I would say they get about 99+% of the job done. It's just some tiny corners that they can't get into due to the design of the robot itself. Once that's perfected, I don't see why I would need to vacuum manually at all. Honestly I can't remember the last time that I vacuumed or mopped my floor or cleaned the pool ever since I bought my robotic vacuum cleaner and the robotic pool cleaner respectively. Buy one and you will see. The only thing it can't do is vacuum the stairs but the technology is getting there. They already have robotic cleaners that clean the steps leading to a building. It's just a matter of time they adapt that to robotic cleaners for houses and honestly I am surprised why they haven't done that already.
Planes already come with autopilot software. Once the pilot puts the plane on the autopilot mode, you already are putting your life in the hands of somebody's software. LOL There is driverless light rails like the one in Macau and in Montreal so again it's other people's software moving us humans. In the future, I wouldn't be surprised that all of the buses would be driven by robots or some sort of auto driving software.
the us politicians hate technology advancement. https://www.cnn.com/2024/07/18/cars/china-baidu-apollo-go-robotaxi-anxiety-intl-hnk/index.html Hong KongCNN — In China, it’s possible to travel six miles in a driverless taxi for justabout 50 cents.
You mean eavesdrop on me? LOL Well there is an easy solution to that. Just don't connect it to a wifi.
Robotaxi in 2 years on the streets? Totally possible, if you look at what is possible today already. For people, who are not into this, that will be a huge surprise.
It all looks great on paper but there are much more other factors that come into play. maybe this was answered in the robotaxi event but I didn't see it. Like accidents, errors, breakdown, tire blows out etc. There's much more that i cant even think of right now but you get the gist. Who handles this? will this be subsidized by the state etc?