Would a self driving car world make it safe for cyclists?
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-mr. bill
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Uber recently reduced that to one for both tasks.
So, it is quite possible that the driver was watching the computer display. Perhaps the computer was giving information like identified street sign, lane borders, etc.
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You asked about the 'big picture' and provided some vague hypotheticals. I responded to them and now you are talking about the specific incident again??? Stay focused.
I know AVs will detect lane taking cyclists. The better designed ones already do and do so very well. BUT like any driver one needs to trust AND verify. Fortunately the AVs I encounter make it easy to verify relative to human drivers.
We don't know yet if the Uber missed the object or didn't respond appropriately and why.
I do agree we need better training and licensing for motorists to reduce the number of inferior drivers out there.
I know AVs will detect lane taking cyclists. The better designed ones already do and do so very well. BUT like any driver one needs to trust AND verify. Fortunately the AVs I encounter make it easy to verify relative to human drivers.
We don't know yet if the Uber missed the object or didn't respond appropriately and why.
I do agree we need better training and licensing for motorists to reduce the number of inferior drivers out there.
What we have seen is that an AV from a large company, and which was allowed to "test" on public roads, completely failed to function as designed and as promised. It simply didn't work.
So don't tell me that you know AV's will detect lane taking cyclists, because this one was supposed to detect a J-walker in that situation, and it didn't. Don't tell me that you can trust any AV that is still in the testing phase to be used on public roads.
Testing implies a risk of failure, and the stakes are simply too high.
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Originally Posted by robertorolfo
Are you really unable to see the big picture? What if the next human to enter the road unlawfully is a kid chasing a ball? What if it is a bike rider that has to swerve into the lane, or simply take the lane, for any number of legitimate reasons? And should the punishment for jaywalking now be death, without even having the benefit of a trial?
What we have seen is that an AV from a large company, and which was allowed to "test" on public roads, completely failed to function as designed and as promised. It simply didn't work.
So don't tell me that you know AV's will detect lane taking cyclists, because this one was supposed to detect a J-walker in that situation, and it didn't. Don't tell me that you can trust any AV that is still in the testing phase to be used on public roads.
Testing implies a risk of failure, and the stakes are simply too high.
So don't tell me that you know AV's will detect lane taking cyclists, because this one was supposed to detect a J-walker in that situation, and it didn't. Don't tell me that you can trust any AV that is still in the testing phase to be used on public roads.
Testing implies a risk of failure, and the stakes are simply too high.
I noted there are AVs today that detect lane taking cyclists very well in a wide, but not complete, range of circumstances. There may be cases they don't very well, but that is why we verify.
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Ah, Noisebeam ... just because you ride a bike in Tempe, in traffic, with other cyclists, human-driven cars, and AVs ... doesn't mean you know anything about riding a bike in Tempe, in traffic, with other cyclists, human-driven cars, and AVs.
We are in the presence of the omniscient genius. Your real-world experience ... nah, just not relevant compared to the imagination of an omniscient genus.
We are in the presence of the omniscient genius. Your real-world experience ... nah, just not relevant compared to the imagination of an omniscient genus.
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Possible, but if you watch the vid you will notice she had a little smile/laugh the first time she looked at device. I doubt routine info about the job at hand would cause that response.
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"Wow, I have never seen this warning before ... 'Approaching illegal pedestrian', what could that--Woah!!!"
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#2784
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If you mean to be playing the part of a raving alarmist for whom facts don't matter, good job. If the system was turned off, then we could be looking at the situation, from among myriad possibilities, of a distracted driver who might have well been driving with simple cruise control activated, and a pedestrian with diminished mental capacity who ambled out in front of a moving vehicle, suddenly appearing out of nowhere in the dead of night.
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I am talking about your hypotheticals to which I responded. Why ask about hypothetical if you were intending to talk about real life event?? I responded to this:
It did not completely fail to function as designed. It failed at a type of detection and/or response.
I noted there are AVs today that detect lane taking cyclists very well in a wide, but not complete, range of circumstances. There may be cases they don't very well, but that is why we verify.
It did not completely fail to function as designed. It failed at a type of detection and/or response.
I noted there are AVs today that detect lane taking cyclists very well in a wide, but not complete, range of circumstances. There may be cases they don't very well, but that is why we verify.
Yes, this AV completely failed to function as designed. There is no question of that. It was designed to detected objects in its path, and then to respond accordingly. It either did NOT detect this person, or did NOT respond accordingly, or both. It failed to work as intended. Simple. Fact. Done.
And yes, you test things to "verify," but those tests don't have to put people at risk, do they?
Originally Posted by maelochs
Ah, Noisebeam ... just because you ride a bike in Tempe, in traffic, with other cyclists, human-driven cars, and AVs ... doesn't mean you know anything about riding a bike in Tempe, in traffic, with other cyclists, human-driven cars, and AVs.
