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Tesla driver appears to be asleep as car goes over 100 km/h on QEW

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Tesla driver appears to be asleep as car goes over 100 km/h on QEW

Video has emerged exhibiting a Tesla driver showing to be asleep behind the wheel whereas travelling greater than 100 km/h on a busy Ontario freeway.

Louise Lesser mentioned she was driving on the Queen Elizabeth Freeway close to St. Catharines round 7 a.m. on Friday when her associate regarded over and thought the white Tesla in entrance of them did not have a driver.

“I assumed he was loopy as a result of, clearly, a automobile has to have a driver,” Lesser instructed CTV Information Toronto on Friday. “I instructed him to decelerate as a result of I wished to see.”

Lesser mentioned once they pulled up beside the Tesla, she seen the driving force’s seat was reclined and the individual behind the wheel had their eyes closed.

She mentioned visitors round them was shifting at roughly 105 km/h on the time.

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“After I was capable of see in, the man, he opened his eyes for perhaps a break up second, after which closed his eyes once more and was totally asleep,” she mentioned. “He was behind a dump truck and all I may assume is ‘If that truck slams on the brake instantly, what would occur?’”

Lesser mentioned her associate thought-about honking their automobile horn to wake the driving force up, however had been fearful that will startle him and trigger an accident.

“I assumed it was insane. I’ve seen visitors, particularly on the QEW, it goes from being totally open, you’ll be able to do 100 km/h, to being at a standstill in two seconds,” she mentioned. “To know this man wasn’t awake, it nearly made me not need to be on the freeway.”

Lesser mentioned the driving force was asleep for about one other 10 to fifteen minutes. She mentioned he opened his eyes and began steering the automobile once more when he acquired nearer to the place the freeway splits in the direction of Lewiston and Fort Erie.

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CTV Information Toronto confirmed the video to Ontario Provincial Police Sgt. Kerry Schmidt. Whereas the video has not been verified by police, he referred to as incident “fully negligent and reckless.”

“If this individual is really asleep, I do not know why the individual recording the video would take the video moderately than name 911,” Schmidt mentioned. “Is that this individual medical misery? What is going on on inside that car? It leaves a little bit little bit of a suspicious thought in my thoughts as as to if that is really reliable or if that is staged? I do not know.”

Lesser instructed CTV Information Toronto she didn’t name 911 as a result of she could not get a transparent take a look at the car’s licence plate.

Schmidt mentioned no matter whether or not this video is reliable, the actions of the driving force behind the wheel are unlawful.

“Nobody of their proper thoughts would do that,” he mentioned. “This car must be stopped and this driver must be assessed.”

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Schmidt mentioned the OPP just isn’t at the moment investigating the video as a result of no formal grievance has been filed.

“Should you’re sitting within the driver’s seat of a car, you might be required and obligated to be alert and attentive. Failure to take action may lead to careless driving expenses and harmful driving expenses. There is no such thing as a offence referred to as asleep on the wheel, however there’s a variety of different offences that will match that class.”

In accordance with Tesla’s web site, their present Autopilot options require energetic driver supervision and don’t make the car autonomous.

CTV Information Toronto reached out to Tesla for remark, however has not heard again.

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'Wait Wait' for June 29, 2024: With Not My Job guest Christian Mcbride

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'Wait Wait' for June 29, 2024: With Not My Job guest Christian Mcbride

Christian McBride performs at An Evening With Christian McBride at the GRAMMY Museum on February 13, 2020 in Los Angeles, California.

Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images for The Recording A/Getty Images North America


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Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images for The Recording A/Getty Images North America

This week’s show was recorded at the Mann Center in Philly with host Peter Sagal, judge and scorekeeper Bill Kurtis, Not My Job guest Christian McBride and panelists Dulcé Sloan, Joyelle Nicole Johnson, and Peter Grosz. Click the audio link above to hear the whole show.

