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Jason,
Just no watching Harry Potter okay?
Just no watching Harry Potter okay?
Neat, but that particular situation, specifically the self-start at the intersection strikes me as needing more than just a forward-looking camera with a limited field of view because it will surely not see the occasional idiot who decided to run the yellow that just turned red on the perpendicular road...?Coupled with the latest end-to-end vision model, ignoring the stock ACC radar entirely, cool stuff becomes possible!
A valid question. The newer comma three has three cameras: forward narrow angle, forward wide angle, and reverse wide angle. The field of view for the forward and reverse wide cams actually overlap very slightly, so it sees all around. It can see cross traffic better than I can. Stoplines are still at "cool party trick" level of maturity, something you have to go way far out of your way to deliberately enable, but the limitations are training and model development, not FoV.Neat, but that particular situation, specifically the self-start at the intersection strikes me as needing more than just a forward-looking camera with a limited field of view because it will surely not see the occasional idiot who decided to run the yellow that just turned red on the perpendicular road...?
Ah. I suppose I incorrectly assumed that it was working only from the data displayed on its own screen that I could see in the video, which appears to be the "forward narrow"..?The newer comma three has three cameras: forward narrow angle, forward wide angle, and reverse wide angle.
Yeah, but the model drives on the view from both front cameras now. The intent is to actually drive with all three, to supplement the blindspot radars with a peek out the side windows, but that isn't happening yet.Ah. I suppose I incorrectly assumed that it was working only from the data displayed on its own screen that I could see in the video, which appears to be the "forward narrow"..?
How dependent is it on those nicely painted, highly visible lines?A better FoV demo from the Tail of the Dragon -- front narrow vs front wide cam view of the same 60 seconds of driving. It sees around hairpins better than the driver can.
I remember coding a Night Driver-esque game in BASIC during a summer computer class my school ran back in the early 80s. I thought it was cool until I tried to play it.How dependent is it on those nicely painted, highly visible lines?
You're probably too young (pun intended) to remember this 1976 arcade game:
But I bet OpenPilot could get a perfect score!
-Uwe-