That's very good. I imagine how hard it must be for a new artificial inteligence to know the difference between some branches and a body maybe. I think it could move foward, but it could have hit anything, so it was better to call assistance.
Seems like pretty typical Houston weather, except it would be raining harder, it would be super hot outside, there would be places with ambiguous road markings, the drivers would be a lot worse, and you would have deep water accumulated here and there to avoid. Those cars aren’t ready for here yet. :-)
Thanks for watching! Yeah, the storm may not translate well to Texas weather! Cruise, GM's self-driving effort, is testing in Houston now- I saw some recently there. I don't know how they are doing, but agree that the drivers (at least on the highways) are way more aggressive. Maybe one day! Hope you get to try Waymo- the security is unparalleled!
Thanks for watching! It was quite a storm and unusual for the city. Operating a vehicle remotely is not safe. Support can instruct a vehicle to start or end a ride. Also, in times of uncertainty they can give the vehicle sample routes, for example, they can 'tell' it to treat a broken stop light as a four-way stop sign, or to reverse on a city street to make a new path. Many of these things the vehicle 'knows' to do, but sometimes receives help- there are some messages on the screen(and sometimes in-car calls connected to support) that suggest when there is intervention. After many hundreds of rides this is my understanding!
I like your words of encouragement to the car "Good job, waymo!"
That's very good. I imagine how hard it must be for a new artificial inteligence to know the difference between some branches and a body maybe. I think it could move foward, but it could have hit anything, so it was better to call assistance.
Love your videos...Waymo did pretty good considering all the obstacles.
Thank you! I agree, and I know Waymo will learn from this.
Seems like pretty typical Houston weather, except it would be raining harder, it would be super hot outside, there would be places with ambiguous road markings, the drivers would be a lot worse, and you would have deep water accumulated here and there to avoid. Those cars aren’t ready for here yet. :-)
Thanks for watching! Yeah, the storm may not translate well to Texas weather! Cruise, GM's self-driving effort, is testing in Houston now- I saw some recently there. I don't know how they are doing, but agree that the drivers (at least on the highways) are way more aggressive. Maybe one day! Hope you get to try Waymo- the security is unparalleled!
I’m loving these waymo cars.
Interesting. Thanks for sharing!
If that car was not being driven remotely then I am super impressed!
Thanks for watching! It was quite a storm and unusual for the city. Operating a vehicle remotely is not safe. Support can instruct a vehicle to start or end a ride. Also, in times of uncertainty they can give the vehicle sample routes, for example, they can 'tell' it to treat a broken stop light as a four-way stop sign, or to reverse on a city street to make a new path. Many of these things the vehicle 'knows' to do, but sometimes receives help- there are some messages on the screen(and sometimes in-car calls connected to support) that suggest when there is intervention. After many hundreds of rides this is my understanding!
@@mayasf Thanks, I'm truly impressed at how far we've come.
oooh ok... well.. wow ok (turns off recording) 🤣
Holy moly subscribe...🤣🤣🤣
LIKE and subscribe... Well, how do you think I feel, I am the one who sounds like that. :)
AWESOME AI PILOOOOOOTT
Please stop saying "holy moly" FFS !!
You're welcome to mute while you watch, or create your own acceptable content!
Holy Moly !! Thank you for oferring me choices. 😎
@@mayasf Very good answer to a very inappropriate comment.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@mayasf Holy Moly! Somebody is angry