Who’s Bill This Time

Presidential Hoarse Race; A Change for The Change; A New Way to Be Bored on Board

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Panel Questions

Stuck In Space

Bluff The Listener

Our panelists tell three stories of unique lawsuits, only one of which is true.

Not My Job: We quiz Jazz bass legend Christian McBride on Bass Pro Shops

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Jazz bassist Christian McBride plays our game called “Bass Pro? Meet Bass Pro!” Three questions about Bass Pro Shops.

Panel Questions

Running for Love; The Greater Outdoors

Limericks

Bill Kurtis reads three news-related limericks: Taylor Swift Side Effects; Furry Caddies; An Adorably Repugnant Pup

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Lightning Fill In The Blank

All the news we couldn’t fit anywhere else

Predictions

Our panelists predict, after rawdogging flights, what will be the next weird thing people will do on planes.

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Taylor Swift Continues to Show Her Love To Travis Kelce While Onstage

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Taylor Swift Continues to Show Her Love To Travis Kelce While Onstage

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A robot gets a face of living ‘skin’ that allows it to smile

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A robot gets a face of living ‘skin’ that allows it to smile

An image released by University of Tokyo researchers shows a robot smiling, with the help of mechanical actuators beneath a flexible layer of living skin.

Takeuchi et al. CC-BY-ND

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If humanoid robots make you a bit queasy — would it help if they had fleshy faces that can smile at you?

The uncanny feat is the result of new technology using engineered living skin tissue and human-like ligaments to give robots a more natural smile, according to Tokyo University researchers who unveiled their work this week.

“In this study, we managed to replicate human appearance to some extent by creating a face with the same surface material and structure as humans,” professor Shoji Takeuchi, the team leader, said in a news release. In the process, he added, “we identified new challenges, such as the necessity for surface wrinkles and a thicker epidermis to achieve a more humanlike appearance.”

The approach promises to make robots more lifelike — and in the future, the researchers say, similar techniques could also be used on humans, in the cosmetics and plastic surgery industries. Their findings were published in the journal Cell Reports Physical Science.

A new method of binding living skin tissue to a robotic skeleton will allow more humanlike expressions and better range of motion, according to researchers from the University of Tokyo.

A new method of binding living skin tissue to a robotic skeleton will allow more humanlike expressions and better range of motion, according to researchers from the University of Tokyo.

Takeuchi et al. CC-BY-ND

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To overlay and connect the lab-produced skin on a robotic skeleton, a layer of collagen gel containing cultured human dermal fibroblasts (a type of connective tissue cell) binds to an innovative system of tiny V-shaped perforations in the surface, letting the skin move with the underlying structure without tearing or peeling. The work of muscles — creating a smile, and other motions — is done by actuators.

Takeuchi’s Biohybrid Systems Laboratory has previously engineered skin that can heal, created small robots with biological muscle tissue, and 3D printed lab-grown meat. He says the latest work on living skin has a string of potential next steps.

“Self-healing is a big deal — some chemical-based materials can be made to heal themselves, but they require triggers such as heat, pressure or other signals, and they also do not proliferate like cells,” he said. “Biological skin repairs minor lacerations as ours does, and nerves and other skin organs can be added for use in sensing and so on.”

It’s critical for robots to have the ability to heal and self-repair, the researchers said in their study, because even small scratches could develop into serious impairments.

Biomimetic robots could also become even more realistic with thicker skin, Takeuchi said, adding that future projects could look to add sensors, pores and even sweat glands and fat. The team’s paper says their work could also bring insights into how humans’ wrinkles are formed. And by incorporating more sophisticated actuators and eventually, cultured muscle tissue, their approach could help robots in the future move in fluid, humanlike ways.

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For now, the robot can’t feel its face, putting it in a category pioneered by Abel Tesfaye, a.k.a. The Weeknd. Not long ago, many of us smiled when technology managed to put the singer’s words about his face into the mouth of a U.S. president.

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