And in a very innocent asking from an innocent press, Audi might have had the car racing murdered for as we have known it. Well, cheers guys.
The car was an automatic version of the new RS7, and yeah, it’s the one who got this passenger ride the previous year and the track on which they were racing was California’s tricky Sonoma raceway.
We have been told that the Audi’s self-driving 560bhp having four doors completed the lap of the 2.5-mile circuit in 2 minute and 1 second, recording a succession of identical times having uniform precision.
Now we don’t have any idea, (while we are sure Audi does) how fast a human can go around in Sonoma in …show more content…
So it’s a case of when and when not if an autonomous car can go on the track faster than any human person on this planet World, then it is the end of motor racing then?
Well, after all, to be honest, don’t we really watch racing for drivers driving the cars very fast and quick as possible as they can? So if a machine can do it more fasters, doesn’t that make it watchable for us still?
First up, it’s to remember that track driving, it was about single car driving and particular single car as the RS7 was doing. The race was as straightforward as it can be at least if we see it from an automatic car perspective. If we throw in a couple of other cars and change the game theory, then the automatic bot has to do more processing.
After all, we know that the chess computers can be easily beaten and humans still win the World Chess Championship.
We have the information that even a Mitsubishi Mirage can do the 100 meters race much faster than Usain bolt, but we still like watching fast