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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#161
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Fri, 5 Oct 2018 07:34:50 -0700 (PDT), whisky-dave, the notorious
troll-feeding senile idiot, blabbered again: Lots of people have driven over a mile without an accident. You two endlessly blathering idiots ARE an accident! |
#162
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 15:34:50 +0100, whisky-dave wrote:
On Friday, 5 October 2018 14:12:03 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 11:26:56 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Thursday, 4 October 2018 17:30:43 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 11:43:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 16:30:50 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message ... On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:15:24 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: whisky-dave wrote Rod Speed wrote whisky-dave wrote It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. What new way ? It emits a very large number of IR beams at the face and records what comes back with the camera. And what does it use to transmit those IR beams ? That thing on the top of the phone, often called the notch because thats what it looks like. So all phones have this notch do they ? The iphones that do facial recognition do. But yuo can;t get facial recognition by just a software update can you. You needed new and extra hardware this meant a 2nd camera had to be fitted to the iPhone, you clouldn't just download facial recognition onto an old phone. Apple doesn't seem to have them. It isnt a physical notch, stupid. Despite that though, the new iPhones lack one key hardware featu an IR blaster. While Apple has never included an IR blaster on an iPhone Automatic cars don't need more hardware. They already have dozens of cameras. You need more than just cameras. Ok maybe a microphone. https://www.sensorsmag.com/component...omous-vehicles Fully autonomous driving by the model year 2021/2022 with security level 4 or 5 requires the use of multiple redundant sensor systems. Todays systems for semi-autonomous driving use various numbers and designs of radar and camera systems. The design of high-resolution, affordable LIDAR systems with ranges up to 300 m are still in the pre-development stage. As I've said there are NO driverless cars so no miles have been driven by a driverless car they havent;l even reached that milestone ;-P Apart from all the ones you keep quoiting as crashing. Lots of people have driven over a mile without an accident. Can you do this? https://youtu.be/WsnKzK6dX8Q?t=100 Which sensors are required for autonomous driving from Levels 1 to 5? As already mentioned, there are three main groups of sensor systems: camera-, radar-, and lidar-based systems. Although, for parking, ultrasonic sensors are available today and are widespread, they are of minor importance for autonomous driving. Camera and radar systems are in the Level 1 and 2 vehicles today and are prerequisite for all further levels of automation. |
#163
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 23:46:32 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 23:08:02 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message ... On Sunday, 30 September 2018 17:04:57 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 11:17:16 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 7 September 2018 23:00:05 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 07 Sep 2018 10:44:19 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 7 September 2018 00:26:18 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 06 Sep 2018 10:04:00 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 5 September 2018 20:53:23 UTC+1, bert wrote: In article , whisky-dave writes On Tuesday, 4 September 2018 15:08:23 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Tue, 04 Sep 2018 10:45:01 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Monday, 3 September 2018 16:52:41 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Mon, 03 Sep 2018 16:06:21 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Monday, 3 September 2018 14:50:32 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Mon, 03 Sep 2018 13:30:40 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Saturday, 1 September 2018 21:59:36 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Sat, 01 Sep 2018 20:54:02 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote Rod Speed wrote http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-09-0...sting/10190804 The report doesn't say whose fault it was. But it does list a hell of a lot of other similar failures and a well designed self driving car should drive the car so it doesn't cause human drivers to run into the back of the car its driving because of how it drives. And of course human drivers never **** up like this.... Which is why people don't want to spend Å1000s on a self driving car that ****s up or kills them, they can have that No, they get 20 times less ****ups. The California DMV said it has received it has received 95 autonomous vehicle collision reports as of August 31. Dozens of companies have received permits to test self-driving vehicles on California roads, but those permits require the presence of a human safety driver. Just how amny of these atomomous cars are there a few dozen comparded to.... You say 95 collisions with autonomous vehicles, but you don't say how many manually driven cars have had collisions. Because it's such a small sample, we don't narrow down the number of manual collisons of 100 or so cars and that is why there are so many more collisins with manual cars because we count the cars in millions NOT dozens. What's needed is a rate of accidents a figure they will not give out. I've seen it, and it's 20 times larger for human driver than automated cars. Then yuo should be able to cite it then shouldn't you ? Presenntly there are NO automated cars, anyway and the cars that are used as