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  • Article on driverless cars

    Thought this was good background reading on issues with driverless cars.

    90 Festy (Larry)--B6M (Matt D. modified B6 head), header, 5-speed, Capri XR2 front brakes, many other little mods
    09 Kia Rondo--a Festy on steroids!

    You can avoid reality, but you can't avoid the consequences of avoiding reality--Ayn Rand

    Disaster preparedness

    Tragedy and Hope.....Infowars.com.....The Drudge Report.....Founding Fathers.info

    Think for yourself.....question all authority.....re-evaluate everything you think you know. Red-pill yourself!


  • #2
    I don't even need to read it to know driverless cars are not going to happen anytime soon, because there is so many variables in weather, and road conditions that there is no way a computer can get that perfect, at least not yet, also parking lots, unpaved roads, or if you want to go to a festival where you have to park out in a field. Sure there can be manual overrides but that kinda defeats the purpose of a self driving car doesn't it? A computer can't see the truck or car way out ahead swerving around and choose to avoid it like you can. Can they perform emergency lane changes? Nope, only thing they can do is slam on the brakes.
    1991 Ford Festiva BP (Full Aspire/Rio Swap) (337k Miles) (Around 95k Engine)
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    • #3
      "This is the first fully-automated plane, flown by a computer" ... watch it crash:

      Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.


      This is about the first French Ariane V rocket crashing due to software errors:



      This is a about a Canadian software-controlled X-ray machine overdosing by factors in excess of 1,000, killing patients:

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      • #4
        I read an article in Autoweek about computer controlled cars. Essentially the car IS a computer, and computers get hacked all the time. (re: N. Korea!)

        Basically, the article stated, if someone were to program a virus into a cars computer, and say have all the cars under control of the computer with the virus, they could make all the cars make a left turn at the same time, it could shut down entire cities! There were a few more examples given, but you get the drift!
        Dan




        Red 1988 Festiva L - CUJO

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        • #5
          Man, what a bunch of Negative Nancys!

          Just kidding. I too think driverless cars are a very bad idea, for several reasons, some already mentioned.
          1. You would need an artificial-intelligence level of computing to make this happen safely, and an array of sensors. This will also raise the price of driverless cars dramatically.
          2. The computers can still crash or be subject to external control--whether by hackers, or police who want to shut your car down. While this may be a good idea to end dangerous police chases, this technology will be used on all of us by the new police state. Right now the "authorities" can jam our cell phones at will, taking away communication. Do we want to let them take away transportation too?!
          3. How will the computers be programmed for potentially-fatal situations? Will it "sacrifice" the occupants of your car to protect the occupants of another car, if there is no other choice? These cars will know how many people are in each car, via seat sensors, and be able to communicate with each other. Who decides on the programmed-in "ethics" of the car?
          4. Why would we want to give up free choice/personal responsibility in yet another area of our lives anyway?
          Last edited by TominMO; 12-22-2014, 03:13 PM.
          90 Festy (Larry)--B6M (Matt D. modified B6 head), header, 5-speed, Capri XR2 front brakes, many other little mods
          09 Kia Rondo--a Festy on steroids!

          You can avoid reality, but you can't avoid the consequences of avoiding reality--Ayn Rand

          Disaster preparedness

          Tragedy and Hope.....Infowars.com.....The Drudge Report.....Founding Fathers.info

          Think for yourself.....question all authority.....re-evaluate everything you think you know. Red-pill yourself!

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          • #6
            TominMO,

            Regarding cars communicating with one another, the technology has been in place for aircraft for 20+ years:



            The cost would have to come down significantly (certainly to a fraction of the value of the vehicle), and the technology adapted to the 2D world (telling one car to "climb" and another to "descend" won't work!) as well as deal with cars only seconds from collision and the possibility/likelihood of scenarios involving more than two cars (I don't think TCAS can work "three-way" resolutions). For now, simply having everybody stomping on the brakes is probably about as good as it's going to get, then deal with those vehicles getting rear-ended, i.e. chain reactions.

            Your comment about whether such a system would "sacrifice" a Festy over a loaded school bus is interesting, even disturbing.

            At the end the day, the whole subject should keep the legal profession gainfully employed.
            Last edited by AlaskaFestivaGuy; 12-23-2014, 02:37 AM.
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            • #7
              There was a BMW (IIRC) on TopGear that could not only drive itself but race itself. BUT it had to "learn" the track first, so I doubt any real world app was even close.

              Though we do have autonomous cruise control, automatic parking, launch control, stability control. In the more high-end vehicles all this stuff works well. Not all the time in the same car, but the tech is there. I could see at least a full on auto-pilot for highway use real soon. I mean if the car can sense when you're about to crash into someone's rear end and stop you, or slow down while in cruise if you get to close, why can't it sense when it's safe to pass or how close is safe to get to the median? And of course anybody with a GPS knows the car could already easily know most of the speed limits, so what's stopping it, technologically speaking? I'd say not much.
              Any difference that makes no difference is no difference.

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              • #8
                I think all Google is claiming is that their technology will work on hard-surfaced roads with good-condition painted lines AND where Google has previously mapped the road into its big database in the sky. That's a far cry from driving unknown dark country roads without any painted lines. With the computer's "finger on the map" (comparing what it "sees" with the mapping data), any gaps in the painted lines, say at intersections, can just be "coasted" over. Much like a big jet's navigation system uses INS (International Navigation System) always know fairly accurately where it is [independently of GPS, which is a relatively new development], even in the absence of ground-based navaids, such as over oceans. As long as you have the painted line, you can keep "re-centering" yourself, equivalent to updating the INS with "known" positions you fly over vs. simply "dead reckoning."

