Why You Should Want Driverless Cars On Roads Now

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  • čas přidán 25. 04. 2024
  • How close are we to having fully autonomous vehicles on the roads? Are they safe? In Chandler, Arizona a fleet of Waymo vehicles are already in operation. Waymo sponsored this video and provided access to their technology and personnel. Check out their safety report here: waymo.com/safety/
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    References:
    Waymo Safety Reports - waymo.com/safety/
    Driving Statistics - ve42.co/DrivingStats
    The Real Moral Dilemma of Self-Driving Cars ve42.co/SelfDriving
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    Special thanks to Patreon supporters:
    Alvaro naranjo, Burt Humburg, Blake Byers, Dumky, Mike Tung, Evgeny Skvortsov, Meekay, Ismail Öncü Usta, Paul Peijzel, Crated Comments, Anna, Mac Malkawi, Michael Schneider, Oleksii Leonov, Jim Osmun, Tyson McDowell, Ludovic Robillard, Jim buckmaster, fanime96, Juan Benet, Ruslan Khroma, Robert Blum, Richard Sundvall, Lee Redden, Vincent, Marinus Kuivenhoven, Alfred Wallace, Arjun Chakroborty, Joar Wandborg, Clayton Greenwell, Pindex, Michael Krugman, Cy 'kkm' K'Nelson, Sam Lutfi, Ron Neal
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    Animation by Fabio Albertelli and Jakub Misiek
    Edited by Trenton Oliver
    Audio Mix and SFX by Shaun Clifford
    Music by Epidemic Sound epidemicsound.com
    Additional video supplied by Getty Images and Pond 5
    Produced by Derek Muller, Emily Zhang and Petr Lebedev

Komentáře • 29K

  • @vincentrobitaille4564
    @vincentrobitaille4564 Před 2 lety +3010

    This just makes me realise how much more public transport we need. I think it's an error seeing autonomous vehicules as a main solution for traffic and road safety

    • @alicepow260
      @alicepow260 Před 2 lety +90

      absolutely agreed!

    • @bumb3274
      @bumb3274 Před 2 lety +37

      Well, could work for busses and other transit options? But yeah not cars of the current size

    • @erikhendrickson59
      @erikhendrickson59 Před 2 lety +80

      Allow me to introduce ya to something called "capitalism!"

    • @Sentryalmighty
      @Sentryalmighty Před 2 lety +40

      consider tho: driverless trains??

    • @xtianityisalie
      @xtianityisalie Před 2 lety +30

      Agree. Japan has an awesome high speed rail system.. when is ours coming????

  • @JeremySoo
    @JeremySoo Před 2 lety +19337

    Derek: It's weird trusting a driverless car
    Also Derek: Hops into makeshift cart with giant windmill

    • @BD-yl5mh
      @BD-yl5mh Před 2 lety +701

      Wait for someone to bet ten grand that this isn’t really driving itself

    • @brokenacoustic
      @brokenacoustic Před 2 lety +139

      This is the video he shouldve titled 'risking my life...' lol

    • @motifity3416
      @motifity3416 Před 2 lety +56

      Giant windmill carts are the norm, you know

    • @ff-qf1th
      @ff-qf1th Před 2 lety +138

      @@brokenacoustic nah, as we can see in this video, a driverless car is way safer than that propeller contraption he was riding in that other video

    • @jacobshirley3457
      @jacobshirley3457 Před 2 lety +55

      b-b-but technically it's not a windmill.

  • @nikofromthehitgameoneshot
    @nikofromthehitgameoneshot Před 4 měsíci +234

    they should make these, but longer, and maybe even on rails

    • @realdickhead6077
      @realdickhead6077 Před 2 měsíci

      😆

    • @jamesclerkmaxwell8020
      @jamesclerkmaxwell8020 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Rails cannot take you point to point

    • @realdickhead6077
      @realdickhead6077 Před 2 měsíci

      Are you sure? @@jamesclerkmaxwell8020

    • @diamond_player
      @diamond_player Před 2 měsíci +20

      ⁠@@jamesclerkmaxwell8020that is just typical North American poor urban planning lol

    • @keanuortiz3766
      @keanuortiz3766 Před 2 měsíci +8

      ​@@jamesclerkmaxwell8020 With bad planning and excessive use of roads, of course rail wont lmao

  • @rarewhiteape
    @rarewhiteape Před 2 lety +4579

    I hope you were all being honest when the Captcha asked you to click on the squares containing traffic lights.

    • @spaztikcuk5871
      @spaztikcuk5871 Před 2 lety +384

      The quiet kid in the corner clicking everything but the traffic lights

    • @hoffer_moment
      @hoffer_moment Před 2 lety +93

      amazing comment

    • @nihil_._sum
      @nihil_._sum Před 2 lety +98

      now the only way to prove youre not a machine is proving youre stupid enought

    • @NickRoman
      @NickRoman Před 2 lety +22

      @@nihil_._sum , so now if we get the math problem wrong, then it lets us through?

    • @It-b-Blair
      @It-b-Blair Před 2 lety +64

      @@nihil_._sum a user would have to move the mouse, and the click rate would be erratic. A bot doesn’t ‘move’ the mouse across the screen, it just clicks like a finger on a touchscreen. That’s the measurable difference.

  • @kg4tnp
    @kg4tnp Před 2 lety +2017

    This feels like a commercial. The other issues is many of these fully autonomous cars have remote drivers monitoring them or are limited to very few areas.
    This tech will be ready when it can be used on EVERY road in EVERY weather condition.

    • @daniel6678
      @daniel6678 Před 2 lety +174

      it basically is a commercial - the sponsorship on the video means that anything he says has to have been approved by the company, so there’s no way he could ever criticize it

    • @kochan8461
      @kochan8461 Před 2 lety +32

      @@daniel6678 i mean, we can always call him a sellout.

    • @ZetaCheese
      @ZetaCheese Před 2 lety +7

      Whats wrong with having remote drivers

    • @thearchives1094
      @thearchives1094 Před 2 lety +52

      @@ZetaCheese search up a CZcams called Tom Nicholas. He has a very educated and thoughtful critism of this video

    • @Errors404
      @Errors404 Před 2 lety +15

      Lamborgini would be a Failed tech cuz it cant be used in many parts of the world.
      Including my own state, the road is unsuitable for such cars. And its not a village either its fairly common to have such type of roads. Only the best of cities in the world have perfect flat smooth road.

  • @timothystockman7533
    @timothystockman7533 Před rokem +33

    They were called "elevator operators", and were still in a few buildings in my younger days. Automatic elevators don't have to dodge other elevators... For those who don't know, the auto-land is tracking the ILS signals sent by a transmitter from the runway; auto-land requires significant airport infrastructure to work. I would guess that some amount of roadway infrastructure will be required to make auto-driving truly safe.

  • @adsr3870
    @adsr3870 Před 5 měsíci +178

    This seriously made me have doubts about the moral integrity of the Veritasium team.

    • @Kavyatej
      @Kavyatej Před 4 měsíci +6

      elaborate? the sponsorship?

    • @vatopunko
      @vatopunko Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@Kavyatejyes lol. It’s not a normal sponsorship, but a custom video.

    • @devamin6017
      @devamin6017 Před 3 měsíci +24

      I agree. No nuisance and stretching the facts and not explaining the downfalls of the sponsored company. Basically, humans can’t drive and the car can do everything perfectly without any human intervention behind its operations.

    • @FredEPLk
      @FredEPLk Před 3 měsíci +12

      ​​@@devamin6017those Google cars were travelling for years without a single accident. Driveless cars are one of the best inventions of the last decades. They have the potential to save so many lives. Most accidents are duo to human error. That is why airplanes are much safer than cars

    • @remi1771
      @remi1771 Před 3 měsíci

      @@Kavyatej you should watch "Veritasium: A Story of CZcams Propaganda"

  • @Sharivari
    @Sharivari Před 2 lety +7154

    Ever wondered why in captchas you have to choose bikes, crossings, school busses and so on? Now you know. Genius idea.

    • @corssaspec
      @corssaspec Před 2 lety +442

      Wait what wow

    • @camanderson9954
      @camanderson9954 Před 2 lety +983

      @@corssaspec it's for ai and deep learning

    • @whatsthefuss0
      @whatsthefuss0 Před 2 lety +142

      Woah!

    • @vadrif-draco
      @vadrif-draco Před 2 lety +674

      But doesn't the captcha system already know what's correct beforehand? (such that when you pick wrong you need to do another check)

    • @nathanezra1
      @nathanezra1 Před 2 lety +257

      But captcha already knows what's correct. These ppl don't need us to teach their machines

  • @Allvaldr
    @Allvaldr Před 5 měsíci +62

    What a lovely advertisement video.

  • @thebeeemill
    @thebeeemill Před 2 lety +1791

    I’m really curious how they handle in scenarios where a human is directing traffic. That is, when police are directing traffic around a crash or workers are directing traffic through an area with road work

    • @indyola9738
      @indyola9738 Před 2 lety +251

      Good question!
      I also wondered if other human activity could trip them up, like playing a siren loudly on your car stereo to make them pull over for you.

    • @samuelmuldoon4839
      @samuelmuldoon4839 Před 2 lety +82

      As long as the car is in an area where there is Wi-Fi, cellphone service, or if the car has a satellite up-link, then a human could pilot the car remotely. That is, if there is a road-worker directing traffic, Waymo could have someone pilot the car using a laptop at home as part of a work-at-home job. After the car has finished passing through the unusual situation, computerized control could resume. You could have some safe-guards, so that if the remote driver attempts to speed, or crash into an obvious stationary object, then the computer will intercede and bring the car to a stop.

    • @pizzashark7067
      @pizzashark7067 Před 2 lety +231

      @@samuelmuldoon4839 If human intervention is necessary, then wouldn't it be more sensible (and safer) to have someone in the vehicle take control, as opposed to someone with a laptop (potentially hundreds of miles away) trying to maneuver through a network delay and cameras? This seems an especially poor solution in those given situations where situational awareness and responsiveness is necessary, such as when you're being flagged through an area with tons of road work.

    • @Rig0r_M0rtis
      @Rig0r_M0rtis Před 2 lety +93

      Yeah that's a problem only when there is a combination of humans and robots on roads. We need to get rid of human drivers asap.

    • @kristianhaverasmussen8558
      @kristianhaverasmussen8558 Před 2 lety +30

      I think that’s level 5 automation. So, i think they’re still working on that

  • @NinjaBearFilms
    @NinjaBearFilms Před rokem +17

    I want two things…
    A federal law that says when an autonomous accident happens, all that cars data from its sensors must be made available to every autonomous car designer within a set time limit. So every manufacturer can say, “we’ve tested the data in simulation and this is how our vehicle would have responded. Based on this data we’re adding these improvements.”
    And second… I want a self driving semi-truck that had the trailer converted into a luxury RV. So when I go on vacation we just climb in, say “I want to see Mount Rushmore this summer.” And off we go.

