Tim Frank
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2008
- Messages
- 5,346
Your last point about the deer struck a nerve with me. My dad started teaching me to drive when I was 13 (I'm 70). One thing he hammered home was never get off the road for an animal. He knew a guy who died when he rolled his car trying to dodge a guinea hen. He said that if an animal comes on the road in front of you, drive through it - DON'T SWERVE! If it's a human, do what you need to not hit them. In my mind, only a human driver can reliably judge the obstruction ahead.If you are aware while driving you are making these decisions every day. How to program the car is a quandary.
It is interesting that it stated hit the smaller of two objects. If it is a person or one on a bike ......
I would look at hitting another vehicle before hitting a pedestrian or some one on a bike. Yes there would be more chance for damage to a vehicle, less chance of that person being killed.
In our state if you drive off the road to avoid a deer insurance will not cover the accident. If you hit the deer they cover the accident. So what will a self driving vehicle do?
We barely have cell phone coverage in many areas in my state, so I am not too worried!
Hell around here, my GPS is always telling me to take a left! Which if I did, I would end up in a lake!
I guess I'm just an old grump but I find it difficult to imagine that a geek programmer knows better than I do how to drive a car. Granted there are a lot of drivers on the road now who are so bad that a computer probably couldn't possibly do worse.It's an interesting ethical problem that is far, far, far outweighed by the number of lives that self-driving cars will save. The medical community is already bracing for the organ donor shortage that will ensue when they don't have the 20% that fatal car crashes represent. Increased efficiency and productivity are huge benefits as well.
I do recall reading that the manufacturers will program the cars to protect their occupants 100% of the time. There's no good answer. That goes for animals in the road, etc.
MT - You must have the Official Nascar GPS! LOL
I don't get the fascination with self driving cars. Am I the only one who actually enjoys driving? I think the real problem is that it's entirely too easy to get and keep a drivers license in this country.
KD4UPL said:I don't see these cars catching on with a lot of the drivers who are really causing most of the problems. When certain people find out the the car won't let them speed, tailgate, swerve lane to lane with no signal just to get ahead 100', etc. I think they will not want one. All of us who do obey the speed limit, leave proper following distance, and signal our intentions won't really benefit much from the car.
...I still want a car without electronics.