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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Latest French presidential polling has one-time odds-favourite

SystemSystem Posts: 11,020
edited February 2017 in General

imagepoliticalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Latest French presidential polling has one-time odds-favourite Francois Fillon failing to make the final two

There’s no doubt what’s what’s become known as Penelopegate is having a big impact on assessments about who is going to win. The right-wing French Republican candidate has been dominating there polls and betting ever since he won the nomination in November but over the past few days there’s been a huge turnaround.

Read the full story here


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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,426
    edited February 2017
    I think he's screwed, this tweet amuses me so much, it's like expenses saga all over again.

    https://twitter.com/sarahloucohen/status/826733915545145349
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    UKIP leaders and potential leaders do seem to have problems filling in simple forms.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    UKIP leaders and potential leaders do seem to have problems filling in simple forms.
    Seem to be fairly good at the ones relating to claiming their expenses....
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Poor chap, he's not even had a chance to put up his fake bookshelf wallpaper.
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    Carolus_RexCarolus_Rex Posts: 1,414

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Nomination papers, corrections - what is it with Kippers and leaving things too late?
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    Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019

    I think he's screwed, this tweet amuses me so much, it's like expenses saga all over again.

    https://twitter.com/sarahloucohen/status/826733915545145349

    Translation please, don't read French and this is an English site :grin:
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2017
    The thing about French scandals being about money not sex, isn't that because a) French far more relaxed about these things and so don't interest the people (thus the papers) and b) isn't it the case that the French politicians enjoy a greater level of protection by law from the papers running sex scandal stories?
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    Whilst there is a credible path to a Le Pen presidency I still think it's very unlikely. Come round two, the French will rally round the alternative, assuming she makes the second round.
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    Blue_rog said:

    I think he's screwed, this tweet amuses me so much, it's like expenses saga all over again.

    https://twitter.com/sarahloucohen/status/826733915545145349

    Translation please, don't read French and this is an English site :grin:
    Mrs Fillon can't find her employment contract and she's not sure if she ever signed an employment contract.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Presumably the powers that be take such things seriously?

    3.84 The home address:
     must be completed in full
     must not contain abbreviations
     must be your current home address
     must not be a business address (unless the candidate runs a business
    from their home)
    21
    3.85 If any detail of the home address is wrong or omitted, the nomination is
    not automatically invalid if the description of the place is such as to be
    commonly understood
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    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460
    edited February 2017
    Blue_rog said:

    I think he's screwed, this tweet amuses me so much, it's like expenses saga all over again.

    https://twitter.com/sarahloucohen/status/826733915545145349

    Translation please, don't read French and this is an English site :grin:
    Penelope Fillon has not found her contracts of employment and doesn't remember if she signed them or not.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Nomination papers, corrections - what is it with Kippers and leaving things too late?
    Well, and the postal votes go out Monday.....
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    CD13CD13 Posts: 6,351
    Mr Divvie,

    I doubt if an error in a home address will make much difference to Ukip's vote in Stoke. Once Article 50 gets the go-head, they'll be like a snowflake in a thaw. At least until, and if, the anti-democrats find a way to sabotage it.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Presumably the powers that be take such things seriously?

    3.84 The home address:
     must be completed in full
     must not contain abbreviations
     must be your current home address
     must not be a business address (unless the candidate runs a business
    from their home)
    21
    3.85 If any detail of the home address is wrong or omitted, the nomination is
    not automatically invalid if the description of the place is such as to be
    commonly understood
    They do take it seriously.

    This smacks of someone ready some of the regulations and not all of them.
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    CD13 said:

    Mr Divvie,

    I doubt if an error in a home address will make much difference to Ukip's vote in Stoke. Once Article 50 gets the go-head, they'll be like a snowflake in a thaw. At least until, and if, the anti-democrats find a way to sabotage it.

    You're assuming that he's eligible to stand?
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
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    Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    @TSE and @Welshowl

    Many thanks, that's really funny
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    Oh Jason Roy....sigh...
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    SimonStClareSimonStClare Posts: 7,976
    edited February 2017
    SeanT said:

    I'm beginning to see a route to a Le Pen presidency, here,

    Say it ain’t so! After Corbyn, Brexit, Trump and now Le Pen, Mr Observer's head will explode.
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    isamisam Posts: 40,927

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    Plenty of EVS Lab about

    http://www.oddschecker.com/politics/british-politics/stoke-on-trent-central-by-election/winning-party
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    Whilst there is a credible path to a Le Pen presidency I still think it's very unlikely. Come round two, the French will rally round the alternative, assuming she makes the second round.

