'How Close Are We to Self-Driving Cars, Really?' (slate.com) 370
Chris Urmson helped pioneer self-driving car technology at Google before founding Aurora (which sells self-driving car software to automakers, and this week announced a new partnership with Chrysler and a new round of investment by Hyundai). In a new interview, Urmson "says he expects that in about five to 10 years, Americans will start seeing robots cruising down the road in a handful of cities and towns across the country," reports Slate.
"It will be about 30 to 50 years, he says, until they're everywhere. " I think within the next five years we'll see small-scale deployment. That'll be a few hundred or a few thousand vehicles. Really this is the, it's Silicon Valley speak, this is the zero-to-one moment of proving that the technology actually works, understanding how customers want to use it, convincing ourselves that -- and when I say ourselves, I mean as a society -- that these are sufficiently safe, that we trust them on the roadway, and that's that first phase... [W]hen the technology actually starts to become scaled, then we can ask the question what have we learned, what are the ways that we can make this a little bit safer, a little bit incrementally more efficient, and that's what I think local and state governments and federal government would invest in infrastructure...
The statistic I heard was 30 percent of traffic in San Francisco is people looking for parking. I heard a more alarming statistic that was 80 percent of traffic in Paris was people looking for parking. So imagine you have automated vehicles that take you to a location, you hop out, then it just drives down the block and picks up the next person and takes them where they're going. Suddenly, you've alleviated a massive chunk of the congestion in a city. Similarly, if you look at the floor plan of a city today, somewhere between 30â"40 percent of cities is dedicated to parking and roads. And so again, if you have automated vehicles operating as a transportation service, whether it's private or public transportation networks in the city, you don't need that real estate to be dedicated for parking. That real estate now can be recaptured, and it can be used for park space, it can be used for residential space, yeah, it can be used for mixed residential-commercial office space... Certainly for urban centers, I think it's much more likely that this technology is a shared platform that people get on and get off. It's an even more convenient version of a bus or of a taxi service.
"It will be about 30 to 50 years, he says, until they're everywhere. " I think within the next five years we'll see small-scale deployment. That'll be a few hundred or a few thousand vehicles. Really this is the, it's Silicon Valley speak, this is the zero-to-one moment of proving that the technology actually works, understanding how customers want to use it, convincing ourselves that -- and when I say ourselves, I mean as a society -- that these are sufficiently safe, that we trust them on the roadway, and that's that first phase... [W]hen the technology actually starts to become scaled, then we can ask the question what have we learned, what are the ways that we can make this a little bit safer, a little bit incrementally more efficient, and that's what I think local and state governments and federal government would invest in infrastructure...
The statistic I heard was 30 percent of traffic in San Francisco is people looking for parking. I heard a more alarming statistic that was 80 percent of traffic in Paris was people looking for parking. So imagine you have automated vehicles that take you to a location, you hop out, then it just drives down the block and picks up the next person and takes them where they're going. Suddenly, you've alleviated a massive chunk of the congestion in a city. Similarly, if you look at the floor plan of a city today, somewhere between 30â"40 percent of cities is dedicated to parking and roads. And so again, if you have automated vehicles operating as a transportation service, whether it's private or public transportation networks in the city, you don't need that real estate to be dedicated for parking. That real estate now can be recaptured, and it can be used for park space, it can be used for residential space, yeah, it can be used for mixed residential-commercial office space... Certainly for urban centers, I think it's much more likely that this technology is a shared platform that people get on and get off. It's an even more convenient version of a bus or of a taxi service.
Prediction timelines (Score:4, Interesting)
Be wary of prediction timelines which extend beyond the life span of the predictor.
Re:Prediction timelines (Score:4, Interesting)
Be wary of prediction timelines which extend beyond the life span of the predictor.
Said George Orwell?
Re:Prediction timelines (Score:5, Funny)
Well, then you do the only sensible thing left.
Toss the cheeky bugger off a cliff and test his theory. In the name of science, of course.
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How do we know?
Go stand by some stairs.
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If for example the people in the car say "STOP" the car should stop.
Stop! In the name of love. Before you break my heart
Think it o-o-ver...
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Stop! In the name of love. Before you break my heart
Or from Fleetwood Mac: "Go your own way." Car: "Thank you, Dave, selecting scenic route".
But a more common issue: "Jimmy, stop hitting your sister". "Why aren't we moving anymore?".
Or Maybe... (Score:2)
Perhaps in the future, as energy becomes scarce, driving will once again be seen as a rare privilege to be enjoyed, rather than a chore to be delegated.
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Perhaps in the future, as energy becomes scarce, driving will once again be seen as a rare privilege to be enjoyed, rather than a chore to be delegated.
Or it will be a crime like in the lyrics to Red Barchetta.