  • @TechNyj
    @TechNyj Před 9 měsíci +9

    1:30
    What you're using is called a geofenced prototype. It's being tested in SF & AZ.
    General availability of this tech is 10-30 years away, depending on where you live.
    It's great that certain places will get early versions that are usable, however.

  • @joostdriesens3984
    @joostdriesens3984 Před 2 lety +806

    In the near future: "I'm bored, I'm going to switch the car to manual to drive myself a bit.." "WTF! are you crazy? stay away from the controls, you're going to hit something if you don't pay attention!".

    • @SOLIDSNAKE.
      @SOLIDSNAKE. Před 2 lety +15

      Exactly

    • @sarumatsu3698
      @sarumatsu3698 Před 2 lety +42

      Just like in iRobot.
      We already are at a point where we trust computers (or automated machines) over humans for near-perfect functioning.
      Imagine everything being automated. We would not challenge it.

    • @bitcoinyoda8321
      @bitcoinyoda8321 Před 2 lety +45

      and it will be pretty expensive to drive yourself because of the insurance

    • @cellc6191
      @cellc6191 Před 2 lety +4

      well yea if we even reach to that point since global warming (:

    • @revimfadli4666
      @revimfadli4666 Před 2 lety +4

      Basically what happened to beginner-to-mid-level programming

  • @a1r592
    @a1r592 Před 2 lety +1551

    "Open the door Waymo!"
    "I'm sorry, Derek. I'm afraid I can't do that."

  • @michinwaygook3684
    @michinwaygook3684 Před rokem +39

    This was one of the first videos I watched by Veritasium and it was because of this video I didn't watch anymore for about two years. I figured when someone is promoting self driving cars while being sponsored by a self driving car company nothing they have to say is worth listening to. While I still do not take anything you say in this video seriously I have very much enjoyed the many other videos you have produced.

    • @FredEPLk
      @FredEPLk Před 3 měsíci +4

      That would be the case if he had hidden the fact that the video was sponsored. They probably reached out to him because of his credibility. He tested the car and made observations (honest ones like when the car suddenly stops to protect a pedestrian). I dont understands why that would make you or anyone else question his integrity. That was not an ad, It was an informative video.

    • @maxguerra9155
      @maxguerra9155 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@FredEPLk To copy another reply i saw here: "Tom Nicholas had made a video about it titled "Veritasium: A story of CZcams Propaganda",
      when "educational" youtubers get paid to do something and present it as a fact. We should spend more time being skeptical on what we're watching nowadays."
      Basically his scientific and balanced view on electric cars and waymo went down to 0% when a paycheck is involved.

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 Před 2 měsíci

      @@maxguerra9155 you seem to have quite a vendetta against veritasium

  • @SanderEvers
    @SanderEvers Před rokem +9

    Honestly, you can replace any car with something really simple: a train. And just take your bike or walk te final distance. Sure you'll need a robust train network, but it is absolutely doable. Since, well, here in the Netherlands we have exactly that network. Plus the bike or walking to the destination.

    • @hamsandwichindahouse
      @hamsandwichindahouse Před měsícem

      In Amsterdam. Outside of Amsterdam, everyone drives, and eveyone knows this, including you.

    • @strategystuff5080
      @strategystuff5080 Před měsícem +1

      @@hamsandwichindahouse Every major city + small town has extensive public infrastructure busses, rent-a-bike, or trains.
      Only in really rural areas would a car be essential.

    • @RMProjects785
      @RMProjects785 Před 20 dny +2

      Netherlands is one of the densest countries in the world, basically one big city. The U.S. is an entire continent. You can't build a train or bus lane to everywhere, bikes can't go far enough quick enough and isn't compatible with a lot of the extreme weather of the USA. While we need more public transport and walkability in urban areas, "just build trains lol" is not a viable solution for the transport needs of such a large country. Point to point transport at anytime anywhere will always beat public transport at a lot of tasks.

    • @paulisebaert492
      @paulisebaert492 Před 15 dny

      You realize that Europe as a continent has a pretty good network of trains right, you could easily travel from London to Madrid within a day by train (20 hours, same as you would with the car over a bit more than 1000 miles) while having time for yourself doing so and reducing your ecological footprint. To put it in perspective, Chicago to New York (little less than 800 miles) takes 18 hours. Each country has then their local network that is maybe less efficient, but the idea is that size is not an argument, it's the mentality. Even China is investing in HST...

    • @RMProjects785
      @RMProjects785 Před 15 dny

      @@paulisebaert492 Yes I know because I live in Europe and commute every day by train and bicycle. First, no one travels by train from London to Madrid, as it requires multiple interchanges, while a single flight can make the trip in 3 hours for half the price. While I agree with the French policy of replacing short-haul flights with high speed rail, making 20 hour train journeys Is something nobody will do.
      Yes, major cities should be well connected by rail, and a lot of road transport disincentivised. We should improve and expand public transport systems. But it is simply unrealistic to replace cars on a large scale. They will always be the most efficient way to travel most distances, even in terms of an environmental standpoint, and to remove them is to return to the 1800s in terms of transportation. Even in the Netherlands, a dense country regarded to have the best public transport infrastructure in the world, cars are by far the most used method of travel.
      To build the most efficient transport system requires a combination of public and private transport. It's silly to rely on one or the other.

  • @channelsixtysix066
    @channelsixtysix066 Před 2 lety +311

    "Driverless Cars Are Already Here" - Yes I know, I've been driving for over 40 years, and see them every day I go out.

    • @thedeadexpert518
      @thedeadexpert518 Před 2 lety +42

      Lol, I think I get it. "Driverless"(not Driverless) cars are the ones where the "driver" is doing something else other than driving.

    • @channelsixtysix066
      @channelsixtysix066 Před 2 lety +22

      @@thedeadexpert518 👍

    • @logicplague2077
      @logicplague2077 Před 2 lety

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @StefanNoack
      @StefanNoack Před 2 lety +12

      @@thedeadexpert518 or maybe just a parked car

    • @GS-td3yc
      @GS-td3yc Před 2 lety +1

      @@StefanNoack or simply you drive ur own car so there is no driver XD

  • @programagor
    @programagor Před 2 lety +541

    I'm sure this was already said in the comments, but the reason pilots land manually on sunny days is that on those sunny days, Cat IIIb operations may not be in effect at the airport. The equipment requires clearance around the runway to guarantee accuracy, and more stringent spacing standards are required. It is more efficient to guide planes close enough to the runway so they can see it, and then let them land manually, visually. On foggy days, airports with Cat IIIb capabilities have it active, as that's when pilots are required to use it.

    • @guyhommeki
      @guyhommeki Před 2 lety +12

      Why don't the airports leave the IIIb operations always in effect then? Too expensive?

    • @jadefalcon001
      @jadefalcon001 Před 2 lety +48

      @@guyhommeki "The equipment requires clearance around the runway to guarantee accuracy, and more stringent spacing standards are required." From above.
      Basically using the autoland systems require more rigid, somewhat less time/space efficient operating procedures. Major airports that are pressed for capacity would see no benefit from sacrificing capacity for superfluous automation. Second-tier airports may be cost-constrained in terms of equipment runtimes, may not have that capability in the first place, or simply don't have the personnel expertise on hand all the time.

    • @FirstnameLastname-ok1yz
      @FirstnameLastname-ok1yz Před 2 lety +5

      @@jadefalcon001 Still there is the same problematic as in the video; would those safe margins impeding time and space efficiency needed for catIII make human landing operations safer too, or is catIII just "overly" safe. Another way to put it is are the reasons for those margins actually necessary feature or, an extra precaution because we do not feel as confortable toeing the limit as much as when we are in control.
      Also there could be a bias about those margins being planned for worst cases climates and not sunny days, which I suppose are not/should not be the same.

    • @eragon78
      @eragon78 Před 2 lety +14

      @@FirstnameLastname-ok1yz Probably regulatory reasons. Things like Automation tend to be regulated much more strictly to ensure safety because when automation goes wrong, it can effect millions vs a single pilot's error. (Because an error in automation regulation can lead to faulty equipment across an entire system).
      So because of this things like automation tend to be OVER regulated to ensure safety which is a good thing. But it also means there is more resistance to automation as its more expensive to rely on so it takes longer before its more widely implemented.

    • @blackjack4195
      @blackjack4195 Před 2 lety +1

      Humans are just better at landing planes, that's why.

  • @touchdownbyu
    @touchdownbyu Před rokem +4

    My dream for autonomous driving. I get into a van Friday night with my family and wake up Saturday morning on the beach ( currently live 10 hours away from the closest one). We spend the day enjoying ourselves, clean off and hop back in the van. When we wake up, we are back home ready for a new day.
    Ive been excited about the possibility for a long time. My guess with the rates of increase in technology, we could be there in 5-10 years.

  • @MrBendybruce
    @MrBendybruce Před 6 měsíci +53

    "Full disclosure, this video is sponsored by Waymo and I've decided to swap out My scientific skeptics hat for my far more valuable propaganda one, so I can get that bag."

    • @FredEPLk
      @FredEPLk Před 3 měsíci +2

      That is because the benefits outweigh the risks massively. Also, he knows that the tendency is for people to be afraid and skeptical about this. He is showing that it is like any other evolution, the more you know about it, the more you realize it is a great invention and start to wonder why you haven't tried before. There was a time when people would never trade a horse for a car and here we are.

  • @fanjan7527
    @fanjan7527 Před 2 lety +525

    My dad who was a pilot, in the late 70's, did an auto landing just to see how the new technology works, on Boeing. He had his hands ready at the flight wheel all the way down, but, in the late 70's, the plane, landed itself.

    • @-_James_-
      @-_James_- Před 2 lety +73

      When I flew to Australia from the UK in the late 90s, we had a refueling stop in Singapore. On our final approach the pilot came on and made his usual pre landing announcement and instructed us to sit back and enjoy the landing - because that's what he was going to do.

    • @underaveragecuber7437
      @underaveragecuber7437 Před 2 lety +8

      Aw, man. So you're telling me that the plot of Airplane! is unrealistic? I never would have guessed

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko Před 2 lety +19

      though even today, it is not unusual for a crash to be attributed to the autopilot. Not directly of course, the autopilot usually works as in tended and there is some degree of human or sensor error involved, but the process of explaining to the autopilot what to do and when involves the pilot, ATC, and other systems that can conflict with it.

