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Originally Posted by stepover
A poll of people that have personal or professional experience in AI/ML/Computer Vision/Image recognition would be a more valuable poll for this discussion in my opinion. Given this is an old school message board I'm guessing most people on here are north of 40. I did a project 5 years ago in medical image ML analytics that took 2 months to analyze the images, the same project could be done in a day today. The biggest limiting factor in AI/ML autonomous systems is more/cheaper GPU to process the training data images then anything else. Most of these algorithms/mathematics have been around for decades, it's really the processing power available now that revolutionizing the field.
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i'm a software developer myself. i've never trained any AI models before, but i have implemented tesseract in one project. (OCR automation for parsing faxes) i try to follow AI trends pretty closely since my job will assumably be changing quite a lot in the next few years. (though i know a lot of these models were trained via stackoverflow and reddit posts with varying degrees of accuracy and relevance to current versions) AI is advancing at a terrifying rate, but there's still so much testing to do.
there's also this:
https://vimeo.com/932562717/5fb3189771 (this is the latest version of FSD!)
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Anyone that deals in absolutes about AI or autonomous systems does not understand what's happening today. You also don't seem to understand the difference between level 5 city driving (much more complex problem) and geofenced or controlled pathways designed for autonomous vehicles. Geofencing has basically been solved, as in an autonomous vehicle is safer than a human driver.
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i called that out earlier. the plan as currently designed has a significant portion of the route street running, between the beltline and where it is will connect with the current tram downtown.
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Anyways, I'm not sure the point of discussing this more. My opinion is I'm closer to what Beltline transit will look like then others expecting Rail but, I guess we'll see in 5 years who's guess is closer.
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agree to disagree here. even if and when AI drives perfectly, these vehicles will still feel like a toy and a gimmick, like the
morgantown PRT. the beltline is one of the few places in the city where you can escape from constantly being next to cars, and having a concrete path with driverless cars will destroy that feeling.