    Probably, but all the electoral evidence is that the French Left is much more inclined to turn out for a right wing Stop Le Pen candidate than the right is for a left wing Stop Le Pen one; if MLP can paint Macron as the socialist choice (clearly she couldn't with Fillon), her chances may well have improved.
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    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460
    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    As someone said FPT:

    Errors in a home address
    3.115 Where a home address is not absolutely correct there may not be a
    need to make a correction. By law, errors in a home address do not affect the
    full operation of a nomination form, as long as the address can be commonly
    understood.

    "as long as the address can be commonly understood."

    That's an interesting phrase.
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    SeanT said:

    I'm beginning to see a route to a Le Pen presidency, here,

    Say it ain’t so! After Corbyn, Brexit, Trump and now Le Pen, Mr Observer's head will explode.

    A Le Pen presidency would cause huge turmoil in the EU and that would have significant and negative consequences for us. What's more, she is a genuine hard right, borderline fascists from a family of undoubted fascists. So my head would explode. But I don't think it will happen.

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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,059

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    As someone said FPT:

    Errors in a home address
    3.115 Where a home address is not absolutely correct there may not be a
    need to make a correction. By law, errors in a home address do not affect the
    full operation of a nomination form, as long as the address can be commonly
    understood.

    "as long as the address can be commonly understood."

    That's an interesting phrase.
    Open to interpretation but I'd take that to mean that a letter sent to the address on the form should reach you. I.e. if the Queen put her address on the form as Buck House, London, it wouldn't be absolutely correct, but would be commonly understood.
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    david_herdsondavid_herdson Posts: 17,419
    edited February 2017
    Sarkozy is available at Ladbrokes for the presidency at 100/1. just saying.

    Actually, I'm not just saying. That's a tip. It's a bloody good price. Sarkozy is not a great candidate but if Fillon goes, he might fill the gap and any senior LR candidate will have a strong chance of winning.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994
    edited February 2017
    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    With the greatest respect, two words: Im. Possible. That is a car costing two smartphones, when a car needs much more processing power than two phones, plus wheels and motors and a roof and sides and such. $20 000 would be only slightly less incredible.

    Unless I am wrong, in which case apols.
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    Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 60,983
    edited February 2017
    Mr. PB, we may well discover the truth of this.

    Edited extra bit: Mr. Observer, I hope your head doesn't explode.
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    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,298
    fpt

    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    rcs1000 said:

    SeanT said:

    Surprised you're not talking about this.

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/feb/01/eu-brexit-deal-city-leaked-report-european-parliament-article-50

    Leaked EU parliament report. Basically, if the EU tries to fuck the City, that will fuck the EU, so they might have to be unexpectedly nice to us.

    It is in both the EU's interests and ours to have a sensible, workable post-Brexit settlement.
    Indeed. I reckon logic will prevail. If you listen to the EU Commission then they're gonna turn Britain into a pile of reeking ashes, if you listen to quieter voices in the nation states, Spain, Italy, Sweden, then they want an equable deal.

    They have nothing to fear from Brexit encouraging others. We were only halfway in anyway. We were unique. For those inside the euro, i.e. nearly all of the remaining EU, the die is cast. They can never leave.

    The Commission is subservient to the member states. They will determine the deal we get, not the bureaucrats and MEPs in Brussels.

    So cheer the F up! It's not going to be the Apocalypse. A deal will be done. Our future is neither Utopian nor Dystopian. But we do know that from 2019 the British people will elect and eject all the people who seek to govern us.

    I don't think the sovereignty we will gain will, in practice, compensate for the economic downside of leaving the single market. I slso never felt Britain was particularly emasculated within the EU; not that I have ever been fond of its institutions.

    That, sadly, is the crux. You will not be able to convince the Sovereigners that we were perfectly sovereign as members of the EU. Witness our sovereign decision to leave. The only people talking about a second referendum are the LDs and unless they are a secret EU-funded third column we can say that they are also operating within our sovereign realm.

    It really is insecurity on a grand and tragic scale.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    As someone said FPT:

    Errors in a home address
    3.115 Where a home address is not absolutely correct there may not be a
    need to make a correction. By law, errors in a home address do not affect the
    full operation of a nomination form, as long as the address can be commonly
    understood.

    "as long as the address can be commonly understood."

    That's an interesting phrase.
    Why did he get himself in this situation - it looks incompetent, because it is.
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    NigelbNigelb Posts: 62,586
    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    That might well be the USP which persuades the luddites accept them.

    Incidentally, there are approximately 3.5m professional truck drivers in the US...
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2017
    I am not sure how old that Fox report on the Google car is, but it doesn't seem right. In recent reports, Google have made it clear they are pursing a different strategy to building a single person bubble car.