driverless aren't tested amonst real road users they just go round and around on test tracks, no wonder they don't have accidents. But if they are so good why do they require a human at the wheel ? Because they are not THAT good. So humans are still better at driving cars than humans, that is the point. Are you drunk again? Rewrite that sentence. Nothing wronfg humans are humans they are all difernt even if only slightl;y so have one faulty human driver isnlt such a dig deal like yourself who can't see a deer in front of them and can't stop in time isnt such a big deal but when you have 100,000s of them and none for them cane yuo end up with serious problems it;s why you have to have recalls for faulty products. With humans you remove their driving license if they can't drive properly and it;s not big deal except for teh person who has their license removed do that to 100,000 cars in a day and you have problems. Computerised cars can easily be updated with better programs, you can't do that with humans. Yes you can it's called training. Not as easy as updating the software in every computer.. But that won;t work it's the semsors and hardware that will need updating. Much more likely its what the software that uses those sensors and hardware that needs the updating. It's like phone Apple haven't just upgraded the software for their iPhone3GS Thats providing more capability. They have in fact radically changed what the software does as well as improving the sensors and cameras. so it's compatable with face recognition It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. and everything else have they. So you wouldn't be able to do that with cars either. Even sillier than you usually manage, and thats saying something. just software that might need changing, but then nyou;'d have to understand the technologies involved rather thsan just assume they work by magic. of course if you can't tell a real car from a fake wooden one ?, Could you tell the differnce between a faked wooden car and the real thing ? People make mistake... The person saw the car, the co puter in the car didn't. People are still better at driving cars than cars driving themselve, Thats very arguable with the routine driving. and that is why currently all driverc assisted cars come with a steering wheel and pedals otherwise why put them in the car just to waste money, to take up an extra seat, to make the cars heavier and less efficient ? Just saw an article in the BBC RSS feed which points out that one of the real downsides with that approach of supposedly having the human checking how the computer is driving is that many humans will just doze off or read a book etc when the computer is doing all the work and it will be interesting to see how real the supervision actually is. Think of it like you're teaching someone to drive. Once they get pretty good at it, you won't be watching their every move. But you do watch how they handle the more unusual situations like when there has been an accident and there is lots of congestion and a real risk of them rubbernecking at the result of the accident as they drive past it and arent looking where they are going. That isnt possible when checking on what the self driving car is up to if you have dozed off because you arent driving. Why would you be more likely to doze off with an automated car than with a person that you think is usually ok driving but might need help? Never said that you would be. Dave quoted from an article: "many humans will just doze off or read a book etc when the computer is doing all the work" That was me, not Dave. It appears that way now, either I was too drunk to read the colours correctly or Opera ****ed up. So you're now admitting that you did say what you thought you didn't? Nope. Your quotation (which I assume you agree with) states that many people will fall asleep when a computer is driving, Yes. yet you claim above that you "Never said that you would be" (likely to doze off). Thats where you ****ed up. It was your claim. Nope, it was the claim made by that other individual. The indents above clearly show that you were the one that posted "Never said that you would be". Thats not a claim. It was a claim that you never said it. |
#164
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 23:46:32 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 23:08:02 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message ... On Sunday, 30 September 2018 17:04:57 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Mon, 10 Sep 2018 11:17:16 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 7 September 2018 23:00:05 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 07 Sep 2018 10:44:19 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 7 September 2018 00:26:18 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 06 Sep 2018 10:04:00 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 5 September 2018 20:53:23 UTC+1, bert wrote: In article , whisky-dave writes On Tuesday, 4 September 2018 15:08:23 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Tue, 04 Sep 2018 10:45:01 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Monday, 3 September 2018 16:52:41 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Mon, 03 Sep 2018 16:06:21 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Monday, 3 September 2018 14:50:32 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Mon, 03 Sep 2018 13:30:40 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Saturday, 1 September 2018 21:59:36 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Sat, 01 Sep 2018 20:54:02 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote Rod Speed wrote http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-09-0...sting/10190804 The report doesn't say whose fault it was. But it does list a hell of a lot of other similar failures and a well designed self driving car should drive the car so it doesn't cause human drivers to run into the back of the car its driving because of how it drives. And of course human drivers never **** up like this.... Which is