Isn't that the exact same video in poorer quality?
I think the question now is how well a LIDAR is supposed to work in the dark. I keep hearing people saying that the hardware should've "seen" her, but speaking purely in terms of physics, how exactly is that supposed to work? Doesn't night vision still require a minimum threshold of light in order to work? How much light?
If that's true, this would certainly suggest a big failure from the LIDAR system in this incident. I wonder how that claim is tested. Would city lights interfere with testing (similar to how you can't see stars in the middle of cities)?
I think the question now is how well a LIDAR is supposed to work in the dark. I keep hearing people saying that the hardware should've "seen" her, but speaking purely in terms of physics, how exactly is that supposed to work? Doesn't night vision still require a minimum threshold of light in order to work? How much light?