Getting Technical: Clarity of purpose

Ben Stein

Ben Stein

Publisher of Panbo.com, passionate marine electronics enthusiast, 100-ton USCG master.

4 Responses

  1. Interesting stuff, Ben! For the enroute portion of a voyage (where we would typically employ the autopilot now) these systems look very attractive. But for close-quarter maneuvering, I’m not so sure. Do these systems understand turbulent, changable current? Can they compensate for things like current and wind in a vessel without bow & stern thrusters (i.e., a single-screw sailboat)? These are the challenges that de-mark truly pro mariners from us plodders!

  2. Capt. Woody with the wooden boat says:

    “The boat” is really an extension of my Self. Just like “the car” becomes an extension of the driver, or “The plane” is an extension of the pilot, and “the hammer” is an extension of the carpenter. Automation continues to make the tasks of being a boater easier. I am supportive of any technology that enhances the safety and lowers the risks associated with the activity, as long as the reliability attains a trustworthy state. Just as I would not trust a drunken bus driver, neither would I trust a buggy AI autopilot.

    • Ben Stein Ben Stein says:

      I think your last sentence resonates with a lot of boaters. I also believe that is a big part of why the first rounds of AI awareness products are awareness and not control. Until we see the technology demonstrate itself as trustworthy and accurate on the water in a vast range of real world scenarios, it will be very difficult to trust it.

      -Ben S.

      • But when will it be trustworthy? Products like the B&G NAC-3 autopilot have been on the market for how many years, yet everyone I know who has one (including myself) knows they will go into standby mode at random times. Can one count on big companies to every really create technology that is trustworthy ‘enough’?

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