                If the software ever isn't sure of its location, or even which side of the road it's on, all it has to do is stop. That's equivalent to an airplane's autopilot doing a "disconnect" whenever it isn't sure of its ability to keep flying properly, at which time it plays a little "ring tone":

                The sound of an Autopilot disconnecting as used on Boeing 747-200 (This can be heard on Airport 1975 and Airpoty 1977) If anyone else happens to have a clean...

                or


                to tell the crew to take over.
                Last edited by AlaskaFestivaGuy; 12-23-2014, 10:04 PM.
                88L black, dailydriver
                88LX silver a/c, dailydriver
                4 88/89 disassembled
                91L green
                91GL aqua pwrsteer
                92GL red a/c reardmg
                3 93L blue, 2 dailydriver, 1 frontdmg
                1952 Cessna170B floatplane

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                • #9
                  From today's San Jose Mercury News (Silicon Valley's major daily newspaper):



                  It's not exactly clear what "milestone" has been achieved here -- "fully functional?" Yet, it sounds like there still has to be a human driver ready to take over.
                  88L black, dailydriver
                  88LX silver a/c, dailydriver
                  4 88/89 disassembled
                  91L green
                  91GL aqua pwrsteer
                  92GL red a/c reardmg
                  3 93L blue, 2 dailydriver, 1 frontdmg
                  1952 Cessna170B floatplane

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by AlaskaFestivaGuy View Post
                    From today's San Jose Mercury News (Silicon Valley's major daily newspaper):



                    It's not exactly clear what "milestone" has been achieved here -- "fully functional?" Yet, it sounds like there still has to be a human driver ready to take over.
                    PR nonense.
                    90 Festy (Larry)--B6M (Matt D. modified B6 head), header, 5-speed, Capri XR2 front brakes, many other little mods
                    09 Kia Rondo--a Festy on steroids!

                    You can avoid reality, but you can't avoid the consequences of avoiding reality--Ayn Rand

                    Disaster preparedness

                    Tragedy and Hope.....Infowars.com.....The Drudge Report.....Founding Fathers.info

                    Think for yourself.....question all authority.....re-evaluate everything you think you know. Red-pill yourself!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Sounds like the perfect driver is the computer. The only accidents were caused by errant human drivers.
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                      • #12
                        UK plan to control private citizens' cars. The lame excuse they give is that it's for fighting global warming and for traffic congestion. Of course it's about control.


                        DEA tracks millions of license plates as cars move around:
                        American Civil Liberties Union warns scanning of license plates by Drug Enforcement Agency is building a repository of all drivers’ movements
                        90 Festy (Larry)--B6M (Matt D. modified B6 head), header, 5-speed, Capri XR2 front brakes, many other little mods
                        09 Kia Rondo--a Festy on steroids!

                        You can avoid reality, but you can't avoid the consequences of avoiding reality--Ayn Rand

                        Disaster preparedness

                        Tragedy and Hope.....Infowars.com.....The Drudge Report.....Founding Fathers.info

                        Think for yourself.....question all authority.....re-evaluate everything you think you know. Red-pill yourself!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Movin View Post
                          Sounds like the perfect driver is the computer. The only accidents were caused by errant human drivers.
                          Unless te software is buggy and crashes the program--and the car. Or when hackers take the car over via wi-fi or GPS signals from or to the car.
                          90 Festy (Larry)--B6M (Matt D. modified B6 head), header, 5-speed, Capri XR2 front brakes, many other little mods
                          09 Kia Rondo--a Festy on steroids!

                          You can avoid reality, but you can't avoid the consequences of avoiding reality--Ayn Rand

                          Disaster preparedness

                          Tragedy and Hope.....Infowars.com.....The Drudge Report.....Founding Fathers.info

                          Think for yourself.....question all authority.....re-evaluate everything you think you know. Red-pill yourself!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Automakers can't protect against hacking of new cars with wireless technology:
                            90 Festy (Larry)--B6M (Matt D. modified B6 head), header, 5-speed, Capri XR2 front brakes, many other little mods
                            09 Kia Rondo--a Festy on steroids!

                            You can avoid reality, but you can't avoid the consequences of avoiding reality--Ayn Rand

                            Disaster preparedness

                            Tragedy and Hope.....Infowars.com.....The Drudge Report.....Founding Fathers.info

                            Think for yourself.....question all authority.....re-evaluate everything you think you know. Red-pill yourself!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Moar:

                              https://autos.yahoo.com/news/consume...--finance.html
                              Dan




                              Red 1988 Festiva L - CUJO

                              Black 1992 Festiva GL Sport - BLACK MAGIC

                              I'm just...a little slow... sometimes:withstupid:

                              R.I.P.
                              Blue 1972 Chevelle SS-468 C.I.D. B'nM TH400-4:56 posi-Black racing stripes-Black vinyl top-Black int.
                              Black on black 1976 Camaro LT-350 4 bolt main .060 over
                              Silver 1988 Festiva L

                              My Music!
                              http://www.reverbnation.com/main/sea...t_songs/266647

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