ChatterBank3 mins ago
No Deaths, This Time........
32 Answers
http:// www.bbc .com/ne ws/tech nology- 4192381 4
Hit by a truck, yes the fault of the trucker but that's cold comfort if you are injured or worse. Note to the programmers, it is entirely possible that other vehicles on the road will not obey the rules.
Hit by a truck, yes the fault of the trucker but that's cold comfort if you are injured or worse. Note to the programmers, it is entirely possible that other vehicles on the road will not obey the rules.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No, they won't have to be perfect - just better than humans. The problem is that there are many events where you know the outcome of the actions taken but can never know for sure what the outcome would have been if a different action had been taken. To go back to Ludwig's Brexit example; there will be an outcome but it will never be known for certain what state the country would be in if Brexit hadn't happened.
The article linked by TTT concludes with the rather important statement that we shouldn't "let perfect be the enemy of good". In this case too it applies because it seems that people are determined to apply perfection to computers and, if (when) they fail to reach that, rely on humans instead. But humans already fail. Badly. A lot. And fatally. And the question only becomes: "are computers better than humans, such that computer-controlled cars will be, on the whole, safer?"
We are probably yet to discover a question to which the answer is, definitively and for all time, that humans are better. Driving is likely to fall victim to the same progress in time.
We are probably yet to discover a question to which the answer is, definitively and for all time, that humans are better. Driving is likely to fall victim to the same progress in time.
The reality, Pixie, is that there are lots of computers helping you drive your current car, assuming it's relatively new. There are computers controlling the braking system and others checking for loss of traction/skids and applying corrections to stop you going out of control and you are usually completely unaware of this happening. By relatively new I would guess less than about 10 years old, possibly more than that. My own car is almost 10 years old and has anti-lock brakes and traction control.
Absolutely right, Pixie but I'm sure you've seen people who haven't a clue where their corners are. We watched one yesterday drive till it touched.
They used to sell cars on visibility - I remember an advert for the Ford Cortina Mk I boasting (because of thin pillars) that there was something like 94% all-round visibility. Nowadays, with airbags everywhere, visibilty is much reduced. It's impossible to reverse our Volvo Estate by looking over your shoulder - you have to use the mirrors.
They used to sell cars on visibility - I remember an advert for the Ford Cortina Mk I boasting (because of thin pillars) that there was something like 94% all-round visibility. Nowadays, with airbags everywhere, visibilty is much reduced. It's impossible to reverse our Volvo Estate by looking over your shoulder - you have to use the mirrors.