why people don't want to spend Å1000s on a self driving car that ****s up or kills them, they can have that No, they get 20 times less ****ups. The California DMV said it has received it has received 95 autonomous vehicle collision reports as of August 31. Dozens of companies have received permits to test self-driving vehicles on California roads, but those permits require the presence of a human safety driver. Just how amny of these atomomous cars are there a few dozen comparded to.... You say 95 collisions with autonomous vehicles, but you don't say how many manually driven cars have had collisions. Because it's such a small sample, we don't narrow down the number of manual collisons of 100 or so cars and that is why there are so many more collisins with manual cars because we count the cars in millions NOT dozens. What's needed is a rate of accidents a figure they will not give out. I've seen it, and it's 20 times larger for human driver than automated cars. Then yuo should be able to cite it then shouldn't you ? Presenntly there are NO automated cars, anyway and the cars that are used as driverless aren't tested amonst real road users they just go round and around on test tracks, no wonder they don't have accidents. But if they are so good why do they require a human at the wheel ? Because they are not THAT good. So humans are still better at driving cars than humans, that is the point. Are you drunk again? Rewrite that sentence. Nothing wronfg humans are humans they are all difernt even if only slightl;y so have one faulty human driver isnlt such a dig deal like yourself who can't see a deer in front of them and can't stop in time isnt such a big deal but when you have 100,000s of them and none for them cane yuo end up with serious problems it;s why you have to have recalls for faulty products. With humans you remove their driving license if they can't drive properly and it;s not big deal except for teh person who has their license removed do that to 100,000 cars in a day and you have problems. Computerised cars can easily be updated with better programs, you can't do that with humans. Yes you can it's called training. Not as easy as updating the software in every computer. But that won;t work it's the semsors and hardware that will need updating. Much more likely its what the software that uses those sensors and hardware that needs the updating. It's like phone Apple haven't just upgraded the software for their iPhone3GS Thats providing more capability. They have in fact radically changed what the software does as well as improving the sensors and cameras. so it's compatable with face recognition It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. and everything else have they. So you wouldn't be able to do that with cars either. Even sillier than you usually manage, and thats saying something. just software that might need changing, but then nyou;'d have to understand the technologies involved rather thsan just assume they work by magic. of course if you can't tell a real car from a fake wooden one ?, Could you tell the differnce between a faked wooden car and the real thing ? People make mistake... The person saw the car, the co puter in the car didn't. People are still better at driving cars than cars driving themselve, Thats very arguable with the routine driving. and that is why currently all driverc assisted cars come with a steering wheel and pedals otherwise why put them in the car just to waste money, to take up an extra seat, to make the cars heavier and less efficient ? Just saw an article in the BBC RSS feed which points out that one of the real downsides with that approach of supposedly having the human checking how the computer is driving is that many humans will just doze off or read a book etc when the computer is doing all the work and it will be interesting to see how real the supervision actually is. Think of it like you're teaching someone to drive. Once they get pretty good at it, you won't be watching their every move. But you do watch how they handle the more unusual situations like when there has been an accident and there is lots of congestion and a real risk of them rubbernecking at the result of the accident as they drive past it and arent looking where they are going. That isnt possible when checking on what the self driving car is up to if you have dozed off because you arent driving. Why would you be more likely to doze off with an automated car than with a person that you think is usually ok driving but might need help? Never said that you would be. Dave quoted from an article: "many humans will just doze off or read a book etc when the computer is doing all the work" That was me, not Dave. It appears that way now, either I was too drunk to read the colours correctly or Opera ****ed up. So you're now admitting that you did say what you thought you didn't? Nope. Your quotation (which I assume you agree with) states that many people will fall asleep when a computer is driving, Yes. yet you claim above that you "Never said that you would be" (likely to doze off). Thats where you ****ed up. It was your claim. Nope, it was the claim made by that other individual. The indents above clearly show that you were the one that posted "Never said that you would be". Thats not a claim. It was a claim that you never said it. Nope, that is a statement of fact. |
#165
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sat, 6 Oct 2018 13:42:49 +1000, cantankerous trolling senile geezer Rot
Speed blabbered, again: FLUSH 500 lines of stinking troll **** ....and much better air in here again! -- Richard addressing Rot Speed: "**** you're thick/pathetic excuse for a troll." MID: |
#166
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sat, 06 Oct 2018 04:42:49 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 23:46:32 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() to doze off). Thats where you ****ed up. It was your claim. Nope, it was the claim made by that other individual. The indents above clearly show that you were the one that posted "Never said that you would be". Thats not a claim. It was a claim that you never said it. Nope, that is a statement of fact. Only if the claim is correct. |
