Quote:
I enjoy being wrong on things and learning for why I had come to a conclusion that is not correct.
I get frustrated cause I am just not wrong that much and denied that enjoyment.
Well I'm glad you're enjoying this thread
Quote:
I enjoy being wrong on things and learning for why I had come to a conclusion that is not correct.
I get frustrated cause I am just not wrong that much and denied that enjoyment.
There's some truth in there, (we all succumb to Dunning/Kruger from time to time) but until this exact post, no matter how many times I have asked, you have never provided a link or source for any claim you've made, other than the source being yourself.Quote:
Some of you guys have assumptions and blinders that keep you from considering others may be knowledgeable on something
How thick is the neck beard on someone who wants a Tesla... hatchback?tk for tu juan said:
I have been waiting to see if a hatchback Model 2 ever gets produced, and it better have steering wheel. Guess we might find out tomorrow
Tell me you know absolutely ZERO about how government regulators work without telling me you know absolutely ZERO about how government regulators work...hph6203 said:
I'm not saying that there won't be roadblocks to its approval. They're going to have to demonstrate substantially safer systems, but that in comparison to actually achieving an autonomous vehicle that operates as well or better than a human driver in all situations is nothing by comparison. You're talking about decades worth of effort compared to maybe a couple of months to a year once they create the software.
Technology is the mountain, the regulations are the molehill, and the liability is not even a speed bump.
There are aircraft that CAN autoland.fka ftc said:My understanding that at properly equipped airports that landing was mostly automated, Is there a technical challenge to automate the rest? Those steps are pretty prescriptive which lends itself programming automation.91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Airbuses are fly by wire, no? So no impediment there.
All that said, I prefer a professionally trained human pilot, with a high preference for more than 1 person so qualified.
The above is true.fka ftc said:
And I know its fun for others to laugh and think I just make things up, but I really do not. Outside of conversations with pilot friends and whilst considering investing in a company in the industry, I come across information.
For GAC06 and TeslAg:
https://crewlounge.aero/blog/commercial-aviation-without-pilots-in-the-cockpit/For the haters on the liability issue:Quote:
In both space travel and military aviation, we already see a large number of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) that can fly completely autonomously. From a technical point of view, it is already possible today to build a commercial airliner that can fly without pilots. But there are also differences.Quote:
Liability
Technology can largely reduce the number of accidents caused by pilot error, but can never bring it down to 0%. Even with fully autonomous aircraft, there will always be a number of incidents and accidents. Who is liable? Self-driving cars raise the same question about responsibility and accountability. Who pays for the damage to your private Cirrus Vision jet when your Tesla car runs away? (video)
In SPO, the pilot in the cockpit acts as captain of the flight and bears ultimate responsibility. When an operator controls the aircraft from the ground, the responsibility also shifts to the ground. But the liability still remains with the airline company.
If commercial airplanes were ever to fly fully autonomously, that responsibility would fall to the manufacturer. Or with ATC, in the event of wrong instructions.
The regulatory transition towards SPO in commercial aviation will probably take more time than the technological transition. In 2022, EASA published the world's first rules [ ] for operation of (unmanned) air taxis in cities. These rules complement existing EU regulatory material for operations of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS). Other aviation authorities are also working on new regulations.
Correct. Because regulators and lawyers require that pilot input. Technically, that input is not required.GAC06 said:
Some of us are very well aware of auto land. It requires pilot input, which he didn't seem to understand
Again...you know ZERO about how regulators work.hph6203 said:
You and FKA might want to stop comparing a vehicle that is temporarily in the sky to a vehicle that is permanently affixed to the ground. An aerial vehicle has different challenges and requirements than a terrestrial vehicle.
There are. Today. Autonomous vehicles without a driver at all. None. Operating in this country.
They are not the same thing.
And you're still not understanding what I'm saying. The hurdles that the regulators affix to the development are part of the technological challenge, but the technological challenge is the primary issue. Getting a car to make an unprotected left is a technological challenge, convincing a regulator that the car can make that unprotected left consistently is not the hard part. The point is not that regulators don't wield control, it's that the belief that technological development is less than the regulators is an absolute absurdity.
Go watch a Waymo, Cruise, or Tesla drive itself right now. They are impressive for what they are, but they are not reliable enough to be broadly deployed. Waymo and Cruise have caused major traffic issues, and Tesla requires consistent monitoring and struggles with certain maneuvers. The technology is still, very much, the barrier, not the regulators.
aggievaulter07 said:I'm definitely very mediocre at timing buys. I'm awful at timing sells.fka ftc said:Spend some time on the B&I board. You error was timing the stock purchase. ...and a limited understanding of overall markets and the complexity of Tesla and its place in the market.aggievaulter07 said:I made my IRA contributions for my wife and I, specifically to buy at $120/share when the price was at like $122. I figured it would dip down, and I'd snag it. It didn't. Kept waiting, and finally pulled the trigger at $200. Still glad I got more, but holy crap what a huge timing error.Sea Speed said:
I keep forgetting to buy stock in tesla and this article just makes me kick myself in the ass even harder.
