Driverless is not very accurate description of what is going on. Semi-autonomous seems a bit better but lacks marketing flash.
I'd suspect that no matter what the 'driver' is going to be given the ticket, maybe the 'car' gets a copy too. Some investigation will have to be done (and laws updated) to determine fault (what is you live in a no fault state). Was the car in autonomous mode? Was the firmware/software current? Did the driver ignore a warning?
The expectations of the driver will also have to be defined. Can the driver fall asleep? How much attention must the driver pay to the vehicle's operation?
The first time a task comes up deal with it manually, it may or may not be related to a problem.
The second time this task occurs deal with it manually.
The third time this task occurs, it's time to start scripting.
It may take you a day or more to write the script, test debug, etc. or even longer for complex tasks but, this behavior tends to be a winner. The script is already some degree of documentation, it records the steps, etc. If it's robust enough it can be used to by your support techs to resolve issues, expanding the number of people who can resolve an issue, freeing the admin for other tasks. Scripts tend not to make typos (yes, I know your command line skills are legendary) and can save a lot of time and effort in the long run.
Not that the LAPD is playing fast and loose with the equipment (okay that this level of poor behavior is being allowed to continue is inconceivable) but, that the equipment isn't self monitoring and reporting. I mean really, they are under the watchful (and apparently sleepy) eye of the DoJ and no one thought to add a monitoring feature? The police have some of the most wired cars around and the tech to push or pull, at least, daily status reports on the health and activity of the recording systems wasn't included?
Wow, even WOW, or OMFGWOW are not adequate to express my disdain.
"Attitude reflects leadership, captain." Julius Campbell (Wood Harris), Remember the Titans (2000)
Add to this the lack of incentive to save money and you've got a right good mess. After spending time and effort to save funds on a program (government in this case), we ended the year with a surplus of funds (in the 10x of 1,000's range, I know it's a drop in the bucket but, we were quite proud at the time). When next year rolled around we were suddenly "poor estimators" and had "poor financial management", so our budget was cut by several times over our savings from last year.
That was many years ago but, since then I experienced a similar mentality in the private sector, especially when dealing with government contracts.
Also, our parent company recently took over management of our capital purchases. We have the money, we have the need, we have reviewed the data but, now it takes and extra 4-6 months to purchase something (e.g. a upgraded SAN). It seems that another subsidiary had some issue with their purchasing process, so rather than deal with the problem, Mother (our loving term for our parent company), created several more.
I've seen demos (albeit on TV documentations) of dogs having been trained for cancer detection. While I can see it might be a boon in third world countries, where folks tend not be to as uptight as most are on this side of the pond, I don't see it catching on in the U.S. I just can't imagine folks laying on a table (the kind where each arm and leg is supported separately) in their skivvies and letting Toto go for a bit of a walk while he sniffs your wobbly bits.
Can't saw I'm a big fan of adding cellular or WiFi to a car for this purpose but, how hard would it be to "have an app for that" connect your phone via USB and wala you have control and choice. The app notifies you of an update, etc. Of course you'd also incur the liability for having not installed a software update that has been made available.
Granted no matter what method is chosen, there will be risks and issues. Pretty sure their is something better than what we are doing or not doing now.
Hmm, but, you have to weigh that risk (and okay, I'm assuming software updates won't occur while the car is moving) against the risk of not updating a vehicle. Yes it's a numbers game and their are vested interests both ways (e.g. I have a vested interest in your car getting a safety update).
Sorta figured with Moon's smaller mass and the fact that we would be removing that mass some sort of effect might occur. Just didn't expect the impact to be that trivial. Factor in that while the mine may process 63K tonnes/day, we wouldn't be shipping ore only the cracked, smelted, processed material and it becomes even more so.
Okay, am I the only one have flashbacks to 13 September 1999, when the nuclear storage facility on Moonbase Alpha exploded sending the Moon hurtling out of orbit?
