I try to avoid Teslas and other automated vehicles on the road precisely because of how unpredictable automated driving is. When there is a human driver behind the wheel the vehicle behaves in human-like ways. It makes intuitive sense to me what the driver is doing and what they might do because it's basically what I would do.
With software there is no such connection to be made. The sensors might see something I don't and come to some conclusion a human never would. I find this to be inherently unsafe because it is unpredictable as a human.
In order for this to become safe all cars would likely have to be automated, but I don't think all cars could be automated unless all road infrastructure was updated and standardized otherwise there are going to be infinite tiny exceptions to the rules of how they operate.
Ultimately it kind of defeats the whole purpose. We might as well just build trains everywhere of various sizes. Trolly's, metros, subways, highspeed rail. Whatever it takes to condense the traffic and automate it on rails. Cars should be limited to the interstate and at low speed in suburbs. No cars should be in the middle of a dense city.
Cables from the monitor go through the monitor mount. All these cables are bundled and twist ties into a single group that go horizontal to the back corner of the room and down into a cable management box which also has a power strip inside of it. Down there I also have a displayport KVM and a laptop dock.
Ah, it is some artwork by a guy who goes by Ilya Kuvshinov. I think this particular ones title is Graveyard. I didn't know she was supposed to be standing in a graveyard when I got it.
On my monitor? It was taken at the St. Louis Botanical Gardens during the Chihuly glass exhibit. I have many more photos of it on my PixelFed if you are interested.
As a completed object perhaps, but they aren't exactly attached to one another. The "tabletop" is simply sitting ontop of the shelves. Which becomes a desk. Unless you would like to call it a desktop, but I feel like computers have co-opted that terminology.
I don't mean to make a single website do all of those things. I mean in the sense of making a federated website protocol that allows you to start an instance for whatever kind of thing you want. Maybe it wouldn't work, but it would save a lot of time on re-inventing the wheel every time you wanted a new type of tracking site.
I like BoomWyrm, but they are so many duplicate books because there are so many different published versions of a book. I think these need to be combined somehow. If people really want to choose the cover of the exact book they read maybe you could be able to choose your cover.
When looking into this show awhile back I heard something about how the CGI effects were done in 4:3, but then a latter release was in 16:9 so all the CGI was stretched because they couldn't re-render the CGI. Are they implying that this is going to be resolved with this release?
Yes, you can make a community and then set it to be mod only posting. Then because you are the only mod it is your personal community.
Edit: Totally fine thing to do here. Anyone who doesn't want to see it would not subscribe or block it if they were particularly peeved.