    • @CharlieDBrown
      @CharlieDBrown Před 2 lety +60

      There's infinitely more complex situations for an autonomous car to have to deal with. Flying is easy for a computer, it's straight forward, minimal obstacles.
      Planes don't need to change lanes to turn, or to check if lanes are clear before attempting so. Aerospace auto-pilot doesn't have to contend with bumper to bumper traffic, or stop lights.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 2 lety +38

      @@CharlieDBrown True, but landing is the trickiest part of flying, and computers could do that half a century ago. Given Moore's Law, just imagine what they are capable of today.
      They might even fit on your desk!

  • @DrummertheCody
    @DrummertheCody Před 2 lety +887

    I’m legally blind too. Stay at home dad of two. Fully autonomous cars would be an absolute game changer for me and my family.

    • @koneal2000
      @koneal2000 Před 2 lety +84

      I'm still waiting for the idiot "but how did you write this?!?!" comments.

    • @oenwlqpsbevxiwoxbevxhsjan
      @oenwlqpsbevxiwoxbevxhsjan Před 2 lety +13

      @@koneal2000 yeah, he just heard and had his iPhone write it for him. You know.. these services for this specific type of people should be a thing indeed! But for perfectly working humans.. c'mon.. what are you doing to the people's way of living? If the government approves this. Crime will just go higher cause of so much stress from people without jobs. It's sad. Very sad what's going to happen. I'm just thinking about it.. and I feel them.

    • @bigmac3628
      @bigmac3628 Před 2 lety +3

      @@oenwlqpsbevxiwoxbevxhsjanoh i see

    • @Sheridantank
      @Sheridantank Před 2 lety +28

      @UCQMRIAMkmz0BLKI4o4JKx4Q
      "I see, I see", said the blind man to his deaf daughter

    • @DrummertheCody
      @DrummertheCody Před 2 lety +17

      @@koneal2000 😂😂😂 I used the force. Obviously.

  • @mad_like_a_hatter5469
    @mad_like_a_hatter5469 Před rokem +23

    Wonder what their parameters are for self break downs like a tire blow out, lightning strike, or any mechanical catastrophic failure. Or what the procedure is when someone has a heart attack and can’t hit the button if it just keeps driving for the entire trip or if there’s onboard visual monitors.

    • @TheBlackEventorizon
      @TheBlackEventorizon Před 10 měsíci +1

      Given they want to protect their investment and taxies/busses/trains have CCTV, of course these heicles will have it when they are made public.
      On Brakedowns/tyre failures, it would pull over to the side of the road if it could or find the safest place it could, like any human driver. Advantages are that it would know far more about itself than a human does about there car and could stop before a major failure and even immediately alert the authorities that it had broken down - no delay digging out for phone and trying to remember who you need to call. It could even call up another vehicle for the passengers to get into so they are not delayed.
      As for heart attacks and similar events, there are already safety systems in place in large machinery such as tower cranes and excavators to detect driver impairment, so adding them to these vehicles wouldn't be that difficult. But this should only apply if there is only one person in the vehicle, so people monitoring the vehicles can make those a priority. The chances of two people being ill are insanely small.
      Also, if the vehicle could detect this or you push the emergency button, it could change its route to the nearest hospital/ER/A&E automatically, alert both the hospital and authorities and even be given priority by other driverless vehicles if it encountered any. Imagine being put directly through to 999/911 in a vehicle that is already on its way to hospital and you can focus on answering questions and keeping your passenger alive until you arrive.

    • @lemon4087
      @lemon4087 Před 10 měsíci

      @@TheBlackEventorizon who are you

    • @Strapsenkoenig
      @Strapsenkoenig Před 9 měsíci +3

      You could die in a train if nobody sits near by and you get a heart attack. The rest could probably be fixed by maintenance, I am getting a hearth attack each day seeing the vehicles allowed on US streets 😅

  • @benjaminhoffman3848
    @benjaminhoffman3848 Před měsícem +2

    The biggest issue is the autonomy people lose when anybody with an internet connection can take your car from you. The government can just say you have deviant views and shutdown your car.

  • @whyamiwastingmytimeonthis
    @whyamiwastingmytimeonthis Před 2 lety +3478

    This video was Waymo interesting than I thought.

  • @bengunderson712
    @bengunderson712 Před 2 lety +718

    In an accident, humans don't "decide who to hit."
    They panic and hit whatever is about to be hit.

    • @ChilapaOfTheAmazons
      @ChilapaOfTheAmazons Před 2 lety +153

      In a typical accident humans often don't even panic until _after_ the accident because they were completely distracted and didn't even notice that it was about to happen.

    • @bable6314
      @bable6314 Před 2 lety +77

      Exactly. As long as the vehicle can do better than LITERALLY PANICKING then it's fine lmfao

    • @bengunderson712
      @bengunderson712 Před 2 lety +57

      @@ChilapaOfTheAmazons exactly! That's why I disagree with all the "morality of who to hit" discussions with AI. Humans don't consider this, and computers comparatively won't ever need to.

    • @Suck-Squeeze-Bang-Blow
      @Suck-Squeeze-Bang-Blow Před 2 lety +15

      As a commercial driver, I have often chosen my exit from a potentially fatal situation.

    • @Tom-fm2fh
      @Tom-fm2fh Před 2 lety +23

      That's not "people" but morons. You can't judge everybody because of the image you have of yourself. "Self" driving cars are nothing less than lethal weapons and suicide booths. Even in aviation where you have thorough and dilligent inspections every 50 hrs, expensive state of the art technology, way more clearances from objects and obstacles, lot longer reaction times, ATC and you assess weather prepare flight plans to make sure the automation will not go out of it's limits and fail (and there are multiple redundancies and emergency procedures for various automation failures) there ARE still frequent automation failures and completely avoidable deaths if there was NO AUTOMATION in a first place. Automation is nothing than convenience that lazy irresponsible collectivists use to avoid taking responsibility for their lives and actions and to avoid putting effort into practical education and training

  • @vishalshah8213
    @vishalshah8213 Před rokem

    It's so exciting when you can recognize the location of where a video is shot especially when it's not a famous location... He starts his ride from Element hotel in Chandler, AZ (Phoenix yay!!!).
    When everyone else banned driverless cars on streets, Phoenix allowed Waymo to operate in a small part of the city which was mainly parts of Tempe and Chandler. Waymo was still at Level 3 when I first rode it in 2020 just before the start of Pandemic and it was so much more automated when I rode it next in 2022 Jan.

  • @deiaraki
    @deiaraki Před rokem +5

    My cousin once caught her toddler when she was about to fall a flight of stairs. Thinking about safety she bought one of these children leash and the next time it happened she just pulled her daughter back to safety. It worked well until one day she wasn't using the leash and the toddler saw a flight of stairs and decided to throw herself because in her mind she would be magically pulled back. Thankfully she wasn't injured but this video reminded me of that situation.
    If this becomes common I think some people would get careless like jumping in front of an automatic car assuming it will brake instead of going to a crosswalk or waiting for their time

  • @thuytienxanh22
    @thuytienxanh22 Před 2 lety +635

    Driverless car at a crash test;
    Engineer: Ok, now drive into that wall as fast as you can
    Driverless car: Umm no!
    Engineer: That's a pass

    • @sumitrana2420
      @sumitrana2420 Před 2 lety +1

      That would be fun!

    • @V_2077
      @V_2077 Před 2 lety +49

      I'm afraid I can't do that Dave

    • @faismasterx
      @faismasterx Před 2 lety +1

      @@V_2077 This needs more thumbs up.

    • @hamsterdam1942
      @hamsterdam1942 Před 2 lety

      @@faismasterx agree

    • @ripmorld9909
      @ripmorld9909 Před 2 lety +5

      @@V_2077 “Open the door! The car is sinking !”
      “I am afraid I cannot do that”

  • @5MadMovieMakers
    @5MadMovieMakers Před 2 lety +4774

    The best driverless cars should have a race, or rigorous safety competition

    • @MogDog66
      @MogDog66 Před 2 lety +330

      @@nunuvyurbiz123 I think he means a race like a car race. Like racing cars...

    • @MogDog66
      @MogDog66 Před 2 lety +70

      ​@@nunuvyurbiz123 Hahaha good, was starting to think you were a little dim!

    • @ClebyHerris
      @ClebyHerris Před 2 lety +78

      That’s a thing. It’s called roborace and it’s amazing. There was a gif last year that circulated of it just starting a lap and just turning into a wall immediately without any indication

    • @Argoon1981
      @Argoon1981 Před 2 lety +18

      How many average human drivers, are as good as a race car pilot? Or even drive on the road, at the same speeds and making the same maneuvers as race car driver? I hope you know that the most accidents, are provoked by careless, speeding drivers that think they are race car drivers.
      So I ask why, should a driverless car, need to be like a race car driver, if it will NOT drive like one, on normal roads at regular speeds?
      Having said that they ARE making driverless race cars, just to appease certain people.

    • @camerons.9012
      @camerons.9012 Před 2 lety +8

      Make them play chicken

  • @qrs_tuv1925
    @qrs_tuv1925 Před rokem

    This helped. I’ve been fence sitting this issue for as long as Waymo has been on the road (in San Francisco MANY Waymo all night).

  • @Pudibu
    @Pudibu Před 4 měsíci +6

    Elevators didn’t go driverless, they went chauffeur-less.

  • @haschid
    @haschid Před 2 lety +507

    Correction: Planes don't land themselves in very bad weather. They do it in very bad visibility. There is a difference. An autoland procedure has very tight limits in regards to crosswind component, compared to a manual landing. The computer can't compensate for the wind, and sudden changes of wind, as well as a pilot.

    • @Millennium7HistoryTech
      @Millennium7HistoryTech Před 2 lety +16

      Perfect.

    • @mindlander
      @mindlander Před 2 lety +9

      Bad visibility is a type of bad weather.

    • @wildgrem
      @wildgrem Před 2 lety +6

      Well Akchutally

    • @greg6094
      @greg6094 Před 2 lety +65

      This was one of Derek's worst videos as the bias was blatant, there were other factual inaccuracies as well, very deceptive.

    • @mindlander
      @mindlander Před 2 lety +12

      @@greg6094 could you elaborate on the inaccuracies?

