligence will be ourselves. "They" will be "us" and we'll have a reason to keep the planet habitable.
Or perhaps marginal improvement in intelligence gets much harder the further you go. Singularity-style extrapolation involves physical parameter
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It's a certainty, that humanity will either exploit itself to extinction, or be surpassed by AI creatures of our own making.
Neither one of those are a "certainty".
There may be a few oscillations (like a global war, but so mild that human race survives it), but I don't really see any other endpoints.
Maybe a world that is so starved of resources that developing AI just can't happen is a possiblity, but I doubt even that. As long as there's energy (even if it's just sun & short-delay derivatives like wind and hydro), there's potential for recycling ancient waste if nothing else is available. It's not like matter disappears when we use it (except in nuclear fission).
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..but I don't really see any other endpoints.
This is a classic failure of the imagination on your part.
Its also devoid of facts, or historic perspective.
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..but I don't really see any other endpoints.
This is a classic failure of the imagination on your part.
Its also devoid of facts, or historic perspective.
I'm unable to imagine what I'm unable to imagene? Well, duh.
However, you appear to be even more devoid of imagination, because you replied, but only complained about lack of imagination, facts or historic perspective in my post, thus actually contributing nothing useful. Good job.
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True AI (machines that think, rather than simply calculate) won't come with present archetectures. Thought is chemical, not electronic. A computer's intelligence isn't artificial, it's the programmer's intelligence, just like an encyclopedia isn't intelligent, but it holds the facts that intelligent people gathered.
As to running out of resources, I don't see that happening. Energy, for example -- all energy on earth is either fusion of fission, fusion coming from the sun. Materials can be recycled or reused
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http://sun.systemnews.com/articles/143/2/feature/22601 [systemnews.com]
http://www.audiusanews.com/newsrelease.do;jsessionid=2CB13CF6B9E286A75E8E2B1663E63318?id=1589 [audiusanews.com]
http://www.topspeed.com/cars/audi/2010-autonomous-audi-tts-pikes-peak-ar92542.html [topspeed.com]
like robot == steel man, and he's taking our jerbs (Score:2)
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Yeah, you're missing either a comma or a hyphen.
I was born a steel-driving man.
or
I was born a steel, driving man.
With that grammar fix, it resolves the ambiguity one way or the other. Not nearly as fun as the one-eyed eater who eats one-horned, flying purple people, though.
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No, it's a hyphen.
"I was born a steel" makes no sense. "I was born a steel-driving man" makes sense, "I was born a man who drives steel" makes even more sense, but it isn't poetic.
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I'm not sure how long it will be for truly intelligent machines (could never happen / be impossible without wetware).
But machines able to do our jobs are here now. And for a lot of jobs the annual cost is $15,000. Compare that to $32,000 (after benefits) for even minimum wage jobs and you have to think things get ugly soon.
Already diapers.com has "hundreds of robotic warehouse workers" (business week) and some hospital has "hired" 19 robotic workers *instead* of humans. It seems great as a cost savings m
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It could be that what is missing is for software that can reason. So that when it is told to grab something from a shelf, it can work out how to do so using internal simulations and observational data.
As for your employment/tax worry, i agree. Except that right now, China have moved that somewhat backwards as there is a long line of workers willing to work for pennies rather then live the life of subsistence farming. But even there the high water mark is rising, and China is sending out "feelers" to the las
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It wasn't many years ago that 75% of the population were employed as farmers. A new invention, the tractor, replaced the majority of farm workers with machines. Today, only 2% of the population still work on farms, yet we do not have a 73% unemployment rate.
Twenty years ago people were claiming that robots would be the death of the employment and that we'd all be out of work in twenty years. Here we are. The employment rate has not changed significantly over that time.
We have been replacing jobs with machin
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I understand that.
I think this one is different- a paradigm shift.
You say, "A machine that can replace farmers".
I'm saying, "A set of machines that can replace ANY physical labor."
Plus, since the 1990's they've been messing with unemployment numbers.
Real unemployment is now over 20%.
http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data [shadowstats.com]
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Now, on top of those factors add a huge number of highly intelligent, well trained indians and chinese willing to work for $15k as well.
So we lose jobs both at the bottom (due to autom
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Seriously, we could be looking at 50% unemployment in 20 years. It will be concentrated on the low end. How do we handle that as a society?
Try reading Oscar Wilde's "The Soul of Man Under Socialism". Over a hundred years ago he was imagining a world where machines were the new slaves and the majority of mankind was released from the drudgery of labour.
