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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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11-08-2017, 09:43 PM | #1 | ||
FPV0002
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: S.E Melb
Posts: 252
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Evening all, been a lot of buzz surrounding autonomous/self driving cars these last few weeks and their arrival in the not too distant future. I have heard some 'futurist' describing a scenario in which we will no longer need to own a vehicle one day and we will simply command one to come when we need it, take us to our destination and then bugger off and pick someone else up. I would like to hear other car enthusiasts thoughts on the self driving car and what the motring landscape will look like once they are mainstream. I personally love driving and with the exception of the odd slow boring commute in traffic to work would prefer to steer myself. Getting your pride and joy out on a nice day and taking it for a cruise is one of life's pleasures that I always look forward to. I cannot imagine there would be a love for an autonomous vehicle as it would simply be an appliance? I am also a tradesman so in need a vehicle everywhere I go to carry all my gear. What are everyone's thoughts?
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11-08-2017, 10:13 PM | #2 | ||
Donating Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 11,429
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Agree. Not interested.
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11-08-2017, 10:14 PM | #3 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 459
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Self-driving Taxis Will Become the Most Disgusting Spaces on Earth
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11-08-2017, 10:40 PM | #4 | ||
Two Wheels Good
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Palmwoods, Sunshine Coast QLD
Posts: 703
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My question is "Who asked for driverless cars?"
When we find that person, we put them in a driverless space rocket and fulfill all their desires.
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2004 SX TX RWD Territory 2010 Mazda 3 1994 GQ DX TD42 Patrol 1969 Kombi |
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11-08-2017, 10:58 PM | #5 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 495
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Just wait until the Government realises they will loose millions in revenue from speed cameras....surely there is an autonomous car tax in the wings.
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12-08-2017, 08:01 AM | #6 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 2,252
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Quote:
Win win win for the taxpayer. It wont happen overnight but it will happen. JP |
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12-08-2017, 09:08 AM | #7 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 1,137
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There will never be vehicles zipping around with no driver or more importantly no one responsible for the vehicle. To say they wont have accidents is BS, how many times has software and hardware failed?
In the 1950s there were going to be flying cars in the future...where did that go. |
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12-08-2017, 09:17 AM | #8 | ||
Mustang GT mmmmmm......
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Mornington Peninsula
Posts: 1,459
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It's the end of the world. Aargh.
Was wondering if car companies will even need to sell the vehicles they build as they could just run a taxi business as less people will need to own a car. Just request a car in an app and wait a few minutes and your off.
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I have become a Mustanger. |
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12-08-2017, 09:38 AM | #9 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 495
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Quote:
I don't share your optimism that GovCo will survive without a major revenue stream though. Throw in battery cars with less fuel excise and I can see an autonomous tax and an electricity levy given the electrical system is already stretched. |
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12-08-2017, 09:50 AM | #10 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: In Front of a Monitor
Posts: 1,692
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'Without a driver present, the urge to have drunken sex will be far too strong — and those odds only increase when you add a second occupant to the equation'
Are a lot of people going to be having sex with themselves in these autonomous cars??????
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2004 Mercury Silver Falcon XR6T - 5 Speed 2017 Platinum White Mustang GT - 6 Speed 2022 Blue Thai-Special for Daily Duties - Auto |
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12-08-2017, 11:16 AM | #11 | ||
Wirlankarra yanama
Join Date: May 2006
Location: God's Country
Posts: 2,103
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If autonomous is the way of the future we may end up being transported in drab cardboard boxes. If motoring heads the was of the PC there is next to no difference between an Lenovo, Dell or Toshiba. Crack open a PC and they're basically the same cheap computer bits inside.
Welcome to the brave new world of visionary motoring Kim Jong iL style. Good luck with any vehicle modifications, the manufacturers will probably have proprietary everything including wheel nuts. |
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12-08-2017, 01:26 PM | #12 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2013
Posts: 913
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A Tony Mouse car may be feasible in Euro countries where public transport is everywhere, and a drive of more than 100k will result in you falling off the edge of whatever country you are in.
