On Wed, 2017-11-15 at 14:32 +1100, David wrote: > > This is a complex task, but guess what? Computer systems can > > already drive cars, and they can do it well. > Not when they T-bone trucks and kill the driver!
Humans do the same thing - hundreds or thousands of times worldwide every day and most are ordinary drivers. Not drunk or mad, though no doubt some are. It looks to me as if autonomous vehicles are now at about the same level as human drivers in general. Probably better, because there are large classes of mistake that they do not make - such as using mobile phones, driving while fatigued, getting distracted by the kids, driving drunk... I know you set the bar to exclude those, but that's just excluding reality. In the "game" that is partly autonomous traffic, not all questions have clear answers, and demanding that autonomous vehicles supply them and never ever fail is pointless and unrealistic. A magic bullet that drops fatalities and injuries to zero would be nice, but I'll take a statistically significant improvement. Wonder how it would have played out if that truck had been autonomous too. Or if the two vehicles had been able to communicate. > I'm not proposing any limit, I'm suggesting they have a very, very > long way to go. And we might get clues from the nominal computing > capacity of just a few cubic millimetres of human brain. Which has very little to do with anything, see above. A $10 computer these days can reliably beat the vast majority of normal people at chess. And they build in pauses in those games because otherwise the speed of defeat would be too demoralising. Regards, K. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Karl Auer ([email protected]) http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer http://twitter.com/kauer389 GPG fingerprint: A52E F6B9 708B 51C4 85E6 1634 0571 ADF9 3C1C 6A3A Old fingerprint: E00D 64ED 9C6A 8605 21E0 0ED0 EE64 2BEE CBCB C38B _______________________________________________ Link mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
