I look forward to seeing how 'computers' will solve the issue when a person/animal/object randomly decides to step in front of an AV and refuse to step out of the way.
- Will there be a manual mode, where a driver can 'step-in' at his own responsibility? (and if yes, will drivers of the future still receive the same kind of schooling to be 'on the road'?)
- if yes, how will that go in with the AVs ability to act around 'rogue' AVs (AV acting out of the collective)?
- Will he not be able to and the traffic will come to a complete stop...
- ...that then adds to the chaos around him when all other AVs react to that traffic build up?
These are very simple obstacles AVs need to be able to solve, yet are rather complex to tackle.
strad wrote: ↑26 Oct 2018, 22:52
You guys gotta make up your minds. You now say it's understood you still have to be paying attention and have your hands on the wheel. Other times you talk of answering e-mails and doing work. Which is it?
This is where this whole development is counter-productive. The AV idea obviously comes out from wanting the roads to be a safer place. Yet by developing driver aids, we are directly encouraging drivers who are now more and more relying on these automatism's and driver aids (that will eventually progress to autonomous vehicles) to rely more on the tech rather than their own instincts and ability. In other words; We are encouraging less attention while driving, because there's a driver assistance module that will "jump in" warn and supposedly save the day. Until it doesn't.
A friend of mine's parking sensor was broken/blocked. Guess what happened? Drove right into the pillar of an underground parking in reverse. Extensive damage. Thanks to all these gadgets, people are becoming more and more reliant on them, to the point they fully trust it and are hopelessly inapt to doing it how they once learned it when they learned how to drive. Same applies to all other gadgets that are finding their way into modern cars.
I can already see the first big accidents coming with semi assisted AVs when people will be reading newspapers while on their commute to work, only to crash because the car overlooked something obvious to the human-eye/brain, but not the AV.
I get the point that the tech will not evolve over night, but it is scary to think how all the effort being sunk into this kind of tech only really makes us more muted as we give up our responsibilities to a piece of software.