  • @pengfeidong5268
    @pengfeidong5268 Před 2 lety +302

    Pedestrian: walks into stationary car
    Waymo: the most serious car vs. pedestrian collision we've had so far

  • @Imbatmn57
    @Imbatmn57 Před rokem +5

    I think building more self driving high speed trains would be better, because it has to stick to a track so theres less variables when it comes to traffic, a train can tow more and if we can have it so trucks only have to get the supplies from the train, they dont have to make 3 day travels with the goods. It would lower costs because you dont have to pay the driver as many hours, also since the driver is more local, more money can be spent in the economy. This would also help more trucks to become solar because its a shorter distance and theres time to charge between orders.

  • @wv05vq
    @wv05vq Před rokem +5

    How much of the experience was done in winter up north? Testing only under ideal circumstances of course makes everything seem great.

  • @ShortHax
    @ShortHax Před 2 lety +6611

    Driverless cars are also wearing seatbelts. What an amazing time to be alive

    • @teabagg1178
      @teabagg1178 Před 2 lety +18

      hello there, how you are you doing today

    • @Tker1970
      @Tker1970 Před 2 lety +246

      So Derek doesn't have to hear Ding Ding Ding Ding... his whole ride I guess :)

    • @FinFET
      @FinFET Před 2 lety +212

      sure the the autonomous car cannot predict what the meatbag driven cars will do, sometimes it is hard to evade an accident caused by another vehicle

    • @tgmtf5963
      @tgmtf5963 Před 2 lety +224

      *hold on to your papers*

    • @ryannygard3661
      @ryannygard3661 Před 2 lety +84

      @@tgmtf5963 get ready to squeeze those papers!

  • @CanadaMMA
    @CanadaMMA Před 2 lety +688

    The fact they would get drunk drivers off the roads instantly makes self-driving cars safer

    • @deanthomas2561
      @deanthomas2561 Před 2 lety +51

      Revmoving drugged and tired drivers also doesn't suck

    • @ahmads5889
      @ahmads5889 Před 2 lety +3

      How about remove alcohol and drugs instead of making such extravagant bypasses

    • @m_uz1244
      @m_uz1244 Před 2 lety +31

      @@deanthomas2561 That's impossible. Even if it was possible, it'd be thousands of times more expensive.

    • @osdever
      @osdever Před 2 lety +101

      @@ahmads5889 We tried. It was called "Prohibition" and "War on Drugs".
      I'm pretty sure you know full well how these endeavors ended up.

    • @ahmads5889
      @ahmads5889 Před 2 lety +1

      @@osdever the issue is with the people, it was normalized for them, then they were immediately forced to leave it after considering it to not be an issue.

  • @ShaharHarshuv
    @ShaharHarshuv Před rokem

    Amaaaazing!!! I'm so looking forward for advancements at those areas. Especially since I don't have a license or do I mean to get one.
    I'm surprised that those cars are already licensed to drive!

  • @toma2819
    @toma2819 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Aug 10, 2023, NPR writes, “Self-driving car firms want California regulators to allow for more vehicles on San Francisco streets. Police and fire departments cite many times when autonomous vehicles botched rescue operations.”

  • @PatrykPonichtera
    @PatrykPonichtera Před 2 lety +713

    As a motorcycle rider I'd feel safer with autonomous cars, they're more predictable, they would indicate their turning intentions and they wouldn't drive distracted or drunk

    • @alericjohansen6775
      @alericjohansen6775 Před 2 lety +58

      I'm not a motorcycle rider, but i would LOVE to have autonomous vehicles on the road that ACTUALLY indicate which way they plan to turn and everything. I see SOOOOO MANY drivers just fail to use turn signals at all, it's insane. Not to mention the drunk aspect or other things humans do.

    • @sino_diogenes
      @sino_diogenes Před 2 lety +12

      This is a good point. I refuse to take up motorcycling (except maybe backroads) because of stupid humans.

    • @WiseWik
      @WiseWik Před 2 lety +3

      @@sino_diogenes that's just stupid

    • @NewBeginningNewCreation
      @NewBeginningNewCreation Před 2 lety +7

      All the negatives, aside from driving distracted, you mentioned are everything motorcyclists I know do 😆

    • @SillyTubereal
      @SillyTubereal Před 2 lety +5

      The possibilities on road are endless, which is why autonomous cars will never take over human drivers. Cars are not like other autonomous machines that have only one job, such as motion detecting lights.

  • @davidhadupyak9946
    @davidhadupyak9946 Před 2 lety +280

    Imagine a car saying, "That was close!"

    • @colinfloyd5788
      @colinfloyd5788 Před 2 lety +9

      In Owen Wilson's voice

    • @puppetsock
      @puppetsock Před 2 lety +8

      Actually, software that notes situations where things went out of parameter limits is a necessary thing. Otherwise you can't learn where the software needs improvement.
      So some situation confuses the software and sensors. And the software reports it. And the developers tune the software, maybe upgrade the sensors. Maybe the sensors get confused over contrast in particular light conditions. Maybe some forms of curb confuse the sensors and the car hits the curb. Maybe it can't figure out train crossings properly. Yada yada, each situation gets recognized, software and hardware upgraded to deal with it, and then they know what to test for.
      The potential benefits are huge.
      It is quite reasonable to expect that the accident rate could be reduced by a factor of 10, possibly much more. So it means your morning commute will have a lot fewer accidents screwing up traffic. Driverless cars will also have radio to communicate with eachother, and computers that can do simulations. They will be able to choose the best route for the shortest travel time. And coordinate with each other so that you don't suddenly get every commuter going on the south option and leaving the north option empty.
      And it means your insurance (with regard to collisions) should be correspondingly cheaper. Maybe you can add about $5000 to the price of the car and get lifetime insurance. Insurance that could be part of the resale of the car. No more monthly insurance costs.
      That will also correspond to a dramatically reduced death and injury rate due to collisions. The vid mentioned deaths. But there are a corresponding number of serious injuries each year also. If you get injured seriously and spend months in hospital then rehab, maybe with things that never go away like scars or damage to your internal organs. Or worse. You may lose your income during this time. And you will have big medical bills, even if your insurance, or the other guy's insurance, pays for it. These cars can reduce the inicdent of those kinds of injuries. That will save costs to the health system as well as reducing the injury and death.
      Theft might be squeezed a bit also. Your autonomous car might know you and refuse to budge for anybody not you. Or designated members of your family. Or it might go, but be calling the police while it goes, giving full video to the cops of both the inside and outside of the car. So if you get somebody jumping in your car with a gun and telling you to drive, the car goes but sees the gun, and calls the cops giving them full particulars. The car and the cops coordinate to agree where and when they grab the thief. After a few incidents where a wanna-be thief is caught this way, people might get the idea that car theft is a bad move.
      It should mean that emergency vehicles have a much better time. The emergency vehicle will be sending radio messages out ahead and the autonomous cars will be getting out of the way in advance. Side streets would stop to clear intersections. It means the fire truck can motor down the middle of the road at maximum speed. The autonomous cars can also be announcing "Firetruck approaching. Please move to the sidewalk." Or some such announcement. And pedestrians can be out of the way. Your ambulance might be able to cut travel times significantly. In the US, there are roughly 6000 ambulance collisions per year, and 3000 fire truck collisions pe year. Driverless cars could reduce those, maybe by much more than a factor of 10.
      You decide you want to go to the office. You dial up your car, which is in a parking lot ten minutes away. It starts itself up and comes to your front door. It drives you to your office. During the drive, you can be reading or watching vids or whatever. At your office, you get out, and the car goes and finds a parking lot nearby. When you are ready to go home, you reverse the process. It means you don't need parking directly at your home or office, just a big parking lot nearby. Which means you can plan things differently both in commercial or industrial areas and residential areas. You can remove the garage and driveway from your home and devote that space and area to something else.

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 Před 2 lety +2

      @@colinfloyd5788 How many years do you think it's gonna be before Owen Wilson is hired to voice the voice system of the car?

    • @SUBSCRIBERSWITHOUTVIDEOS-dj7vo
      @SUBSCRIBERSWITHOUTVIDEOS-dj7vo Před 2 lety +1

      @@puppetsock 1948 - john orwin

    • @mauorel
      @mauorel Před 2 lety

      Wamo: "ughh, c'mon! ... must be a human driving... yup! Hooooman!!"

  • @tonystorcke
    @tonystorcke Před rokem

    My High school, Brooklyn Technical High School, had an elevator driver into the mid- 90's. I remember truing the wheel and having the elevator move up and down.

  • @sentar6969
    @sentar6969 Před rokem

    I definitely get the point I personally the main thing that it would be useful for me is when I wanted to go meet somebody at a bar and have a good time I wouldn't have to worry about getting back home but other than that I find personal pride in learning to drive and I would never take that away from myself but people that are in between driving eliminating having to have driving licenses for a large population of the world that just don't even want to drive anyways I think that's where this would help and even more so I think it allow people to want to drive later so that they get the pride of accomplishing something versus it just being something they have to do

  • @martindonoval2162
    @martindonoval2162 Před 2 lety +365

    Seeing a sticker that says: "Please _keep your hands off_ the wheel" in a car is pretty weird :D

    • @practicalapplications
      @practicalapplications Před 2 lety +1

      Unless it's a BBC Monster

    • @epicplaceholder9853
      @epicplaceholder9853 Před 2 lety +2

      *not having a wheel at all

    • @lordpvt
      @lordpvt Před 2 lety

      LOL

    • @MO-fg2cm
      @MO-fg2cm Před 2 lety +4

      Hackers : keep your hand or not .. I still control you

    • @greefo
      @greefo Před 2 lety +1

      @@iSketchy 😂😂 his being cringe for speaking on something that happens has had happened and will happen? You're the cringe not him for actually thinking.

  • @manp1039
    @manp1039 Před 2 měsíci

    I hope you can go back and do an updated video on what waymo is up to and how far they have progressed since making this video. I am a huge fan of Waymo

  • @dash8465
    @dash8465 Před rokem +10

    There’s a fundamental flaw with these auto-drivers being mixed in with us… it’ll always maintain a safe following distance… so in rush hour other drivers will fill that gap, repeatedly, until the auto-drive becomes the slowest vehicle and thus a rolling obstacle.
    Add 10 of these to rush hour and see what happens. Our current roadways are only barely adequate because we cram more vehicles down the line by tailgating.

    • @albertkwalsh
      @albertkwalsh Před rokem

      How about good public transport and well designed cities?

    • @croikeymatesthrowashrimpon8130
      @croikeymatesthrowashrimpon8130 Před rokem +1

      @@albertkwalsh public transport LOOOL what makes you think i want to share my transport space with you?

    • @albertkwalsh
      @albertkwalsh Před rokem

      @@croikeymatesthrowashrimpon8130 trust me buddy, it's mutual

    • @croikeymatesthrowashrimpon8130
      @croikeymatesthrowashrimpon8130 Před rokem +1

      @@albertkwalsh clearly it isnt mutual, since you obviously want public transport.
      ill ask again, what makes you think i want to sit with the lower classes?

