Rechercher dans ce blog

Saturday, October 31, 2020

Watch A Driverless Roborace Race Car Hilariously Plow Itself Into Wall In First Live Broadcast Of The Series - CarScoops

Autonomous cars may be our future, but not many enthusiasts are excited by the prospect of watching driverless race cars go round a circuit.

That’s mainly because taking human skills and error out of racing equates to turning motorsport into a “sanitized” discipline where there’s very little room for unpredictability. In plain English, autonomous car racing is boring to watch. Unless of course you take into account this accident involving a Roborace self-driving vehicle.

It happened right at the start of the Season Beta 1.1 race when Roborace team SIT Acronis Autonomous’ self-driving car decided to drive straight into a wall instead of following the track. 
Footage shows that the AI controlling the autonomous racer “decided” to steer it to the right immediately after the start, plowing into the pit wall.

See Also: Roborace Unveils Its (Almost) Fully-Autonomous DevBot 2.0 Racing Prototypes

It’s not clear what led to the mishap, but in all likelihood it must have been caused by a glitch. Mind you, this wasn’t the only incident, as Autonomous Racing Graz’s car reportedly had positioning issues that led to it getting “lost” on the track, abandoning the race as a result.

Anyway, these incidents highlight the challenges of unleashing AI on a real race track. Unlike autonomous cars that are “taught” to drive on public roads, robotic racers run at far greater speeds and therefore have less room for error. They also have less time to react to hazards and make good calls.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



Technology - Latest - Google News
November 01, 2020 at 05:10AM
https://ift.tt/31Yk64I

Watch A Driverless Roborace Race Car Hilariously Plow Itself Into Wall In First Live Broadcast Of The Series - CarScoops
Technology - Latest - Google News
https://ift.tt/2AaD5dD

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured Post

iOS 17 just got exciting with report that ‘most requested features' are on the way - Macworld

For the past several months, we’ve assumed that the next iOS release would be light on features and heavy on performance improvements and ...

Popular Posts