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They've gone a big step up from previous offerings with 12 cameras, 8 sonars and radar.
https://www.tesla.com/videos/full-se...are-all-teslas
Love the way the bloke jumps out while his car goes to look for a space.
Looks amazing but I wonder what it does if it is unable to find a space.
I can't wait until driverless cars come around, if life goes to plan I reckon I might get about 20 years out it.
Brilliant stuff. It must be such a strange sensation to be in the drivers seat with the steering wheel in front of you but with something else doing the driving.
Have to say, I'd trust the car driving more than I would most people.
If true driverless cars do take off, will that mean that people will be happy to commute further distances?
Places like the valleys could see an increase in demand for housing.
I also think this will result in a lager drop in car ownership. Instead of buying a car and everything that's associated with it, we'll end up renting these as and when we need them, paying only for what we use. There'll be lots of different models, from single occupant to large vehicles. Buses and taxis would become a thing of the past.
What's the logic behind driverless cars meaning there will be less cars on the road. I've heard it quite a few times but not really sure why that is the case.
Doesn't a driverless car = the same as a driven car?
I guess the ultimate aim is for driverless cars to communicate with each other. "I'm turning left in 650m" and so on, so they can drive closer together. On the outside lane on the motorway, for example, there'd be no need for such big gaps as human reaction time is no longer a factor. It'll be like you're surrounded by beemer drivers.
I'd imagine that once all cars are like this then police chases would be a thing of the past. They'd just hack into the car carrying the criminals. Lock the doors and drive them serenely to the nearest police station.
It would all depend if there was an element of having to control the vehicle in certain circumstances. You can be guilty of being drunk in charge of a horse.
It could be seen that you were unfit to take control of the driver less car in an emergency. In that case driver less taxi service would need an attendant.
I'm not sure how many posting actually do much driving for a living, but I can assure you 'driver-less' cars will never be on UK roads, unless in special areas.
Pretty much every car journey each day - and there must be tens of millions in the UK alone - has at least one, probably many more, unique interactions with other vehicles, pedestrians, cyclists, animals, road conditions, weather conditions etc, etc, .
In every case the driver - or drivers - act spontaneously to a unique situation, something which a computer cannot possibly replicate.
Like Amazon's drone delivery service, it's all hot air..
"Google's self-driving cars, of which there are usually a dozen on the roads of California and Nevada at any given time, have now logged 700,000 miles of awesome accident-free autonomous driving."
http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/1...top-for-trains
You will have a long wait for Splotty.
In the story about the guy crashing it says "Drivers are instructed to keep their hands on the steering wheel in case of a software hiccup." which kinda defeats the object really but I assume you would have to be a licenced driver?
Tesla driver dies in first fatal autonomous car crash in US
https://www.newscientist.com/article...r-crash-in-us/