    In fact many of the senior people who pushed this project have left and it is reported that other companies have overtaken Google on who has state of the art self driving tech.
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    SeanT said:


    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    Are you sure that they didn't mean $2000 more than a standard car? That sounds more plausible, and in line with some other estimates I've seen.
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    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

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    SeanT said:


    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    Are you sure that they didn't mean $2000 more than a standard car? That sounds more plausible, and in line with some other estimates I've seen.
    Those are the kind of numbers I have heard quoted from a number of different companies involved in this...$2000-3000 more for the tech.
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    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460
    edited February 2017
    SeanT said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    Yes, the car is in charge. You just have to slur your address. It will be great for pubs - no more worries about drink driving. But terrible news for cabbies and Uber drivers, as you say.

    I reckon a personal car driver will eventually become a status symbol for the very rich, like a butler. Otherwise cars and buses as we know them will go extinct, as the horse and carriage did, before.
    On a serious note, returning from nights out aside, "who is in charge?" is a legal minefield for all kinds of road use, insurance etc. What if you can override it and you are not qualified or are indeed drunk? What if you can't override it too? I could see there being a 10 m.p.h. limit on them to start (21st Century man with a red flag walking in front for public safety really) or some such limitation. The lawyers will win big time as ever (unless they've been automated too by then).
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    weejonnieweejonnie Posts: 3,820
    edited February 2017

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    A 17 year old youth on his second driving lesson wouldn't swerve towards a hedge just because the car he was tailgating turned off.

    My old lecturer at college once quoted "Any damned fool can write a compiler for correctly-written source code." The equivalent here is

    "Any damned company can program a car to follow lines in the road."
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Nomination papers, corrections - what is it with Kippers and leaving things too late?
    Well, and the postal votes go out Monday.....
    Yes. He'll be on the ballot. Legally, I think it'll only be an issue if he wins, in which case a petition could be brought. However, I'd be amazed if Labour (and others) didn't try to make something of it in the campaign.
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited February 2017
    One for @SeanT and bug watchers

    The assassin bug https://t.co/TfuzOjX8go

    Great thread comments
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,426
    edited February 2017

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    As someone said FPT:

    Errors in a home address
    3.115 Where a home address is not absolutely correct there may not be a
    need to make a correction. By law, errors in a home address do not affect the
    full operation of a nomination form, as long as the address can be commonly
    understood.

    "as long as the address can be commonly understood."

    That's an interesting phrase.
    Why did he get himself in this situation - it looks incompetent, because it is.
    I've spoken to someone who has acted as an agent in the past, he thinks Nuttal will be declared ineligible and there will be no UKIP candidate in Stoke.

    Just need someone to make a complaint to the returning officer.
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    welshowlwelshowl Posts: 4,460

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Nomination papers, corrections - what is it with Kippers and leaving things too late?
    Well, and the postal votes go out Monday.....
    Yes. He'll be on the ballot. Legally, I think it'll only be an issue if he wins, in which case a petition could be brought. However, I'd be amazed if Labour (and others) didn't try to make something of it in the campaign.
    Not sure Labour's candidate wants too much attention of what he thinks about the locals...
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,891
    I've just heard Osborne say the government have chosen not to prioritize the economy post Brexit but instead to concentrate on getting rid of the European Court of Human Rights.

    Is he taking the piss?
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    williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 48,059

    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

    If UKIP are out, does it mean a clear win for Labour, or possibly a big upset?

    The Lib Dems should do some bar charts of the top 2 from the 2010 result.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/results/constituency/e47.stm
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    Mr. Owl, would've thought motorways would be far easier than a twisty English village.
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    isamisam Posts: 40,927
    edited February 2017

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Nomination papers, corrections - what is it with Kippers and leaving things too late?
    Well, and the postal votes go out Monday.....
    Yes. He'll be on the ballot. Legally, I think it'll only be an issue if he wins, in which case a petition could be brought. However, I'd be amazed if Labour (and others) didn't try to make something of it in the campaign.
    Not sure Labour's candidate wants too much attention of what he thinks about the locals...
    Imagine after all the lefties trying to ignore the referendum result, UKIP win in Stoke and Labour still have the MP on a technicality!!!

    The gap between the bubble and the normal folk will get ever bigger
  • Options
    PAWPAW Posts: 1,074
    Not the latest incarnation of the Tesla Autopilot in that review of course, have to wait another 12 months as the software is upgraded.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2017
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:


    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    Are you sure that they didn't mean $2000 more than a standard car? That sounds more plausible, and in line with some other estimates I've seen.
    lol. Maybe. It is late here in Bangers and I have imbibed gin with an old mate.

