New Near Miss Following a NYC Deadly Crash - Both UnnecessaryBoth Could and Should Have Been Prevented by AI Now Being Tested
He says such deadly collisions and the ever-growing number of potentially- Using AI to reduce actual airplane collisions, as well as the escalating number of potentially- Fortunately, as referenced below, the industry is moving ahead anyway. Banzhaf notes that computers running AI programs can already do many things air traffic controllers can't possibly do, and do it in milliseconds, including: ■ monitoring the dozens of different relevant radio frequencies, including commercial, helicopter, small craft civilian, military, Homeland Security, ground vehicles, and radios from other nearby airports, as well as air and ground radar ■ calculate various flight paths, and trajectories of planes taking off or taxiing as well as ground vehicles, and thereby foresee possible crashes in fractions of a second ■ never become tired, flustered, distracted, or panicked, or distracted by concerns about a missed paycheck, and then alert an air traffic controller if there seems to be a problem such as a potential collision. For more details, as well as links to what the industry is already doing, see: Lives of 300+ Passengers at Risk in Preventable Near Miss at Boston AP (http://prsync.com/ AI Can Help Prevent Inevitable Catastrophe at Little Cost NOW - Experts (http://prsync.com/ JOHN F. BANZHAF III, B.S.E.E., J.D., Sc.D. Professor,George Washington University FAMRI Dr. William Cahan Distinguished Professor Fellow, World Technology Network Creator of the "Banzhaf Index" (703) 527-8418 http://banzhaf.net/ End
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