What will cars do if they don't know what to do? Apparently, stop until they do.
Read the whole story
Read the whole story
There will be waymo self driving cars in CA now.
There will be waymo self driving cars in CA now.
"If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed," Waymo continued in a press release. "For our cars, that means following well-established protocols, which include contacting Waymo fleet and rider support for help in resolving the issue."
"If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed," Waymo continued in a press release. "For our cars, that means following well-established protocols, which include contacting Waymo fleet and rider support for help in resolving the issue."
What kind of control does Waymo fleet and rider support have? How do they explain things to the car? Do they drive it remotely?
There will be waymo self driving cars in CA now.
Well, its a very small (very crowded) area around Google headquarters. They have been testing there for years, and the maps of those streets are probably the most up to date and highest resolution in the world.
There will be waymo self driving cars in CA now.
Well, its a very small (very crowded) area around Google headquarters. They have been testing there for years, and the maps of those streets are probably the most up to date and highest resolution in the world.
This one time I was driving home after working late at Adobe. I ran into a weird situation on highway 280: no other cars at all across 5 lanes of traffic. So I kept on driving like usual. When I looked down I saw with a fright an extraordinary sight: I was doing 30 in a 65. I stepped on the gas and started to regale with my bizarre tale of highway fail.
As long as it can move in a forward direction without crashing I am happy. Well ok, at better than normal human competence as well.There will be waymo self driving cars in CA now.
Well, its a very small (very crowded) area around Google headquarters. They have been testing there for years, and the maps of those streets are probably the most up to date and highest resolution in the world.
I think you mean" most highly optimized in the world", not "highest resolution in the world". When you're dealing with path calculations through 3D data in real time, you want highly acurate, highly efficient geometry. Having more resolution than you need is counter-productive
I know, and 880 is even faster. I am usually doing 80-95, but relative to other traffic and almost never looking at the speedometer. As the only car on the highway I was concerned that radar would accurately clock me and nobody else would be to blame. But fatigue and no references = way too slow.This one time I was driving home after working late at Adobe. I ran into a weird situation on highway 280: no other cars at all across 5 lanes of traffic. So I kept on driving like usual. When I looked down I saw with a fright an extraordinary sight: I was doing 30 in a 65. I stepped on the gas and started to regale with my bizarre tale of highway fail.
Dude 280 has an effective minimum of 80 MPH. You were WAY under.
And we'll be seeing waymo of these puns, as usual.There will be waymo self driving cars in CA now.
My encounters with the driver-monitored Waymo vans have always been benign.
They're easy to spot, and behave predictably, adhering to speed limits and [r]using their signals.[/r]
Which makes them less of a perceived danger than most human drivers, who can be erratic and inattentive.
The only explanation I can think of is that most people think turn signal laws are about giving fines rather than showing your intentions to the other drivers around you. The few people I do see use them turn them on as they begin their turn which entirely defeats the purpose.My encounters with the driver-monitored Waymo vans have always been benign.
They're easy to spot, and behave predictably, adhering to speed limits and [r]using their signals.[/r]
Which makes them less of a perceived danger than most human drivers, who can be erratic and inattentive.
THIS ^^
Can't wait for the day when most cars on the road use turn signals!!
I clearly remember 4-5 years ago driving on 94 through Michigan and seeing a local Sheriff's cruiser use turn signals EVERY TIME he changed lanes. Never before or after that time have I seen another 'law enforcement' agent use turn signals the way they're supposed to.
How could we expect them to enforce rules they have no idea about??
Actually I think it'd be great if people would in fact get fines for not signaling.The only explanation I can think of is that most people think turn signal laws are about giving fines rather than showing your intentions to the other drivers around you. The few people I do see use them turn them on as they begin their turn which entirely defeats the purpose.My encounters with the driver-monitored Waymo vans have always been benign.
They're easy to spot, and behave predictably, adhering to speed limits and [r]using their signals.[/r]
Which makes them less of a perceived danger than most human drivers, who can be erratic and inattentive.
THIS ^^
Can't wait for the day when most cars on the road use turn signals!!
I clearly remember 4-5 years ago driving on 94 through Michigan and seeing a local Sheriff's cruiser use turn signals EVERY TIME he changed lanes. Never before or after that time have I seen another 'law enforcement' agent use turn signals the way they're supposed to.