    $2000 MORE is certainly less impressive.

    On the other hand, self drive cars can be had for $20k, already

    http://fortune.com/2016/03/14/self-driving-car-honda/


    Perhaps Google sees some huge economies of scale?
    That isn't a self driving car! It is a computer assisted.
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    DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215
    edited February 2017
    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    I know the wider use of advanced technology will cause issues; but cheap, self driving cars are undoubtedly going to be great for most people. Opens up commuting by car to huge swaths of people who would never in a million years have considered it.
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    Have to say that as someone working on election stuff at the moment, I think Nutall should be off the ballot. Bit of a stupid lie.
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983
    edited February 2017

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    As someone said FPT:

    Errors in a home address
    3.115 Where a home address is not absolutely correct there may not be a
    need to make a correction. By law, errors in a home address do not affect the
    full operation of a nomination form, as long as the address can be commonly
    understood.

    "as long as the address can be commonly understood."

    That's an interesting phrase.
    Why did he get himself in this situation - it looks incompetent, because it is.
    Some years ago when I was a Parliamentary Agent I fell foul of this. Our candidate was employed by the EEC (in those days) , and lived near his place of employment, in Brussels. However, for the time of the election, and indeed for the purposes of pre-election electioneering he stayed with a committee member, and I put that address on the nomination form. The Returning Officer refused to accept it, as that ‘wasn’t where he ordinarily lived with his wife and family.’ I argued hard but time was runnimng short and I couldn’t get advice from Party HQ so hastily prepared another form with the Brussels address on it and got it duly signed.
    There were comments, but I don’t think it did us much harm.
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    I've spoken to someone who has acted as an agent in the past, he thinks Nuttal will be declared ineligible and there will be no UKIP candidate in Stoke.

    Just need someone to make a complaint to the returning officer.

    The odd thing is that objections had to be made yesterday:

    http://webapps.stoke.gov.uk/uploadedfiles/Timetable-for-Stoke-Central.pdf

    So maybe it's too late to declare him ineligible?
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    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    The thing is, driverless cars are one security hack away from joining the Microsoft Zune.
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    PongPong Posts: 4,693
    edited February 2017

    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

    If UKIP are out, does it mean a clear win for Labour, or possibly a big upset?

    The Lib Dems should do some bar charts of the top 2 from the 2010 result.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/results/constituency/e47.stm
    Clear Lab win. Although the tories might have a chance....

    I'm not convinced Nuttall is ineligible though.
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    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Yep, nominations have closed. I'm not an expert, but it looks to me as though his nomination form is invalid. There's provision for correcting minor details of the address, but not for correcting fictional addresses.
    As someone said FPT:

    Errors in a home address
    3.115 Where a home address is not absolutely correct there may not be a
    need to make a correction. By law, errors in a home address do not affect the
    full operation of a nomination form, as long as the address can be commonly
    understood.

    "as long as the address can be commonly understood."

    That's an interesting phrase.
    Why did he get himself in this situation - it looks incompetent, because it is.
    Some years ago when I was a Parliamentary Agent I fell foul of this. Our candidate was employed by the EEC (in those days) , and lived near his place of employment, in Brussels. However, for the time of the election, and indeed for the purposes of pre-election electioneering he stayed with a committee member, and I put that address on the nomination form. The Returning Officer refused to accept it, as that ‘wasn’t where he ordinarily lived with his wife and family.’ I argued hard but time was runnimng short and I couldn’t get advice from Party HQ so hastily prepared another form with the Brussels address on it and got it duly signed.
    There were comments, but I don’t think it did us much harm.
    That's interesting, so they obviously do take it seriously. Too late for Nuttall?
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994
    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    " it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance,"

    No, it isn't clear. In the same way the Turing Test is nowhere near being passed.
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    isamisam Posts: 40,927

    I've spoken to someone who has acted as an agent in the past, he thinks Nuttal will be declared ineligible and there will be no UKIP candidate in Stoke.

    Just need someone to make a complaint to the returning officer.

    The odd thing is that objections had to be made yesterday:

    http://webapps.stoke.gov.uk/uploadedfiles/Timetable-for-Stoke-Central.pdf

    So maybe it's too late to declare him ineligible?
    It all just makes for great betting opportunities
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    Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    Nigelb said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    That might well be the USP which persuades the luddites accept them.