So, mine the Moon, ship the material to Earth... Um, won't this change it's mass and as a consequence, it's amount of gravity in generates and then it's orbit? Sorry for being all Doom & Gloom here.
In the various versions of the train dilemma, you have two options 1) don't act and five people will die; or 2) act and only one person will die. While I see the logic of your argument, and tend to agree that it is the best overall or numerical result. It does seem to be a rather chilling choice. It avoids the premise that by taking action the actor becomes a murderer; having taken action that directly resulted in the death of another. In the other case the actor is only a witness to a tragic event.
So are you saying nothing of use/value has come out of the space program as a whole, or just from the space station itself? Here is just one short list of the programs value. Okay, not all of it is that valuable.
You only have to worry amount the monthly fees and losing your money. While YMMV, I don't have to worry about losing funds (the pre-paids I've used don't offer refunds of lost/stolen funds) and the monthly fees (pay your CC off monthly and no interest, again YMMV) seem to be high. It's also still connected to you and your connected to your accounts, so it's only disconnected in the sense that it doesn't directly contain you other account information.
Seems the costs are borne by the issuer and vendors (which of course are passed on...) so it more a concern for them than me. It's just not that big a hassle from my POV.
I'd start, with "I think you need a new sheriff". User behavior in many of my examples is wrong, sharing passwords (would you give someone your social security card or drivers license), sticky notes on monitors (a physically secure note would be a better option) are poor ways to deal with the issues.
There are better ways for a user to deal with the strictures placed upon them than what is frequently seen in the wild. If you can remember a phone number, address, URL, what someone else wore, etc. you can remember a password. I believe on of the major issues is that users were one day given a computer and expected to know how to behave, without guidance or expectations.
Please don't take this to mean that frequent password changes, complexity requirements, etc. aren't bad policy, and seem to lack all consideration for the human part of the equation. The broader point is that fixing the user choose poor passwords problem won't fix anything, if we don't fix the underlying culture and behaviors.
Please tell me no one is surprised by the general conclusion (haven't we been here a time or ten before?) of these studies. Add to this the corporate or government attitude demonstrated so equivalently here, the lack of effective computer security training, including a complete failing of organizations to have or heaven forbid enforce policies about password practices and you've got a pretty pickle.
Sadly, it took the recent Adobe compromise, to get me to finally start using a password wallet and use different passwords for each Internet service I use. Have to admit I was stunned, by the number of accounts I had when I got through most of the sites I access.
After hearing a few disturbing stories from my wife, about how computer security and passwords are treated at her place of work, I stepped up my training for her and her co-workers that will listen. Based on what I've heard from her the choice of poor passwords is the least of our troubles.
Passwords on sticky notes on monitors.
Passwords shared with co-workers, that have not been granted access.
System does not require default password to be changed.
Default password is a known pattern.
Techs routinely ask users for passwords
Co-workers say, "Just give them your password".
And so on . . .
Unless the underlying problem of poor culture surrounding computer security is changed and an understanding of the associated risks is cultivated, it won't matter one whip whether users can choose "Good Passwords TM".
During a review my boss remarked that my appearance was not entirely up to snuff (my words, not hers). I immediately asked for clarification and got a less than specific answer along the lines of you're usually very put together but, some days you're not, which didn't help much. Months later I was witness to a comment she made about another employees scruffiness. Note to self, she doesn't like 5 o'clock, or in my case 3rd day shadow.
More to the point, did you ask for clarification, examples, guidance? Going about this, in a "flailing in the dark" manner is unlikely to produce the desired results. Social skills covers a wide range of material.
Driverless is not very accurate description of what is going on. Semi-autonomous seems a bit better but lacks marketing flash.
I'd suspect that no matter what the 'driver' is going to be given the ticket, maybe the 'car' gets a copy too. Some investigation will have to be done (and laws updated) to determine fault (what is you live in a no fault state). Was the car in autonomous mode? Was the firmware/software current? Did the driver ignore a warning?
