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posted by martyb on Friday May 17 2019, @09:48AM   Printer-friendly
from the keep-your-eyes-on-the-road-and-your-hands-on-the-wheel dept.

Tesla's advanced driver assist system, Autopilot, was active when a Model 3 driven by a 50-year-old Florida man crashed into the side of a tractor-trailer truck on March 1st, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) states in a report released on Thursday. Investigators reviewed video and preliminary data from the vehicle and found that neither the driver nor Autopilot "executed evasive maneuvers" before striking the truck.

[...] The driver, Jeremy Beren Banner, was killed in the crash. It is at least the fourth fatal crash of a Tesla vehicle involving Autopilot.

This crash is eerily similar to another one involving a Tesla in 2016 near Gainesville, Florida. In that incident, Joshua Brown was killed when his Model S sedan collided with a semitrailer truck on a Florida highway in May 2016, making him the first known fatality in a semi-autonomous car.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) determined that a "lack of safeguards" contributed to Brown's death. Meanwhile, today's report is just preliminary, and the NTSB declined to place blame on anyone.

Source: The Verge

Also at Ars Technica.


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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Saturday May 18 2019, @12:30PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Saturday May 18 2019, @12:30PM (#844994)

    What the heck is wrong with disabled transit services?

    Rural Alabama? Even in a big city with good service, what would be a 15 minute trip to the store turns into a 3 hour scheduled ordeal, with a fair chance of not happening until tomorrow, or the next day. I will say, most of the special needs drivers I know are doing it in more rural settings, though some have moved into the bigger cities successfully, and some have retired from driving when they got to city traffic.

    we desperately need a fundamental shift in how we construct cities and neighborhoods to encourage and allow spaces for walking, biking, etc. The people you help should find independence in a safer environment and setting than multi-ton vehicles on a freeway.

    Special needs has got nothing to do with it, our current city architecture is highly resource consumptive, and subjects us all to far too much risk of serious bodily harm - not to mention the daily grind (waste of time) of commuting long distances to balance home price vs location. The Police called it in 1983, and we haven't done a thing to improve it in the 36 years since:

    Another working day has ended.
    Only the rush hour hell to face.
    Packed like lemmings into shiny metal boxes.
    Contestants in a suicidal race.
    Daddy grips the wheel and stares alone into the distance,
    He knows that something somewhere has to break.
    He sees the family home now looming in his headlights,
    The pain upstairs that makes his eyeballs ache.

    --
    🌻🌻 [google.com]
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