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It's the transition period from most people working through some people working to no people working that is the main problem. It was the same problem with Communism why would you work hard if the rest of the population doesn't have to work hard and still gets paid.
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It's especially bad because the robot didn't even come close to breaking the record! Let's celebrate this technical triumph for what it is, but save the robot overlords concession speech for when it actually applies.
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This is Slashdot, dammit, we're supposed to be talking about the tech the car uses, the sensor fields, blind spots, known bugs, and so forth. What do we get? A typical journalist "the narrative" story, where humanity is in a race against robots which will surely supplant us. Guh, it's like a rejected 1950s sci-fi manuscript.
Well, an automated journalist could be programmed to write about the facts, the technology, like you said. Maybe we should face off a /. writer with a computer to see who writes the most compelling story? As a prize, the winner could enslave the loser's race.
As a member of the same race as current /. editors, I strongly object to this idea. But if it comes to pass, I'll strive to be the first to personally welcome our new automated journalist overlords, of course.
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... our new automated journalist overlords...
As opposed to our current geopolitical journalist overlords?
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You are assuming that this has not already happened....
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you forgot "what could possibly go wrong?" and "in Soviet Colorado, car drive you!"
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you forgot "what could possibly go wrong?"
Well, let's load it up with gasoline and C-4, send it on its way and find out.
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From what I saw last night, ANYTHING would be good for the US version of the show. I might actually feel bad for the people involved in the show when I see it crash and burn.
It's almost as if someone gave the guys a camcorder and $50 to edit it. Not to mention the whole Chopper vs. Viper thing felt like a direct rip-off of the BBC version, but with more whining and less intelligence.
Robo-Thelma&Louise (Score:5, Funny)
Audi is logically taking a cautious and considered approach because the negative publicity of a car plunging over a fatal drop would hinder the development.".
Actually, the dash-cam video of the Autonomous Audi speeding off the road, going over a cliff and crashing in a fiery explosion would be pretty damn awesome.
Re:Robo-Thelma&Louise (Score:5, Funny)
"All autonomous vehicles are fitted with extra gasoline tanks made out of cheap plastic for explosive awesomeness".
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Thanks.
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There's also a video of a braking assist vehicle crashing somewhere (at work, can't look right now...)
But it brings up a point (question?) Are people so fearful now that ANY recorded incident is a terrible disaster? If we look at the history of human flight, it's full of accidents and disasters... but with each failure is a learning curve. That's how we work! Has the overload of video showing crashes prevented us from taking the next step faster than taking the slow and methodical "Public Image" route?
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"It's an old racing adage that it's a lot easier to make a fast driver who crashes safe than to make a slow driver faster.
Is there any source for this old adage? Google only turns up this slashdot article :-P
Would have thought I'd at least have run into it in the course of Gran Turismo 4, or even a parody of it in GTA training :-P /always/ do much better in races by taking the latter approach... and that's when there's not even a penalty for risking dangerous crashes in the video games...
That, and I
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I suspect... (Score:5, Insightful)
Assuming that you don't totally cheap out on the fault tolerance or get horribly unlucky, the autonomous car should be able to complete the course every 27 minutes, with occasional pauses for refueling, and longer; but even more occasional pauses for hardware service on the car, virtually forever. That expert human driver, though, will do 17 minutes a number of times; but will be a downright danger to himself and others within 24 hours or so.
For many applications(municipal bus service and low-priority-low-cost mail delivery and commodity trucking/train deliver come to mind), it is virtually irrelevant what a top-notch human in fresh condition can do. What matters is either how many of those you can afford as spares, or what an exhausted, bored, hopped-up-on-stimulants-just-to-stay-awake human can do. Computers, on the other hand, may take longer than one would expect to catch up with best of breed humans in anything resembling natural conditions; but will be able to catch up with real world, performance-degraded humans considerably faster...
Re:I suspect... (Score:5, Insightful)
but will be able to catch up with real world, performance-degraded humans considerably faster...
If you'd ever watched a semi truck driver cross the country non-stop running on speed (the driver, not the truck), you'd know it's possible to extend the number of hours a human can perform without significantly degraded performances. In my youth, I've always preferred hitching a ride with a truck driver than ride the bus, as I would invariably get there faster, and I never really felt unsafe.
As for the economics of autonomous vehicles, they'll become commonplace when
- a human behind the wheel is massively more expensive than the computer solution,
- people get over their fear of runaway machines,
- drivers unions are squashed
In short, it's not gonna happen anytime soon. Heck, even trains, the one kind of vehicle that could drive itself completely safely today, are still manned by "drivers" who spend their time pushing a button to tell the computer they're still alive, because passengers would be scared without drivers and unions prevent their removal from the trains.
