Just_a_fan wrote: ↑23 Jul 2023, 22:58
The whole "AI does CFD" thing really needs us to arrive at an AGI that can "see the air" (in the way that people like to say Newey does). In effect it would be doing CFD in its head (difficult to come up with a suitable metaphor). At that point, one can start to see that the legality question is raised - is an AGI "seeing the air" a CFD process controlled by the resource rules? I think most sensible people would say yes it is, but this is F1...
Any CFD at all, must be accounted for and I feel that's rather logical. The AI should merely act as an operator. The big advantage here is the budget cap. Why pay an employee to queue surfaces for CFD when a bot could do it for the cost of the CPU and electricity to run it.
I also wonder if there should not be some regulations surrounding automation...If the original goal of the cap was to in part stop teams hoarding employees like task rabbits, then what is the equivalent policing method when teams are just replacing people with computers for pennies on the dollar in "labor" cost.
Many teams had to downsize. The biggest teams had over 1000 employees before. They have downsized due to budget cap which made them closer in size to smaller teams, but if the big teams are just growing again by way of robots, automation, and AI, then they are basically still operating like 1000 person teams.
A lion must kill its prey.