When one can drive you from the Sydney Harbour Bridge to Cameron Corner without getting lost, hitting the local fauna, or loosing its suspension in a bottomless pothole, I will say 'OK, they have succeeded', but not in my lifetime. I think cars will run out of fuel, be it petrol, gas, lithium batteries, flux capacitors, whatever before Tony Mouse cars are mainstream. |
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12-08-2017, 06:00 PM | #13 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 838
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Quote:
Less physios too. And autonomous trucking there's a few more jobs not needed. These guys pay tax. They may not need as much in terms out outgoings but the tax base is about to shrink markedly due to automation. There will be new jobs to fit in with this but not the sort of jobs which people without a trade or degree will actually get. To be honest there could be massive social upheaval coming and that doesn't bode well for a nice stable society. I'm for autonomy and robots when it helps productivity not when it puts people out of jobs. |
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12-08-2017, 06:22 PM | #15 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Perth, Northern Suburbs
Posts: 5,035
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There's a lot of chatter about autonomous Taxis (or Uber) and I just can't see how it works.
For starters, most countries don't have high labour costs like Australia. Then, what happens when your auto-uber rocks up and the last passenger has vomited allover the interior? It would also seem like a cheap way for people to nick parts. And whilst I'm not about to say "it will never happen" I don't see how you get around the legal issues surrounding liability. (Especially in a country like the USA where suing big corporations is their national sport.) I can see greater levels of autonomy working for your own car. As long as you are in the drivers seat, you are deemed to be in control, and held liable. And there would be some attraction, especially for daily commuting in traffic. The other thing that worries me, in all seriousness (and without going all "iRobot") is the question of children and roos. I have collided with a roo twice, both times on my way home in suburbia, so it is a real issue. If I am driving along, and I see a roo or child by the side of the road, I know to slow right down because bother are unpredictable and prone to stupidity. How do you teach that to a computer? If you program it to detect pedestrians on the verge and slow down every time, you'll never get anywhere. How do you program it to recognize that the vehicle stopped is full of school children? And lastly, if god forbid a child does run in front of me, I will swerve and do anything possible to avoid them, even if that means going off the road. A roo? No chance, thats what roo bars are for. Even if you could program a computer to know the difference, Will the vegan brigade insist all cars are programmed to protect wildlife? |
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12-08-2017, 07:09 PM | #16 | ||
BLUE OVAL INC.
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 8,768
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Meet George Jetson...
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12-08-2017, 09:25 PM | #17 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Mid North Coast
Posts: 6,443
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Quote:
http://intellibus.rac.com.au/?gclid=...RoCVYYQAvD_BwE https://www.cnbc.com/2016/10/25/driv...ing-truck.html
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12-08-2017, 09:26 PM | #18 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 208
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I'm so over the whole technology crap, not just cars, but the replacing humans with computer operated equipment.
They just keep coming up with this Sh.t to replace blue collar jobs, so it will be the select few fat cats who become wealthy and everyone else struggles ,because of our desire to replace our base jobs with technology. I'm sorry, but science and technology design and manufacturing , can only employ so many people. Plus like it or not, not everyone is capable of being a A grade student. Supermarket self checkouts I avoid just purely on principle as this could well have been one of my kids after school jobs, convenient yes but only real benefit is the supermarkets bottom line. Anyway back to autonomous cars, well it's pretty clear how I feel. Science and technology certainly have a place, but not at the cost of the average Joe trying to get a job. |
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12-08-2017, 09:28 PM | #19 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
Posts: 49,824
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Can't get phone reception out 50km from Melbourne and you think they're going to have driverless cars any time soon
I can't wait to rub one out in a driverless taxi, and then when I'm out of there you're going to sit in the same place |
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13-08-2017, 07:55 AM | #20 | |||
Futura
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Bathurst
Posts: 226
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Quote:
Bet you're on camera too and the taxi operator sells the pics on the internet for a little more profit. Never underestimate people. Interesting times. Be great if folk who truly love driving for the sake of driving get to keep our V8 meditation time. Our unpredictability relative to tens of thousands of automated vehicles may be the noise in the system that helps stop the unintended consequences of so many pieces of code controlling identical vehicles reacting identically... Imagine a whole country full of automated cars zipping along highways two seconds apart at precisely 100.000km/h and something truly unexpected happens like a small asteroid (as over Chelyabinsk in 2013) and every car is blinded (or even completely confused by the EMP from the burst) for 2-3 seconds. Unintended consequences in too-rigid systems and boom, the chain reaction could have tens of thousands of fatal crashes across a state in under a minute. Of course, good programming would have that noise integrated into every vehicle. Vehicles might even have slightly different driving personalities, and while I might trust coders as a group to *think* of all those potential issues and their fixes I don't trust corporations to actually allow individdual ones time to *implement* them well. We drivers might just save everyone, and nobody would know. *wishful thinking* Last edited by Nanoraptor; 13-08-2017 at 08:00 AM. |
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13-08-2017, 08:08 AM | #21 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Sydney in the hustle and bustle
Posts: 254
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Fable has a time of the humble horse and cart...