I'm happy to live in a time when I can enjoy driving. Thankfully it will probably not be outlawed in my lifetime.
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Perhaps in the future, as energy becomes scarce, driving will once again be seen as a rare privilege to be enjoyed, rather than a chore to be delegated.
When this happens then it will be a privilege enjoyed only by the wealthy and elite. Those that rule your society. The most likely the time the rest of you will be in a car is when you are being transported to a local re-education camp or your execution. So, perhaps its best that it never becomes a rare privilege.
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Energy will never become scarce. It's written right in the laws of thermodynamics, you can not create nor destroy energy. No matter how hard politicians and environmentalists try to brainwash people into thinking energy is going to run out, we will never run out of energy.
Perhaps in the future, humanity's ability to harness energy for its own use becomes scarce, you pedantic sock.
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"You can never have too much power." - Max Shrek
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Are you the same guy who after looking at NYC urban traffic in 1850 predicted that by the year 1900 the city would completely drown in horse manure?
"It will take another 50 years before ... (Score:5, Insightful)
... humans can fly."
Wilbur Wright, 2 years before his first flight.
It takes 5 minutes in a festive robot car to convince anyone that the era of driving yourself is over.
Point in case/anecdotal example: Two weeks ago I had a short conversation with a Spanish woman using only Googles instant translation feature on my cheap Moto G7. I don't speak Spanish and she needed help getting the next train to the airport.
A lady following this was utterly amazed. "I want that app too!" she said. "You already have it on your Smartphone, it's Google."
This would've been science fiction just a handful of years ago. In a year this will be normal. Same with robot cars. Once they can cruise the Autobahn safer than humans - something that is Just a handful of years away and mostly due to missing infrastructure today - the manually controlled car will quickly become extinct.
It took new York a year to transition from coaches to cars entirely. As soon as people learn they can sleep write to their car is driving them, they will do it. And that's gonna happen sooner than this guy thinks.
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It does seem like if he thinks it is that far out he is holding it wrong. I am sure that there are places where the rules of the road are too ambiguous to automate driving for along time (southeast Asia comes to mind), but other places the problem is “easy” to solve.
I am curious when a self-driving car will know to interpret facial expressions and gesticulations, or to honk the horn at a pedestrian or manual car.
Re:"It will take another 50 years before ... (Score:4, Informative)
Wright quote is suspecious but interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
Because the Wrights were very aware that Otto Linenthal was making controlled flights 20 years earlier. They built one of his gliders. Then reworked the design and added an engine. So reference please.
What is really interesting about flight is that despite Linenthal 's success he got very little interest. And then once the Wrights built a practical aeroplane about 2 years from the first powered flight, nobody was interested. The Wrights could not get the army to see the value of being able to spot an enemy. One year (1906?) the Wrights gave up entirely, no flying was done.
Then about 1908 they went to Paris, and the world went plane mad. By the beginning of WW1 planes were very competent. But still not airliners.
For self driving cars, the big question is how autonomous. Self driving down the freeway is almost there. Self driving with supervision a few years away. And the uptake will be very quick.
Completely autonomous, nobody in the car at all, that might take 10 years to mature.
But as Bill Gates said, we tend to overestimate what can be achieved in one year, but underestimate what can be achieved in ten years.
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early planes did have very little value, especially in war. I am not surprised the army wasn't interested in a contraption that had a relatively unreliable history and up until 2 years ago the longest flight was 60 seconds.
They were using spotting balloons before they were using planes. Then planes came along, and shot down the spotting balloons. Any military man who discounted the value of the aeroplane in warfare wound up looking like an utter dildo, whatever his excuse was.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"It will take another 50 years before ... (Score:5, Insightful)
... humans can fly."
Wilbur Wright, 2 years before his first flight.
You're cherry picking here. There were more people who said "humans won't fly soon" and were right than people who said "humans won't fly soon" and were wrong.
It takes 5 minutes in a festive robot car to convince anyone that the era of driving yourself is over.
Yeah, right! We've heard experts sing the "it's five years out" song since 2012. The problem with all of the predictions is that they are using advancements in hardware as an indication of how close we are to self-driving.
Unfortunately hardware is not the limiting factor, so it doesn't matter how good the sensors are if we don't have software anywhere close to the level of autonomy that humans have.
Over twenty years ago the state of the art in self-driving cars was "human intervention needed 9% of the time." Now, using around 10000x more resources, it is "human intervention needed 8% of the time". That isn't progress.
Re:"It will take another 50 years before ... (Score:5, Insightful)
We've heard experts sing the "it's five years out"
Which experts?
Sergey Brin. [computerworld.com] That is one of many many articles from 2012 that makes the same insane predictions we are seeing today.
If you exclude bullshitters like Elon Musk and just look at the people who are actually doing it, then it's clearly not that far off.