#167
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 06 Oct 2018 04:42:49 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 23:46:32 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() (likely to doze off). Thats where you ****ed up. It was your claim. Nope, it was the claim made by that other individual. The indents above clearly show that you were the one that posted "Never said that you would be". Thats not a claim. It was a claim that you never said it. Nope, that is a statement of fact. Only if the claim is correct. It is. |
#168
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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FLUSH yet more troll ****
-- Richard addressing Rot Speed: "**** you're thick/pathetic excuse for a troll." MID: |
#169
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Friday, 5 October 2018 21:42:42 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote:
On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 15:34:50 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 5 October 2018 14:12:03 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 11:26:56 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Thursday, 4 October 2018 17:30:43 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 11:43:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 16:30:50 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message ... On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:15:24 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: whisky-dave wrote Rod Speed wrote whisky-dave wrote It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. What new way ? It emits a very large number of IR beams at the face and records what comes back with the camera. And what does it use to transmit those IR beams ? That thing on the top of the phone, often called the notch because thats what it looks like. So all phones have this notch do they ? The iphones that do facial recognition do. But yuo can;t get facial recognition by just a software update can you. You needed new and extra hardware this meant a 2nd camera had to be fitted to the iPhone, you clouldn't just download facial recognition onto an old phone. Apple doesn't seem to have them. It isnt a physical notch, stupid. Despite that though, the new iPhones lack one key hardware featu an IR blaster. While Apple has never included an IR blaster on an iPhone Automatic cars don't need more hardware. They already have dozens of cameras. You need more than just cameras. Ok maybe a microphone. https://www.sensorsmag.com/component...omous-vehicles Fully autonomous driving by the model year 2021/2022 with security level 4 or 5 requires the use of multiple redundant sensor systems. Todays systems for semi-autonomous driving use various numbers and designs of radar and camera systems. The design of high-resolution, affordable LIDAR systems with ranges up to 300 m are still in the pre-development stage. As I've said there are NO driverless cars so no miles have been driven by a driverless car they havent;l even reached that milestone ;-P Apart from all the ones you keep quoiting as crashing. Those are not driverless they are meant to have a driver in control. I know you don;t understand this but it;s rather like lettign a 10 year-old drive a car sure they can do the basics they might even be able to drive a few miles but put them on a busy road with other car users andn they are far more likely to have a crash or cause one, that is why 10 year-olds aren;t allowed to drive even if yuo think they can. Puttign a computer in crontol of a car is simialar that's why they need constant testing and why a hum,an always has to be at the wheel. Lots of people have driven over a mile without an accident. Can you do this? https://youtu.be/WsnKzK6dX8Q?t=100 Peace of **** easy, especaily with no other cars on the road ow many times does that happen ? Robertson says the technology is €œnot mature right now. The measure of success is how many times the engineer has to get involved. And were currently sitting at around three times [every 1,000 km]. Sounds pretty good €¦ however, thats three times too many. It has to be perfect.€ Now how about you showing me where I can buy one of these cars ?. If they really are that goodm then we should be able to buy them and use them as driverless cars. |
#170
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 8 Oct 2018 03:58:31 -0700 (PDT), whisky-dave, the notorious
troll-feeding senile idiot, blabbered again: FLUSH over 100 lines of the two blathering idiots' usual endless idiotic blather unread ....and much better air in here again! |
#171
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 08 Oct 2018 11:58:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote:
On Friday, 5 October 2018 21:42:42 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 15:34:50 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 5 October 2018 14:12:03 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 11:26:56 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Thursday, 4 October 2018 17:30:43 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 11:43:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 16:30:50 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message .... On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:15:24 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: whisky-dave wrote Rod Speed wrote whisky-dave wrote It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. What new way ? It emits a very large number of IR beams at the face and records what comes back with the camera. And what does it use to transmit those IR beams ? That thing on the top of the phone, often called the notch because thats what it looks like. So all phones have this notch do they ? The iphones that do facial recognition do. But yuo can;t get facial recognition by just a software update can you. You needed new