jayfra
JayFra
jayfra

That’s not the goal, it has to be vastly better than a human driver. Because of the morale question and ambiguous liability, having a system that will kill a xx% of drivers/pedestrians/animals/etc. comparable to a human driver is not a saleable system. I mean clearly the laws and regulations lag the system

I’m not the target market (middle age dad with kids), but I hate the design. Front end is butt ugly and the rear looks cheap/old - not retro in a good way. They’re mismatched design directions imo. The headlights suck too, they look goofy not aggressive (they could have copied a million existing LED DRL patterns for a

That still doesn’t solve the imager limitations (blocked/degraded view) regardless of the having even the best image processor available. Additional/redundant cameras also adds cost.

Standalone Camera systems with ACC/LKA/AEB have been around a decade. These tests are idealized scenarios (no weird lighting/weather/high noise environments/etc.). They’re not capable of self driving.

There are multiple posts above in the chain you can read if you want to learn how cover songs actually work legally.

Exactly, I could see this hitting a few grand in sales the first MY or two then dwindling down to effectively zero. Unless they were building up a performance nameplate, then it makes no sense at all to pay the engineering cost to “luxurize” the chassis/vehicle and to develop or tune a new powercube. They’ll never

Lol, this seems like the kind of sales trend that has Lexus drooling:

Playing the sheet music someone else wrote. It’s illegal since Ubisoft could monetize it.

That’s not how covers work, bud. You need a mechanical (album/digital sales) or synch (in a TV show) license honored by the original artist to publish a cover you intend to monetize. And that generates royalties or maintains ownership to the original artist. That’s the legal way to do it, whether that is pursued or

I mean, this is like playing someone else’s music on a different instrument and making money off it. Write your own music.

Engineering campuses don’t do this, or don’t enforce it. This is a manufacturing thing and more so a reflection of the manufacturing employee base.

The money “burn” to slap hatchback back end on the same vehicle isn’t that bad. They probably share 95+% content.

DK64 was the first game I 100%’d. Collected all the bananas. I remember the counts had errors on some levels - like I found an extra one in one level and couldn’t find one in another. I later collected all the Mario stars, but my entire family (my sis played as much as I did) remembers DK64 very fondly.

I will never forget the blisters from Mario Party on N64. It’s one of the most vivid memories I have about N64. The other is walking around in the castle courtyard Mario 64 for the first time - complete awe. I never got an SNES, so it was a jump from Sega. Yin and Yang I guess.

I just use a small North Face Base Camp Duffel - pack work clothes (polo and jeans most days), work shoes, toiletry bag, and a towel. Wear my gym clothes to the gym, swap everything after the shower - clean out, dirty in. I just make sure to wash or hang everything out to dry when I get home (if laundry is later in

(joke) ->

Thanks for making everything slower and painful as fuck. It’s impressive how poorly this game is managed given how financially successful it is.

Outback gets remarkably poor fuel economy - just an FYI. 

“I definitely burnt out,” said a teary-eyed Liu. “It was tough because during all of this, we weren’t able to see friends and family. Being so tired from working, I couldn’t even go visit my family during covid and had to spend holidays alone...That was definitely the hardest time.”