IllNess

joined 2 years ago
[–] IllNess 9 points 2 years ago (4 children)

If you need an account with Chase, doesn't that mean they were just withdrawing their own money? On top of that they are now going to jail for fraud.

[–] IllNess 6 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I feel like I lost and won at the same time.

[–] IllNess 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

If it was a simple flag, you would be correct a computer will react faster than any human but when you factor in everything else like constantly analysis of surroundings, decision making, and accounting for physical limitations, then yes. It's the reason why Waymo cars move so slowly.

If a person was standing at a sidewalk, hidden behind an object, far away from a pedestrian way or traffic signal and jumps 2 feet in front of a car going 25 mph, the average driver with their full faculties would do better than Waymo.

[–] IllNess 2 points 2 years ago (3 children)

The reports of the safety of AVs is overstated when you consider that they are limited within a city limit, they rarely go on the highway, they follow speed limits in cities which is lower than highways, people are more aware of AVs, and during their trial runs they had an actual human in the car to correct them.

On average, AVs are safer especially when you consider some bad drivers do not get better, people drink, people get sleepy, people distract themselves. and young drivers lack experience. But the average driver with it with their full faculties would do better in tests based solely on reactions.

if you look at the accident reports and took out drivers who were on a substance, are younger than 25 or older than 70, was distracted with something like their phones or others in the car, were not following laws, and those who were emotional then the stats would be pretty close.

Overall I do believe AVs are better for world because peak performance of an average driver is rare.

[–] IllNess 9 points 2 years ago (5 children)

Human vision also have the brain that does a lot of automation like figuring out distance and looking out for danger with real time reaction speed. Night vision is usually better for most people too. The brain also combines that with sound so it can detect things out of vision. Eyes already have a range of view but the human head can also move around accurately. On top of all this focus is what the human brain is best at. While cameras can see 360°, years of data built in the subconscious taught a human driver what to look out for.

[–] IllNess 5 points 2 years ago

This correct. Waymo cars have both radar and Lidar plus like 29 cameras.

[–] IllNess 16 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Texan here. I have seen a lot of trucks.

is that real?…

[–] IllNess 5 points 2 years ago

Yeah, the drunks with several DUIs.

[–] IllNess 2 points 2 years ago

The security advisory is for version 13.x until 13.6 on the popular virtualization software for macOS. The bug — CVE-2024-38811 — has a CVSSv3 base score of 8.8 and is caused by an insecure environment variable. Mykola Grymalyuk of RIPEDA Consulting reported the vulnerability and VMWare has issued a patched version of the software.

The vulnerability allows a user with standard privileges to execute code within the Fusion application.

[–] IllNess 2 points 2 years ago

that makes sense. Thank you.

[–] IllNess 7 points 2 years ago (2 children)

No negatives listed on the Wiki page. Are there any? Does potting increase the likely hood of overheating?

[–] IllNess 1 points 2 years ago

Since this is an offshoot of BlackCat, some experts say exploits in remote access software.

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