Just in time for global warming.
Don't go there, I just had a warning for off topic
I dont think its anywhere near that simple.Big Tea wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 20:10Many vehicles today seem to have the 'bare bones' already included in them.
I have ordered a low end car for delivery Sept 1 and it has the 'Camera' for anti collision and lane departure sign reader rear sensors cruse etc. (Its Automatic) High end cars have had most of this for some time.
I think just about everything has electric power steering today which can be converted, braking system could be modular if the 'brain' is there
I believe by 2020 just about all cars will be convertible with some work, soon after with plug in modules.
Brakes are for slowing, gears are for going.
John Force would still be able to drive on his quarter mile of straight tarmac with no one coming the other way. AVs won't spell the end of motorsport (or drag racing).
I find the whole idea that AVs must be as close to perfect as possible quite interesting. It seems to me that so long as an AV is as good as the average human driver then we're ok. Anything better than that improves the overall situation.theblackangus wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 21:37I dont think its anywhere near that simple. [rest of quote removed for ease of forum navigation]Big Tea wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 20:10Many vehicles today seem to have the 'bare bones' already included in them.
I have ordered a low end car for delivery Sept 1 and it has the 'Camera' for anti collision and lane departure sign reader rear sensors cruse etc. (Its Automatic) High end cars have had most of this for some time.
I think just about everything has electric power steering today which can be converted, braking system could be modular if the 'brain' is there
I believe by 2020 just about all cars will be convertible with some work, soon after with plug in modules.
I don't think what I have specified is close to perfect mostly because software is written by humans. That is to get acceptable results across a wide spectrum of driving environments in the winter/snowing, dark, rain, hail, fog, etc and standard speeds w/o outlawing everything else from the roads.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 21:53
I find the whole idea that AVs must be as close to perfect as possible quite interesting. It seems to me that so long as an AV is as good as the average human driver then we're ok. Anything better than that improves the overall situation.
Right and just one sensor cannot currently do the job that you have stated with any real safety. Do you want to stop driving on a rainy day when mud keeps getting on your camera? The car is no good if it fails safely every mile.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 21:53Most humans are pretty rubbish at driving, to be honest. Using phones, chatting to passengers, fiddling with the radio, putting on make up, watching the fine bit of on the sidewalk, thinking about dinner/work/the kids etc. Any AV that can keep its view on the road and deal as best it can with what's going on is better than all of those drivers.
As I said, if AVs are as good as humans to start with, they will improve and systems improve. Humans won't, to be honest.
Humans basically rely on one sensor - their vision. What do we do when mud/rain/snow gets in front of our eyes? We wipe the windscreen. Why can't AVs have wipers in front of their sensors (or the equivalent)?theblackangus wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:18
Right and just one sensor cannot currently do the job that you have stated with any real safety. Do you want to stop driving on a rainy day when mud keeps getting on your camera? The car is no good if it fails safely every mile.
Hmm. Really should be tapping abilities of the clairvoyants, channelers, mystics, fortune tellers, palm readers, and psychics. This would eliminate most of the issues with current AV technologies. Predictive avoidance. Can't get in an accident if you know it's gonna happen. Huge opportunity missed there by the tech companies there, a real blind spot. A spoon bender mounted in the glove box would help allay the doubts of the more critical passengers as to the miracles bestowed of the sacred software.
We work way better with snow, rain, mud, etc than current vision software does. That is why most all AV companies are using a combination of Lidar, Radar, and vision systems.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:35Humans basically rely on one sensor - their vision. What do we do when mud/rain/snow gets in front of our eyes? We wipe the windscreen. Why can't AVs have wipers in front of their sensors (or the equivalent)?theblackangus wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:18
Right and just one sensor cannot currently do the job that you have stated with any real safety. Do you want to stop driving on a rainy day when mud keeps getting on your camera? The car is no good if it fails safely every mile.
This was my point... to be safe AV's have to have alot of sensors and input to ensure they are not plagued with false positives.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:35The reality is that an AV can have a multitude of sensors, monitor them all at the same time, talk to neighbouring AVs and borrow their sensor data, make use of road-side sensor data etc. It works for humans, affter all - we get info from active traffic signs, we get info from other vehicles (brake lights), we can also use other sensors (assuming the radio is off). But humans get bored, tired, distracted, lazy, don't care. We're also pretty poor at doing two or more things at the same time.
Saying the only issue that that is slowing AV adoption is implementation.... Well thats the key to everything. Ideas are a dime a dozen, but getting it to work well is the gold.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:35The only issue slowing AVs is implementation. That and politics, of course.
I disagree. I see no reason to floor it until you are 6 inches behind the car in front then stand on the break.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 21:41Brakes are for slowing, gears are for going.
The days of brakes made from cheese are long gone. Use them, that's what they are there for.
What I would like to pick up on here is variables. Not just between one sensor (person) and another, but the same on at different times and at different parts of the life curve. Yes you can have a very good very safe driver, but if the kids are playing hell in the back and the wife is standing on the roadside where he was not expecting her to be picked up, the 'loop' will not be the same as optimum.theblackangus wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 23:08We work way better with snow, rain, mud, etc than current vision software does. That is why most all AV companies are using a combination of Lidar, Radar, and vision systems.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:35Humans basically rely on one sensor - their vision. What do we do when mud/rain/snow gets in front of our eyes? We wipe the windscreen. Why can't AVs have wipers in front of their sensors (or the equivalent)?theblackangus wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:18
Right and just one sensor cannot currently do the job that you have stated with any real safety. Do you want to stop driving on a rainy day when mud keeps getting on your camera? The car is no good if it fails safely every mile.
This was my point... to be safe AV's have to have alot of sensors and input to ensure they are not plagued with false positives.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:35The reality is that an AV can have a multitude of sensors, monitor them all at the same time, talk to neighbouring AVs and borrow their sensor data, make use of road-side sensor data etc. It works for humans, affter all - we get info from active traffic signs, we get info from other vehicles (brake lights), we can also use other sensors (assuming the radio is off). But humans get bored, tired, distracted, lazy, don't care. We're also pretty poor at doing two or more things at the same time.
Saying the only issue that that is slowing AV adoption is implementation.... Well thats the key to everything. Ideas are a dime a dozen, but getting it to work well is the gold.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 22:35The only issue slowing AVs is implementation. That and politics, of course.
Getting that to work as well as us in 95% of the driving scenarios (the minimum bar) hasn't happened yet, not even close.
Are you saying that you think AV software today can use a simple camera and be as good humans?
Im somewhat confused, as I was replying to a post that said cars have most of the sensors they need today, and I was pointing out that they didn't to get a reasonable level of safety.
Ah, yes, I see what you mean now. I thought you were rehashing the argument I've had in the past about "using the gears to slow down and only use the brakes as a last resort/to finish slowing". The sort of stuff my dad did when he were a lad, really, because the brakes were rubbish back in the day.Big Tea wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 23:37I disagree. I see no reason to floor it until you are 6 inches behind the car in front then stand on the break.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑19 Jul 2018, 21:41Brakes are for slowing, gears are for going.
The days of brakes made from cheese are long gone. Use them, that's what they are there for.
You go just as quickly as the car in front, which is all you can ever do, and get a few fractions extra time if you need it to react. Try it you may deprecate it. A much more relaxed way to get places. But I don't mean hold up the traffic either. There are many who drive that way but you would not know if you were not in the car with them, unless you ask them how long tyres last.