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Not sure if you're right about trains. I guess that in a modern rail network, the driver could be made superfluous as long as things are running normal. Normal might even include most everyday delays, minor hardware malfunctions, speed limits (e.g. right now due to lots of leafy mush on the tracks). But you need the driver for extraordinary occurrences.
If you were dealing with an isolated vehicle, having an automated system that simply failed safe might be ok, but I have a feeling that the interconnected na
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Air travel is mostly automated, with the pilot spending most of the time setting and adjusting the autopilot based on orders from area controllers on the ground (or even just confirming the corrections delivered via data link when crossing something like the pacific).
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Heck, even trains, the one kind of vehicle that could drive itself completely safely today, are still manned by "drivers" who spend their time pushing a button to tell the computer they're still alive, because passengers would be scared without drivers and unions prevent their removal from the trains.
Well except in at least Copenhagen, Denmark, where our metro is without in-train operators [railway-technology.com]. As far as I know there is no union for the operating computers, as they have yet to gain sentience.
New Delhi (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, the metro in New Delhi is driverless, too.
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even trains, the one kind of vehicle that could drive itself completely safely today, are still manned by "drivers"
List of driverless trains [wikipedia.org]
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Of course trains like the TGV that can't stop fast enough anyway, its really a bit moot. Some train systems are becoming driver-less. But its pretty limited.
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A human behind the wheel will become massively more expensive the moment some insurance adjuster (runs a spreadsheet that) determines that a human behind the wheel is statistically more expensive for his employer to underwrite.
On that day - kiss your god-given-right to drive legally on public roads good bye.
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And most of the elevated people-movers at airports, some (not all) of the Disney parks, etc. are driverless, or if there's a human driver, the driver isn't physically present in the vehicle. IIRC, even BART was designed to be driverless, though the trains are not operated in that mode, last I checked.
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The problem with using long-haul trucking as an example is that like so many jobs it consists of long stretches of boredom punctuated by moments of terror. You're either driving for long, boring periods of time, or you're having an "oh shit" moment due to equipment failure or driver error, usually the latter, and not necessarily yours. Why people like to cut off semis I'll never know. Even just hooking a travel trailer to the back of a 7 or 8 thousand pound pickup gives you lots of opportunities to have the
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You forgot a little detail: normal driving don't happen in empty roads!
Going fast on a road is only a small part of what human drivers have to do: they also have to monitor the other cars, the pedestrian, etc.
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And neither am I... so that's why I think I might be better at seeing someone playing a DS (better than a camera that would have to determine the amount of distraction something causes) and making sure I keep a good distance from them.
And here I was just thinking... (Score:2)
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Yeah, NASCAR isn't really racing now is it? It's a practice track. I get bored by Formula 1 cars because they all finish within tenths of a second of each other but at least there's something interesting to navigate round. NASCAR is like watching a giant dragster race - interesting for the first few seconds and then it's just more of the same forever.
Tip to Americans: The classification of a "sport" does not entail the spectators wishing everyone would just start fighting to actually provide some enterta
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AFAIK NASCAR cars actually cant steer right, the entire suspension setup is built to only either drive straight or turn left, maybe a very small bit of right turning to exit the pit, but those things are built asymmetrical
And yeah F1 can get boring, but the recent season was quite good, with a rather interesting finale.
The best of us? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't care about autonomous cars out-driving the best of us. I want to see common cars that can out-drive the morons on the freeways! Out-drive the mediocre and worst of us and I'd be happy.
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Ahhh, but remember there are hardly any mediocre or worst drivers - 80-90% thinks they are in the top 50%.
Question though... (Score:3, Interesting)
While I do not doubt that these e-drivers will quickly come to out drive most of us, doesn't it come down to a question of how close to the physical capabilities of the car the driver can go or is going already? I expect them to be more reliable overall, more attentive (obviously) and more able to repeat their own performance. However, I am not necessarily so sure that there really is that much more capability for them to squeeze out of the cars than a trained pro driver on a test course is already able to squeeze out.
Driving maneuvers are a constant trade off, the closer to the physical capabilities of the car you come, the faster you can traverse a course, however, it also means having less ability to make adjustments and corrections. It is a crude example but, If 99% of my available traction is being used to make this turn, at this speed,I only have 1% more to add if I need to make an adjustment to my course, or speed.
Admittedly cars can then be redesigned to push those limits.....but thats another issue.