    Incidentally, there are approximately 3.5m professional truck drivers in the US...
    Reminds me of an old Simpsons episode where Homer becomes a truck driver and finds they all have autopilots :grin:

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    weejonnieweejonnie Posts: 3,820
    SeanT said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    Yes, the car is in charge. You just have to slur your address. It will be great for pubs - no more worries about drink driving. But terrible news for cabbies and Uber drivers, as you say.

    I reckon a personal car driver will eventually become a status symbol for the very rich, like a butler. Otherwise cars and buses as we know them will go extinct, as the horse and carriage did, before.
    American Legalese

    The car is in charge.
    Therefore the software in the car is in charge
    Therefore the writers of the software are responsible for the actions of the car.
    They have deep pockets.
    So when the 1st accident comes in - we sue.
    Have a nice day.

    (England struggling in the 1-day T20 I see) 86/2 after 10.
  • Options

    I've spoken to someone who has acted as an agent in the past, he thinks Nuttal will be declared ineligible and there will be no UKIP candidate in Stoke.

    Just need someone to make a complaint to the returning officer.

    The odd thing is that objections had to be made yesterday:

    http://webapps.stoke.gov.uk/uploadedfiles/Timetable-for-Stoke-Central.pdf

    So maybe it's too late to declare him ineligible?
    Looks like it depending on when Doctor Nuttal submitted his papers.
  • Options

    Have to say that as someone working on election stuff at the moment, I think Nutall should be off the ballot. Bit of a stupid lie.

    Would be better if he was on. He can avoid being beaten if he's not allowed to stand.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994
    PAW said:

    Not the latest incarnation of the Tesla Autopilot in that review of course, have to wait another 12 months as the software is upgraded.

    Indeed; it was at the end of last year; i.e. a month or two ago.

    I bet they won;'t have made much improvement in this sort of behaviour at the end of this year. It's a blooming difficult thing to do.
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    CookieCookie Posts: 11,445
    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    .

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.
    70mph on the motorway is actually quite straightforward - no pedestrians to anticipate, no parked cars to navigate, predictable lane markings.

    There are definitely issues. I can't see how one of these can navigate a windy Cornish lane where your car is touching the hedges on both sides at once, or park in a temporary car park in a muddy field. But most of the issues are surmountable. After all, if Google can regularly drive down every street in the country for the purposes of Streeview, it's not too much of a stretch of the imagination that it drives down every street and lays down some sort of road-edge-indicators that the car can sense.

    Car parking will be a big change. In future, your car will take you right to your destination, then trundle off to park in a big car park ina cheap location on the edge of town - then come back again to pick you up when it's time to go home. No need for city centre car parks.

    Car ownership will also be a big issue. You won't need to own one of these - it will just turn up at your house when you need it. And you'll use a different car when you need to drive your family to Cornwall for the week than when you just need to get yourself to B&Q for a new screwdriver. (This will mean you can no longer treat the boot of your car as an extra store room, but hey, swings and roundabouts). Which will in turn mean that your drive is superfluous, and we can all live in elegant Georgian streets.
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    DanSmithDanSmith Posts: 1,215

    Have to say that as someone working on election stuff at the moment, I think Nutall should be off the ballot. Bit of a stupid lie.

    Would be better if he was on. He can avoid being beaten if he's not allowed to stand.
    Is almost a good thing for him for this to happen...
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,967
    Just catching up, what's this Nuttall business about?
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981
    edited February 2017
    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.
    Musk has serious form for bigging up quite dull technology into Star Wars type scifi. He seriously shouldn't be calling a primitive cruise control plus camera setup an autopilot, because plenty of people are going to assume that if that is what it's called, that is what it is.

    My favourite fact: you could buy a production electric car with rechargeable battery off Thomas Parker in 1884 - the year the siege of Khartoum started, and Oscar Wilde got married.
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994
    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    Yes, the car is in charge. You just have to slur your address. It will be great for pubs - no more worries about drink driving. But terrible news for cabbies and Uber drivers, as you say.

    I reckon a personal car driver will eventually become a status symbol for the very rich, like a butler. Otherwise cars and buses as we know them will go extinct, as the horse and carriage did, before.
    On a serious note, returning from nights out aside, "who is in charge?" is a legal minefield for all kinds of road use, insurance etc. What if you can override it and you are not qualified or are indeed drunk? What if you can't override it too? I could see there being a 10 m.p.h. limit on them to start (21st Century man with a red flag walking in front for public safety really) or some such limitation. The lawyers will win big time as ever (unless they've been automated too by then).
    This is why I would buy a Volvo autonomous car when they come on the market. They're the first - and I think only - manufacturer to accept liability for incidents whilst in autonomous mode.

    http://fortune.com/2015/10/07/volvo-liability-self-driving-cars/

    Very brave of them.
  • Options
    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.
    Motorways are dead easy, no matter what the speed, because they're clear of obstacles, everyone's going in the same direction, there are no sudden corners or blind summits, the surfaces are regular and well-marked and the junctions are simple. The only problems - beyond normal traffic issues - come with roadworks.