Google/Waymo already has a robotaxi service running.
I am looking at the people who are actually doing it, and their best efforts, in perfect road conditions, with near-perfect visibility, on a known-in-advance course that was practised on is still an order of magnitude (or two) off from the average driver, in average conditions, with average visibility.
Since 1995, we upped the resources for self-driving by around 1000x, and got a single-digit percentage increase. That isn't progress.
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Sergey Brin most assuredly is not an expert. He has a lot of money earned by being early-on-the-scene and working diligently in a non-related field, but that doesn't make him an expert.
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Planned routes in orderly suburbs are a good place to start with this tech, and a viable initial market for robot taxi and delivery services. It will gradually expand from there.
I would expect a full changeover to take about a generation, during which time there will be a steady shriveling of car culture until a tipping point is reached where manual driving is considered an old-school specialty. That will be the point when in the absence of manual drivers the road signs will come down and all the automated
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They don't have to be good. They only have to not crash. Hopefully remote driver systems [wired.com] can bridge the gap and we can start seeing these deployed soon.
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We've heard experts sing the "it's five years out"
Which experts? If you exclude bullshitters like Elon Musk and just look at the people who are actually doing it, then it's clearly not that far off.
Google/Waymo already has a robotaxi service running. Limited area, but it's expanding.
Do they have a plan for the inevitable things people are going to do in these cars? Perhaps I am too squeamish, but some people like to make a real mess. Perhaps the interiors might be made of a hard plastic that can be pressure washed out - many police cars have back seats like this, because some of their "clients" seem to like defiling the back seats.
A lot of people seem to dismiss this, but present day taxi's have this problem, and it will only be worse with unmanned ones.
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I'm guessing the solution will be CCTV and hefty fines. Throw in some facial recognition.
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I'm guessing the solution will be CCTV and hefty fines. Throw in some facial recognition.
The question of course, is how do you tell a person is urinating? Uber has cleaning fees, but a lot of customers who have been charged, complain that it was a mess when they got in.
Me? I'll just keep my own vehicle. Only one allowed to pee in it is me.......
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Sorry I'm confused what app you used to translate voice to voice? I know google can recognise my voice, pretty darn well, but I don't know about automating the translation into another language and then saying it out loud?
I'm sure it could be done? Via the web interface on translate.google.com - but for the correct flow of a conversation, how does this all work?
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I found the URL he's talking about and I was surprised, it is relatively easy to use on the web and probably engage in a very basic conversation with gesturing, fairly quickly - it's overall impressive (all things considered)
I suspect it would be enough for an emergency like "help, lost keys hotel room"
Etc.
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Sorry I'm confused what app you used to translate voice to voice? I know google can recognise my voice, pretty darn well, but I don't know about automating the translation into another language and then saying it out loud?
Not sure if the GP's solution is automated but in Google translate all you have to do is press a single button and it will speak the translation out loud.
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... humans can fly."
Wilbur Wright, 2 years before his first flight.
"We'll have fully self-driving cars next year."
-- Elon Musk, 10+ years ago.
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After 5 minutes in an autodriving Tesla, I'm convinced that the era of driving myself is nowhere near over. The car made me extremely nervous. It keep moving from one side of the lane to the other, making me feel like it was about the change lanes. The drivers around me must have been concerned as well because it looked like the car was about to slowly move into their lane.
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... humans can fly."
Wilbur Wright, 2 years before his first flight.
It takes 5 minutes in a festive robot car to convince anyone that the era of driving yourself is over.
Then why when we have buses, do we still have cars?
A lady following this was utterly amazed. "I want that app too!" she said. "You already have it on your Smartphone, it's Google."
This would've been science fiction just a handful of years ago. In a year this will be normal.
Or you could just learn Spanish, French, whatever. I've used those translators. They are okay in a pinch, But a nuisance if trying to have a real coversation. If you are using say, English to Russian and back, it gets pretty strange.
Anyhow if the SD cars are like Google translate, I'm not interested other than a similar emergency use.
Perhaps some people's lifestyle is very simple. I have various cases with equipment that I keep in my vehicle. I have t
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Once they can cruise the Autobahn safer than humans - something that is Just a handful of years away and mostly due to missing infrastructure today - the manually controlled car will quickly become extinct.
You were doing well until you got to here.
First, AVs which depend on smart roads are a total non-starter. There's nothing wrong with adding sensors and merging the intelligence from those sensors, but you cannot rely on them. They could fail, they could be malicious... you can only use them as advisory input.
Second, the Autobahn is not the standard. Freeway driving is easy compared to local driving. Correctly, your statement would have begun "Once the AVs can handle puttering around local streets with dogs
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People want CONTROL, not the equivalent of a rollercoaster but on the highway. With so-called 'autonomous cars' you have ZERO control, and more to the point: abject terror when it fucks up, because you have NO CONTROL. This is why, among a mountain of reasons, these will never, ever catch on.