Glad you got what you wanted, but hopefully one learns from their errors.
IIRC, when it was at $122, there was some FUD that came out which caused me to expect it to dip below $120. It seemed like the smart thing to wait at the time, but it obviously didn't work out that way.
XpressAg09 said:Sea Speed said:
I keep forgetting to buy stock in tesla and this article just makes me kick myself in the ass even harder.
Don't buy. Tesla is finished.
Source: OP
91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Meh...my thousands of hours in the simulator are better than yours.ravingfans said:91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Wouldn't bother me--I could take the helm and land it. Let's see, my license is only about 25 years out of current, but its just like riding a bike!
Let's see... E-odd, We-Even, East is least and West is Best!!
I've still got it
Ag with kids said:Meh...my thousands of hours in the simulator are better than yours.ravingfans said:91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Wouldn't bother me--I could take the helm and land it. Let's see, my license is only about 25 years out of current, but its just like riding a bike!
Let's see... E-odd, We-Even, East is least and West is Best!!
I've still got it
Don't know I'd like to try and land a 767 though...
Plus. You can't get into the cockpit now with the locked doors.
Well...HAD.ravingfans said:Ag with kids said:Meh...my thousands of hours in the simulator are better than yours.ravingfans said:91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Wouldn't bother me--I could take the helm and land it. Let's see, my license is only about 25 years out of current, but its just like riding a bike!
Let's see... E-odd, We-Even, East is least and West is Best!!
I've still got it
Don't know I'd like to try and land a 767 though...
Plus. You can't get into the cockpit now with the locked doors.
I flew a full motion triple seven simulator at a customer facility when it first was coming out. Would have got to land it except my partner was getting sick in the back and anxious to make his flight back that night (we had plenty of time).
I nosed it down hard and set off every warning device in the cockpit--was actually a little more awesome than if I had landed it!
Sounds like you have a very cool Gig...
Ag with kids said:Well...HAD.ravingfans said:Ag with kids said:Meh...my thousands of hours in the simulator are better than yours.ravingfans said:91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Wouldn't bother me--I could take the helm and land it. Let's see, my license is only about 25 years out of current, but its just like riding a bike!
Let's see... E-odd, We-Even, East is least and West is Best!!
I've still got it
Don't know I'd like to try and land a 767 though...
Plus. You can't get into the cockpit now with the locked doors.
I flew a full motion triple seven simulator at a customer facility when it first was coming out. Would have got to land it except my partner was getting sick in the back and anxious to make his flight back that night (we had plenty of time).
I nosed it down hard and set off every warning device in the cockpit--was actually a little more awesome than if I had landed it!
Sounds like you have a very cool Gig...
I did simulation for 20+ years of my career. 17 with helicopters. No full motion ones, though. Your partner would have lost his lunch WAY earlier at my place.
It'll pop up. TSLA is a good investment now.ravingfans said:Ag with kids said:Well...HAD.ravingfans said:Ag with kids said:Meh...my thousands of hours in the simulator are better than yours.ravingfans said:91Challenger said:
There is technology available for aircraft to take off and land autonomously. However, airliners are not equipped with that.
And the aircraft that air, I saw a study a while back that 1/3 of all the military preds built had crashed.
I trust my autopilot, but as a passenger, no way.
WHEN your automation fails, the only thing keeping those passengers alive is a pilot.
So, should we cut the crew to one pilot? I knew a passenger who refused to ever fly on a plane with a single pilot because he was in the back of a plane taxiing gif takeoff when the pilot died if a sudden heart attack, 30 seconds before takeoff. One minute later and he would have died as well.
Do you want you and your family on the plane with only one or even zero pilots?
Wouldn't bother me--I could take the helm and land it. Let's see, my license is only about 25 years out of current, but its just like riding a bike!
Let's see... E-odd, We-Even, East is least and West is Best!!
I've still got it
Don't know I'd like to try and land a 767 though...
Plus. You can't get into the cockpit now with the locked doors.
I flew a full motion triple seven simulator at a customer facility when it first was coming out. Would have got to land it except my partner was getting sick in the back and anxious to make his flight back that night (we had plenty of time).
I nosed it down hard and set off every warning device in the cockpit--was actually a little more awesome than if I had landed it!
Sounds like you have a very cool Gig...
I did simulation for 20+ years of my career. 17 with helicopters. No full motion ones, though. Your partner would have lost his lunch WAY earlier at my place.
Hahahahahahahahaha!!! He was a turkey, so would have been well worth it!
Thanks for the quickderaildetour!
Back to buying or selling TSLA!!
What is the stock going to do during/after the big reveal--is it tomorrow already??
Ag with kids said:
Plus. You can't get into the cockpit now with the locked doors.