    Minor roads, by contrast, present difficulties of a different order of magnitude.
  • Options
    TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 41,298
    I don't think every teenager attending a rave in Bermondsey, or people in London going from office to meeting, or families on a night out in the country, or anyone caught in the rain will be using driverless cars or have one in their pocket.

    So I think they will make a dent but not a huge one.

    (Waits for this post to resurface in 100yrs amid unrestrained hysterical laughter.)
  • Options
    CookieCookie Posts: 11,445
    weejonnie said:

    SeanT said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    Yes, the car is in charge. You just have to slur your address. It will be great for pubs - no more worries about drink driving. But terrible news for cabbies and Uber drivers, as you say.

    I reckon a personal car driver will eventually become a status symbol for the very rich, like a butler. Otherwise cars and buses as we know them will go extinct, as the horse and carriage did, before.
    American Legalese

    The car is in charge.
    Therefore the software in the car is in charge
    Therefore the writers of the software are responsible for the actions of the car.
    They have deep pockets.
    So when the 1st accident comes in - we sue.
    Have a nice day.

    (England struggling in the 1-day T20 I see) 86/2 after 10.
    Who accepts responsibility is currently a thorny issue. But I think Volvo, possibly, have recently indicated that their confidence in their emerging product is such that they will take on insurance liability. (It may not be Volvo.)
  • Options

    Is this Nutall incorrect home address down to another mistakes by another overly keen supporter, like him being a pro footballer and having a PhD? ;-)

    Rookie mistake by the looks of it, with nominations having closed, I'm not sure there's time for him to correct it.
    Nomination papers, corrections - what is it with Kippers and leaving things too late?
    Well, and the postal votes go out Monday.....
    Yes. He'll be on the ballot. Legally, I think it'll only be an issue if he wins, in which case a petition could be brought. However, I'd be amazed if Labour (and others) didn't try to make something of it in the campaign.
    Not sure Labour's candidate wants too much attention of what he thinks about the locals...
    One would assume that wouldn't be the angle taken!
  • Options
    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    The thing is, driverless cars are one security hack away from joining the Microsoft Zune.
    No, they're not. Driverless cars are clearly the future, the way email was clearly the future in the early 1990s.

    A technology so transformative, quicker, superior and less wasteful than its predecessor it will become universal very quickly.
    They're the future, but they're a long way off (at least for level 5 cars). Note that many of these cars are used on selected routes that have been heavily mapped. Smoke and mirrors ...
  • Options
    Blue_rogBlue_rog Posts: 2,019
    Cookie said:

    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    .

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.

    Car parking will be a big change. In future, your car will take you right to your destination, then trundle off to park in a big car park ina cheap location on the edge of town - then come back again to pick you up when it's time to go home. No need for city centre car parks.

    Car ownership will also be a big issue. You won't need to own one of these - it will just turn up at your house when you need it. And you'll use a different car when you need to drive your family to Cornwall for the week than when you just need to get yourself to B&Q for a new screwdriver. (This will mean you can no longer treat the boot of your car as an extra store room, but hey, swings and roundabouts). Which will in turn mean that your drive is superfluous, and we can all live in elegant Georgian streets.
    My idea of heaven, I hate driving and especially hate long distance driving
  • Options
    Two grand for a self driving car seems way too cheap, if it's our conventional idea of a car. If it's just literally a comfortable heated box, then maybe. I can't see it being widely used in just 6 years, I know nothing about the technical side, but we're just not culturally ready for it, and the legal implications are probably not even understood yet.
    It seems still in the realms of science fiction. Mind you, when I was a kid, we had 3 TV channels and it was in black and white, and I've only just turned 50. Science Fiction does seem to become Science Fact quicker these days.
  • Options
    Pong said:

    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

    If UKIP are out, does it mean a clear win for Labour, or possibly a big upset?

    The Lib Dems should do some bar charts of the top 2 from the 2010 result.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/results/constituency/e47.stm
    Clear Lab win. Although the tories might have a chance....

    I'm not convinced Nuttall is ineligible though.
    If the details are as claimed then he is certainly ineligible. That doesn't mean he won't be on the ballot though, just that the matter would have to be taken to an election court afterwards.
  • Options
    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    That would make them genuinely useful if you could go out to a nice country pub and get ratted safely.
    For that reason, you could bet your last fiver that plod will want the occupant to be deemed responsible.

