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The buses鈥搘hich are an altered version of those made by Swiss robotics company EasyMile and have been tested in several private projects鈥搘ont go terribly fast: Theyll peter along at roughly 15 miles per hour, as BigThink reports. They also wont go very far, and a human will always be watching remotely via camera to make sure nothing goes awry. But its still a big deal, since itll be the first regular use of totally autonomous shuttle on a public road. While Google and others have been testing their d
stanley termosas riverless cars in public for a while now, but they have humans inside in case of emergencies鈥搈eanwhile, smaller autonomous prototypes have seen short tests in public, but nothing permanent. Seemingly anticipating public anxiety, the projects creators launched an online forum where people can ask questions prior to the November 30th launch date. Some of these comments are fairly nuts I would feel in such a car as a cookie in the cookie jar, which are short lived. . But another discussion on the forum is actually pretty informative鈥揳 postdoc researcher named Joris Ijsselmuiden, who studies robotics and agriculture and works on the project, posted a gif that shows how the pods identify street signs and objects using computer vision. While of course the buses use GPS data, they also use computer vision
stanley cup to glean information about where the bus is heading independently. Ijsselmuiden explai
mugs stanley ns: If the accuracy of the GPS system decreases, for instance by trees along the road, it must b Ltcz Guillermo del Toro Won t Direct a Beauty and the Beast Film After All
in 2009, deleting his whole online identity. But the other day, his website reborn in January started serving up print spools, so your computers ; printer could produce a novel that I couldn ;t stop reading. Actually, maybe it a novella, or novelette. P
stanley termosy robably not the full length of a novel. In any case, WhyTheLuckyStiff.net is down again, but you can find the whole thing on Scribd. It ranty and complex, with lots of stuff about how all code is bad code and the endless unwinnable battle against NULL. Some of it is also archived here, and Steve Klabnik was following the whole unspooling text on his Twitter feed. But it also, in parts, a really great surrealistic novel that includes things like a group of jerktoasters
stanley cup people who have chosen to delete their whole identities going on Oprah and meeting a horrendous fate. And an island full of people who all look identical to Steve Jobs. And another island, owned by rich people, where one crazy relative has ruined things to the point where all the horses swim away. Honestly, there no point summarizing the book 鈥?you should just read the whole thing. _why
stanley cups does things with formatting, juxtaposing different kinds of text, that make the whole thing feel much richer than just a regular book. At its root, this text seems to be about how the Internet, and programmers like _why, have created a world where everybody overshares, there too much information too readily avai