Originally Posted by McBTC
If you mean to be playing the part of a raving alarmist for whom facts don't matter, good job. If the system was turned off, then we could be looking at the situation, from among myriad possibilities, of a distracted driver who might have well been driving with simple cruise control activated, and a pedestrian with diminished mental capacity who ambled out in front of a moving vehicle, suddenly appearing out of nowhere in the dead of night.
And if you want to call people names, your despicable (and irrelevant) comments about the person who got hit would make you what, then?
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Hey kids, I just got to the playground and I didn't buy the fight program?
McBTC, your language got stuck in the mud bog and I don't even know why yet.
If this is really getting to you, maybe SBW is right.
Good GRAVY.
McBTC, your language got stuck in the mud bog and I don't even know why yet.
If this is really getting to you, maybe SBW is right.
Good GRAVY.
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Let's lighten up on the name-calling and insults gentlemen.

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Exactly. This seemed awfully fast for a settlement to be reached. But I guess Uber is desperate to keep the family quiet and make this go away in general.
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merged the three threads on this subject
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And did we forget these cars are also supposed to be equipped with forward radar? Are bicycles and aluminum cans the newest stealth technology?
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Ever driven on a country road at night? If the low beams can't handle even 38mph, how is it that people routinely survive driving 70+ with them?
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Well, since we conveniently never get to see the two videos synced up, it's safe to assume whatever it was isn't helpful to Uber's cause. Same goes for the tons of other data the system should have been collecting.
#2796
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Jaywalking is a choice and there may be consequences. A homeless person probably has made a lot of bad choices throughout life. One of the consequences is possibly being hit by a car--e.g.,
and,
When we think about accidents between cars and pedestrians, our initial assumption is probably that the driver of the vehicle is usually at fault. Most of us have probably heard the old adage "the pedestrian has the right of way," even though that isn't always correct from a legal standpoint. In a pedestrian-vehicle accident, the pedestrian can actually be to blame, wholly or partially..
...some instances where a pedestrian’s actions are wholly to blame in an accident with a vehicle:
1. Walking Where Pedestrians are Prohibited: This could be along major highways or bridges, where pedestrians aren’t supposed to be walking.
2. Jaywalking (Crossing in the Middle of the Street): When a pedestrian walks from one street to another and doesn’t use the crosswalk, they are endangering themselves and other pedestrians that might be hurt by an oncoming car that must swerve to avoid them...
1. Walking Where Pedestrians are Prohibited: This could be along major highways or bridges, where pedestrians aren’t supposed to be walking.
2. Jaywalking (Crossing in the Middle of the Street): When a pedestrian walks from one street to another and doesn’t use the crosswalk, they are endangering themselves and other pedestrians that might be hurt by an oncoming car that must swerve to avoid them...
#2797
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The CDC says that about, "129,000 pedestrians were treated in emergency departments for non-fatal crash-related injuries in 2015" Anyone jaywalking a darkly lit road late at night -- not even wearing reflective clothing -- knows they're engaging in a dangerous and possibly self-destructive act. How many times have we heard this when growing up?
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Is it programmed with the above laws in mind, to hit objects, such as people, or bikes, not in compliance with jaywalking laws?
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The CDC says that about, "129,000 pedestrians were treated in emergency departments for non-fatal crash-related injuries in 2015" Anyone jaywalking a darkly lit road late at night -- not even wearing reflective clothing -- knows they're engaging in a dangerous and possibly self-destructive act. How many times have we heard this when growing up?
This wasn't an "edgy" difficult situation.
The AV didn't even slow down with the person in the lane.
It appears the AV system handled the situation worse than a careful/attentive driver would have.
Why do you think the "bad choice" of the pedestrian is enough to give the vehicle a pass for an incompetent response (which is a different "bad choice")?
=====================
In accident analysis, the ill-outcome is often the final result of a chain of multiple errors. That is, rather than an appropriate/safe reaction to the initial mistake, people keep making additional mistakes.
That is, often, there are multiple opportunities to correct and avoid the end result but none of the opportunities are taken.
=====================
In this case, the sequence of mistakes appears to be:
1- Poor design of AV system (speculative).
2- Pedestrian walking in an inappropriate place.
3- AV systems not detecting or reacting appropriately.
4- "Safety" driver not being attentive.
End result: a (likely) avoidable death.
Whatever the cause of 2 might have been, it doesn't free the people behind the mistakes in the other steps from responsibility.
That is, those people behind the other steps are required to take due care to avoid the other mistakes even if 2 never occurred!
We only found out about the other mistakes because somebody happened to die.
Given the apparent poor performance of the AV system, it doesn't seem it would be able to handle a pedestrian crossing at an appropriate place.
Last edited by njkayaker; 03-30-18 at 10:47 AM.