-Steve
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The driver has to perform a mystical brain computation in order to integrate everything they're learning about the car through their five senses. The car can have as many senses as you have processing time and I/O to handle. The car can [theoretically] make more decisions per second as well. Ultimately the car is going to be faster... someday.
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Five? You only have five senses?
Okay, let's see
Taste
Sight
Hearing
Smell
Touch
Which one handles balance/acceleration? Seems rather nifty while driving a car
Spatial sense (ability to know where your body parts are with your eyes closed)? Knowing exactly where your feet and hands are without looking at them comes in handy when changing gears and breaking
Temperature? Is
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Look at this as an example and cower in fear: http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~aim/?p=video [utexas.edu] ( http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~aim/video/fcfs-insanity.mov [utexas.edu] )
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An autonomous car would be incredibly boring. Hell, driving down long motorways is already incredibly boring and it's nowhere NEAR the most efficient way to do that.
And e-drivers can outpace us already in every statistic. They're still shit for driving in general, though, because like voice recognition, image recognition and everything else where you try to get a computer to do a job in a machine designed for human senses, it'll hit a limit that makes it entirely unable to actually *APPLY* any of those ab
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Boring? Don't think about it in terms of operating a car - it could be more like a train or bus (or, you know, as a passenger of a car), with many ways of filling the passing time.
Especially in case of "long motorways" - where most of your reservations might not apply much sooner.
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Formula 1 cars are hampered by restrictions because the drivers can't handle 10G+ in the turns and because there is a limit to how survivable you can make 500km/h crashes. Take away the restrictions and you would immediately see a significant reduction in lap times, but the drivers wouldn't last long.
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I wasn't trying to take any of that into account. The original post was about a car that made it through in a time that was approaching that of a skilled human driver.
The time to make it through a course, being the only consideration, since it is not "how many times can it make it through the course at that speed before the car mechanically fails".
Otherwise, why not compare its ability to make it through the course against my grandmother? (who, I seriously believe, is unaware of the fact that she has a gas
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Actually, in terms of car life, vehicles that are mostly driven at 65-80 MPH on the highway last much longer than vehicles that are mostly driven in town, with fewer breakdowns and other problems. What causes the most damage to vehicles is in-town driving at slower speeds. Between the steering, the constant starting and
You car has been sued - please leave it. (Score:2)
Maybe in 50 years we will take it for granted? (Score:2)
"Grandpa you mean you actually had to DRIVE A CAR?? What if mom forgot to pick me up from school...she couldnt just send the auto-cab for me?"
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And quite possibly no reason to send it (a waste really, one way empty...), might be just in the form of car sharing as part of public transport (though it would require us coming to our senses, also including things like bikes in the process)
Should have used a DeLorean (Score:2)
It's a question of style...
I hope it remembers to stop (Score:2)
When it gets to the top.
Hurry up, dammit. (Score:2)
The real test (Score:2)
I drove my car to the top of Pike's Peak several years when I was on vacation. Driving up is easy. Driving back down, on the other hand, is the real challenge.
It was especially fun considering that my car was sold in a part of the country that was basically at sea level so the computer had trouble dealing with the air at that altitude. How will their automated system deal with the engine stalling out, causing a lose of both power steering and power braking ever couple of minutes?
There's something else I too
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That means that a driver has an accident (of ANY kind) only once or twice in a driving lifetime, or thereabouts. I call rubbish on that, I think the statistics don't show what you think they show - given that the average "no-claims bonus" is about 3-4 years and there's only one man in the entire UK who hasn't had an single accident (actually insurance claim, which isn't the same thing at all) in over 50 years of driving (according to a news article I read a year or so ago). I think you've looked at *insur
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Here's the data [dot.gov] from the US DOT for miles driven and death rates.
As far as the 1 per 500,000 miles I am using 6 million [car-accidents.com] car accidents per year in the US. If you have better data I'd be glad to see it.
Exactly - near misses happen all the time but rarely result in an accident.
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Mmm.... http://www.statistics.gov.uk/ [statistics.gov.uk] tells an even more unbelievable story, but that's because it measures total road usage in "passenger km's" which is a bit unwieldy. But there's plenty of source data there - especially under http://www.statistics.gov.uk/hub/travel-transport/index.html [statistics.gov.uk].
The document here: http://www.dft.gov.uk/adobepdf/162469/221412/217792/4212241/transportstatisticgreatbrit.pdf [dft.gov.uk] is very enlightening, for example, especially table 8.1. - 45 casualties per 100m km (62m miles). That's on
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Where did you come up with that number?
