Sunday 17 May 2015

Self-driving car trials move over to real road conditions as Google roll out driverless cars

by Benson Agoha | Technology

With the Royal Borough of Greenwich being an approved trial borough for self-driving cars, it may not be too long before we begin to see the likes of the Google Car on our roads.

The Google Self-driving Car.
(Credit: Google).
This is because Google has given the green light that its self-driving cars may be a reality far sooner than the public expect.

And Chris Urmson, Google's Director of the self-driving car project is excited to see the actual project has moved to something that is starting to come to being realise, saying the goal is to actually see people using it.

Releasing the video on youtube on Friday, Google said "We started designing the world’s first fully self-driving vehicle to transform mobility, making it easier, safer and more enjoyable for everyone to get around."

"Now we're ready for the next step of our project: this summer, our prototype vehicles will leave the test track and hit the familiar roads of Mountain View, California, with our safety drivers aboard.

And according to Google's System Engineer for the self driving car project, Jaime Waydo, google said "..every moment has been building towards putting these cars on the goad where we can even start learning more from them."

In a blog release on titled "Green lights for our self-driving vehicle prototypes", google said the auto-driving cars are being released unto the roads so that the 2023 target date will begin to feel real.

"We've made the car hard, we've made the car cold, we've durability testing, we've driven through reliability bump track." Waydo said.

Google said, it is also advisable for the car to leave their Californian trial base, where it has been confined, so that researchers can monitor its performance on the roads, in the real world.

Urmson said the car they rolled out in December had everything integrated into it, making it their first real push to making the car usable in real conditions.

He said getting the cars out will allow people to react to them and for google engineers to keep watch and monitor it's performance - at junctions, when people cross the road, or traffic lights and so on. "Most importantly, it is a necessary step to get them to try it themselves". 

"When we think about safety, when we think about giving people mobility, and when you start to think in longer term about the impact on cities, and reliability and reclaimed space, and to reduce congestion and freer parking - this is something that will have a huge impact."

See this video:


Friday 15 May 2015

Three remarkable moves that contributed to the Tory win

by Benson Agoha
The election has come and gone, but it was one in which the parties played all their cards and by the evening of May 8th, the winner had taken it all.
No one thought things would end the way it did, not least Lib Dem’s Nick Clegg, who said on the night of March 27, during his opening speech at the Leaders Debate that:
“I think it is pretty obvious that no one standing here tonight is going to win this election outright, so you will have to choose, like you did last time who is going to work with whom…”
Analysts from the Labour camp are working hard to isolate what went wrong and to right it before the game is on again.
Some of the factors that contributed to the decisive win of the Conservative Party, against all expectations include:
A) Effective Use of Noise: By insisting on the 7-Party Leaders’ Debate, the conservative party ensured that all the major parties had a chance of being heard. But was the information too much for an electorate that has been used to focusing on two leaders from two major parties?
Effective use of noise helped because the deluge of party policies, many of which are similar but being presented with bogus descriptive words designed to make it unique, became just too much for them to process.
When the brain has too much information, it will either reject some, reject all or decide to maintain the statusquo. And the fact that good news continued to emerge from official statistics about the economy was enough to make a decision.
Take for example the first question asked by a student of politics by name Jonny Tudor during the Leaders Debate:
“How will each of the party leaders believe they will be able to keep their promises of eliminating the deficit without raising certain taxes or making vast cuts to vital services?”
All 7 party leaders had to answer this question in one minute, but how many of what was said by each of the seven leaders would you remember after 7 minutes, if you had not been taking note? So how much of that would you remember the next day?
B) That New Memorable Phrase: Whereas Ed Miliband was relishing his growing #Milifandom base, David Cameron’s `I am pumped-up for this election’ arrived in the nick of time to reverse this.  It has already a phrase of choice and a new vocabulary that is enjoying increasing patronage from writers.
“Taking a risk, having a pun, having a go – that pumps me up.” He told city workers that, with 10 days to go “If you think I’m gonna let Ed Miliband and Alex Salmond wreck that, you've got another thought coming.” David Cameron energetically told a group of City workers just a week before the election.
 C) Video Message: the short video Message made by David Cameron in which he asked the electorate to “vote for the Conservative Party” if they wanted him to remain in office. Was very effective. He said “Don’t vote for others and hope that I will win.”
Direct video messages never to fail to appeal, especially if it is correctly handled. And the short but direct message employed, helped to work the magic.
So with data about rising local auto manufacturing, increasing foreign direct Investment, rising profile for London as well as decreasing unemployment figures, strong indices that any government should be proud of, the Tories milked it for all its worth.
This goes to show that strategic deployment of noise, can swing the pendulum to your favour. It’s a matter of how.

