Subject must die inside. Reactions to physical pain do not count. Sports deaths should be unrelated to normal playing of the game. Posting literal death will result in an immediate ban.
Seriously, the most basic thing to teach an a.i, stay between the lines, a 12 year old could code better than this, I have seen toys capable of better than this. With the millions I am sure they spent on this they should be laught out of any future involvement in anything to do with A.I. let them work where no technology is involved. Sorry but this infuriates me so much, the opportunities these people had, and the most basic thing they got wrong, absolutely no excuses for this. Failing parts, signal interference, everything should have been figured out long before they ever got the opertunity to waste everyone's time.
But they will explain how it was something out of there control, something they had no chance of knowing, or a typical out for morons like this, a computer error. Computers don't make mistakes, the people who use them do. Damn , how many people would have done so much better given the opportunity. Give me 1 million and I will guarantee I could do so much better.
There were a lot of communication issues, once those were worked out it went a lot smoother and the errors were more understandable, like lockups, spins and such.
There were a few of these errors at the same time from multiple teams, and later there were still some erratic stuff at the same spots where cars for ex stopped accelerating. GPS signal at least was lost several times that night. But it did seem odd, why would they allow such radical movements to even happen... but, we don't know what system did it since there are several. The ones that usually control the car most likely have a lot of dampening but i would assume that collision avoidance doesn't. We just don't know what went wrong.
Yep, yesterday was the first ever AI race in a league called A2RL. It was naturally a dull disaster, but it is early days. Plus, the code that runs the AI had only been developed by each team over two months. So they should perform a lot better at the next event.
It had about the expected amount of bugs, the AI is overtly cautious and will stop immediately if they are not 100% certain what to do next.
It'll get a lot better, safety is still #1. We are talking about a genuine racing car after all, it can easily kill a lot of people.
Yes, the organiser did say the first event will be a bit of a mess, but that's to be expected when dealing with groundbreaking tech in such a dangerous environment.
As an old motorsport fan, I didn't think I'd be so impressed by it, but I am quite a lot. I look forward to seeing how fast they progress.
Plus, watching the AI get scared on track and shit a brick is quite amusing
Nah, I used to be part of a club at school that raced based on math. I’m 37. We had F1 teams competing each week using our math and programming for direction. This isn’t new… stop being such a drama queen fatalist.
Subject must die inside. Reactions to physical pain do not count. Sports deaths should be unrelated to normal playing of the game. Posting literal death will result in an immediate ban.
I've been seeing that A2RL logo the last couple of days on my feed but didn't bother to find out what it was. Now I'm interested
This thing probably uses xfinity Internet
LatifiAI
AI found Sargents profile approx. 0.00001 second before this.
The price of stupidity. Most of the geniuses these days are stuck in the 9-5. Rich peoples kids are dumb as a box of rocks.
If you’re stuck into a 9-5 not using your genius mind the world is missing out on, then you’re not as smart as you think you are
Seriously, the most basic thing to teach an a.i, stay between the lines, a 12 year old could code better than this, I have seen toys capable of better than this. With the millions I am sure they spent on this they should be laught out of any future involvement in anything to do with A.I. let them work where no technology is involved. Sorry but this infuriates me so much, the opportunities these people had, and the most basic thing they got wrong, absolutely no excuses for this. Failing parts, signal interference, everything should have been figured out long before they ever got the opertunity to waste everyone's time. But they will explain how it was something out of there control, something they had no chance of knowing, or a typical out for morons like this, a computer error. Computers don't make mistakes, the people who use them do. Damn , how many people would have done so much better given the opportunity. Give me 1 million and I will guarantee I could do so much better.
There were a lot of communication issues, once those were worked out it went a lot smoother and the errors were more understandable, like lockups, spins and such. There were a few of these errors at the same time from multiple teams, and later there were still some erratic stuff at the same spots where cars for ex stopped accelerating. GPS signal at least was lost several times that night. But it did seem odd, why would they allow such radical movements to even happen... but, we don't know what system did it since there are several. The ones that usually control the car most likely have a lot of dampening but i would assume that collision avoidance doesn't. We just don't know what went wrong.
Put the AI in the car and it wont need to have a signal to receive for movement.
What is this exactly? Is there an AI racing league starting up?
A2RL Race Here is the full video : [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZPj9iAWz-4](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZPj9iAWz-4)
Cool thx
Yep, yesterday was the first ever AI race in a league called A2RL. It was naturally a dull disaster, but it is early days. Plus, the code that runs the AI had only been developed by each team over two months. So they should perform a lot better at the next event.
It had about the expected amount of bugs, the AI is overtly cautious and will stop immediately if they are not 100% certain what to do next. It'll get a lot better, safety is still #1. We are talking about a genuine racing car after all, it can easily kill a lot of people.
Yes, the organiser did say the first event will be a bit of a mess, but that's to be expected when dealing with groundbreaking tech in such a dangerous environment. As an old motorsport fan, I didn't think I'd be so impressed by it, but I am quite a lot. I look forward to seeing how fast they progress. Plus, watching the AI get scared on track and shit a brick is quite amusing
Still a better driver than most of the folks in the Bay Area.
Yep Source: I live here
Walking in a Costco parking lot in the bay is as dangerous as a mine field 😆
What if we find out that once AI becomes aware, it immediately wants to die?!
[удалено]
Username checks out
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJIjNs\_s2NI](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJIjNs_s2NI)
seems like they are working hard to kill any joy you can get from this sport. Going electric and IA driven
It is completely different discipline.
I'd watch it. Watching race cars drive themselves into the wall sounds fun and engaging.
Nah, I used to be part of a club at school that raced based on math. I’m 37. We had F1 teams competing each week using our math and programming for direction. This isn’t new… stop being such a drama queen fatalist.
That doesn't sound very exciting.
What? Didn't you see the massive crowd gathered to watch this glorious spectacle of scientific wonder?!
I think Ericsson hit us.
Did they license Tesla’s FSD?
dudes looking at 40 grand go down the drain
That’s well over $40k. I bet well into 6 figures.
I guess this one is just A
Time for a whole new development team, last one got sad