Ibut the vast distances between the stars means that interstellar colonization will be much more challenging.
You'd need a P85 for sure.
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Ibut the vast distances between the stars means that interstellar colonization will be much more challenging.
I'd ask about what he things are good candidates in the solar system (in addition to Mars) for human colonization in the next 100 years. I'd also ask if he has any thoughts on how humans might colonize other star systems. Getting to other planets and asteroids within a reasonable time is doable with today's propulsion technology, but the vast distances between the stars means that interstellar colonization will be much more challenging.
The correct response is both: brake hard to shift weight to the front, and then immediately steer to avoid the obstacle. By shifting weight to the front you dramatically increase the grip on the front wheels, helping you swerve quickly. It also has thr benefit of slowing the car if there is an impact.
Presumably the car would be able to do this better than a human.
My concerns about a self-driving car would be handling winter conditions: poor visibility, snow collecting on sensors, variable traction conditions, no lane markers visible, etc. I'd be astonished if a computer could figure out how to get a car unstuck even if only slightly encumbered.
Around here that probably means self-driving wouldn't work for the entire winter.
Oddly enough young people around here are debating whether it's useful to get a driver's license, because they assume self-driving cars will soon make it irrelevant. I think they're delusional. It's not going to be widespread until they can cover the 0.1% cases. Who wants to be stranded whenever the weather turns bad? People would get stranded on highways in dangerously cold conditions.