Forum Discussion
- MEXICOWANDERERExplorerSelf funeral. Backhoe digs hole, rolls me in, fills hole then plays hymns
- JesLookinExplorerSince this video is from Jun 6, 2016, I don't see this new technology exactly being right around the corner.
- Yosemite_Sam1Explorer
philh wrote:
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
It's already available on Tesla and other cars. It could be auto-pilot or driver assist. The auto-pilot can be totally driverless except for there is no regulations yet on the matter and car manufacturers are being cautious with the liability issues.
This is useful to us who drive long distance. And for me because I want to go sightseeing which is not possible when my full attention is into driving.
Actually no, there are no self driving cars.
There are people in the industry that think it's a short period of time, like a couple of years away. Me personally, I think it's over a decade or more away.
This is a young guy and must be faking it -- driving 17 hours and sleeping on the wheel.
17 Hours Self-Driving Tesla
Or, I must be delusional when my daughter summoned her Tesla X from parking lot to where she was standing infront of the theater.
What else don't you believe? - Mickeyfan0805Explorer
maillemaker wrote:
You will know the turning point has been reached when they start altering road construction and signage to accommodate autonomous vehicles. When they start embedding things in the roadway, or special stripes on the roadway, or special visual or RF beacons on the roadside, that serve no purpose but to help AI vehicles navigate the roads, then you will know that the turning point has come.
Today, everything you see on and around roadways is to enable human drivers. Soon, there will be things there to enable AI drivers.
I think this is a big factor that remains unknown in all of this. Many adaptive/assist systems currently exist, but they are far from bulletproof, and many rely on systems that can become readily problematic in real world conditions. Five minutes on an icy, salt covered, road and my F150 spits out a warning that the pre-collision system can't operate. The sensors become covered in sludge and can't see anything.
I'm sure there can and will be solutions to all of this, but I think some of it is likely to boil down to infrastructure that is not yet in place. We will continue to move in that direction, but there are still some major hurdles to overcome. - maillemakerExplorerYou will know the turning point has been reached when they start altering road construction and signage to accommodate autonomous vehicles. When they start embedding things in the roadway, or special stripes on the roadway, or special visual or RF beacons on the roadside, that serve no purpose but to help AI vehicles navigate the roads, then you will know that the turning point has come.
Today, everything you see on and around roadways is to enable human drivers. Soon, there will be things there to enable AI drivers. - mich800Explorer
philh wrote:
Yosemite Sam1 wrote:
It's already available on Tesla and other cars. It could be auto-pilot or driver assist. The auto-pilot can be totally driverless except for there is no regulations yet on the matter and car manufacturers are being cautious with the liability issues.
This is useful to us who drive long distance. And for me because I want to go sightseeing which is not possible when my full attention is into driving.
Actually no, there are no self driving cars.
There are people in the industry that think it's a short period of time, like a couple of years away. Me personally, I think it's over a decade or more away.
The Tesla is self driving. You just need to ignore the crashes and the actual disclaimer in the manual it is not. :B - valhalla360NavigatorTeslas are not self driving.
As with a lot of new cars, some driving functions can be taken over by the car but self driving isn't available on any production car.
It will come eventually but it's more likely to continue to be an evolutionary process where the easiest functions are incorporated first with the driver there to handle the more difficult functions.
- Adaptive Cruise Control
- Lane Assist
- Curve Speed Limiter
- Traction Control
- Low Speed Self Parking
These are all functions that the car can do now.
I could see in 10yrs they reach the point where it becomes an honest question if they should skip the steering wheel...really, they could have a removable stalk now where you put a tablet and use that to control the car in a kind of limp mode if you really need direct control.
PS: As much fun as a sci-fi world with self driving cars sounds, it's a huge potential money saver. You can safely draft 10ft behind another car, crashes (and associated repair bills and injury bills) will drop like a rock. Lots of things we don't even know yet. midnightsadie wrote:
The idea might be for safer driving to reduce the 30,000+ deaths from vehicles every year in the US.
one of the top ten most stupid things they,ve come up with.
Worldwide almost 1.25 million die each year in a car wreck. And to think we are worried about a new virus....- azrvingExplorerA thousand dollars? Its easy to spend $200 at the grocery store
- midnightsadieExplorer IIone of the top ten most stupid things they,ve come up with.
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