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by carapace
2249 days ago
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> The whole point is to build a machine that can go the speed limit. Sure, eventually, when the machines and sensors and algorithms and so on are good enough. When the infrastructure can be rebuilt to accommodate them (e.g. Boring company tunnels for auto-trucking, sensors and comms in the roads and signage, &c.) The rush to market is the whole problem. Not the ultimate concept. I want a machine that can take my mother to her doctors appointment now that the dementia has gotten to the point where she shouldn't take the bus on her own anymore. Let the experiences with the toy cars guide the incremental graceful adoption of faster machines. > most of the real issues will show up when you go 45 in the real world. Right! So don't go 45. |
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“ I want a machine that can take my mother to her doctors appointment now that the dementia has gotten to the point where she shouldn't take the bus on her own anymore.“
This meanwhile is already happening[1]. We’ve been testing on toy cars for 15 years. We’re not ready to remove the safety driver but we are ready for the road.
[1]https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/10/16874410/voyage-self-driv...