    • @albertkwalsh
      @albertkwalsh Před rokem

      @@croikeymatesthrowashrimpon8130 Well you see, in europe, taking public transport isn't for poor people, it's a a better way of getting around than with a car.
      It's completely fine if you don't want to take it but you should have to pay a premium to use a car. High gas prices, taxing cars and so on.

  • @rohithshenoyd
    @rohithshenoyd Před 2 lety +512

    Man the car must have so much anxiety imagining all those possible scenarios.

    • @realchezboi
      @realchezboi Před 2 lety +141

      “Oh my god, that car was so hot, was he looking at me??”
      *Computes 20 billion possibilities*

    • @curgest6807
      @curgest6807 Před 2 lety +35

      @@realchezboi mmmm look at that model 1980 classic

    • @PiotrLast111
      @PiotrLast111 Před 2 lety +3

      AI cars not doing this thing. It works more like human brain.

    • @akatsukilevi
      @akatsukilevi Před 2 lety +31

      Imagine the car suddenly stops in the middle of the road because it is having a anxiety attack XD

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 Před 2 lety +21

      @@realchezboi Out of the 20 billion possibilities there is only one in which that girl car would go on a date with him

  • @happyjoyjoy6976
    @happyjoyjoy6976 Před 2 lety +552

    a very nicely made ad for Waymo thanks Veratasium.

    • @Pudibu
      @Pudibu Před 4 měsíci +11

      Millions of miles and they still won’t step outside easy layout of Phoenix roads. I dare them to come to Boston.

    • @Hyanmensir
      @Hyanmensir Před 3 měsíci +5

      I also welcome them to Northern Europe in December or Central Europe in general. Let's see how they do when the lanes aren't as wide as a football field and originally designed for horse carriages.
      (They will get there, I'm sure. Just not in 2024.)

    • @FredEPLk
      @FredEPLk Před 3 měsíci +5

      It is like you guys are expecting them to fail. I am actually surprised It is taking this long. Here in Brazil, traffic is chaotic, roads are usually not good enough and drivers can be really agressive and irresponsible. I can't wait to see self-driving cars everywhere.

    • @momom6197
      @momom6197 Před 3 měsíci +6

      It's not an ad: the vast majority of his audience cannot use Waymo's services because they don't operate in that area. It's not about finding customers, it's about increasing public support.
      There is an argument to be made that it might be called lobbying, but don't call it an ad when it's not.
      Also, I don't care who gives me arguments about self-driving cars; what matters is the facts: are autonomous cars safer than human-driven ones or not? From all I can see, the evidence is steadily accumulating in favor of autonomous cars.

    • @woldenwolk
      @woldenwolk Před 3 měsíci +17

      @@momom6197 it literally is an ad. Waymo paid for this video to be made. It was part of a promotional campaign wherein Waymo paid multiple youtube channels to make videos. This is not an unprompted video that Waymo just happened to sponsor.
      An ad is still an ad when it also reaches people who can't purchase your products or services. Lobbying is about influencing government or legislation which isn't at play here.

  • @kimberlykinsinger2612
    @kimberlykinsinger2612 Před rokem +22

    I would really like to see how Waymo would navigate or deal with poor weather conditions like freezing rain/icing roads. I would also like to see how it would deal with gravel roads, as we know ABS on gravel is not good. Thanks for the video! Really excited for this.

    • @syrkon27
      @syrkon27 Před rokem +5

      Driverless cars is not the future, it’s the flying car for our generation

    • @charlottelanvin7095
      @charlottelanvin7095 Před 11 měsíci +4

      I disagree with your point about ABS. I reckon ABS outperforms a human braking especially on a gravel road

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Abs works on gravel roads. I drove on them in icy, snowy, and rainy conditions for years and it never failed me.
      Edit: you know self driving cars don't use ABS right? They control the ammount the car is breaking more like a human would by varying an output to the breaks. Except they are way more precise than humans. So worse case scenario they can just mimic human's best breaking on gravel and match our performance.

    • @DrakeKillah
      @DrakeKillah Před 5 měsíci

      ABS on gravel extends braking distance. However, it also retains the ability to turn, which you wouldn't be able to, if your wheels locked up on gravel. So whether it's better or worse, depends on the situation; in some situations, you might need the shortest braking distance. In other situations, it might not be possible to avoid an accident, without turning away from the obstacle, no matter the braking distance.

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 Před 2 měsíci

      @@charlottelanvin7095 You put an average driver it absolutely does, but a race car driver will beat abs every time. That's why race cars don't have abs

  • @ADEpoch
    @ADEpoch Před rokem

    I love that you said, "Automatic elevators" as though it's a new concept. One that we now take for granted. Roll on the auto driving car!! Got a quesion though. What happens if a bird craps on the lidar? Also, could you do a video on why although electricity is slower than light we can use electrical sensors to measure light's speed? That has always intrigued me :-)

    • @ewanlee6337
      @ewanlee6337 Před rokem

      Assuming the coders aren’t dumb. If a sensor goes down because of bird poop or something else it will slow down, turn on hazard lights, pull over and stop using the other sensors.
      Measuring the speed of light is simple in principle. Fire a laser down a known distance where it hits a mirror and goes back. Time between when it fires and comes back and you can get the speed.
      The difficulty and complexity is in getting precise enough equipment and facilities.

  • @diedertspijkerboer
    @diedertspijkerboer Před 2 lety +683

    Since I don't drive, a driverless car would feel more like a bus or a train, something I'm already used to.

    • @timokreuzer1820
      @timokreuzer1820 Před 2 lety +54

      Yeah, except it's not full of stupid, noisy, stinking, sick, crazy, criminal and annoying people.

    • @diedertspijkerboer
      @diedertspijkerboer Před 2 lety +47

      @@timokreuzer1820 That's not the case where I live anyway. Yes, there can buses and trains like that, especially late at night, but not during the day and in the evenings.
      My worry with a driverless taxi would be that someone has been sick in it, though. But maybe they will have interior cams that spot that sort of thing.

    • @Resetium
      @Resetium Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly my train of thought.

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 Před 2 lety +9

      I wonder: why don't we start with driverless trains? Shouldn't that be easier? We could have way more trains then.

    • @commanderleo
      @commanderleo Před 2 lety +16

      @@lonestarr1490 they already exist

  • @matthewviramontes3131
    @matthewviramontes3131 Před 2 lety +1023

    Robot car: "I'll just stop completely to keep hooman safe"
    Bicyclist: *runs into car anyway*

    • @shahanshahpolonium
      @shahanshahpolonium Před 2 lety

      lol

    • @benjamincarlson6994
      @benjamincarlson6994 Před 2 lety

      My question is how they would fare on longer trips, like interstate highways

    • @shahanshahpolonium
      @shahanshahpolonium Před 2 lety +5

      @@benjamincarlson6994 why they'd fare just fine

    • @edwardcardona717
      @edwardcardona717 Před 2 lety +20

      @@benjamincarlson6994 It's a lot easier to get the interstate right than neighborhoods. The only dangerous thing about interstates is the stakes in the speed, and it's such a regularized system that it reduces the variables at play. In a neighborhood, you any driveway could have a car backing out, every intersection can have an idiot, and every crosswalk can have a vulnerable pedestrian. There's a lot more to detect and be careful of.

    • @kennylaysh2776
      @kennylaysh2776 Před 2 lety +10

      @@benjamincarlson6994 interstate would be the easiest...try driving in the city with almost no markings because they don't pain often, pot holes, people parking so far in roads turn into single lanes....

  • @taylorpeters2071
    @taylorpeters2071 Před rokem +27

    For me it's clear that in city centers, as more cars become autonomous, the quality of autonomy would improve as the IoT on the road grew in connection points. The greatest concern for me would be the security involved with the companies controlling perhaps hundreds of vehicles (and even more human lives) at a time. Both the on site security and network security would be the make or break for me.

    • @Daniel-mw7pu
      @Daniel-mw7pu Před 11 měsíci +1

      Air traffic control is incredibly rigorous for this reason :)

  • @Lianpe98
    @Lianpe98 Před rokem +1

    beautiful 80's Cadillac at 2:04 😌

  • @tomatotomato6534
    @tomatotomato6534 Před 2 lety +660

    At this rate Disney will make live-action version of the Cars movie.

    • @cedriceric9730
      @cedriceric9730 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes to that

    • @anotherfellasaiditsnunya
      @anotherfellasaiditsnunya Před 2 lety +7

      And it will be made by Skynet having determined the human race is unable to survive its own flawed existence prompting the onset of the robot war

    • @savinyupant6227
      @savinyupant6227 Před 2 lety +1

      But man they won't be able to crash those cars into each other , kind of leaving no space for suspense and action xD

    • @Hyrulistic
      @Hyrulistic Před 2 lety +1

      Lightning McQueen will be the last car with a human driver, who has to learn to trust his AI.

    • @sorenkair
      @sorenkair Před 2 lety +1

      This makes no sense

  • @InterloperBob
    @InterloperBob Před 2 lety +509

    "in all three cases, the waymo vehicle was stationary and the pedestrians ran into the vehicle." The report kindly omits the intoxication level of these pedestrians 😂

    • @maulerrw
      @maulerrw Před 2 lety +116

      Up next: driverless pedestrians

    • @James-sk4db
      @James-sk4db Před 2 lety +58

      @@maulerrw That sounds like drunk people already

    • @simonescarinzi3491
      @simonescarinzi3491 Před 2 lety +31

      Or maybe the car just stop immediately Infront of them? I think more details are needed to get a picture of what happened

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Před 2 lety +1

      Were they actually intoxicated?

    • @StormTiberius
      @StormTiberius Před 2 lety +4

      @@paulmichaelfreedman8334 Maybe they were scammers trying to get some cash from the Waymo mobile ATM :>

  • @sammytech9464
    @sammytech9464 Před rokem +1

    I really like the idea of autonomous cars. Excited for the future!

