Tesla Autopilot 'Predicts' Accident Before It Happens (engadget.com)
A dash cam footage suggests a Tesla on Autopilot may have predicted a nearby freeway crash before it actually happened. A video showed that a Tesla car driving on a highway in the Netherlands started to beep a few seconds ahead of two cars colliding with each other in front of it. A Tesla representative confirmed to media that the beeping heard in the video is indeed the sound of Autopilot's Forward Collision Warning. Elon Musk tweeted a news article about the incident, adding more credibility to the matter. From a report on Engadget:Tesla's Autopilot 8.0 has a particularly clever feature: it uses radar to track road activity two cars ahead, helping it avoid danger that you wouldn't normally see. And it now appears that this tech just averted a disaster. Dutch Model X owner Frank van Hoesel has dashcam footage showing his electric crossover reacting to a bad highway crash before it even starts. As you can hear in the video, the Model X's Forward Collision Warning system starts braking when it detects the SUV two vehicles ahead coming to an abrupt stop, even though the driver of the car directly behind it is unaware. The result? Van Hoesel's EV remained untouched when it could easily have contributed to a pile-up.
It predicted that *it* would crash if it didn't slow down. It didn't predict jack about the collision between the other cars.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
This will save lives, full stop. You can crap all over Elon if you want, but the guy actually gets shit done. No it's not perfect, but it keeps getting better and it is at the point where it will save lives.
I have seen accidents about to happen and avoided them many times in my many years driving, as I'm sure most of us have. In none of those cases did we go around saying we 'predicted' those accidents.
This may say more about your use of english language than anything else.
You saw something about to happen did you?
predict:
verb
say or estimate that (a specified thing) will happen in the future or will be a consequence of something.
English is a rich language. Why use a word like "detected" when you are describing an event that hasn't happened yet? If you're talking about traffic abnormalities then yes you "detected" it. If you're talking about the impending collision then you "predicted" it and then "avoided" it.
But my guess is you were more concerned with heaping shit on Musk / Tesla, which is a shame because all you showed is that his language skills are more impressive than yours may actually be.