The standard F1 ECU is called the TAG320, and it's from McLaren, not Williams or Microsoft. The CPUs are PowerPC's but not from IBM - they come down the Motorola side, and are currently from NXP.Muniix wrote: ↑30 Jul 2018, 21:14There's no custom user code that can be installed for execution into the standard controller unit.GrandAxe wrote: ↑28 Jul 2018, 21:01Its surely not. Every sensor is a single dimension only.
A system as the one we are discussing might only want to know when the car is standing still, cornering, accelerating beyond a threshold, braking from above a threshold speed, one or two safety parameters; altogether only a handful of dimensions. Turning switches on or of in an F1 car should be pretty straightforward with the main challenges being integrating the machine learning system with the design/function of the car.
Recognising cats on the other hand, requires juggling millions of dimensions.
Talking about turning switches on or of in an F1 car to change functionality ... It could be anything from simple off/on switch actions, to loading custom software on the go or taking circuits offline to reprogramme them. The AI software could also be hidden like a virus to pop up when required. All these techniques can both change functionality of an engine and mask the method of change without requiring massive computational power.
It's a shitty Microsoft/Williams Unit using a ancient dual IBM cell cores and a TPU timing processing unit, couple hundred Mhz per core. Two SoC one for powertrain and one for chassis.
The TPU manual is 200+ page document.
It's really handicapping the TJI usage as it's designed before HAJI let alone TJI in shared fuel injector, and prechamber scavenge injector/valve.
I really do wish people would look stuff up before posting...