  • @Dan-1031
    @Dan-1031 Před rokem +2

    While the concept of autonomous is good, it won’t solve traffic. City planners refer to induced demand whenever a freeway, like the 28 lane Katy Freeway, adds new lanes. New lanes equals more drivers on the road since there is more supply, and you get more traffic since the extra capacity meant for the 20 cars in the freeway before expansion will now be filled up by new cars.
    Also, say the autonomous cars of the future to go around like a network and there is 0 breaks or anything. How would you cross the city if you were a pedestrian? It’s like a deer running on a road, near impossible.
    Best solution is to get rid of cars and focus on rail or denser cities which take people off cars

  • @dantheman8862
    @dantheman8862 Před 2 lety +301

    13:50 - "These vehicles have WAYMO experience than any human driver"

    • @dantheman2120
      @dantheman2120 Před 2 lety +5

      You did not

    • @proloycodes
      @proloycodes Před 2 lety +9

      you are truly The Man, Dan

    • @9ishesh
      @9ishesh Před 2 lety +3

      They cant even drift

    • @demosdown9812
      @demosdown9812 Před 2 lety +4

      @@9ishesh when you put it that way.

    • @9ishesh
      @9ishesh Před 2 lety +2

      @@demosdown9812 dude anyone into cars will drive themselves. Imagin someone is chasing you and your car decide, nah we cant break speed limit.

  • @BlacklistBill
    @BlacklistBill Před 2 lety +719

    You might even say, they have 'Waymo' experience than any human driver.

  • @Pudibu
    @Pudibu Před 4 měsíci +3

    Wait until little Johnny stops one of these by pressing “Siren” button on his toy car from side of road.

  • @aspecreviews
    @aspecreviews Před rokem +1

    I've had the lane keeping assist system in my grandpa's 2019 Acura RDX jerk the steering wheel out of my hands and apply the brakes on one side of the vehicle to try to bring me back into my lane when I crossed the centerline of the road to provide space for a cyclist. Will autonomous vehicles be intelligent enough to take that into account and be able to cross the centerline if it is necessary?

  • @emmanueleng1160
    @emmanueleng1160 Před 2 lety +195

    15:15 Pedestrians running into a stationary vehicle. That face was priceless.

    • @SherrifOfNottingham
      @SherrifOfNottingham Před 2 lety +2

      Almost like a suppressed pogchamp lol

    • @FelixFranz
      @FelixFranz Před 2 lety +20

      For me, Derek was way too much tech-fanboy, not even once offering a critical thought. Because these cars, when in doubt, always err on the side of caution, they tend to violate our reasonable expectations especially in low-speed situations. Remember this sudden hard stop in the parking lot? I can easily imagine how those 3 pedestrians got their expectation about the cars movement suddenly betrayed and instead of slipping past behind, walking into the car! The cars constantly predict their surroundings and we do exactly the same, but at times in a very different way.

    • @JustusRomijn
      @JustusRomijn Před 2 lety +6

      @@FelixFranz I understand, however if we adapt to these cars on the road (easily recognizable), I'm sure these things are not so much an issue anymore. I still think it is worth the trade-off: thousands of deadly incidents each year vs minor injuries because of low speed bumps into a stationary vehicle.

    • @maxk4324
      @maxk4324 Před 2 lety +4

      @@FelixFranz maybe the solution is that pedestrians just shouldn't walk through moving traffic..... Idk, maybe that's a bit too crazy an idea to work.

    • @iy42
      @iy42 Před 2 lety +8

      @@FelixFranz I'm struggling to actually picture the scenario in which a pedestrian expects to pass behind a car, the car instead stops, and then the pedestrian slams into the car at enough force to cause injury -- and of course that would still be human error, and pedestrians not paying enough attention while on a road to not walk into a car should feel lucky they walked into an autonomous one and didn't get run over by a human controlled one.
      I think part of the hypey tone in the vid is due to the frustration with people's attitudes toward autonomous tech, while human driven cars continue to be one of the most dangerous elements of our lives. My main transportation method is cycling, and almost getting run over by a driver not paying attention is a daily occurrence in my life. At this point, I'm pretty sure the only reason I'm not injured or dead is that many modern cars automatically brake to avoid these types of collisions.
      (Oh, and also, I don't think the sudden brake was unreasonable. If a pedestrian reaches a crosswalk while a car is behind the crosswalk, the car is supposed to stop -- that's a reasonable expectation. The fact that drivers almost never actually do this is the unreasonable bit, and why pedestrians will feel much safer crossing the street when they know no humans are going to try and swerve around them at a crosswalk.)

  • @mrWobbleWobble
    @mrWobbleWobble Před 2 lety +1933

    Maybe a corporate PR oriented sponsored video is not exactly an element of truth? Don't get me wrong, I'm a huge fan and have been here since the beginning of the channel. But this is kind of a disappointment because we all know you'd do a much deeper and more interesting analysis in the autonomous cars technology without some company's interests looking over your shoulder. This is more of a very big ad than a true Veritasium video which we all know and love.

    • @javiergonzalez7214
      @javiergonzalez7214 Před 2 lety +138

      This is absolutely an ad. I'm genuinely disappointed. At the very least, they should change the name of the channel.

    • @That_GuyYouTube
      @That_GuyYouTube Před 2 lety +38

      Gotta make that $$$$$$

    • @BrassicaRappa
      @BrassicaRappa Před 2 lety +53

      Yeah, this disappointing, especial considering the size of the channel. They have 4000 patrons on patreon. Didn't see numbers published, but I'm sure they're not all $1 subscribers. Can't imagine they're *that* desperate for funding, or that it would be worth putting the channels credibility on the line. :/

    • @7654321220
      @7654321220 Před 2 lety +20

      You dismissed an arguement of truth based on intentions not factual evidence, that's not a good sign. Also, there's no general "autonomous cars technology", just "autonomous cars technology of XXX company"

    • @charan775
      @charan775 Před 2 lety +7

      @@That_GuyCZcams they can take sponsorships from someone else rather than the same company on which you are making video about it

  • @oukeef3668
    @oukeef3668 Před rokem +13

    I would love more information on those accidents. Specifically the pedestrians hitting the vehicle. My guess is the waymo vehicle made a ridiculous hard stop for predicting another pedestrian was going to walk in front of the car.
    I like the idea of autonomous vehicles but I do think humans have things that the vehicles do not. I would also love to see how a waymo vehicle handles rush hour in NYC heading to one of the tunnels. I would guess it would just sit there because it wouldn’t be aggressive enough to move forward in that traffic.

    • @jayramsey853
      @jayramsey853 Před rokem +1

      what specifically do you think humans do better? (in context of cars of course)

  • @Boz1211111
    @Boz1211111 Před 5 měsíci

    Maybe having autonomous mode, with fully functional drivers seat like we use would be forever solution, because there could be many instances where driver cannot be replaced, so having an option to use it as a regular car if desired should be a must. for example natural disasters, war, vehicle malfunction, going into area where autonomous mode doesnt work well, rough road conditions like heavy snow or such

  • @matthewtalbot-paine7977
    @matthewtalbot-paine7977 Před 2 lety +149

    Imagine being so comfortable in your job that you were told you were allowed a car that drove itself but you had to be attentive to the situations that might come up and you were going to be recorded and then you still went to sleep in the car.

    • @DomyTheMad420
      @DomyTheMad420 Před 2 lety +1

      you joking?
      that dude probly has a nice cuchy contract and is in charge of a whole division

    • @redeamed19
      @redeamed19 Před 2 lety +13

      it really isn't hard to imagine. I doubt it was a first day thing. regardless of warning the monotony of the daily commute would build. it is exactly why the use cases were such a good demonstration of what you can expect of the general public. People are quick to trust a system when things are going well and quick to forget surveillance when it isn't regularly brought up. I dont think this requires any excessive amount of comfort in ones job.

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Před 2 lety +6

      Actually, this scenario is the most dangerous. Humans are terrible watcher for machines.
      Take flying planes, theres lots of tasks to keep the pilots entertained while the auto-pilot does its think, because they discovered if you totally do 100% of the things and expect the human to act in the critical situations only, it will fail so badly. That's what the fly-by-wire engineers don't tell the pilots, nor the public, but the plane could actually literally fly itself without pilot, but it doesn't have total environment awareness.
      So you either let the human drive, which is safer, or go full autonomous 4 level and don't allow the human to touch the machine.

    • @mastergonggi6652
      @mastergonggi6652 Před 2 lety

      *imagine being so tired you sleep

  • @smbarbour
    @smbarbour Před 2 lety +799

    I'm really interested to see how they will handle winter road conditions where there is black ice and a layer of snow and slush that completely obscures the lane markings.

    • @Kylesnowboardersutcl
      @Kylesnowboardersutcl Před 2 lety +168

      It would probably drive slower and more carefully than most people would in the same situation. It would also be able to use the data gathered about the width of the road, other cars positions, and the edges of the road to determine its own correct positioning

    • @bearcubdaycare
      @bearcubdaycare Před 2 lety +84

      I think that there's a reason that is done in a warm climate on wide straight roads, not in snowy, icy regions with winding lanes, bad pavement, blowing grocery bags. You know, like stuff that makes it complicated. Some years back, I thought "wow, DARPA really seems to think that teams have cracked this". Then, cars driving into the sides of buses or the bottoms of crossing tractor trailer trucks, or unable to distinguish between a stopped fire truck and an overheard sign. That last was like, if you can't solve that basic motion problem, that's the most basic 0.00001% of the problem. Ok, long way to go, if ever.

    • @thedarkcod4824
      @thedarkcod4824 Před 2 lety +10

      @@bearcubdaycare MINNESOTA MOMENT

    • @rum-ham
      @rum-ham Před 2 lety +70

      How well do humans handle these conditions? (I don't think they handle it very well tbh). There's really no reason why these cars can't (eventually, after enough training) handle ANY situation better than a human.

    • @rum-ham
      @rum-ham Před 2 lety +33

      @@bearcubdaycare I see autonomous cars from multiple companies driving around everyday in San Francisco. They are coming sooner than you think.

  • @RafaelCardoso299
    @RafaelCardoso299 Před 10 měsíci

    Awesome video as usual ! Keep rocking !

  • @zanharris8697
    @zanharris8697 Před rokem +3

    Here's an idea for concern I had:
    As time goes on and more and more things become automated through technology, such as car in this case, shouldn't that raise concern for things that Can interfere with technology, such as hacking?
    If technology is getting more advanced then surely hacking is getting more advanced as well. Could someone hack an automated/self-driving car to make it perceive something that isn't there, or worse to make it Not perceive what is really there?
    Though even with the risk of hackers, I do think that having cars to be fully automated will ultimately result in less deaths than nonautomated vehicles.

  • @shortstuph123
    @shortstuph123 Před 2 lety +778

    As a disabled person who rarely feels comfortable driving further than my neighborhood, I cannot wait for this to be commercially available. I cannot explain how drastically this would change my life.
    Edit: so there are some ignorant people replying to me here. Before you also write something uninformed and frankly rude, please read my responses to those that already did so. If you have actual questions about being disabled, I will be happy to answer them. Just don’t be a jerk please.