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How will their automated system deal with the engine stalling out, causing a lose of both power steering and power braking ever couple of minutes?
with a turbocharger setup, the TTS has a 2 litre TFSI engine
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Power steering and power braking don't just instantly vanish after engine cutoff in general, and newer systems are shifting to electric in particular.
Buses are an order of magnitude safer, so there's quite a lot of room for improvement when it comes to training and abilities of an average driver.
HUmans not good at driving? Oh really? (Score:2)
FTA:
"Humans are not very good at driving cars, as is evidenced by our ability to destroy 1.3 million souls on our roads each year"
Apart from the fact that you don't just measure driving skill by the number of fatalities, thats just BS anyway. Considering how few accidents there are per mile driven we're EXCEPTIONALLY good at driving. If say 1 billion people in the world drive and they each drive 10000 miles a year
on average then thats 10 TRILLION miles a year, so in other words thats 1 death for roughly eve
*Ahem* (Score:2)
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I imagine the big test comes a few years down the line, when all the major manufacturers let their cars run along Pike's Peak, with varying traffic patterns (i.e., try to hold 80KPH for three minutes, 30KPH for two, et.c.,) randomized for all the cars to see how well the systems handle unexpected events.
In fact, I would probably insist on not buying an automagic car that hasn't been through a multi-car safety test along those lines.
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http://www.botjunkie.com/2010/10/12/googles-autonomous-car-takes-to-the-streets/ [botjunkie.com]
Re:The most important benchmark would still be... (Score:5, Insightful)
Something like a car, in a natural environment(not some empty closed test-track stuff), will suffer an accident from time to time. Human error, mechanical issues, sensor faults, algorithmic fuckups, whatever.
With a human driver(who basically all juries trivially recognize as an autonomous agent, since they think of all reasonably functional humans as such), the liability for accidents typically falls on one of the operators, unless a mechanical fault, braking issue, or something of that sort can be proven.
With an autonomous control computer, a jury will be much more likely to see the "driver" as an extension of the company who built the car, just like the brakes or the steering column, and assign liability accordingly.
Even if, lets say, computer-controlled cars delivered a 10-fold reduction in morbidity and mortality(which would save something like 35,000 Americans a year from death, plus an unknown but even larger number from serious injury, just to put things in perspective), that would likely be a net increase in liability for the vehicle manufacturers.
Until autonomous vehicles prove superior safety and insurers and/or legislators recognize the new state of affairs, it'll be strictly test tracks, tech demos, and internal use....
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Can you cite even one instance where a robot has "gone berserk" and killed people? Robots don't go berserk. They can break, like any machine, but they don't go berserk.
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Far more likely is that we will still pay insurance to allow the vehicle on the public road. The sale will include a disclaimer of liability and an agreement from the purchaser that they will buy insurance to drive it on the public road. We will all sign it, and continue to buy insurance. The combined interest of the car manufacturer and the insurance company won't let this go any other way.
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The problem comes when the pilot doesn't remember how to drive when the need comes to take over (if ever.) I can only imagine people freaking out if/when the alert light comes on trying to remember what the driving instructor told them to do and what pedal to push.
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I wouldn't call it completely irrational. There is still much that we can do with our brains that a CPU can't. Albeit, with a road and infrastructure made to suit autonomous vehicles, this becomes less of a problem, but I wouldn't just put a blanket statement on the whole thing and claim: "Computers are better drivers, period."
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On the other hand, cars have very lax rules with hardware and software compared to medical and aeronautics. Hell just about
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Absolutely. Java is a terrible choice for anything remotely realtime, and any sort of autonomous control system for a vehicle meets that definition, by definition. I hope that they at least ensure that objects are always reused and that their code never relies on any garbage collector. Otherwise, this is quite literally an accident waiting to happen.
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i'd love to see you drive up Mt. Everest in an audi TTS
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recently the germans produced AutoFahrer 2.0, they called it sebastian vettel, it is already outpacing the old version, but still has some compatibility problems with australian software components
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did millen use a TTS for that run? (at work, so no youtube for me)
a TTS is a pretty serious sportscar (by my standards anyway, it outperforms 99,9% of other traffic), but compared to the monstrous racers they use on pikes peak, i wouldnt be surprised if 17 minutes is a realistic goal for a pro-driver in a TTS
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There is almost no "unfamiliar course", for a bot driver, in the era of GPS maps now. Will be much more the case when autonomous vehicles will go on sale.
(oh, you want to purposely handicap the abilities of bot driver? Why not blindfold the human while you're at it?)