XPost: rec.arts.sf.written, rec.arts.sf.science   
   From: dtravel@sonic.net   
      
   On 1/23/2014 6:15 PM, rex wrote:   
   >   
   >   
   > "Your Name" wrote in message   
   > news:240120141310026807%YourName@YourISP.com...   
   >> In article , rex   
   >> wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> "Your Name" wrote in message   
   >>> news:240120140855359808%YourName@YourISP.com...   
   >>> > J. Clarke wrote:   
   >>> >> In article <52e0c728$0$52806$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net>, >>   
   >>> dtravel@sonic.net   
   >>> >> says...   
   >>> >> > On 1/21/2014 9:49 PM, Your Name wrote:   
   >>> >> > > In article <52df5822$0$52798$742ec2ed@news.sonic.net>,   
   >>> Dimensional   
   >>> >> > > Traveler wrote:   
   >>> >> > >> On 1/21/2014 7:46 PM, Greg Goss wrote:   
   >>> >> > >>> "John F. Eldredge" wrote:   
   >>> >> > >>>>   
   >>> >> > >>>> Several years back, something got royally screwed up in the   
   >>> >> > >>>> Google   
   >>> >> > >>>> Maps   
   >>> >> > >>>> database. If I recall correctly, going from one particular   
   >>> >> > >>>> town   
   >>> >> > >>>> to   
   >>> >> > >>>> another in Scotland showed, correctly, a land trip of about 20   
   >>> >> > >>>> miles.   
   >>> >> > >>>> Going in the reverse direction showed a trip of several   
   >>> hundred   
   >>> >> > >>>> miles,   
   >>> >> > >>>> passing through three different countries and involving two   
   >>> >> > >>>> trips   
   >>> >> > >>>> across   
   >>> >> > >>>> the North Sea.   
   >>> >> > >>>   
   >>> >> > >>> I forget whether it was Google Maps, or some predecessor   
   >>> mapping   
   >>> >> > >>> internet program, but I was once told to turn left from one car   
   >>> >> > >>> ferry   
   >>> >> > >>> onto another near Nanaimo.   
   >>> >> > >>>   
   >>> >> > >> I once had map software on my laptop while I was entering St.   
   >>> >> > >> Louis   
   >>> >> > >> via   
   >>> >> > >> a bridge across the Mississippi try to tell me to take a left   
   >>> >> > >> turn   
   >>> >> > >> from   
   >>> >> > >> the divided interstate highway bridge a hundred feet up in   
   >>> the >> > >> air   
   >>> >> > >> onto   
   >>> >> > >> the riverside jogging/bike path below.   
   >>> >> > >   
   >>> >> > > One example of NUMEROUS that prove self-driving cars simply   
   >>> aren't   
   >>> >> > > going to happen any time soon.   
   >>> >>   
   >>> >> If a self-driving car took its _only_ navigational information from a   
   >>> >> GPS this would be an issue. But the Google cars take their >>   
   >>> information   
   >>> >> from a variety of sources and should not drive off of the road simply   
   >>> >> because a GPS tells them to.   
   >>> >   
   >>> > Without massive amount of expensive changes to the roading system   
   >>> and /   
   >>> > or a sudden, and currently immpssible, increase in the   
   >>> functionality of   
   >>> > "artificial intelligence", there's no way to stop the cars going the   
   >>> > wrong way down a one-way street (as one example) simply because Google   
   >>> > Maps told them to.   
   >>>   
   >>> It wouldn't be hard to ensure that google maps is always up to date   
   >>> with any road change like that,   
   >>   
   >> It would be a MASSIVE task to try and keep it up to date with all the   
   >> local changes worldwide,   
   >   
   > No, it's done right now.   
   >   
   As the examples that have already been posted show, no, it isn't.   
      
   --   
   The 'Enterprise' crew in the 2009 Star Trek are adrenaline addicted,   
   hyper-active teenagers with ADD whose Ritalin got replaced with   
   methamphetamine, displaying a level of discipline that a Somali pirate   
   wouldn't tolerate.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
|