During qualifying time trials, the driverless Dallara Super Formula racers outfitted with cameras and software seemed to struggle mightily to complete a full lap.
When it came time for the actual race, the lead racer, Polimove, spun out on the fourth of eight laps.
The second car, Tum, passed it safely, but shortly after that, the event’s officials threw up a yellow flag.
And since these are good AI drivers who obey the rules, the two behind Polimove stopped, unwilling to pass the spun-out yellow car.
These are early days for autonomous racing, and surely things will get better eventually — certainly, they’ve come a long way since Roborace’s first full circuit in 2017.
But for right now, we’re very much still in the “congratulate baby for successfully getting most of its food into its mouth” phase of self-driving racers.
The original article contains 304 words, the summary contains 140 words. Saved 54%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
During qualifying time trials, the driverless Dallara Super Formula racers outfitted with cameras and software seemed to struggle mightily to complete a full lap.
When it came time for the actual race, the lead racer, Polimove, spun out on the fourth of eight laps.
The second car, Tum, passed it safely, but shortly after that, the event’s officials threw up a yellow flag.
And since these are good AI drivers who obey the rules, the two behind Polimove stopped, unwilling to pass the spun-out yellow car.
These are early days for autonomous racing, and surely things will get better eventually — certainly, they’ve come a long way since Roborace’s first full circuit in 2017.
But for right now, we’re very much still in the “congratulate baby for successfully getting most of its food into its mouth” phase of self-driving racers.
The original article contains 304 words, the summary contains 140 words. Saved 54%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!