The expectations of the driver will also have to be defined. Can the driver fall asleep? How much attention must the driver pay to the vehicle's operation?
Lot's of questions, not problems
Hmm, what part of the male anatomy does a rocket resemble? 'nuff said
Chances are you'd get a faster response from Google.
Step #7.1: Prepare excuse for mgmt [...]
#1 - It's not an excuse, it's a reason get in the proper mindset.
#2 - You already know the reason and bonus, bean counters love this. You're gonna save the company long term dollars with a short term expenditure.
First time for this task ;-)
#EpicFail, can't count, shoulda been #8...
The first time a task comes up deal with it manually, it may or may not be related to a problem.
The second time this task occurs deal with it manually.
The third time this task occurs, it's time to start scripting.
It may take you a day or more to write the script, test debug, etc. or even longer for complex tasks but, this behavior tends to be a winner. The script is already some degree of documentation, it records the steps, etc. If it's robust enough it can be used to by your support techs to resolve issues, expanding the number of people who can resolve an issue, freeing the admin for other tasks. Scripts tend not to make typos (yes, I know your command line skills are legendary) and can save a lot of time and effort in the long run.
Not that the LAPD is playing fast and loose with the equipment (okay that this level of poor behavior is being allowed to continue is inconceivable) but, that the equipment isn't self monitoring and reporting. I mean really, they are under the watchful (and apparently sleepy) eye of the DoJ and no one thought to add a monitoring feature? The police have some of the most wired cars around and the tech to push or pull, at least, daily status reports on the health and activity of the recording systems wasn't included?
Wow, even WOW, or OMFGWOW are not adequate to express my disdain.
"Attitude reflects leadership, captain." Julius Campbell (Wood Harris), Remember the Titans (2000)
Ever get the feeling Google should be paying us $.02/month per gigabyte, just sayin'
and its a large corporation in the private sector. Its hard for very large organizations to be efficient.
I'd add a couple corollaries to that:
.
Add to this the lack of incentive to save money and you've got a right good mess. After spending time and effort to save funds on a program (government in this case), we ended the year with a surplus of funds (in the 10x of 1,000's range, I know it's a drop in the bucket but, we were quite proud at the time). When next year rolled around we were suddenly "poor estimators" and had "poor financial management", so our budget was cut by several times over our savings from last year.
That was many years ago but, since then I experienced a similar mentality in the private sector, especially when dealing with government contracts.
Also, our parent company recently took over management of our capital purchases. We have the money, we have the need, we have reviewed the data but, now it takes and extra 4-6 months to purchase something (e.g. a upgraded SAN). It seems that another subsidiary had some issue with their purchasing process, so rather than deal with the problem, Mother (our loving term for our parent company), created several more.
I've seen demos (albeit on TV documentations) of dogs having been trained for cancer detection. While I can see it might be a boon in third world countries, where folks tend not be to as uptight as most are on this side of the pond, I don't see it catching on in the U.S. I just can't imagine folks laying on a table (the kind where each arm and leg is supported separately) in their skivvies and letting Toto go for a bit of a walk while he sniffs your wobbly bits.
Can't saw I'm a big fan of adding cellular or WiFi to a car for this purpose but, how hard would it be to "have an app for that" connect your phone via USB and wala you have control and choice. The app notifies you of an update, etc. Of course you'd also incur the liability for having not installed a software update that has been made available.
Granted no matter what method is chosen, there will be risks and issues. Pretty sure their is something better than what we are doing or not doing now.
Hmm, but, you have to weigh that risk (and okay, I'm assuming software updates won't occur while the car is moving) against the risk of not updating a vehicle. Yes it's a numbers game and their are vested interests both ways (e.g. I have a vested interest in your car getting a safety update).
And now I know, and knowledge is power!
