Exclusive: Watch Mobileye's Self-Driving Tech Navigate Miami Streets

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • In this exclusive video, Intel's Mobileye gets deployed on the city streets of Miami, FL. See video from its test run for the first time.
    #Mobileye #Self-Driving
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 35

  • @mannyfreshh
    @mannyfreshh Před 2 lety +9

    Not fake at all. I live in Miami and have seen these cars driving around for 4 years now in Miami specially around the beach and downtown they have been doing testing.

  • @omarsabih
    @omarsabih Před 2 lety +6

    Mobileye has been doing this longer than Tesla. I don't understand the mistrust.

    • @jolank
      @jolank Před 2 lety +4

      For me this is about data base. I mean, Yahoo has been around much longer than Google, but that doesn't make it a better search engine. Google just managed to accumulate orders of magnitude more data that they can base their engine on. That's how I see Tesla. They just have soooo much more data gathered from across the world. I feel like all these other self driving teams are optimizing for: "sunny, limited area, limited road rules". So in that small vicinity in good weather conditions Mobileye might actually be better than Tesla. But in a global frame Tesla seems to be waaay ahead.

    • @richbest9877
      @richbest9877 Před rokem

      @@jolank There was one other one that supposedly could be instaled on any car after 2000. but I can't remember the name of it.

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov Před rokem

      @@jolankTesla is famous for making exploding vehicles

    • @tribalypredisposed
      @tribalypredisposed Před 10 měsíci

      A LOT longer, and that is the problem. This video is a year old now, where are the videos showing any progress? Same for Wayno and Cruise, at it longer, no apparent progress for a while now and what they have is not good enough. This is called a local maximum, a solution that seems promising at first, maybe even allows rapid progress, but the best that solution can ever achieve is not good enough for the problem. You can watch Tesla FSD videos here from a year ago and see lots of progress, and while Tesla was making that progress they also were working on v12, the all neural net next evolution of their program. Why do both? Because Tesla is a show me company that will happily try two solutions and see which one is actually better.
      The DARPA challenges for self driving were won by LIDAR experts because LIDAR allows rapid initial progress. This lead Wayno and Cruise and MobilEye and most everyone else to hire LIDAR experts to lead their FSD teams, and being that they specialize in LIDAR ..well they are not going to suggest not using LIDAR, right? But LIDAR and mapping will never solve this problem and as far as it can go is not scalable or economically competitive. It is a dead end.

    • @George2647g
      @George2647g Před 5 měsíci

      If you look into it they are learning that it's far more about Quality of data rather than quantity - and this mobileye demo looks far better than anything tesla has ever put out - including v12.. @@jolank

  • @rowland5951
    @rowland5951 Před 2 lety +2

    Let's see the car drive out of it's geo fenced area.

  • @kahunakang5995
    @kahunakang5995 Před 2 lety

    what about the geely's first super vision car, geeker001, so far no progress?

  • @whitakerbennett9310
    @whitakerbennett9310 Před 2 lety

    Anyone see the water bottle on the passenger floorboard

  • @kb8570
    @kb8570 Před 2 lety +2

    Looks like a marketing video. Explain the technology like Tesla does.

  • @tonystorcke
    @tonystorcke Před 2 lety +1

    There will come a time where it will be illegal for you to drive your own car. Before then you will see the wide availability of add-on kits to give legacy vehicles the ability to communicate with other vehicles.

    • @maalikserebryakov
      @maalikserebryakov Před rokem +1

      Lmao
      Ye and it will ve said /
      “This is for your own safety. Look at the data. Self driving cRs make less accidents”

  • @NemoEUC
    @NemoEUC Před 2 lety +1

    why does CNET look like a car logo

  • @annabanana632
    @annabanana632 Před rokem +3

    looks very inferior to Tesla. The first left turn shouldn't have been made...the oncoming car had to brake lol. We need raw footage to compare...but turns look really slow here

  • @jolank
    @jolank Před 2 lety +11

    I wish you all the best Mobileye. Tesla Autopilot needs a bit of proper competition. But I'm just not buying this video. It's a marketing material and I have high doubts about how accurately it shows real life self-driving capabilities.

