• hexaflexagonbear [he/him]
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    427 months ago

    I’m gonna guess there was already a lot sentient sand in trains, planes, and cars, and good design principles to make sure it (almost) never fails and stuff like the entertainment system doesn’t break the whole vehicle. I’m gonna also guess Musk fired anyone with that sort of background because they said no to some harebrained idea.

    • skeletorsass [she/her]
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      7 months ago

      Is this way. The train have separate system for control. Nothing may touch. Car is the same. Have only simple connection of entertainment to CAN bus. Only control basic thing. Can not touch driving.

      Plane use separate wire for every thing.

      For all three the safety critical software is formally verify.

    • context [fae/faer, fae/faer]
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      157 months ago

      I’m gonna also guess Musk fired anyone with that sort of background because they said no to some harebrained idea.

      there’s no way anyone like that survived the design phase of the cybertruck. anyone who wasn’t fired surely resigned.

    • TechnoUnionTypeBeat [he/him, they/them]
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      147 months ago

      Pretty much

      A lot of tech used in applications like vehicles are old. There’s a reason people complain all the time about slow and clunky infotainment systems in their cars, and that’s because the manufacturers go with older, more reliable, and less failure prone versions of various technologies

      It’s shit like Musk trying to stay on the bleeding edge that causes problems. When an eight year old version of Android crashes in your car, it’s going to crash in a way that’s predictable from the last eight years and thus easier to diagnose and fix. When an eight day old version of Tesla X OS or whatever the fuck he’d call it crashes, you bet your ass it’s gonna crash in spectacular new ways nobody knows how to fix