Saturday 9 May 2015

As Ed Miliband quit, who Leads the Labour Party?

by Benson Agoha | Politics
Ed Miliband resigned within one hour of the announcement of the Conservative Party victory in the May 7 General Elections. A strong showing by the Scottish National Party (SNP), diluted Labour's strength and resulted in a major loss for the Party that hoped to wrest Number 10 from David Cameron.
Ed Miliband resigned within one hour of announcement of Torry win.
 (Credit: via Yahoo!)
Miliband who took his role as Labour Leader seriously send out a `Thank you' email to Labour members saying, he had hoped to send them a different email, and, apologizing `profoundly' for the defeat, he said he was more grateful than he could express for their support throughout the campaign.

Ed Miliband told Labour members he was taking full responsibility for the result of the election and was stepping down as the leader immediately because it was the `right' thing.
He said even though the defeat would be hard to take, `we are a party that will never stop fighting for the working people of this country.' and that `Britain needs a strong Labour Party and it is the responsibility of each of us to continue the fight.'

"The stakes are too high to wait for others to lead," he said, adding "It isn’t simply leaders who achieve change, it is people that make change happen."

He said "I will never give up on that idea, I will never give up on our cause and I will never give up on our fight."
Miliband urged members to keep on fighting because "The course of progress and social justice is never simple or straightforward, and change happens because people like us don’t give up."
Meanwhile, Miliband's exit has thrown the door open for a leadership contest in the Labour Party. And, according to the Press Association (PA), names being mentioned include Andy Burnham; Yvette Cooper whose husband Ed Balls lost his constituency seat; Chuka Umunna; Liz Kendall; Dan Jarvis; Alan Johnson;  John McDonnell/Diane Abbott.

But as important as who emerges to lead the Labour Party will be finding a way to convince Scotts that votes of their believed SNP members should be broken up, and shared.
Earning their trust and making them accept that a block vote from SNP is not the best for England as part of the Union.

Friday 8 May 2015

Tories win Majority in the House of Commons, cruise home with 331 seats

Job Well Done: Prime Minister David Cameron gives the thumbs up.
(Credit: via GooglePlus)
by Benson Agoha | Politics
Prime Minister David Cameron-led Conservative Party, has won a Majority in yesterday's elections. The Tories won 331 seats of the 650 Parliamentary seats contested.
He got more than the required minimum number of 326 seats. 326 seats are required to be won in order to form a government without coalition.

The win of the 331 seats for the House of Commons is the first time the Conservative party has won a parliamentary majority since 1992.

Reacting to the news David Cameron said it was the sweetest of all wins, and posted a photo of himself giving his wife a well deserved peck with the title "Here's to a brighter future for everyone."
It means, he does not need the Liberal Democrats to govern and should find it easier to pass bills in the house. It will also mean he will find it easier to implement policy, without wrangling from any coalition.
The rise of the Scottish National Party which picked an almost block vote in Scotland affected the chances of the Labour party and the other parties.
Even UKIP lost ground, with leader Nigel Farage losing his South Thanet constituency. He said of the loss: "I feel like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders."
Other party biggies that also lost out include Labour's Ed Balls who lost his  Morley and Outwood constituency in West Yorkshire by 422 votes.
Liberal Democrates Leader, Nick Clegg also lost his Sheffield Hallam constituency, as did his party faithful, Simon Hughes in Bermondsey and Old Southwark after 32 years.
Many people did not think this outcome would be possible especially with the litany of polls results showing a close call between labour and the conservatives.
But just a week to the election, PM David Cameron responded to allegations that he was not seemingly looking forward to the election, saying "I am pumped up for this election, lets do it".
Now it has been done and he has proved his mettle.