Despite promises of "soon," the infrastructure to support the driverless future isn't there yet.
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Discussion of V2V/X/I/whatever communications always makes me worry about security. Like, if a city's network here is compromised and malicious actors start broadcasting incorrect information, what measures would be in place to prevent collisions or traffic jams from occurring? Or even if the system has some sort of software bug. Obviously the car can just observe its surroundings as they do now to see what's actually physically happening, but it would be making at least some decisions based on this information it's receiving, or it wouldn't be useful to have it in the first place. I've never seen discussions about how it would be handled before, so my brain is just full of nightmare scenarios about it.
No, actually, for a vehicle to approach autonomy, it needs to anticipate what is going to happen, not from moment to moment and reacting in that fashion.For a vehicle to even approach autonomy, it has to understand the instant-to-instant changes in its immediate environment and what they mean. It has to know how to react. And it has to know the important nearby things that don’t change—like where houses and trees are.
If we're at the point where V2V is necessary, is it smart to keep on with individual transportation when most people travel in the same direction on the same road? You might as well use your phone to communicate your destination and it will automatically pick out a bus or a shared taxi for you.
Speaking as someone who hit a deer with his brand new car little more than a month ago (doing $5k in damge), I often wonder how certain unpredictable events can be dealt with. In my case the deer bounded out into the road from a dense forest right in front of my car.
To deal with an animal suddenly running into the road properly it would have to be detected first obviously. How difficult do dense trees make such a detection? I think it's easier to detect something in motion than to detect something that's standing still but could be capable of springing into motion like a deer.
Another factor would be that as long as there are traditional “dumb” cars out there AIs are at a disadvantage since they can’t predict human stupidity. Noticing cats in the road or a car door being opened is one thing but a person deciding to cut across several lanes of traffic to reach an off ramp in 10-15 seconds might be too sudden and unexpected for an AI. Or at least AIs in their current state
Another factor would be that as long as there are traditional “dumb” cars out there AIs are at a disadvantage since they can’t predict human stupidity. Noticing cats in the road or a car door being opened is one thing but a person deciding to cut across several lanes of traffic to reach an off ramp in 10-15 seconds might be too sudden and unexpected for an AI. Or at least AIs in their current state
Came here to say something similar. Creating an AI that gets good enough at predicting human unpredictability (i.e. stupidity) to trust it to have control over a vehicle on the roar shared by countless unpredictable human sources is a world different than making an AI assistant who knows to turn on your kitchen lights when you get home or remind you to pick up eggs at the supermarket.
I wonder if someone has plugged in enough data to make an educated guess on what percentage of vehicles would need to be fully AI controlled for them to be considered safe without a reasonable chance of an accident... Like, do we need 50% of the vehicles to be fully automated (removing half of the human factors and having enough of them on the road sharing data about likely reckless human drivers), or does it need to be higher, like 75% or 99% of all the vehicles?
While I agree 100% with everything the article says, I find it interesting that this is some sort of revelation for some people who seem to think we're just a few years away from having fully autonomous cars that can go nearly anywhere. Or even talking about a time when we could ban manual driving entirely. Maybe I'm just being curmudgeonly, but I don't think we're anywhere as close to commonplace self-driving cars (outside of perhaps interstates and other well-controlled areas) as is generally believed.
Despite the thousands of annual deaths, the human-driven car is really a bit of a marvel. Using two barely-spaced apart optical sensors located inside the car (thus partially obscured by car structure) with a relatively narrow field of view, humans average 100M miles per fatality.
Waymo is on its way there, but they still have to get to 10x their current mileage without anyone dying.
Humans rely almost entirely on vision to drive, and cameras already have way better resolution than human vision. So theoretically cameras with nothing external to the car are enough.
Another factor would be that as long as there are traditional “dumb” cars out there AIs are at a disadvantage since they can’t predict human stupidity. Noticing cats in the road or a car door being opened is one thing but a person deciding to cut across several lanes of traffic to reach an off ramp in 10-15 seconds might be too sudden and unexpected for an AI. Or at least AIs in their current state
Came here to say something similar. Creating an AI that gets good enough at predicting human unpredictability (i.e. stupidity) to trust it to have control over a vehicle on the roar shared by countless unpredictable human sources is a world different than making an AI assistant who knows to turn on your kitchen lights when you get home or remind you to pick up eggs at the supermarket. Smart cars, smart roads?
I wonder if someone has plugged in enough data to make an educated guess on what percentage of vehicles would need to be fully AI controlled for them to be considered safe without a reasonable chance of an accident... Like, do we need 50% of the vehicles to be fully automated (removing half of the human factors and having enough of them on the road sharing data about likely reckless human drivers), or does it need to be higher, like 75% or 99% of all the vehicles?
Even if all vehicles had it, the AI would still have to deal with children, pets, animals and all kinds of other random unpredictable hazards.
Humans rely almost entirely on vision to drive, and cameras already have way better resolution than human vision. So theoretically cameras with nothing external to the car are enough.
Cameras work only if they can see. Higher resolution doesn't do jack shit, if the camera's vision is obscured by e.g. heavy snowfall.
Humans rely almost entirely on vision to drive, and cameras already have way better resolution than human vision. So theoretically cameras with nothing external to the car are enough.
Cameras work only if they can see. Higher resolution doesn't do jack shit, if the camera's vision is obscured by e.g. heavy snowfall.
Global warming will take care of that.Me, I'll be surprised if fully autonomous cars can handle a real, proper Finnish winter in anything less than 20 years.
But the car also needs to know the local speed limit and whether it should adjust for the weather, which it also needs to understand. Some of that information may come from remote resources, like highly localized weather information and a machine-understandable municipal map (which, by the way, will probably look like an XML file and not what you’d understand a map to look like). Because high bandwidth and low latency are going to be key, that’s a job for a 5G network.
If there are other cars around when your car takes action to avoid the cat, your car should be able to communicate with them, too, so they can understand instantly whether they need to brake, swerve, or accelerate; otherwise, your car might hit them instead of the cat. To make that work, you need vehicle-to-vehicle communication (called V2V), which will require an interoperable industry standard that doesn’t yet exist.
I have a couple of kids of learner’s permit age, and it’s my fatherly duty to give them some driving tips so they won’t be a menace to themselves and to everyone else.
Another factor would be that as long as there are traditional “dumb” cars out there AIs are at a disadvantage since they can’t predict human stupidity.
It does not need it. It could benefit from it. In the ways the following examples show. If that infrastructure was required for self-driving vehicles to function, we would not have them driving around at present.As smart as a car may be, it needs an equally smart (if not smarter) infrastructure around it.