Oh come on, be fair. The ultimate aim is to have technology that's good enough to be doing emails without the need to e watching the road ready to hit the big red button. At the moment, you need to be paying attention. That's because at the moment we don't have AVs, we have cars with some "driver aids" that are working out the issues with the intention of getting to AVs.
Apparently, as for some strange reason no one will make any technological breakthroughs in the next 20 years, these are the only two options?Just_a_fan wrote: ↑27 Oct 2018, 01:36Oh come on, be fair. The ultimate aim is to have technology that's good enough to be doing emails without the need to e watching the road ready to hit the big red button. At the moment, you need to be paying attention. That's because at the moment we don't have AVs, we have cars with some "driver aids" that are working out the issues with the intention of getting to AVs.
You seem to want it to go from the Model T to full AV in one stride or it's all a failure and pointless, won't work etc.
Obviously, we´re talking about safety, and safety is only as high as its lowest point, because...
You´re describing the situation yourself, but sill negate how dangerours are humans at the wheel?
This is a perfect definition of demagogy. You know that is NOT an AV, but even so you use it to bash AVs
Luckily, the US Constitution was written before the arrival of the motor car.
It's an interesting discussion. Aviation autopilots are very robust, even in light single engine aircraft, and are certified for every make/model aircraft they are installed in. They are also triple redundant in many cases. Does a car need the same type of certification/redundancy or do we let each manufacturer engineer what they think is best? Who would be the certifying authority?Andres125sx wrote: ↑30 Oct 2018, 18:09When autopilot for airliners were introduced there was a lot of people claiming how dangerous it would be arguing exactly this
I don’t think so. Level 5 for aircraft would control everything in getting the plane from airport terminal to airport terminal.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑30 Oct 2018, 19:27
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isn't CFC right now pretending to be what you lot seem to categorise as future L5 ?
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As this, but I would not be surprised to see another level slipped in to the system using static references on some roads to interact and fine tune the onboard systems.henry wrote: ↑30 Oct 2018, 19:00Personally I think the autonomous vehicle developments will continue on 2 tracks in the near term, nextv10 years.
One will be “out of town”, focused on long journeys on major roads with an objective of reducing the driver load ultimately to zero. These could be thought of as L3+ or L4- . They will be available to buy for personal ownership. Their sensor and processing needs will focus mainly on interaction with vehicles and road topology. Tesla’s latest “navigate on Autopilot” is approaching this functionality. They will incorporate sensors and mechanisms to ensure driver involvement.Cadillac’s eye tracking for instance. In a few years time (10?) this type of vehicle will likely get to L4 for the part of the journey from joining a major road network to leaving it.
The other will be “in town”. These will be true level 4 vehicles. They will be owned and operated by fleet organisations, possibly even manufacturers. Their sensors and processing will be more varied and require more servicing, hence fleet only. They will operate as ride hail, public transport, short delivery etc. They will initially operate in simple environments, orderly road networks, limited mixed traffic, good weather. Over time they will move to more complex environments as and when the operators think they can make money. Waymo in Phoenix is an example about(?) to go live.
I don’t think that it is likely that anyone will try to make money from L5 go anywhere do anything vehicles. There will still be driver operated vehicles for this need. They will benefit from the developments in “autonomous” research and infrastructure with aids to ease the driving burden. C Continuing the proliferation of blind spot, auto brake, speed limit detect etc. into optimum speed advice from roadside furniture, side road vehicle detection from vehicle to vehicle communication etc etc.
I think that´s out of debate, obviously there should be a certifying authority, but I think it will be local for each country, as cars are not planes wich fly daily internationally. Then it will be a chaos if you want to go with your car to a foreign country if their standards are not the same, but hey, that´s happening even today in some circumstances just for the driving license so no reason to think this will be any different, absurd burocracysubcritical71 wrote: ↑30 Oct 2018, 19:05It's an interesting discussion. Aviation autopilots are very robust, even in light single engine aircraft, and are certified for every make/model aircraft they are installed in. They are also triple redundant in many cases. Does a car need the same type of certification/redundancy or do we let each manufacturer engineer what they think is best? Who would be the certifying authority?Andres125sx wrote: ↑30 Oct 2018, 18:09When autopilot for airliners were introduced there was a lot of people claiming how dangerous it would be arguing exactly this
Lots of questions and I personally think this will need to play out. If manufacturers cannot get it right I could see a regulatory agency needing to be created, like the ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization) today.