and extra hardware this meant a 2nd camera had to be fitted to the iPhone, you clouldn't just download facial recognition onto an old phone. Apple doesn't seem to have them. It isnt a physical notch, stupid. Despite that though, the new iPhones lack one key hardware featu an IR blaster. While Apple has never included an IR blaster on an iPhone Automatic cars don't need more hardware. They already have dozens of cameras. You need more than just cameras. Ok maybe a microphone. https://www.sensorsmag.com/component...omous-vehicles Fully autonomous driving by the model year 2021/2022 with security level 4 or 5 requires the use of multiple redundant sensor systems. Todays systems for semi-autonomous driving use various numbers and designs of radar and camera systems. The design of high-resolution, affordable LIDAR systems with ranges up to 300 m are still in the pre-development stage. As I've said there are NO driverless cars so no miles have been driven by a driverless car they havent;l even reached that milestone ;-P Apart from all the ones you keep quoiting as crashing. Those are not driverless they are meant to have a driver in control. But they manage without one, and probably better than a normal driver controlled car. I know you don;t understand this but it;s rather like lettign a 10 year-old drive a car sure they can do the basics they might even be able to drive a few miles but put them on a busy road with other car users andn they are far more likely to have a crash or cause one, that is why 10 year-olds aren;t allowed to drive even if yuo think they can. Puttign a computer in crontol of a car is simialar that's why they need constant testing and why a hum,an always has to be at the wheel. No, test show they are 20 times better. Already. Lots of people have driven over a mile without an accident. Can you do this? https://youtu.be/WsnKzK6dX8Q?t=100 Peace of **** easy, especaily with no other cars on the road ow many times does that happen ? That was racing driver standard, above what most road users can do. Robertson says the technology is €œnot mature right now. The measure of success is how many times the engineer has to get involved. And were currently sitting at around three times [every 1,000 km]. Sounds pretty good €¦ however, thats three times too many. It has to be perfect.€ So they want them perfect, doesn't mean they're not already better than humans. Humans make a colossal amount of mistakes. Now how about you showing me where I can buy one of these cars ?. If they really are that goodm then we should be able to buy them and use them as driverless cars. dunno, go to America where they're not as up tight as us. |
#172
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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![]() "Jimmy Wilkinson Knife" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 08 Oct 2018 11:58:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 5 October 2018 21:42:42 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 15:34:50 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 5 October 2018 14:12:03 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 11:26:56 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Thursday, 4 October 2018 17:30:43 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 11:43:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 16:30:50 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message ... On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:15:24 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: whisky-dave wrote Rod Speed wrote whisky-dave wrote It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. What new way ? It emits a very large number of IR beams at the face and records what comes back with the camera. And what does it use to transmit those IR beams ? That thing on the top of the phone, often called the notch because thats what it looks like. So all phones have this notch do they ? The iphones that do facial recognition do. But yuo can;t get facial recognition by just a software update can you. You needed new and extra hardware this meant a 2nd camera had to be fitted to the iPhone, you clouldn't just download facial recognition onto an old phone. Apple doesn't seem to have them. It isnt a physical notch, stupid. Despite that though, the new iPhones lack one key hardware featu an IR blaster. While Apple has never included an IR blaster on an iPhone Automatic cars don't need more hardware. They already have dozens of cameras. You need more than just cameras. Ok maybe a microphone. https://www.sensorsmag.com/component...omous-vehicles Fully autonomous driving by the model year 2021/2022 with security level 4 or 5 requires the use of multiple redundant sensor systems. Todays systems for semi-autonomous driving use various numbers and designs of radar and camera systems. The design of high-resolution, affordable LIDAR systems with ranges up to 300 m are still in the pre-development stage. As I've said there are NO driverless cars so no miles have been driven by a driverless car they havent;l even reached that milestone ;-P Apart from all the ones you keep quoiting as crashing. Those are not driverless they are meant to have a driver in control. But they manage without one, and probably better than a normal driver controlled car. I know you don;t understand this but it;s rather like lettign a 10 year-old drive a car sure they can do the basics they might even be able to drive a few miles but put them on a busy road with other car users andn they are far more likely to have a crash or cause one, that is why 10 year-olds aren;t allowed to drive even if yuo think they can. Puttign a computer in crontol of a car is simialar that's why they need constant testing and why a hum,an always has to be at the wheel. No, test show they are 20 times better. Already. You've never been able to cite any such test and google certainly can't find it. Lots of people have driven over a mile without an accident. Can you do this? https://youtu.be/WsnKzK6dX8Q?t=100 Peace of **** easy, especaily with no other cars on the road ow many times does that happen ? That was racing driver standard, above what most road users can do. Robertson says the technology is €œnot mature right now. The measure of success is how many times the engineer has to get involved. And were currently sitting at around three times [every 1,000 km]. Sounds pretty good €¦ however, thats three times too many. It has to be perfect.€ So they want them perfect, doesn't mean they're not already better than humans. Humans make a colossal amount of mistakes. Now how about you showing me where I can buy one of these cars ?. If they really are that goodm then we should be able to buy them and use them as driverless cars. dunno, go to America where they're not as up tight as us. Still can't buy one there. |