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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852
    edited February 2017
    Apropos the discussion last thread concerning adoption, and the lack there of by members of the US congress and senate. The number of people who adopt is tiny. It runs to about 120,000 kids in the US each year, in a country of around 120m families, so one family in a thousand adopts each year. So the fact that the number found is the senate is small is indicative of nothing.

    I have personally adopted children.. I know no other people that have adopted children, its that smaller world.
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    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.
    Motorways are dead easy, no matter what the speed, because they're clear of obstacles, everyone's going in the same direction, there are no sudden corners or blind summits, the surfaces are regular and well-marked and the junctions are simple. The only problems - beyond normal traffic issues - come with roadworks.

    Minor roads, by contrast, present difficulties of a different order of magnitude.
    Perhaps they'll go the way of most of those inventions you used to see on 'Tomorrow's World'. Did the aqualung that extracts its oxygen from the water ever materialize?
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    " it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance,"

    No, it isn't clear. In the same way the Turing Test is nowhere near being passed.
    IIRC, you're the guy that used to argue with me, on here, that I was deluded in thinking that computers would ever master translation. Oops.
    They haven't 'mastered' it, although they've improve more than I thought they would. And besides, that's a very different problem domain with radically different consequences of failure.

    But if we're in that sort of mood, you're the guy, a few weeks ago, who said that the Turing test was nearly passed ... :)
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    If the details are as claimed then he is certainly ineligible. That doesn't mean he won't be on the ballot though, just that the matter would have to be taken to an election court afterwards.

    The bet might be settled on the initial result, even if overturned later, so some caution is needed.
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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852

    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    " it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance,"

    No, it isn't clear. In the same way the Turing Test is nowhere near being passed.
    http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-27762088
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    isamisam Posts: 40,927
    edited February 2017

    Pong said:

    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

    If UKIP are out, does it mean a clear win for Labour, or possibly a big upset?

    The Lib Dems should do some bar charts of the top 2 from the 2010 result.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/results/constituency/e47.stm
    Clear Lab win. Although the tories might have a chance....

    I'm not convinced Nuttall is ineligible though.
    If the details are as claimed then he is certainly ineligible. That doesn't mean he won't be on the ballot though, just that the matter would have to be taken to an election court afterwards.
    That would be the best result for UKIP I think, better than winning and not being taken to court. It would fuel their claim that the establishment is against them and the will of the people.
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    OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 31,983
    SeanT said:

    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    The thing is, driverless cars are one security hack away from joining the Microsoft Zune.
    No, they're not. Driverless cars are clearly the future, the way email was clearly the future in the early 1990s.

    A technology so transformative, quicker, superior and less wasteful than its predecessor it will become universal very quickly.
    Since you’re sunning yourself (JEALOUS) in Bangkok......I really do like the thought of driverless cars clogging Sukhumvit!

    Would it make much difference!
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    PlatoSaidPlatoSaid Posts: 10,383
    edited February 2017
    Should he be leading his Party instead? The comments say everything

    Jeremy Corbyn MP
    We need Twitter to silence LGBT hate. I've just signed up to tomorrow's thunderclap to say #no2LGBTHate https://t.co/zwayMPuvwg
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    Ishmael_ZIshmael_Z Posts: 8,981

    welshowl said:

    welshowl said:

    SeanT said:

    ON-topic I just watched a Fox News report on self drive cars. Google have got a new version. The Fox News lady inside said it scared her - but no one died.

    Google told Fox they expect these cars to be widely on sale within 6 years, or less.

    Cost? The basic model is $2000

    Yes, two thousand dollars. For a car that will safely and automatically drive you around urban streets. Electric and sustainable. $2000.

    This is a revolution and it will be here within 6 years. It's gonna destroy tens of thousands of jobs, from the off, it will eventually destroy millions of jobs.

    I've no doubt we will find alternative ways to give people work, but, Wow.

    The interesting thing is are you in charge of it, or is it in charge of it? Difference being if it's in charge of it you could presumably be as drunk as a skunk on the way back from the pub and all would be well. Bad day for taxis is that.
    It's all smoke and mirrors at the moment. Here's ARS's take on a Tesla:
    https://arstechnica.co.uk/cars/2017/01/tesla-model-s-rural-review-countryside/

    I can report that autopilot works perfectly on motorways, and adequately on undivided A-roads, but you probably shouldn't use it on B-roads unless you're feeling brave. Basically, autopilot's primary mode of operation is following road markings. If there aren't any central or side lines, autopilot attempts to follow the car in front—and if there's no car in front, autopilot disengages. I had one particularly close call when the road markings had disappeared due to resurfacing, and then the car in front turned a corner. The car didn't really know what to do, and ended up veering sharply towards a hedge.

