General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Anik Samiur Rahman
Asianometry
comments
Comments by "Anik Samiur Rahman" (@aniksamiurrahman6365) on "Simulating the World To Train AI" video.
@v4lgrind Better than humans is a big "If". For example, most accidents don't happen due to human error, it just involves human. The physical factors like visibility or sharp turn or lotsa car speeding by are still there. So, replace the human with AI and the same things will keep causing accident and involve an AI driver instead. Actually, I'll argue that, given the chip shortage - except for the most expensive cars, most AI driven cars will be more accident-prone than actual human.
5
I have to correct one misconception here. Most accidents aren't due to human error. Yes, they involve the human, but are mostly because of factors like low visibility, or sharp turns etc. These factors will still be there with Automatic driving cars. Given the chip and fuel shortage, which is just gonna intensify with each passing day, I predict that 90% of AI cars are gonna be quite poor in those things than average human. Combined with the fact that any level of autonomous driving will make drivers sloppy and less attentive, I predict, except for the top ones, most AI cars will be more accident prone than manual ones.
3
And yet, Tesla is struggling to go past level 3 automation! Just imagine, what's the care for others. My judgement is that, given the chip and fuel shortage, these AI driven cars will never come to consumer space in any substantial amount. The actual market for this AI might be the military.
2
I dare Nvidia (or Tesla) to make an artificial model of the roads of Delhi.
1
@raymundhofmann7661 I don't know if autonomous driving will be shut down or not. But I don't think it's going to come to average consumers in my lifetime, and I'm only in my 30s. Why? Yes, these are technically hard, but more important factor will be chip and fuel shortage, that are intensifying day by day.
1
@marcusmoonstein242 The 90% figure is exactly the misconception. 90% accident involves human driver. Most of the "inability to adjust vehicle's speed" is very hard to do with AI as well. At our current status, AI will do make many of those same error, and make them in situations we consider silly. Given the chip shortage, end of Moor's law (which actually happened a decade ago), and price hike, I deeply doubt if we ever be able to develop an AI that can replace the human driver, and also put necessary computational power in a car without making it as costly as a Fighter Jet. If you say "cloud" then imagine a possible accident scenario requiring a split-second decision.
1