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Home > Off Topic > Your views on the impact of driverless cars |
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The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
Seriously?! I did not think autopilot could handle a landing like that. What about the one in NYC that landed in the Hudson?
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3rd Jan 2015 11:38 pm |
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The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
Still can't see it coping too well with a roundabout standoff. It knows what is occurring but others may decide they will go or start to go then suddenly stop. Someone has to go first and the computer in the driverless car can't command them or halt them. PhD (a real Doctor) - Good luck at the no sh t Sherlock awards LL.B (Hons) - University of Derby LOT (Lord of Time) - University of Gallifrey |
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3rd Jan 2015 11:44 pm |
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dorsetfreelander Member Since: 20 Jul 2013 Location: Dorset Posts: 4354 |
According to the protocol no one has right of access, your laptop doesn't command the others to stop transmitting, They are simply aware that someone else is using the resource (ie on the roundabout ) so back off for a random prime number of milliseconds (so that two waiting don't come back again at the same time). Just like you or I would.
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3rd Jan 2015 11:52 pm |
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The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
It would be interesting to see it in action that's for sure. Will they be fitted with winter tyres to better handle snow and ice?
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3rd Jan 2015 11:58 pm |
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dunkley201 Member Since: 09 Jul 2011 Location: Lincolnshire Posts: 2739 |
What the computer does not have is "eye contact". You may think it insignificant, but a fleeting glance or meeting of eyes can convey so much information that a computer will never see. 10MY (Sept 09) TD4 HSE Auto in Stornoway Grey (Now Gone)
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4th Jan 2015 11:07 am |
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taztastic Member Since: 03 Feb 2011 Location: North West Posts: 8652 |
Autopilot can't, that's a relatively unsophisticated system, keeps a plane on course and in the sky, look at drones, they take off and land all the time without an on board pilot, I am sure they have been tested autonomously too. |
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4th Jan 2015 11:17 am |
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Kolar Member Since: 05 Nov 2014 Location: Wales Posts: 23 |
So how often can you see the other car's driver especially at night? The issue being discussed here is what is the effect of the technology when it is mature, most members are talking about the limitations of what we can do now. I know it's a simpler situation but driverless tractors are already in use and the next big step is driverless HGV lorries which will have a major cost savings impact in that they will not have driver hours limitations ie tachographs and won't need to park up overnight. They could travel up the motorways in convoys and perhaps have a driver join them to supervise the last few miles and help unload. What will become of greasy spoon transport cafs? |
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4th Jan 2015 1:26 pm |
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taztastic Member Since: 03 Feb 2011 Location: North West Posts: 8652 |
My views on the impact of driverless cars ... Will it really happen? I doubt it, there will be a long long drawn out process of who's technology works best and how it is implemented on the road, this will take years, by which time cars will be a distant memory and rapid transit systems will be in place. Why have loads of little engines when you can have one?
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4th Jan 2015 2:34 pm |
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Pegleg Member Since: 15 Apr 2010 Location: Deep in mid Wales Posts: 3114 |
Projects for driverless cars has been around for some time.
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5th Jan 2015 7:00 pm |
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j77 Member Since: 26 Nov 2008 Location: Fife Posts: 2909 |
Driverless trains will be the next thing, we already have the technology, look at the DLR. No reason why a train can't go from London to Edinburgh without a driver. 21MY Defender 90 S 3.0 D200 |
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5th Jan 2015 10:47 pm |
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Lost for Words Member Since: 15 Dec 2014 Location: Warminster, Wiltshire Posts: 198 |
^^^^That won't happen.
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6th Jan 2015 10:25 am |
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pab Member Since: 28 Aug 2012 Location: Now in Mid-Wales Posts: 2007 |
The idea of driverless cars using ethernet-like protocols is pretty scary, given that the CD stands for Collision Detection! Ethernet allows collisions to happen, then recovers from them. The equivalent applied to cars at a roundabout would be something like this. Each vehicle looks to see if there's anyone currently on the roundabout. If there is, they wait. If there's not, they go. But in this case several vehicles may go at once, in which case there will be a crash. If there is a crash, the vehicles involved back out from the roundabout, wait a random period of time, then go again. At which time there may, of course, be another crash. I think I'll walk... As for driverless cars in general, on the clear open roads around here driving is, indeed, still a pleasure to be enjoyed. In cities and on crowded motorways, however, I'd happily hand over to the car and relax while the car deals with the traffic. |
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6th Jan 2015 10:46 am |
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dorsetfreelander Member Since: 20 Jul 2013 Location: Dorset Posts: 4354 |
Actually they wait for a small random prime number of milliseconds so as to reduce the possibility of them all joining again simultaneously. However it would be clear to each car that moved that it was on a collision course well before it happened. As a human driver you can safely assume that Asimov laws rule in which case you can drive how you like and the robotic cars will have to avoid you. But would I trust it though? |
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8th Jan 2015 4:05 pm |
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pab Member Since: 28 Aug 2012 Location: Now in Mid-Wales Posts: 2007 |
Yes, the original set of vehicles shouldn't crash again, but another vehicle may have come along in the mean time and it is this which may result in further collisions. And the busier the network the more crashes there are - in ethernet type networks this greatly reduces the maximum capacity of the network. (Which is why, of course, wired ethernet now uses a star architecture rather than true CMSA/CD.)
Maybe, but that still leaves you with the original problem of resolving the conflict. |
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8th Jan 2015 4:18 pm |
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