    This is really, really difficult to do. So far they're getting the really easy bits done reasonably, not perfectly.
    Quite. Pottering at walking pace around suburban streets is a big challenge of itself, let alone 70 mph down the motorway or a twisty lane at night in the rain.
    Motorways are dead easy, no matter what the speed, because they're clear of obstacles, everyone's going in the same direction, there are no sudden corners or blind summits, the surfaces are regular and well-marked and the junctions are simple. The only problems - beyond normal traffic issues - come with roadworks.

    Minor roads, by contrast, present difficulties of a different order of magnitude.
    Perhaps they'll go the way of most of those inventions you used to see on 'Tomorrow's World'. Did the aqualung that extracts its oxygen from the water ever materialize?
    Or the stuff you could buy from the Innovations catalogue.
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    Pong said:

    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

    If UKIP are out, does it mean a clear win for Labour, or possibly a big upset?

    The Lib Dems should do some bar charts of the top 2 from the 2010 result.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/results/constituency/e47.stm
    Clear Lab win. Although the tories might have a chance....

    I'm not convinced Nuttall is ineligible though.
    The Labour Party candidate view of Brexit.

    https://order-order.com/2017/02/01/labour-stoke-candidate-brexiteers-confused-inward-looking-racists/
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    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    " it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance,"

    No, it isn't clear. In the same way the Turing Test is nowhere near being passed.
    http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-27762088
    But it was bollocks...

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/06/10/world_to_captain_cyborg_youre_rumbled/
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    isamisam Posts: 40,927

    Pong said:

    Michael Crick might have saved me nearly a grand.

    If UKIP are out, does it mean a clear win for Labour, or possibly a big upset?

    The Lib Dems should do some bar charts of the top 2 from the 2010 result.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/election2010/results/constituency/e47.stm
    Clear Lab win. Although the tories might have a chance....

    I'm not convinced Nuttall is ineligible though.
    The Labour Party candidate view of Brexit.

    https://order-order.com/2017/02/01/labour-stoke-candidate-brexiteers-confused-inward-looking-racists/
    I knew it I knew it I knew it!!

    I have been searching for those deleted tweets for weeks, well done Guido!!
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    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)


    I look forward to zig zaging between the self drive cars as I overtake.
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    Carolus_RexCarolus_Rex Posts: 1,414
    edited February 2017
    On driverless cars, I am sure they will sell them for $2,000.

    And charge $10,000 for each critical software update.

    Edit: forgot to add, and lobby the government to change the traffic regs every week so there are lots of updates...
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    Miss Plato, thunderclap does sound like a powerful strain of chlamydia.

    Maybe it's the STD Zeus gives you.
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    JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 38,994

    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    " it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance,"

    No, it isn't clear. In the same way the Turing Test is nowhere near being passed.
    http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-27762088
    LOL. Eugene Goostman? Really?

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Goostman

    It also involves self-publicist 'scientist' Kevin Warwick, and was back in 2014, and there have been no reported sightings of it since.

    In other words (and I think this is the first time I've said this): fake news.

    More info here:
    http://isturingtestpassed.github.io/
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2017
    Asked by the bot 'Eugene' where the judge lived, this exchange followed:

    [16:14:22] Judge: Epsom, home of the derby. yourself?

    [16:14:27] Eugene: My guinea pig says that name Derby sounds very nice.
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    AlsoIndigoAlsoIndigo Posts: 1,852

    SeanT said:

    Whatever the cost, it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance, and they will annihilate vast sectors of employment.

    Quite scary. Also exciting (if you're not a cabbie, Uber dude, truck driver, etc)

    " it is quite clear self drive cars are now within touching distance,"

    No, it isn't clear. In the same way the Turing Test is nowhere near being passed.
    http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-27762088
    But it was bollocks...

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/06/10/world_to_captain_cyborg_youre_rumbled/
    Fake news has been around for longer than we thought ;)
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    Ishmael_Z said:

    Or the stuff you could buy from the Innovations catalogue.

    I once did some consultancy work for that company. I got into a bit of trouble because I needed some sample text similar to their catalogue descriptions, so I came up with "Silver Clothes Pegs! Your washing-line will be the envy of the neighbourhood with these 1-carat silver-plated clothes pegs, specially made by Danish craftsmen to our exclusive design. Just £30 for six!"

    They weren't very amused.
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,285
    edited February 2017
    Oh dear England are f##ked.
This discussion has been closed.