    • @spidermight8054
      @spidermight8054 Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly! I’m not confident auto pilots will ever work satisfactorily, at least not in the near future. Especially on city streets. It’s too variable, too fluid.

    • @robotman011
      @robotman011 Před 2 lety +4

      Tesla is literally an AI Company before they are a Car company. Any Engineer knows that Tesla is YEARS ahead of these marketing videos

    • @spidermight8054
      @spidermight8054 Před 2 lety

      @@robotman011 Ok. Are you arguing that fully functional autopilot systems will be a safe reality in our lifetimes?

    • @robotman011
      @robotman011 Před 2 lety +2

      @@spidermight8054 In our lifetimes? Absolutely! The question is how many years it’ll take. No one knows how advanced we’ll be in 20 years. I mean, look at just how much has changed from 2002 to 2022. It’s…overwhelming to be honest.

    • @spidermight8054
      @spidermight8054 Před 2 lety

      @@robotman011 I can’t argue with you there! I never believed we’d be landing and re-using rockets either, based on what those older and “wiser” would tell me. Yet, here we are! And the internet? I was born in the mid-60’s, and never foresaw what the internet would become. But autopiloted cars is a huge leap, if only because of the hassle in applying blame when accidents happen. I’d love to see autopiloted cars become a reality, but I just don’t see it happening in my lifetime, if ever, given the huge amounts of variables involved.

  • @johncurtis920
    @johncurtis920 Před rokem

    I see some think there will come a time when you, yourself, driving your vehicle might be considered illegal. I say ah contraire. This will never happen. But that said I can definitely see the day coming where your insurance agent might say something to the effect:
    "Gee...you want auto insurance from us, do you Mr./Mrs/Ms. Jones? Well, if you have an autonomous vehicle and we can monitor you when you give it full command, which we would expect to be the case all of the time, then your monthly recurring cost will be some $X. But if you want to drive yourself, and not give it control, then your monthly recurring will be 10 x $X."
    Can't you see this happening? I can. I expect this will happen just as soon as the insurance industry collates the data and concludes that autonomous driving is safer (read here less costly to them) than when the primate drives.
    Yeah...as soon as they conclude this, they'll in a heartbeat start altering their contracts. I guarantee you on this. It's the Capitalist way isn't it? It'll be on you as consumer to decide how you pay for it.
    And quite frankly I can't really summon an argument against it if it in fact lowers my costs. 'Course, that's an open question. How much? 😏
    John~
    American Net'Zen

  • @MicahPotts
    @MicahPotts Před 2 lety

    I dunno why this looks so fake to everybody. I witnessed 3 cars just last night driving around with NOBODY in the driver's seat! San Francisco

  • @reaumoo
    @reaumoo Před 9 měsíci

    While I see some good behaviors, I saw a lot of concerning behavior:
    0:04 Mobileye yields right of way to a vehicle at an intersection, but then cuts across the intersection despite continuous oncoming traffic; oncoming car going straight has to slow down quickly/stop to avoid collision despite not having a stop sign.
    0:15 Traffic ahead comes to a halt and car ahead of the Mobileye has brake lights activated; Mobileye does not even slow down initially; brakes aggressively at the last moment.
    1:02 Man with stroller partially in the street appears ready to cross, Mobileye does not slow down. Young child begins to walk into street, Mobileye does not slow down. Adult takes child's hand and begins to cross. Mobileye slows to a stop after adult, stroller and child have already begun crossing the street. Another adult with stroller has not even begun crossing, likely because Mobileye's speed did not indicate it was safe to do so. Furthermore, if you carefully watch foot of driver, it is hovering over the brake pedal, and appears driver has possibly applied the brake manually.
    1:28 Parked car door suddenly opens, Mobileye initially does not react at all, risking collision.
    1:48 Approaches intersection busy with pedestrians too quickly, stops beyond the stop line. Pedestrian in red instinctively moves out of car's path given its speed and stopping behavior.

  • @Contendet
    @Contendet Před 2 lety +2

    Looks so fake 🙄 😒 😕