Are you sure? People ride in taxis, buses, trains and planes all the time, despite having no control over them.
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The problem is the safety of anything animate or inanimate, in the vehicle and, more important, in the vicinity of the vehicle.
That's not the problem at all. They are already comparatively safe. The big, unanswered question is "how safe do they need to be?"
Human drivers are incredibly unsafe at times. Drunk driving, driving and texting, road rage, excessive speeding, unsafe following and passing, failure to yield, etc., etc. Self driving cars are already more safe than the least safe drivers.
The societal and philosophical question thus is "how safe as compared to the average driver should they be?"
Is "at least they won't do 30+ ove
Imagine... (Score:5, Insightful)
So imagine you have automated vehicles that take you to a location, you hop out, then it just drives down the block and picks up the next person and takes them where they're going
If we ever invent this, we might call it "taxi". It would be a huge improvement for traffic congestion. Can you imagine...
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If we ever invent this, we might call it "taxi". It would be a huge improvement for traffic congestion. Can you imagine...
Statistically nobody would own a car if it were cheaper to get picked up in a Taxi, and due to economies of scale (fleet ownership vs. private vehicle ownership) it would be, except for the need to pay drivers. We could stagger work start times and let passengers split fares when carpooling to permit commuters to get to work, although if we're designing transport systems for commuters, trains make more sense.
By the same token, buses only exist because we need drivers to operate automobiles. If you have self
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And when I am done whatever I was doing there, I'll need to wait 30 minutes for my car to show up. Thanks, but no. I'd rather sit in my car (AC/heat and music on) while it circles around looking for a close parking spot and then be able to go home immediately than wait outside for it to arrive.
The insurance companies will demand it (Score:4, Insightful)
After that will come laws mandating that humans cannot drive in densely populated areas, or at speed, or under ever-more restrictive conditions. Until the opportunity and cost simply pushes everyone to being a passenger. Although since the safety angle of AVs will be well-known and widespread, there would be little desire from ordinary people (leaving aside the petrol-heads and those irrationally opposed to using seat-belts) to ever travel in a manually operated vehicle.
It will be commercial pressures, not technological ones, that will drive the change. And once it starts, it will move very quickly.
Re:The insurance companies will demand it (Score:5, Insightful)
"As soon as there is clear, actuarial, evidence that self-driving cars are safer than manually driven ones, the cost of insurance (and the restrictions placed on it) for people to drive will start to rise."
Thank you for demonstrating that you have absolutely zero understanding of how insurance works.
No, that is a perfect description of how insurance works. People who don't drive because cars are automated will have higher insurance costs because they have less experience driving and would be prone to more accidents.
Remember, insurance, any insurance, is not there to help you. It's to make money for the company and they will do whatever they can to either not pay claims or raise rates to make sure they hit their financial numbers. People who lack experience driving will have higher insurance rates in the same manner as new drivers.
I heard a more alarming statistic that was 80 perc (Score:4, Informative)
It actually 67.8%. The same amount of statistics is made up, by pure coincidence.
Once we understand how the brain actually works, (Score:2)
then we'll be almost there.
This is a promise.
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Once we understand how a bird wing works, then we'll be almost ready to make an airplane. This is a promise.
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Yes, that is exactly what happened.
Re:Once we understand how the brain actually works (Score:4, Informative)
Except that it isn't. People have used bird wings as early inspiration, but the further development into finding the best shapes was done without looking back at birds. Airplanes don't use their wings to generate thrust, and they have completely different construction. Despite not looking like a bird, a fully loaded 747 can carry a lot more coconuts than a swallow.
Similarly, early neural nets were inspired by brain cells, but most of the development is just done directly on artificial neural nets, without trying to stay close to actual brains. There already is a long list of things where machine learning outperforms human brains for the same task. A simple example is the AlphaGo program, which taught itself to play the Go board game, starting with nothing but the rules, and then beat the best human players. All of this was done without understanding the brain of a Go player. In fact, we don't even really understand how the machine works.
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Except that it isn't.
Of course it is, ignoramus. People built 747s because they understood the physics of wings in general, and then proceeded to make the wings they were interested in, applying their understanding of the general principles to a specific case.
The same will apply to real "intelligence" as opposed to the statistical games that are called "AI" today.
And yes, it is quite obvious that you don't understand how and why a lot of the shit around you works.
Re:Once we understand how the brain actually works (Score:5, Insightful)
No you dolt. A plane wing and a bird wing aren't remotely similar. The aerodynamics of feathers and flapping is completely different from a rigid, fixed wing. That's why most birds can do VTOL and hover for short periods of time while pretty much zero fixed wing aircraft can.