    • @vanessamoon7316
      @vanessamoon7316 Před 2 lety +48

      I commute 90 mins to work everyday. I can’t wait to get into one of these and just sleep till I arrive at the office.

    • @savag3_orang387
      @savag3_orang387 Před 2 lety +22

      Yeah just add an alarm and boom an extra 90 minutes of sleep

    • @igisanchez265
      @igisanchez265 Před 2 lety +20

      You are not disabled.
      You just said on another video that you ran a marathon and feel so happy you completed.

    • @shortstuph123
      @shortstuph123 Před 2 lety +82

      @Paul Martin he’s just wrong. On every account. I have never and will never run a marathon (or claimed to do so). Regardless, I can list off the top of my head a dozen different categories of disabilities that could do a marathon but not drive. No idea where he got this idea from.

    • @safe-keeper1042
      @safe-keeper1042 Před 2 lety +8

      This is going to be life-changing for a lot of people who can't drive (or can't drive well).

  • @SpAzMaNiK
    @SpAzMaNiK Před 2 lety +439

    Would love to see how this technology handles snow

    • @king6dutch
      @king6dutch Před 2 lety +36

      It will, as long as its a little snow. I live in Edmonton. 6 Months of the year our roads are a winter nightmare, with residential streets being having a thick pack of snow/ice on them, it was about 3 inches on my street last year by the end. Add a particularly heavy snowfall, add wet snow conditions that ice up the sensors, add black ice (so thin and clear you don't know its there) Its another level of technology that will be needed for conditions like this, tech that can 'see' through snow and ice, tech that can label roads and lanes without visual line of sight, better tires and braking for icy streets. That said, human driving in those conditions suck too. Sort out the sensors and it will probably be safer already, but likely slow.

    • @comicguy4624
      @comicguy4624 Před 2 lety +31

      I guess that's why they're in Arizona lmao

    • @alexwebster8999
      @alexwebster8999 Před 2 lety +12

      Ya it’s definitely a different beast. Stuff like a Lidar sensor can still “see” even in heavy snow. I’m in Canada and I keep thinking how every winter my cars backup camera is unusable. I wonder if they could solve it someone. Like keep the camera clean by warming up the lens or something

    • @rb032682
      @rb032682 Před 2 lety +7

      I handled snow by moving away from Ohio and into a snow-free climate.

    • @ILCorvo001
      @ILCorvo001 Před 2 lety +11

      @@alexwebster8999 I think its less of a visibility question, and more of a "making many small (and bespoke) adjustments in an environment that demands constant (and random) adaptation" kind of thing. The hard part of driving on snow and rain (for those that aren't really familiar), has less to do with visibility than it does road conditions.

  • @Peacewind152
    @Peacewind152 Před rokem

    The one thing I worry about with the pilot shortage, is the drive for single pilot ops or zero pilot ops. That technology is enormously complicated compared to a car or elevator. When something goes wrong, more than one person is required to fly the plane and get through the checklists. Sure a pilot in a Cessna can do it on their own, but it is a significantly LESS complex aircraft.

    • @my2cents366
      @my2cents366 Před 10 měsíci

      Most modern planes are mostly automated and pilot do very little in it. The stuff we do in planes can be simply automated but it is more of a red tape. I hope it stays that way so I have a job security.

  • @frankdavidson644
    @frankdavidson644 Před rokem

    Brilliant idea 💡 awesome job thank 😊 👏 🙏 Pops

  • @TheDanaYiShow
    @TheDanaYiShow Před 2 lety +612

    idk why I laughed so hard when derek said "in all the accidents with pedestrians, they ran into the car" 😂😂

    • @GTAVictor9128
      @GTAVictor9128 Před 2 lety +30

      Insurance fraud?

    • @Hathur
      @Hathur Před 2 lety +67

      Not hard to believe. I've had 3 "crashes" with pedestrians in my 20+ years driving... All 3 I was stopped at a red light and some idiotic cyclist crashed into the side of my door trying to squeeze between cars. One of them got killed after he blew threw a red light after smacking the side of my door. Cyclists are suicidal.

    • @morthostalisint1720
      @morthostalisint1720 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Hathur See, this is why I never learned to ride a bicycle. Also, yikes.

    • @54m0h7
      @54m0h7 Před 2 lety +20

      @@Hathur I've only every had 1 incedent with a pedestrian. I was literally sitting in stopped bumper to bumper traffic, and this cyclist just bangs on my window.. like I'm suppose to move out of his way or something? I was in a Tundra, so rather large truck.. but um yea what do you want me to do? People are dumb.

    • @hansolowe19
      @hansolowe19 Před 2 lety

      In almost all cases, there was a vehicle-pedestrian collision.
      True story.

  • @JMUDoc
    @JMUDoc Před 2 lety +962

    "Ride In Progress" makes for an unfortunate acronym...

  • @DColcla
    @DColcla Před rokem

    I was in PHX all last week. I saw these cars on many occasions in PHX. As part of an aircrew I travel around the states. I have never seen these cars anywhere else. I am curious to know in what other markets they are found.

  • @rahulxtremegaming7294

    I love the idea of the autonomous vehicles. It will clearly be a game changer. Only 2 things That should be clear:
    1. what about maintenance of such vehicles if not properly maintained will it malfunction and cause an accident or it will not drive with those errors and we are stuck.
    2. How expensive would they be?
    Hopefully a reasonable amount for maintenance and mid range price would change the world... because there is no point in only high class people having these vehicles as they already have chauffeurs for driving which are way better than average...

  • @equesdeventusoccasus
    @equesdeventusoccasus Před 2 lety +183

    In 2010, due to upper body mobility dysfunction, I parked my car and sold it. It was no longer safe for me to be behind the wheel. Autonomous vehicles are something that I have been waiting for.

    • @ElNeroDiablo
      @ElNeroDiablo Před 2 lety

      Aye. I mean I have panic attacks trying to start a car and get it rolling along with muscle problems in my legs that give me lead feet, but live in a part of rural NSW, Australia where it's a 40km/25mi to the next town and a 110km/70mi+ drive to the nearest cities so having a car is kinda required if I need to go any further than my grocer down the road and expect to carry anything more than some light breakfast and lunch makings in shopping bags.

  • @PaulJWells
    @PaulJWells Před 2 lety +218

    "Pilot Error" - When you see that most air accidents are caused by pilot error you could wonder why we still have pilots. The reason is that the pilot prevents far more accidents that would happen if they were not there. The problem is it's very hard to quantify things that don't happen.

    • @brandoncueto
      @brandoncueto Před 2 lety +38

      Ah yes, some survivorship bias. Or non-survivorship bias? haha

    • @DArtagnonW
      @DArtagnonW Před 2 lety +60

      It's a bit like a vaccine. If you heard "Most flu related deaths are from bad reactions to vaccines" you might think "Oh no! Vaccines are bad!" But what's really happening is: flu deaths are so insanely diminished that the waaay secondary consideration, bad reactions, becomes prominent.

    • @mariusvanc
      @mariusvanc Před 2 lety +24

      It's a huge phenomenon in economics. Often used to justify things like, for example, government assistance projects. A government project creates, say, 100 jobs at the cost of $X dollars. Great. What you don't see, and never will, is how many jobs would have been created if the money was spent differently, but you can confidently say "we created 100".

    • @mrquark
      @mrquark Před 2 lety +4

      Source for that statement?

    • @JMurph2015
      @JMurph2015 Před 2 lety +3

      Ummm, actually they do track how many pilot-prevented incidents there are. Those numbers aren't publicized but I can almost guarantee you that the airlines keep track of close calls through post flight reports.

  • @wesleybaldwin1999
    @wesleybaldwin1999 Před rokem

    And also the more of these vehicles that are on the road, the potential to have them communicate making it that much safer is higher.

  • @notabot0101
    @notabot0101 Před rokem

    I'd be curious to see how it behaves in a place like Dallas, where drivers are erratic and many are driving 90 mph.

  • @commander_frog
    @commander_frog Před 2 lety +337

    Finally a cab where I don’t have to awkwardly worry if I’m supposed to talk to the cab driver or not

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 2 lety +8

      How do you tell it not to go the long way round

    • @devarora3770
      @devarora3770 Před 2 lety +12

      @Guinness There is map integrated you can suggest to change the route.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer Před 2 lety +3

      @@GuinessOriginal You can just tell the system. Just looking in the video. You could speak to the car like you can speak to your Alexa or Hey Google. You could use the touch screen and use a map to tell it how you would like to drive if that is possible. Like you could already Google Maps now. With the added bonus that if the system knows a certain road is congested or broken up it could suggest alternatives.

    • @daphenomenalz4100
      @daphenomenalz4100 Před 2 lety +2

      @William Manning anybody sitting next to you probably will be someone you know, you won't sit in an automatic car with strangers😂

    • @jaloveast1k
      @jaloveast1k Před 2 lety

      I'll still be talking to the robot bro

  • @JJs_playground
    @JJs_playground Před 2 lety +756

    You should have mentioned that those waymo cars are "geofenced" in one neighbourhood in Phoenix, Arizona.

    • @james3803
      @james3803 Před 2 lety +16

      Exactly

    • @salmanbehen4384
      @salmanbehen4384 Před 2 lety +40

      This comment should be way up higher.

    • @alankwellsmsmba
      @alankwellsmsmba Před 2 lety +14

      That's implied. You figured it out and so did I.

    • @james3803
      @james3803 Před 2 lety +149

      @@alankwellsmsmba that’s definitely not implied in this video and almost no one knows that

    • @samplebriefmint4204
      @samplebriefmint4204 Před 2 lety +34

      @@james3803 But he did say that they are only in a certain part of Phoenix? Near the beginning of the video.

  • @user-wk7lm5gk6x
    @user-wk7lm5gk6x Před měsícem

    WOW so amazing..I'm so proud me All people good technology.. bless you all

  • @drob8220
    @drob8220 Před rokem +7

    The big problem with driverless cars is that the amount of data you need to work on every road and scenario is astounding...60 million miles of driving in a single city, where they manually have mapped it and ensured things work, and it only just about works...these cars would not work on any random road outside of Phoenix

  • @jaysftw
    @jaysftw Před 2 lety +618

    Imagine road ragers pulling up to the car and seeing that there is no driver.

  • @paborralho
    @paborralho Před 2 lety +1401

    I've always admired veritasum videos and watched them as independent opinion. My question is: if Derek thought something was wrong, would it be on the video? It is sponsored by Waymo, I assume that they had to aprove it right? Did they write the script? I just ask.

    • @TheDanielradio
      @TheDanielradio Před 2 lety +107

      There was actually a video discussing that possible problemo.

