โFeb-08-2021 02:53 PM
โFeb-10-2021 05:51 AM
valhalla360 wrote:When the truck driver makes a mistake it is an accident and liability insurance takes over. But when the computer makes an actual, provable, decision to run over a 65 year old instead of a 10 year old because the programming says the life of a young child is more valuable than that of a senior citizen is that still an accident? I don't know, but I do know it will kind of suck to be at the bottom of the decision tree.wapiticountry wrote:
One of the biggest hurdles to automated driving are ethical decision trees. What will the programming be when the vehicle is faced with multiple bad outcomes? Will it be programmed to protect the vehicle at all costs, keeping it out of the ditch and running into a child instead? Will it be programmed to go the other way and veer into the ditch and miss what it thought was a child, but was actually a bag of trash in the middle of the highway possibly careening out of control and crashing into homes, businesses etc? There is a lot of information available on this problem and it is scary to realize there may actually be computer code that makes the decision to deliberately kill you in an effort to protect someone else.
And what happens when a truck driver makes the same mistakes?
Unless Asimov's 3 laws blows up and the trucks decide we are better off locked in our houses, it's not really a big worry.
โFeb-10-2021 03:34 AM
โFeb-10-2021 03:31 AM
time2roll wrote:
With all the cameras will the automated trucks be able to submit people driving illegal or unsafe manor?
Like if they cut off the truck slam on the brakes and subsequently merge off the interstate. All in a day's drive here in the city.
โFeb-10-2021 03:29 AM
pnichols wrote:
Scarry is right!!
Imagine how full of integrated circuits, complex mechanical components, and communications equipment (for Internet and/or satellite connectivity) ... those trucks will be full of. All of tlhat can, and will, fail here and there over time.
I hope that transportation regulations require those trucks to be clearly marked - including distinctive night lighting - so that the rest of us can stay well away from them on the highways.
P.S. Maybe I spent too many years working in the integrated circuits industry and too many hours watching those cable reality shows about big rig accident disasters in Alaska - most which have nothing to do with human error - but can be blamed on 80,000 lbs. of freight inter-acting with the laws of physics.
โFeb-10-2021 03:28 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:
A trucker drives his rig to either a shipping point or the delivery point. He has to stop at the security gate out front for farther information or get out of his rig, once he is in the yard, and find a receiving/shipping person and get a dock number and a load/unload time. Sometimes the driver is told to leave and come back at another time.
I doubt the warehouse/customer is going to spend millions of bucks setting up a system to handle drivers free trucks.
I can see how a intermodel shipping yard like UP or BNSF could use driver less pony trucks to move containers around in those huge yards.
โFeb-10-2021 03:21 AM
wapiticountry wrote:
One of the biggest hurdles to automated driving are ethical decision trees. What will the programming be when the vehicle is faced with multiple bad outcomes? Will it be programmed to protect the vehicle at all costs, keeping it out of the ditch and running into a child instead? Will it be programmed to go the other way and veer into the ditch and miss what it thought was a child, but was actually a bag of trash in the middle of the highway possibly careening out of control and crashing into homes, businesses etc? There is a lot of information available on this problem and it is scary to realize there may actually be computer code that makes the decision to deliberately kill you in an effort to protect someone else.
โFeb-09-2021 07:22 PM
โFeb-09-2021 06:41 PM
โFeb-09-2021 06:00 PM
wapiticountry wrote:
One of the biggest hurdles to automated driving are ethical decision trees. What will the programming be when the vehicle is faced with multiple bad outcomes? Will it be programmed to protect the vehicle at all costs, keeping it out of the ditch and running into a child instead? Will it be programmed to go the other way and veer into the ditch and miss what it thought was a child, but was actually a bag of trash in the middle of the highway possibly careening out of control and crashing into homes, businesses etc? There is a lot of information available on this problem and it is scary to realize there may actually be computer code that makes the decision to deliberately kill you in an effort to protect someone else.
โFeb-09-2021 11:27 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:
I doubt the warehouse/customer is going to spend millions of bucks setting up a system to handle drivers free trucks.
โFeb-09-2021 10:01 AM
โFeb-09-2021 09:21 AM
Lynnmor wrote:The heck with a flying car, I want the Jetpack we were promised decades ago.Bionic Man wrote:
Welcome to the future.....
Where's my dang flying car??? One thing at a time please, with my flying car, I can stay well above the debris field caused by the railroads without tracks.
Flying Cars
โFeb-09-2021 09:20 AM
โFeb-09-2021 09:04 AM
Bionic Man wrote:
Welcome to the future.....
โFeb-09-2021 08:18 AM