Sorta figured with Moon's smaller mass and the fact that we would be removing that mass some sort of effect might occur. Just didn't expect the impact to be that trivial. Factor in that while the mine may process 63K tonnes/day, we wouldn't be shipping ore only the cracked, smelted, processed material and it becomes even more so.
Okay, am I the only one have flashbacks to 13 September 1999, when the nuclear storage facility on Moonbase Alpha exploded sending the Moon hurtling out of orbit?
So, mine the Moon, ship the material to Earth... Um, won't this change it's mass and as a consequence, it's amount of gravity in generates and then it's orbit? Sorry for being all Doom & Gloom here.
In the various versions of the train dilemma, you have two options 1) don't act and five people will die; or 2) act and only one person will die. While I see the logic of your argument, and tend to agree that it is the best overall or numerical result. It does seem to be a rather chilling choice. It avoids the premise that by taking action the actor becomes a murderer; having taken action that directly resulted in the death of another. In the other case the actor is only a witness to a tragic event.
So are you saying nothing of use/value has come out of the space program as a whole, or just from the space station itself? Here is just one short list of the programs value. Okay, not all of it is that valuable.
So, in short, Tomb Raider X will know exactly how much time us perv gamers spend staring at her um muscles.
You only have to worry amount the monthly fees and losing your money. While YMMV, I don't have to worry about losing funds (the pre-paids I've used don't offer refunds of lost/stolen funds) and the monthly fees (pay your CC off monthly and no interest, again YMMV) seem to be high. It's also still connected to you and your connected to your accounts, so it's only disconnected in the sense that it doesn't directly contain you other account information. Seems the costs are borne by the issuer and vendors (which of course are passed on...) so it more a concern for them than me. It's just not that big a hassle from my POV.
I'd start, with "I think you need a new sheriff". User behavior in many of my examples is wrong, sharing passwords (would you give someone your social security card or drivers license), sticky notes on monitors (a physically secure note would be a better option) are poor ways to deal with the issues.
There are better ways for a user to deal with the strictures placed upon them than what is frequently seen in the wild. If you can remember a phone number, address, URL, what someone else wore, etc. you can remember a password. I believe on of the major issues is that users were one day given a computer and expected to know how to behave, without guidance or expectations.
Please don't take this to mean that frequent password changes, complexity requirements, etc. aren't bad policy, and seem to lack all consideration for the human part of the equation. The broader point is that fixing the user choose poor passwords problem won't fix anything, if we don't fix the underlying culture and behaviors.
Please tell me no one is surprised by the general conclusion (haven't we been here a time or ten before?) of these studies. Add to this the corporate or government attitude demonstrated so equivalently here, the lack of effective computer security training, including a complete failing of organizations to have or heaven forbid enforce policies about password practices and you've got a pretty pickle.
Sadly, it took the recent Adobe compromise, to get me to finally start using a password wallet and use different passwords for each Internet service I use. Have to admit I was stunned, by the number of accounts I had when I got through most of the sites I access.
After hearing a few disturbing stories from my wife, about how computer security and passwords are treated at her place of work, I stepped up my training for her and her co-workers that will listen. Based on what I've heard from her the choice of poor passwords is the least of our troubles.
Unless the underlying problem of poor culture surrounding computer security is changed and an understanding of the associated risks is cultivated, it won't matter one whip whether users can choose "Good Passwords TM".
Possibly related case:
During a review my boss remarked that my appearance was not entirely up to snuff (my words, not hers). I immediately asked for clarification and got a less than specific answer along the lines of you're usually very put together but, some days you're not, which didn't help much. Months later I was witness to a comment she made about another employees scruffiness. Note to self, she doesn't like 5 o'clock, or in my case 3rd day shadow.
More to the point, did you ask for clarification, examples, guidance? Going about this, in a "flailing in the dark" manner is unlikely to produce the desired results. Social skills covers a wide range of material.
Nope, not when they are raised with cell phones at the table.
At dinner table...
Dad: Put down your damn phone!
Daughter: Umm... (points to my phone).