We engineered fixed wings with pretty much no crossover from bird wings other than the realization that a light structure with a large wing area is a requirement for flight. Bird wings ARE THE PROPULSION, while fixed wings can either only glide, or need an additional power source.
And yes, it is quite obvious that you don't understand how and why a lot of the shit around you works.
The irony is hilarious.
Reinventing the wheel? (Score:3)
That sounds a lot like buses and taxis to me. Which we already have. If people aren't using those now, then why would they use self driving versions of them in the future?
Re:Reinventing the wheel? (Score:4, Insightful)
because its a lot cheaper when you dont have to pay the driver.
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Re:Reinventing the wheel? (Score:4, Informative)
Buses are not available on your schedule and don't travel from where you are to where you are going. Taxis are expensive and often inconvenient or unavailable due to corrupt artificial scarcity arrangements.
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Buses are not available on your schedule
In a city with a functioning public transit system, the buses are pretty readily available (every 10 minutes or so) and GPS tracked so you can aim to get to the bus stop just as the bus arrives.
Nodoby knows, especially not this guy (Score:3)
Which is to say, we'll only know when self driving cars will be around, when we produce a program that can drive a car. We have everything else, billions of dollars just slammed into the industry year after year has produced better than adequate sensors and chips to run whatever this program looks like. We just don't have the program itself, and by the very nature of this we can't predict exactly what it is until we get it. And thus it's fantastically hard to say when we'll get it either. Maybe it'll be five years from now, but that will just be a coincidence. Maybe two months from now Elon Musk will do some dance onto a stage, shitpost on twitter, and demo a Tesla that can safely drive itself.
Year of the self-driving car (Score:2)
It will take only a little bit longer than fusion energy, which should be fairly soon after the year of the Linux desktop.
As far as I can tell there's been relatively little progress in recent time in understanding natural intelligence, and all the advances in artificial intelligence seem to be 20-year-old algorithms working on larger data sets, more powerful hardward, and better distributed computing platforms, not any advance in the actual science.
What car makers call self-driving will undoubtedly become
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What car makers call self-driving will undoubtedly become better, undoubtedly with significant practical benefits
Significant practical benefits, that get better every year. What more do we need ? If that can be done with old science, then this means the science is good enough.
Night Rider (Score:2)
Developers backyards (Score:2)
The thing that I have noticed with pretty much all of these autonomous driving tests is that they take place near where the developers live. For example, Google has been testing their cars for years near their headquarters in Silicon Valley. They do this because it is convenient for them and allows them to test near where they prefer to live. The problem with this is that there hundreds of millions of people who live somewhere where they get a winter with snow and ice.
The snow changes your own vehicles hand
We should realize (Score:2)
Depends upon your definition of "self-driving" (Score:2)
Utopial vision, Except there's humans In It... (Score:2)
While I can admire the "Star Trek" like utopia that the guy selling the vision promotes, I'm fearful of what it will really be like.
Rolling around town, people in these things will be largely un-monitoried. I imagine I'd call up a taxi-bot to pick us up in front of a mall or event center and when we get it, it's a mess of trash, a half eaten hamburger left behind, sticky kid handprints on every window, sticky sex leftover fluids on the seats and the smell of it all baking in the summer sun.
I think the visi
Automated parking garages (Score:2)
The statistic I heard was 30 percent of traffic in San Francisco is people looking for parking. I heard a more alarming statistic that was 80 percent of traffic in Paris was people looking for parking.
Sounds like what is really needed are just a bunch of automated parking garages.
AI... (Score:2)
Exponential (Score:2)
Watch the Tesla Autonomy Day video. The whole thing - it's a treat for nerds.
Tesla's claim, and that's backed by both Elon and his hyper-nerd AI guy from Stanford - is that they've reached the point of exponential gains on self-driving now.
You may dispute this claim - hopefully with data - but that's the claim on the table. If the claim is true, we're looking at super-human FSD within two years, not thirty.
Remember your hockey sticks.
And The Next Step? (Score:4, Insightful)
First, authorities and governments around the world moving to outlaw "manually operated" transportation, on the grounds that such vehicles are "dangerous".
Second, authorities and governments around the world mandating that "autonomous vehicles" must, by law, be equipped with a "state intervention mechanism" which will allow law enforcement or other government service to forcibly disable a vehicle or cause it to pull over to the side of the road.
Third, the criminal element figure out how to compromise those remote control and security systems, which lead to a series of vehicle-based kidnappings...
And if you wondering if all of this sounds a bit tin-foil-hat and far-fetched... well tell me that the authorities really don't want to have this sort of control... And maybe go read a copy of Heinlein's "Stranger in a Strange Land" to see what happens to Ben Caxton when he challenges authority from the back seat of an automated mini-cab...