    • @hardo78
      @hardo78 Před 2 lety +13

      @@TheDanielradio what video? Can you post a link?

    • @TheDanielradio
      @TheDanielradio Před 2 lety +74

      @@hardo78 I was being vague because you can use word filters for your comment sections so they never show up. I wouldn't expect the Veritasium team to do it, but who knows

    • @hardo78
      @hardo78 Před 2 lety +22

      @@TheDanielradio thx. U know the veriatium video about self driving cars sponsored by a german car brand? I think there where many comments about it being an ad, but now not anymore

    • @TheDanielradio
      @TheDanielradio Před 2 lety +9

      @@hardo78 no i saw veritasium had a video about self driving cars from 5 years ago? Haven't seen it, was that the one you meant? Sad to hear if that was a sponsored one too. Or sponsored videos shouldn't be disliked just because of that, but that we all can remain contious about biases, and preferably that educational youtubers still make sure to weigh both sides of an argument

  • @starvingpeoplecantcomplain

    The implementation of autonomous vehicles will reduce the amount of accidents but a driverless car should also be able to react to unforeseen circumstances if we want to be adept it on a wide scale.
    I also believe that there should still be the option for the driver to take over control (in the case of a software or hardware error or if the driver just wants to drive independently or when the route isn’t programmed).
    One problem that I see is that of the criminal and legal responsibility. Who will be criminally and legally responsible in case of an accident?

  • @michaelfletcher1224
    @michaelfletcher1224 Před rokem

    "Most of these errors are impossible for a machine to make" - That's a crazy statement. I use the FSD on my Tesla daily - I know it's not level 4, and doesn't have as many sensors as these vans do - but every single time I use it is makes a mistake, some of which would cause an accident. This is the future for sure... but it's still more than 5 year away. I personally know engineers that work on these systems and they'll tell you the same thing.

  • @SeanHodgins
    @SeanHodgins Před 2 lety +2190

    The real problem is the transition phase, which will likely be extremely long period(or endless?). Its not quite as easy of a change as elevators, so you will likely always(in our generation at least) have bad human drivers with good Autonomous drivers sharing the road. I wonder what it would mean for insurance companies with 100% autonomous vehicles on the road.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 2 lety +245

      You’ll never get that though will you, there will always be people who want to drive

    • @byrnemeister2008
      @byrnemeister2008 Před 2 lety +96

      I am pretty sure it’s going to mean bankruptcy for auto insurers. Except for the one that insurers Google and the one that covers Tesla.

    • @Gunny-rt3lb
      @Gunny-rt3lb Před 2 lety +481

      1 word, 'insurance'. At some point insurers will significantly raise premiums on human driven vehicles because the risk of damage will be so much higher and it will be sooooo much easier to prove that a human was the source of the crash (from telemetrics)

    • @jaredf6205
      @jaredf6205 Před 2 lety +7

      What would make it a problem?

    • @jaloveast1k
      @jaloveast1k Před 2 lety +163

      @@GuinessOriginal I mean, the government can enforce that. If let's say 90% of population will be against human drivers sticking around, then it'll be in every politicians interest to make it part of his election program.

  • @markozagar
    @markozagar Před 2 lety +519

    Here's one way I'm thinking about this: Yes, software can have bugs and will fail sometimes, but it will do so once (or a few times), then it'll be fixed and *all* the self-driving cars will be updated. On the other hand, humans make the same mistakes over and over, the "lesson learned" is not shared, and the learning has to start all over again for each generation.

    • @CrouchingGrandpa
      @CrouchingGrandpa Před 2 lety +28

      Only if you've paid for the $199/mo premium package.

    • @JamesV1
      @JamesV1 Před 2 lety +9

      @@CrouchingGrandpa this is a taxi service.

    • @zrize101
      @zrize101 Před 2 lety +12

      The biggest issue, I think, is predictability and corrections to failures. Like the whole reason why there are pilots in the airplanes. If the system encounters a failure, either mechanical or electronic-wise, the auto-pilot will be very challenged in correcting the issue, whereas humans might have the right ingenuity to compromise or otherwise strategise in the situation.

    • @Megaranator
      @Megaranator Před 2 lety +29

      @@zrize101 I don't think air planes and cars are comparable, you can stop a car, you can't stop and airplane

    • @RageFireMaster
      @RageFireMaster Před 2 lety +3

      Some People dont even learn from their own mistakes so :D

  • @ReDiiKuLuS
    @ReDiiKuLuS Před rokem

    Being that I’m from New York, I won’t be impressed until I see autonomous vehicles nearly 100% of the time being able to handle all conditions.
    Not just rain and wind, but also snow, ice, leaves all over the road in the fall, etc.

  • @tonymottram1396
    @tonymottram1396 Před rokem

    I'm all for safety and technological advances but on the other hand I love driving my car with any luck we car enthusiasts will be able to get to a permit to still drive our cars, there are lots of people who still love the classics big blocks everywhere lol.

  • @yourex-wife4259
    @yourex-wife4259 Před 2 lety +668

    This technology is cool and will be useful. But the whole "Wow now I can read a book on my way to work" can be achieved with public transport as well. I know this is not an original thought.

    • @toericabaker
      @toericabaker Před 2 lety +23

      But the public is yuckyyyyy ewww... why would we want to help them

    • @oakoakoak2219
      @oakoakoak2219 Před 2 lety +43

      @@toericabaker I pretty sure you are just joking but in case you aren’t….. if your public transport sucks, that’s because we haven’t invest enough into them. Public transportation are purposely underfunded due to automotive industry that lobbied for cities to build and prioritize their infrastructure around private vehicles rather than an encompassing public transportation system

    • @toericabaker
      @toericabaker Před 2 lety +17

      @@oakoakoak2219 yes, i'm joking. i am a poor myself!

    • @toericabaker
      @toericabaker Před 2 lety +13

      I sub to More than bikes and Adam Something. I love public transit. KC was gonna get a rail extension until covid happened, and the city drank our budget into other projects

    • @yourex-wife4259
      @yourex-wife4259 Před 2 lety +4

      @@toericabaker Thats really frustrating. Theres this trade school I want to go to that's like a 20 minute walk from a train station but only freight goes through the town for some reason. Its like a 50 minute drive from my town.

  • @InsidiousDr9
    @InsidiousDr9 Před 2 lety +507

    The guy who refused to take elevators probably added years to his life with more exercise.

    • @jean-francoisbucas6689
      @jean-francoisbucas6689 Před 2 lety +17

      The Humanity who refused to produce more cars, with more embedded energy-voracious-computers probably added to its chances to stay under 1.5°C

    • @riley_oneill
      @riley_oneill Před 2 lety +19

      @@jean-francoisbucas6689 Not exactly. Each driverless car will take several other cars off the road, and while the Waymo test vehicles in the video are gas powered, the commercial vehicles will be EVs. Growing along side with EV tech and Driverless tech is Solar and Wind tech. Driverless cars are going to allow a much larger portion of the population go from Oil powered miles to solar powered miles.

    • @mar8925
      @mar8925 Před 2 lety +3

      And so, `this guy` also added the risk of traversing stairs to his life. Thanks for your comment. Be safe out there (Stairs aren't really dangerous if you are careful).

    • @lelouch1722
      @lelouch1722 Před 2 lety +4

      @@riley_oneill Replacing current electricity production with solar and wind power only is an utopia. It has neither the necessary energy density nor the capacity to be produced continuously or stored efficiently.

    • @BrosBrothersLP
      @BrosBrothersLP Před 2 lety +3

      @@lelouch1722 ah yes you sound like a very youtube educated man

  • @snehashishkarmakar3376
    @snehashishkarmakar3376 Před rokem +1

    As a researcher in deep learning, I have done quite some study on adversarial attacks where a neural network can be fooled into making wrong outputs. For example a stop sign can be misclassified as a speed limit sign by imposing some crafted noise. This should raise concerns for self driving cars. Of course there is a lot of research being done to defend the neural networks but at this point of time, self driving cars are far from reality. Maybe when the research is ripe enough we can think of it.

  • @zbvirus2420
    @zbvirus2420 Před rokem

    Under good conditions the technology has been functional for some years now.
    The problem is that it is not reliable.
    All you need is a little bit of pretty much anything to make a car like that unfunctional.
    A bit of rain: clearety goes down - a problem, the roads are wet and all the physical calculations are off - problem, the road is wet and reflects object so it may seem like an object is flying towards the car from inside the road, or the road just ends, or maybe theres a wall, or tha car may even fail to see a wall or a curb because it is wet where the curb and the road connect.
    Now you can say "okay, if it rains switch the system. Drive slower, use higher security meassures..." and whatnot.
    But what if it doesn't rain. What if the road is just wet, detecting that is much more difficult.
    The big picture is that there are way too many dependencies we just can't predict when it comes to driving on the same roads with real people in our world.

  • @SnakeTheBoss13
    @SnakeTheBoss13 Před 2 lety +227

    "In all 3 cases the pedestrians hit the vehicle"
    We are REALLY bad at avoiding even stationary objects
    I'm surprised we can even drive at all

    • @To1ony
      @To1ony Před 2 lety +9

      To be fair it's lacking details on if the car was moving but was stationary at the impact, which a pedestrian wouldn't expect. Idc enough to check tho

    • @solderbuff
      @solderbuff Před 2 lety

      We created traffic rules that even our limited brains can understand. More or less intuitively.

    • @raymondkidwell7135
      @raymondkidwell7135 Před 2 lety +3

      Not true. You can google it. The car hit and killed a woman because if you aren't in a designated crosswalk apparently the car doesn't recognize you. The problem with this is in some places like where I'm at in Florida if you use a crosswalk people hit you because they turn without looking so most people run across the street when there is a break in traffic because traffic basically never stops at the crosswalks. Or consider a country road someone crossing the street to check their mail or something. Then you have the jobs crisis what happens when nobody has a job because its all automated which is already becoming a problem. These self driving cars might be ok on short commutes in a well ordered city but there should be serious limitations put on them. Of course law makers bought and paid for by donors are unlikely to do the right thing unless another trump comes along.

    • @solderbuff
      @solderbuff Před 2 lety +18

      @@raymondkidwell7135, that was a different technology from UBER. Google/Waymo did it the right way.

    • @lucbloom
      @lucbloom Před 2 lety +1

      “Oh, it’s one of those driversless cars. Better watch out, it can hit the brakes at any moment for no discernible reason”
      I get that without AI level communication in our own brains, it can be dangerous to have vehicles with a new movement pattern.
      I’m all for driverless cars, but when they break on the highway and claim innocence because others were too close to their tails or something…