this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2023
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On a large empty slab of asphalt, two BMWs take off. They drive in figure eights and along an oval path separate from each other but nearly in tandem, like two ice skaters practicing the same routine on a piece of black ice before coming to a stop.

Neither of the cars has a driver. That's not that impressive; self-driving cars in testing environments shouldn't impress anyone at this point. Essentially the automaker tells the car to drive a route, and it does it. The important thing here is why these cars, outfitted with additional sensors, are driving along the same route again and again, each time depressing the accelerator the same amount and applying the exact amount of pressure on the brakes: They're testing hardware with the least amount of variables you can encounter outside of a lab.

"It's boring for human drivers," says BMW's project lead for driverless development, Philipp Ludwig. When a human is asked to perform the exact same task repeatedly, the quality of the work diminishes as they lose interest or become fatigued. For a computer-controlled car, it can do this all day. And it has done exactly that.

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[–] PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world 18 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Sweet summer child...

This type of "drive in a circle and put on the brakes" self driving is solvable without neural networks.

Simple model based vision would be completely fine. You're clearly not familiar with the requisite literature of that time.

You don't even need vision. Just a loop of wire in the ground and a fence to keep everyone out is all it takes.

And not all problems are best solved with NN. This kind of thinking is why we can't have nice things.