Driving is a hard AI problem (Score:3)
Autonomous driving is a hard AI problem with a lot of constraints and the capacity to actually kill people, both in the car and outside, so it must be taken very seriously. The mere idea of privately-developed, close-source software driving tons of hardware at highway speed without supervision is enough to evoke nightmares.
AI has made a lot of progress lately. Somewhat hardish AI problems that we can solve today are in the order of facial recognition, language translation, categorising the content of images, helping with the diagnosis of some illnesses like skin cancer, etc. These are incredibly useful, but notice that they still have a non-zero error rate. The current state of the art on ImageNet for picture recognition is in the ordre of 3%, and they are relatively easy to fool. If you have ever used google translate, you must know its limitations.
Autonomous cars need to have a precise image of their surrounding up to a few hundred meters in all conditions (day, night, wet, etc), very frequently updated, and they need to be able to anticipate other drivers as well as other hazards on the road. The technology is simply not there yet, even with the 70k$ sensors that Waymo uses.
We all want this technology to be here and to be better than humans at driving. This sounds easy since most of us drivers think everyone else drives like an idiot, however, the fatality rate in cars is in the order of 1 death per 100 million miles travelled. This is actually very low. This presents a challenge to the autonomous driving research community, because to certify that their system is actually better than humans, they will have to travel significantly more than hundreds of millions of miles, in real, not simulated or recorded conditions. The cost of doing this is astronomical, and it must be done everytime a new version comes out.
Trusting this software is going to be very hard in practice.
Source: RAND corp [rand.org].
We've heard that before (Score:3)
So imagine you have automated vehicles that take you to a location, you hop out, then it just drives down the block and picks up the next person and takes them where they're going.
Uber made the exact same argument. That it would eliminate cars on the road but none of the traffic promises held true. In fact, Uber increased traffic in congested areas.
It's goofy to think self-driving cars will do what Uber could not.
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Re: No cars. (Score:2)
The trouble with public transport is that the public use it. I'd still rather use it to get to work than have to sit in long traffic jams though as I can read, play a game or just stare out of the window. I would love a self-driving car where it would have the advantages of both forms of transport with none of the disadvantages.
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Back here public transport is generally safe and clean. If there's a problem with "the public" using it it is that rush hour trains are overcrowded. Between major cities trains run at 10-minute intervals, so if you miss a train the wait is 10 minutes. I even live in the city center within easy distance of the central station.
Still, I own a car and use it at least as often as the train. Why? Trains are not very good at going to non-urban places, and trains are not very good at going to the DIY store and brin
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I like owning a car. I can keep stuff that I'll need tomorrow in the trunk instead of taking it home and then back to the taxi tomorrow. Also, the car is relatively near me all the time - I do not have to wait outside in +35C or -30C weather for the taxi (with a human or computer driver) to arrive. And when it does, it is full of vomit, because someone before me was really drunk.
So, even if manually driven cars are banned I would still buy a self-driving car that I would own.
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Why? Cars provide an incredible amount of convenience and freedom, so much that people keep squeezing their budgets to pay for the sometimes unbelievable taxes on cars and petrol, rather than switch to cheaper alternatives.
People are also irrationally car obsessed, can't imagine life without one and simply cannot believe it is possible. It's not just that they are convenient, it's that people arrange their life around cars, become ignorant of the alternatives then assume those don't exist.
For example grocer
Star Trek: The Next Generation's Data (Score:2)
About 330 years from now he will be born.
He is able to do 60 trillion computations a second (60 teraflops).
And now you're now telling me a prototype car is...!?!?!? *laugh*
At the time the episodes were broadcasted he was 60,000x faster than a supercomputer.
Meaning: 30 years ago we way underestimated the computational power needed for autonomous understanding.
Re:Not enough compute (Score:5, Interesting)
If you think you can directly compare artificial neural networks and biological brains, you are missing a couple orders of magnitude in terms of complexity.
I may seem that the abstraction in ANNs, where each neuron is simply some form of $f(w.x)$, captures the essence of real neurons, but it turns out that a lot of the 'smarts' in brains come from the deviations from that abstraction, in terms of neurotransmitters, delays, sauration, etc. etc.
OTOH, my cat worries about a lot of things that my car doesn't necessarily need to worry about. If abandon my cat into the woods, he has a decent shot at surviving. I don't expect my car to fend for itself when the revolution comes.
Another analogy, look at how wasps are able to navigate, react to the environment, attack prey, defend itself and the hive, etc. - with a total brain volume of <1mm^2, or about .0001% of the human ~1 liter (1200cm^2). I'm not saying I would trust a wasp to drive my car (the only good wasp is a dead wasp if you ask me), but I think it is clear that you can't just compare ANN "neuron" counts to brain sizes and make statements about possibilities, certainly not at any precision near a single order of magnitude like "10-30x".