#173
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Sun, 14 Oct 2018 05:16:55 +1100, cantankerous trolling senile geezer Rot
Speed blabbered, again: FLUSH 128 lines of stinking troll **** ....and much better air in here again! -- Archibald Tarquin Blenkinsopp addressing Rot Speed: "You really are a clueless pillock." MID: |
#174
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Saturday, 13 October 2018 18:53:33 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote:
On Mon, 08 Oct 2018 11:58:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 5 October 2018 21:42:42 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 15:34:50 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Friday, 5 October 2018 14:12:03 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Fri, 05 Oct 2018 11:26:56 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Thursday, 4 October 2018 17:30:43 UTC+1, Jimmy Wilkinson Knife wrote: On Thu, 04 Oct 2018 11:43:31 +0100, whisky-dave wrote: On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 16:30:50 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: "whisky-dave" wrote in message ... On Wednesday, 3 October 2018 11:15:24 UTC+1, Rod Speed wrote: whisky-dave wrote Rod Speed wrote whisky-dave wrote It has in fact got a completely new way of looking at the face for that. What new way ? It emits a very large number of IR beams at the face and records what comes back with the camera. And what does it use to transmit those IR beams ? That thing on the top of the phone, often called the notch because thats what it looks like. So all phones have this notch do they ? The iphones that do facial recognition do. But yuo can;t get facial recognition by just a software update can you. You needed new and extra hardware this meant a 2nd camera had to be fitted to the iPhone, you clouldn't just download facial recognition onto an old phone. Apple doesn't seem to have them. It isnt a physical notch, stupid. Despite that though, the new iPhones lack one key hardware featu an IR blaster. While Apple has never included an IR blaster on an iPhone Automatic cars don't need more hardware. They already have dozens of cameras. You need more than just cameras. Ok maybe a microphone. https://www.sensorsmag.com/component...omous-vehicles Fully autonomous driving by the model year 2021/2022 with security level 4 or 5 requires the use of multiple redundant sensor systems. Todays systems for semi-autonomous driving use various numbers and designs of radar and camera systems. The design of high-resolution, affordable LIDAR systems with ranges up to 300 m are still in the pre-development stage. As I've said there are NO driverless cars so no miles have been driven by a driverless car they havent;l even reached that milestone ;-P Apart from all the ones you keep quoiting as crashing. Those are not driverless they are meant to have a driver in control. But they manage without one, and probably better than a normal driver controlled car. No they DO NOT they have crashes crashes which an alert human driver would aviod and that is why driverless cars MUST have a compedant driver in the driving seat otherwise the car isnlt legally allowed to be driven on the road. You still don't understand this simple point do you. I know you don;t understand this but it;s rather like lettign a 10 year-old drive a car sure they can do the basics they might even be able to drive a few miles but put them on a busy road with other car users andn they are far more likely to have a crash or cause one, that is why 10 year-olds aren;t allowed to drive even if yuo think they can. Puttign a computer in crontol of a car is simialar that's why they need constant testing and why a human always has to be at the wheel. No, test show they are 20 times better. Already. No they DO NOT. Lots of people have driven over a mile without an accident. Can you do this? https://youtu.be/WsnKzK6dX8Q?t=100 Peace of **** easy, especaily with no other cars on the road ow many times does that happen ? That was racing driver standard, above what most road users can do. running around a track, I had a scaletric set that did that. Robertson says the technology is €œnot mature right now. The measure of success is how many times the engineer has to get involved. And were currently sitting at around three times [every 1,000 km]. Sounds pretty good €¦ however, thats three times too many. It has to be perfect.€ So they want them perfect, doesn't mean they're not already better than humans. Humans make a colossal amount of mistakes. Not as many as so called driverless cars make. If that was the case you'd be able to buy them today, but you can't. Now how about you showing me where I can buy one of these cars ?. If they really are that goodm then we should be able to buy them and use them as driverless cars. dunno, go to America where they're not as up tight as us. They have the same ideas on guns don't they. If everyone has one everyone is safer, but the real stats don;t show that do they. |
#175
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On Mon, 15 Oct 2018 03:07:51 -0700 (PDT), whisky-dave, the notorious
troll-feeding senile idiot, blabbered again: FLUSH 145 lines of the usual idiotic drivel unread |
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