No carbon tax back then, but people could easily step on things in the dark .... sort of like dog crap, but on a larger scale .... and things were measured in 'horse power' .... or as some prefer 'chasing ponies... But on a serious note ... electric driverless cars .. has the potential to change world economics with less reliance on middle easten oil ...
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13-08-2017, 09:37 AM | #22 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 838
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Quote:
They will even stop if a tumbleweed less than a foot in diameter gets into their path. Are they better than a manned truck. No. Do they move more than a manned truck? Yes just cos they don't need to take a **** or change shifts. Do they work well on long hauls yup but in tight spots they suck. |
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13-08-2017, 12:50 PM | #23 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
Posts: 49,824
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13-08-2017, 07:31 PM | #24 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: NSW
Posts: 4,344
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Good for brain dead idiots that would rather look at Facebook 8 hours a day rather than drive, but I'd prefer to drive myself 90% of the time.
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13-08-2017, 09:54 PM | #25 | |||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: NSW
Posts: 4,344
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Quote:
Bring on the new industries that don't exist yet, because we need them before there is an unemployment crisis. Quote:
But since the unemployment rate will be like 40% with many jobs automated, no one will have jobs to travel to or have any money to travel around or spend on leisure activities. So yes there will be less cars on the road I guess. Quote:
On the plus side once self driving cars are among regular traffic I hope they are easy to identify from a distance. I will need to know so I can push in front of them at merge lanes. The computer will err on the side of caution and let you merge to avoid a crash, plus I won't feel bad cutting off a computer. Last edited by Ben73; 13-08-2017 at 10:01 PM. |
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13-08-2017, 10:05 PM | #26 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2013
Posts: 3,318
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14-08-2017, 08:13 AM | #27 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Wollongong
Posts: 3,115
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i'm not a fan of taking jobs away from real people
plus can i tell my autonomous car to do a skid?
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14-08-2017, 12:31 PM | #28 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jun 2008
Posts: 1,137
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I am talking totally stand alone and relying on its own systems and able to navigate all scenarios. Never going to happen. |
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14-08-2017, 01:59 PM | #29 | ||
SZ II TS Territory-Black
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Townsville
Posts: 208
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If the car can drop me at the pub, and pick me up when I have had a skinfull I might be interested then
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Kick it in the guts Barry! FWD is the Devils work |
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15-08-2017, 02:43 PM | #30 | ||
Powered by Marshall
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 1,143
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Contect context context.
This isn't just for taxis. This is for EVERY car trip. The scale is enormous so the infrastructure will just make it happen. Car ownership will be an abstract novelty for crazy enthusiasts like us, everyone else will reclaim their un used garage. Car manufacturers will sell to whicherver organisation/s provide the vehicle ride service not private individuals so most enthusiast focused models will disappear. Some will survive but the price will be $ Fact.......people use their car for less than 5% of the day but its the second biggest expense in their life...............not in the future.............
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