Sources:
Re: (Score:3)
Well, you've recognized his vision. But there are reasons why most people don't depend on taxis, and it sure isn't cost.
N.B.: The primary reason is different for different people, so solving one of the reasons is only an incremental improvement.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Agreed- after all the investment cash is ploughed in, how much cheaper than a human taxi will self driving taxis be?
You're falling for a sunk cost [wikipedia.org] fallacy [youarenotsosmart.com]. As long as there are more than two competing companies providing self driving services then the price will be set as something between the marginal cost and the price people are willing to pay and the basis for the price will be what the companies are able to persuade people their particular service is worth rather than the price they want to charge based on getting a return on their investent.
Re: (Score:3)
More importantly, will people choose self-driving cars?
In droves.
As soon as they find out they can sleep/surf porn/whatever during the daily commute then the changeover will take a few weeks. It will be a very good time to buy a second hand car.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
More importantly, will people choose self-driving cars?
In droves.
As soon as they find out they can sleep/surf porn/whatever during the daily commute then the changeover will take a few weeks. It will be a very good time to buy a second hand car.
Ugh. I'll bet those cars will be a bit skanky inside. Imagine the person before you deciding they want to masturbate, or a couple into some pee sex. Hell that will probably be a thing. Every kind of takeout food smell, perhaps partaking in some nice kush.
And it's strange, some people just want to mess nice things up. I was on a public bus once that smelled awful, and people were avoiding one seat in particular. Sure enough, there was a turd on it. Even if I were to use or have a self driving car - no o
Re: 350 years. (Score:5, Funny)
Ugh. I'll bet those cars will be a bit skanky inside. Imagine the person before you deciding they want to masturbate, or a couple into some pee sex. Hell that will probably be a thing. Every kind of takeout food smell, perhaps partaking in some nice kush.
This is why hotels have never really caught on.
Re: 350 years. (Score:4, Insightful)
Automating car cleaning is much easier than automating safe driving. It might use more water than a human cleaner, but it will work. Cars will have to be specially designed for that.
1. Remove carpets, seat covers
2. Wash with high pressure soap water
3. Wash with high pressure water.
4. Dry with high pressure warm air.
5. Fit new carpets, seat covers.
Re: (Score:3)
Ugh. I'll bet those cars will be a bit skanky inside. Imagine the person before you deciding they want to masturbate, or a couple into some pee sex. Hell that will probably be a thing.
This is why online anonymity will in the long run be seen as a bad thing, not a good thing. Uber cars are already nicer to ride in than taxis because there are no anonymous cash customers. If you puke in one, the driver and the company knows who you are and you have to pay for the cleanup. When cars go self-driving, people will welcome having "security cameras" on all the time. They will be advertised as a feature.
Re: (Score:2)
And it's strange, some people just want to mess nice things up. I was on a public bus once that smelled awful, and people were avoiding one seat in particular. Sure enough, there was a turd on it. Even if I were to use or have a self driving car - no one is getting into it that I don't know
Maybe they'll only catch on in civilised countries where people don't shit on public transport. Seriously where on earth do you live?
Re: (Score:2)
This. While a self-driving car could be interesting, I would definitely not want car-as-a-service. Some people want "everything shared", or rather "everything as a service" in that a few people own everything and everyone else pays them.
The only "everything shared" plan I would support is the one that involves hammer and sickle and shares the money too.
Re: (Score:2)
So speak with your pocketbook. Studies have indicated that "car-as-a-service" would reduce the amount of money the average individual spends on automotive transportion by at least half. No car payments, No insurance payments. No registration and excise taxes. No gasoline taxes. No maintenance bills. No time spent filling the tank and waiting for oil changes. No parking expenses.
And so on. It probably costs me $7,000/year for the privilege of owning a vehicle that sits unused 95% of the time.
Would I rather h
Re: (Score:2)
So speak with your pocketbook. Studies have indicated that "car-as-a-service" would reduce the amount of money the average individual spends on automotive transportion by at least half. No car payments, No insurance payments. No registration and excise taxes. No gasoline taxes. No maintenance bills. No time spent filling the tank and waiting for oil changes. No parking expenses.
And so on. It probably costs me $7,000/year for the privilege of owning a vehicle that sits unused 95% of the time.
Would I rather have an extra $3,500/year in my pocket instead? You bet.
How about you?
So what is stopping you from ditching the car and just using Uber or taxicabs now then?
Do you think the self driving car will be cheaper or faster? Seems doubtful.
Re: 350 years. (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
If I really cared about making my transportation costs as low as possible, I would probably have a different car (one that is more efficient and cheaper to run) and use it less.
