Have you ever tried to read a story, on those sites where it just shows you one picture at a time, and you have to click next to get to the next picture? Most of them are just ad machines, and it lags your browser so bad.
But you can't predict what would happen. Driving even healthy and sober, something could happen. Assuming you're in a more developed version of the self-driving cars, machine-learning has most likely come a long way since the beginning. The car/network of cars would have learned by now that the command:
"Stay on the right side of the road."
Doesn't mean to stay on the right side of the road but it's okay to hit a few cars or pedestrians."
They would have learned, or have programmed in them, that hitting cars or people is not good.
Machines don't have a moral sense, and hoping that they are not completely sentient, this means that they don't have opinions, meaning that if you don't like this guy, you can be a little rude to him.
And my last point is that the network of cars, all communicating at once, would learn how to be safest.
Done.
Not only is NVIDIA getting those three things that Huang mentioned, but they are also planning, and maybe getting, a monopoly.
Think, rapidly switching from chip-making to AI, before anybody else, but not for self-driving cars. Then, when Tesla decided to start self-driving cars, NVIDIA hopped in and now Tesla is going to use their Drive PX2 supercomputer.
This is a smart move by NVIDIA, after all, they're five years ahead!
There are some sites that display not ads but fake virus alerts. When I visited one of these sites, I got a message blaring out of my computer to call a phone number or to reinstall my computer to get rid of a "virus." (Hopefully it was not.) Every time I closed out of the message box a new one would appear, and I finally managed to close out of the site. It's happened a few times.
This may not entirely relate to the topic you were speaking about.
:)