This is my biggest problem with self driving cars at the moment.
Yes, it's really a shame they're on the market for so long already, yet/still/ suck ass.
They still aren't good enough that you can take a sleep or watch a movie while they drive you around.
Fully agree. It's a pain in the ass to sit there, every morning, watching my car drive me to work but not being allowed to distract myself. Why are they selling those cars already? Obviously the technology isn't there yet. Come to think of it, you also still have to manually remove the dead hookers from the trunk. How autonomous is that?!
Except that that doesn't seem to be what's happening, because a lot of random unnecessary junk is added.
Now if you'll excuse me, I've got to find the hamburger button to take me to the gear button so i can disable the helpful^Whorrible new about:newtab page.
it makes me wonder how many crashes we would have had in autonomous mode, if there weren't an attentive driver who was fully aware he was sitting in an experimental vehicle.
What's your point? Yes, it isn't ready yet. That is why they have a safety driver there in the first place.
I just clarified that the GP was conflating two distinct problems. However, since you asked, you need to take into account that the NIC might not even have the entire USB for itself. For instance, I use one raspi as a wifi access point (hostapd on NetBSD), bridged to my wired network. So everything going through it effectively visits the USB twice. I don't think I have ever seen higher throughputs than around 5Mbps for any traffic going through it.
But even if the USB is passed only once, as in the following test that doesn't involve any wifi/sd card access/cpu load:
# rsync rather than scp to avoid CPU load due to compression/encryption # destination is/tmp, which is a ramdisk to avoid sd card accesses $ rsync -v 16M pi:/tmp/ 16M
sent 16,781,387 bytes received 35 bytes 1,459,254.09 bytes/sec total size is 16,777,216 speedup is 1.00
That is 11.6 Mbps, on an 100Mbps wired link with only one otherwise idle 100Mbps switch inbetween, with cat.6 cabling
Supposing normal artificial lighting, say a 10W LED bulb, the theoretical maximum at 100% efficiency one could gather is... 10W. At which point the room would be pitch black, as a side effect. Something makes me think solar cells aren't really a good idea to install indoors, graphene or not.
Probably around the same as you could store in a 1U enclosure filled with 2.5" drives. Okay, a bit less, but at least one could seek in reasonable time.
I paid the ad-infested price, getting rid of the ads manually was straightforward, even on stock. I shortly thereafter installed cyanogenmod to the device though, since that was what i bought it for in the first place.
Yeah, I'm also seriously considering to consider the consideration of potentially maybe looking at OpenBSD, or their Website anyway, if Microsoft does this again more than five times, at least if it wasn't for all the Windows-only programs that I need and have no replacement.
I'm sure MS is shaking, considering my consideration.
Why? Cars can also be rear-ended, you know. Come to think of it, the odds on whether the hit comes from the front or the back should be exactly 50:50.
That strategy wastes fuel, not saves.
This is my biggest problem with self driving cars at the moment.
Yes, it's really a shame they're on the market for so long already, yet /still/ suck ass.
They still aren't good enough that you can take a sleep or watch a movie while they drive you around.
Fully agree. It's a pain in the ass to sit there, every morning, watching my car drive me to work but not being allowed to distract myself. Why are they selling those cars already? Obviously the technology isn't there yet. Come to think of it, you also still have to manually remove the dead hookers from the trunk. How autonomous is that?!
5-10 years ago the news like this would have triggered 1000-1500 comments, but now just few dozens.
Within the first 25 minutes after the submission, sure.
Goodbye AC, we won't miss you, nor your alleged 5-digit uid account.
That would be the job of your female seat neighbor. Got two 300 pound manwhales on the four seats left and right? Tough luck!
For some reason, it's still the #1 browser in Germany. It would seem as if most people consider it the lesser evil compared to Chrome.
Except that that doesn't seem to be what's happening, because a lot of random unnecessary junk is added.
Now if you'll excuse me, I've got to find the hamburger button to take me to the gear button so i can disable the helpful^Whorrible new about:newtab page.
Thanks for coming a long to tell me this.
awhile
It's two words, mkay? A while. Much like a whale. Would you say awhale? No? Why? Yes. Because it's two words.
Stop doing it, it bothers me alot.
I don't know. Do they take the original loot, or are they making copies of it?
...this load of crap.
It lacks the obligatory
Burma Shave
At the end
Though.
Burma Shave.
it makes me wonder how many crashes we would have had in autonomous mode, if there weren't an attentive driver who was fully aware he was sitting in an experimental vehicle.
What's your point? Yes, it isn't ready yet. That is why they have a safety driver there in the first place.
Ouch, of course you're right, I forgot rsync goes via ssh by default.
With no encryption, I get around 60 Mbps, so that's not all too bad after all. :)
I guess i'll switch it to rsh
of=/dev/stdout
huh?
I just clarified that the GP was conflating two distinct problems.
However, since you asked, you need to take into account that the NIC might not even have the entire USB for itself. For instance, I use one raspi as a wifi access point (hostapd on NetBSD), bridged to my wired network. So everything going through it effectively visits the USB twice. I don't think I have ever seen higher throughputs than around 5Mbps for any traffic going through it.
But even if the USB is passed only once, as in the following test that doesn't involve any wifi/sd card access/cpu load:
# rsync rather than scp to avoid CPU load due to compression/encryption /tmp, which is a ramdisk to avoid sd card accesses
# destination is
$ rsync -v 16M pi:/tmp/
16M
sent 16,781,387 bytes received 35 bytes 1,459,254.09 bytes/sec
total size is 16,777,216 speedup is 1.00
That is 11.6 Mbps, on an 100Mbps wired link with only one otherwise idle 100Mbps switch inbetween, with cat.6 cabling
The original USB ethernet had problems with the poly-fuses blowing out under load. That's not a problem now with later Pis.
Different problem. That was about the raspi resetting.
The throughput is still shit, a theoretical maximum of 480Mbps notwithstanding.
from the no-shit-sherlock dept?
Supposing normal artificial lighting, say a 10W LED bulb, the theoretical maximum at 100% efficiency one could gather is ... 10W. At which point the room would be pitch black, as a side effect.
Something makes me think solar cells aren't really a good idea to install indoors, graphene or not.
chips from USA, chips from Russia....it's all made in Taiwan!
given that our calendar and timekeeping that requires leap days is a little bit less than 5 billion years old, 4 million years is a bit.
Probably around the same as you could store in a 1U enclosure filled with 2.5" drives. Okay, a bit less, but at least one could seek in reasonable time.
I paid the ad-infested price, getting rid of the ads manually was straightforward, even on stock.
I shortly thereafter installed cyanogenmod to the device though, since that was what i bought it for in the first place.
Guess I should consider looking at OpenBSD
Yeah, I'm also seriously considering to consider the consideration of potentially maybe looking at OpenBSD, or their Website anyway, if Microsoft does this again more than five times, at least if it wasn't for all the Windows-only programs that I need and have no replacement.
I'm sure MS is shaking, considering my consideration.
In a perfect world, lives would not end prematurely in the first place.
To be honest, this is one of the rare times where you are literally correct :).