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| You don't have to monitor every moving part at all times, it comes down to cost/benefit. Existing sensors and a basic camera system are probably enough, maybe teamed with a drive by from a supervisor once or twice per day.
I didn't have a single time in 2025 I had to stop the tractor and get out because a gauge wheel fell off or a closing wheel got jammed up. Not that it can't happen but in threads like this you'd think guys are stopping every 20 minutes to reassemble half the machine.
You make the same mistake a lot of people do - AI doesn't have to be a perfect driver, it just has to be equal to human drivers to be viable. That's not the mark to hit in the public eye though, it has to be perfection or nothing.
The Arizona uber story got national attention even though 50 pedestrians across the US get killed every day by human drivers. | |
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