03-22-2018, 10:30 AM | #155 |
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Well, good for you, but for situations that require a human to repeatedly perform a certain task, the number of errors is vastly greater than a machine.
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03-22-2018, 10:32 AM | #156 | |
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03-22-2018, 10:44 AM | #157 | |
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Uber is doing this milliondollar research (probably 100+million dollar research, as they ordered 24000 XC90's at volvo alone, not counting the tech, personell and companies they bought to develop this tech...) not for using autonomous driving in Arizona, and not even for the US alone. They want to become world leader in autonomous driving transport. And in a lot of places a pedestrian has more legal protection. (where I live, when hitting a pedestrian or cyclist while driving a car is at the start always 50% your fault as pedestrians and cyclists are considered weak traffic participants and motorists arent. (the difference between a motorist and a cyclist or pedestrian is also that the motorist is a schooled traffic participant), so that gives extra responsibility to motorists. Who's 'truely' at fault is only important for this incident, but not for the globalized process of implementing autonomous driving imho. Also who is really/truely at fault is not clear to me. I mean the car WAS speeding from what I understand of all the info around this. (how that car could be speeding is beyond my comprehention, its dead easy to program a car to follow the maximum speed limit within 0,1mph based on gps data alone, so if that car was speeding, it would be a deliberate programming decision) And the pedestrian was hit on the front right of the car, so she was almost on the other side of the road. Depending on how fast she was moving with her bike and stuff, so how long she had been crossing that road, it could be the case that if the car wasnt speeding, she would have reached the other side of the road in time. You can wonder if someone can estimate or calculate a crossing of a road on that level of accuracy, but thats not the point here if the issue is who's 'truely' at fault. If there's a lawsuit, there will be experts that will be pointing out this issue. What also is important is that the car didnt stop where experts say that it should have stopped based on the sensorarrays and hardware that the car is equipped with. That would mean its likely a software error. Software is very much an intellectual product, so its very difficult to measure software performance as in this case software has to interpret something. If hardware cant detect something, its due to physical parameters, like the range has to be extended or light sensitivity has to be increased to a certain lumen or other physical parameter. But interpretation performance is a more subjective scale.
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03-22-2018, 10:52 AM | #158 | |
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I don't think anyone would define driving as "repeatedly performing a task." Too many variables. In any case- It sounds like you're backing away from humans being bad "at pretty much everything." Thanks for agreeing.
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03-22-2018, 10:54 AM | #159 | |
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03-22-2018, 11:04 AM | #160 | |
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What's interesting in the quotes you've provided from manufacturers (for some reason I can't add them to my post) is that manufacturers see the trap as well. Autonomy will never be able to prevent all accidents, but in the future when we have true autonomy when there are accidents or collisions automobile manufacturers rather than drivers will be on the chopping block. So manufacturers will want to push the myth that their cars are 100% accident free. If an accident occurs, it's an Act of God.
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03-22-2018, 11:13 AM | #161 |
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03-22-2018, 11:17 AM | #162 | |
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I believe both officers have a better idea of the accident scene than you or I. You continue to fail to acknowledge victim dressing in dark clothes hide her even more. There will never be a trial. Officials will not charge and homeless victim has no one that can claim a loss for civil court, so your statements are false speculation. Last edited by IK6SPEED; 03-22-2018 at 12:00 PM.. |
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03-22-2018, 11:30 AM | #163 |
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I just watched the video. The car's automation was primarily at fault; the backup driver, secondarily at fault. The pedestrian had a bike and was in the street for many many seconds before the impact. There were no obstacles, no visual blockages, no nothing. A human with a bike crossing a road.
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03-22-2018, 11:30 AM | #164 |
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03-22-2018, 11:39 AM | #165 | |
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03-22-2018, 11:41 AM | #166 | |
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The Phoenix New Times States there is a 45 MPH about 1/4 mile away on Mills Avenue. Personally, I do not see how a Dual Lane limited Access road such as that with a median is 35 MPH either. Considering the Phoenix New Times actually went out and found this speed limit sign and states as such, perhaps a reduced speed limit sign to 35 MPH is missing, if that is indeed the Speed Limit. The car most likely read the last speed limit sign on the road (45 MPH) and was driving at 38 MPH accordingly or 2) was slowing from a 45 to MPH zone to 35. In most States, 5 MPH isn’t chargeable to err on the side of caution. But regardless, 3 MPH would have made no difference here. |
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03-22-2018, 11:46 AM | #167 | |
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1) cross in crosswalks 2) don’t expect a car to stop for you as you don’t have the right a way. 3) wear bright clothing at night. Reflective vest as well 4) have a light and reflector on your bike as required by law at night. |
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03-22-2018, 11:49 AM | #168 |
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Irrespective of who is at fault here, I think (hope) we can agree that to be considered ready for mass consumption, the technology should mature to a point where an incident like this can be avoided. As noted by the gentleman from EEVblog, the sensors that the vehicle is equipped with should theoretically have been able to detect the pedestrian even though she was not visible to the human eye until an instant before the collision. It is an unfortunate situation, but it will be studied and result in a safer product.
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03-22-2018, 11:49 AM | #169 | |
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Of course, the kid would most likely have been in residential area at 10PM as well |
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03-22-2018, 11:56 AM | #170 | ||
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With that said, I think we would all agree that if the safety standard is equal to that of a human driver, it needs to be set to an attentive human driver following traffic laws, not the average driver. Even then, to your point, that isn't much of a "selling point" to the public. Most logically expect an improvement in safety based on hundreds of billions in R&D and infrastructure needs to support safe autonomous driving, as well as societal changes that will result from autonomous vehicles. There needs to be a reason to support change and human nature is to avoid loss of control unless it is pretty clearly safer.
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03-22-2018, 11:56 AM | #171 | |
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Regardless, without the video, what the driver was doing would be unknown. In a normal situation, she could just claim she didn’t see victim as victim was dressed in dark clothes and darted out in front of her in an area one would not expect a pedestrian. |
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03-22-2018, 12:03 PM | #172 | |
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The primary fault was the victims violation of the Arizona law. |
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03-22-2018, 12:04 PM | #173 | ||
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03-22-2018, 12:05 PM | #174 | ||
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03-22-2018, 12:11 PM | #175 |
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That is a point that the fanboys are willfully ignoring. THE major part of agreeing to let automated vehicles test on public roads was that there be a human driver in place to intercede in case the system fails. Now we have a fatal example of the system failing and we find that the human was not paying attention. The driver admitted that they were looking down; and hitting the pedestrian was what brought the entire situation to attention. Why wouldn't the driver be held responsible for not paying attention? That was the agreement. A pedestrian jaywalking and/or not dressing like somebody wishes they had, doesn't absolve a driver from blame when their vehicle kills someone.
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03-22-2018, 12:20 PM | #176 | ||
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I suspect they should be able to look at the diagnostic screens as human driver is only there for backup in autonomous mode. Reread the statue you posted. Then read statements from investigators and Sherrif. The driver could not have prevented. Quote:
Please research what Arizona’s law permitting Driverless Car testing actually states, especially the Governor’s Executive Order on March 1st of this year. The way it is written, car is driver, so the Company would need to be charged as they were/are driver. Also, Human has to give car time to see how it is reacting. Otherwise, no point to tests. Human is backup. Last edited by IK6SPEED; 03-22-2018 at 12:29 PM.. |
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