I like my car, even if it is more expensive to maintain than some other car would be.
I also dislike renting stuff. Sure, if it's a one-time thing (I need a big drill to make a hole in a thick wall, I probably won't need it again) then it makes sense. But continuous use, like a car, is just me buying the item for its owner and paying
Re: 350 years. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
I see self-drive cars and mass transit coming together as one system. When you leave home you fire up a summoning app that works like today's Uber app, except that if there is a transit line that goes your way, it will be offered as a lower-cost alternative to a one-car ride. Now nobody heading out for a one-shot trip or carrying luggage is going to opt to take a car ride to a subway station, ride the transit, and then take another car to the destination, to save a few bucks. But what if you need to take th
Re: (Score:3)
This self-driving-car-as-service thing though is just a way to get you to pay a lot more for transit - and to fund private corporations. My daily commute from my home to my office is 11 miles; it's a 15 minute ride/drive for me. Using the bus means about a 1.3 mile walk (0.4m on the front/0.9m on the end) so nearly a 1 hour commute to take public transport. Via Uber, it would be $25 per day. Per month, I'd have more than $500 in transportation costs.
Now many will say "but that's how much you spend on a
Re: (Score:3)
Studies concerning self-driving (no driver) electric (reduced fuel costs) fleets (discounts) could cut the cost of renting an "Uber" by 70% or more. So that's $150/mo, not $500.
Now what's that do to your math? Take dozens of local weekend trips and now you're at $200. That's $3,600 extra a year you're paying just to "move around" on your own, using an expensive asset you personally have to maintain and whose value is steadily depreciating towards zero. (Real financial genius whiz move there, sport.)
At any r
Re: 350 years. (Score:5, Funny)
Buses are slow, and subways only go to places where there are tracks.
Plus they're so crowded these days that no one uses them any more.
Re: 350 years. (Score:3)
Buses and subways have fixed routes. If you dont live near the line or your destination is away from the line it can take longer than driving. That's why "no one" uses them: you still have to have so way to get to them. Self driving cars solve both those problems.
Re: (Score:3)
"And yet, private use of automobiles continues to increase."
This is false-to-fact, which tends to dismantle your argument. Auto sales are declining, including sedans, SUVs, and light trucks. And young people continue to turn away from cars, with only 26 percent of U.S. 16-year-olds earning a driver’s license in 2017, half that from just 36 years ago.
Ride-sharing is increasing. Electric bike, scooter, and other mobility services are increasing. Private use of automobiles? Not so much.
Finally, the probl
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Auto sales are declining, including sedans, SUVs, and light trucks.
They are? Looks to me like we've plateaued back up to pre-2009-2012 recession levels [stlouisfed.org]. That's quite a bit different than declining. Globally they continue to grow [oica.net]. We may have reached saturation sales levels in the US - but much of the world is still buying more and more, every year.
And young people continue to turn away from cars, with only 26 percent of U.S. 16-year-olds earning a driver’s license in 2017, half that from just 36 years ago.
Well, many States do not allow you to apply for a learner's permit until you're 16 in the first place, meaning that between mandatory classes and practice, it's essentially impossible to get a license when you're 16.
But more
Re: 350 years. (Score:5, Interesting)
So. The question really is: do people want such cars?
No. Never have, never will.
Buses and subways have existed for more than a hundred years. You get on, and it takes you somewhere. You can read, sleep, do whatever you want. And yet, private use of automobiles continues to increase. And the Mass Transportation Nazis continue to ignore the reasons why this is true and just blindly push for more of the same, just dressed up in fancy new tech -- like high speed rail and fleets of self-driving taxis.
1) Mass transportation is serial, private transportation is parallel. What do I mean: To get a thousand commuters to their destinations, mass transportation would have to make a thousand stops, one after the other (serial), taking many, many hours. Cars - private transportation - can do this concurrently (parallel), doing this in minutes.
Mass transportation is good for getting large numbers of people close to their destinations, but not for that "last mile", where it breaks down.
2) Will the public want such cars? I would say yes, if this technology can combine the benefits of mass transportation (ability to do other things while commuting) with the benefits of private transport (ability to take you directly to your destination, not merely a common drop-off point).
Re: 350 years. (Score:5, Interesting)
If self-driving vehicles prove themselves safer than some idiot driving down the road with their nose in a phone... scratch that.
WHEN self-driving vehicles prove themselves safer than some idiot driving down the road with their nose in a phone, then it won't be politicians prohibiting people from driving, it will be the insurance companies.
Over time, owning a car capable of driving in "manual mode" will become prohibitively expensive.
Re: (Score:3)
Great. Someone pooped in their pants. Now we all need to wear diapers.
Because people die when you shit your pants? All those school shittings are getting to a real nuisance stinking up the place.