Agreed, it's in the same vein as self-driving cars.
Sure, it could put a lot of programmers out of a job in theory.
In practice, the emergency brake alert goes off for cars waiting to turn in the oncoming lane, the blind spot warnings trigger on cars that are ahead of you, the lane departure warnings are usually wrong, and so on.
I'm not worried, and I prefer to avoid the uncertainty even if it means outsourcing a bit less effort to the magic AI pixies.
Sure, it could put a lot of programmers out of a job in theory.
In practice, the emergency brake alert goes off for cars waiting to turn in the oncoming lane, the blind spot warnings trigger on cars that are ahead of you, the lane departure warnings are usually wrong, and so on.
I'm not worried, and I prefer to avoid the uncertainty even if it means outsourcing a bit less effort to the magic AI pixies.