How could we expect them to enforce rules they have no idea about??
"If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed,"
Most emergency braking systems on the market today won't stop for stationary objects at freeway speeds.
"If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed,"
Meanwhile in another article....
Most emergency braking systems on the market today won't stop for stationary objects at freeway speeds.
I'm sure nothing could possibly go wrong.
The only explanation I can think of is that most people think turn signal laws are about giving fines rather than showing your intentions to the other drivers around you. The few people I do see use them turn them on as they begin their turn which entirely defeats the purpose.My encounters with the driver-monitored Waymo vans have always been benign.
They're easy to spot, and behave predictably, adhering to speed limits and [r]using their signals.[/r]
Which makes them less of a perceived danger than most human drivers, who can be erratic and inattentive.
THIS ^^
Can't wait for the day when most cars on the road use turn signals!!
I clearly remember 4-5 years ago driving on 94 through Michigan and seeing a local Sheriff's cruiser use turn signals EVERY TIME he changed lanes. Never before or after that time have I seen another 'law enforcement' agent use turn signals the way they're supposed to.
How could we expect them to enforce rules they have no idea about??
Can people not get tickets for these things where you live? Seems absurd tbh. They aren't super-strictly enforced where I live (Australia), but you can be booked for not signalling and you *will* be booked for driving without your headlights.Actually I think it'd be great if people would in fact get fines for not signaling.The only explanation I can think of is that most people think turn signal laws are about giving fines rather than showing your intentions to the other drivers around you. The few people I do see use them turn them on as they begin their turn which entirely defeats the purpose.My encounters with the driver-monitored Waymo vans have always been benign.
They're easy to spot, and behave predictably, adhering to speed limits and [r]using their signals.[/r]
Which makes them less of a perceived danger than most human drivers, who can be erratic and inattentive.
THIS ^^
Can't wait for the day when most cars on the road use turn signals!!
I clearly remember 4-5 years ago driving on 94 through Michigan and seeing a local Sheriff's cruiser use turn signals EVERY TIME he changed lanes. Never before or after that time have I seen another 'law enforcement' agent use turn signals the way they're supposed to.
How could we expect them to enforce rules they have no idea about??
..or for not turning on their headlights at night, especially on the highway, or for turning from the wrong lane, or for any other stupid shit they do in attempts to kill others or themselves on the roads. Couple of tickets might make them remember and pay attention and drive better.
The reality is the only tickets cops can be bothered with are speeding tickets, nevermind stuff that's really unsafe and dangerous.
They can be ticketed, but they probably won't be. Especially for not using turn signals (the police are as bad about not using them as everyone else). Having your headlights off at night is more likely to get you pulled over, but it's definitely not uncommon to see people without them on in well-lit areas.Can people not get tickets for these things where you live? Seems absurd tbh. They aren't super-strictly enforced where I live (Australia), but you can be booked for not signalling and you *will* be booked for driving without your headlights.
"If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed,"
Meanwhile in another article....
Most emergency braking systems on the market today won't stop for stationary objects at freeway speeds.
I'm sure nothing could possibly go wrong.
Waymo has full lidar array it can detect stationary objects. The hard part for OEM building AEBs is how to do with without $120,000 in lidar gear per car.
"If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed," Waymo continued in a press release. "For our cars, that means following well-established protocols, which include contacting Waymo fleet and rider support for help in resolving the issue."
What kind of control does Waymo fleet and rider support have? How do they explain things to the car? Do they drive it remotely?
we are getting closer. in 2015 I guessed 2025 for full market avalability, and that guess seems to be right on the money. they will test in those cities for a year or 2, than move to LA/SF. if no major issues 2025 seems right.
In a town not so very far from where this testing is being performed, use of turn signals is interpreted as weakness, to be punished by merciless hazing. Robots will find this very difficult to deal with.
In a town not so very far from where this testing is being performed, use of turn signals is interpreted as weakness, to be punished by merciless hazing. Robots will find this very difficult to deal with.
Huh? No they won't. They'll just drive around. They don't know or care whether you're "hazing" them. Perhaps for fun someone will've programmed them to post video of people behaving unusually to the internet, and you'll make a fool of yourself to other humans, but the car won't care.
Testing outside the USA is not only done under optimal conditions. For example, Oxbotica has cars out in narrow twisty lanes and congested town high streets in Oxfordshire.