Kirsty
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Played by | Ashley Laurence |
---|---|
Creators | Clive Barker |
First appearance | The Hellbound Heart |
Fictional universe | Hellraiser |
First appear | The Hellbound Heart |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2319782 |
About Kirsty
Kirsty is a fictional character from the Hellraiser media franchise. Created by writer Clive Barker, Kirsty first appears in the 1986 novella The Hellbound Heart, whose full name is identified in the sequels as Kirsty Singer, before being adapted in the 1987 film adaptation Hellraiser as Kirsty Cotton.
Ellie Goulding gets the last number one of the 2010
...Mariah Carey3) last ChristmasWham!4) fairytale of New York Pogues / Kirsty Maccoll5) Own ItStormzySource: Official ChartsMariah Carey s All I Want For Christmas Is you led the chasing pack in second place, with Wham s Last Christmas on three...
'Remember our stillborn babies in Christmas cards'
... Kirsty Schwegmann says seeing her stillborn daughter s name on a card would fill her with joy In January, Kirsty Schwegmann, who was 22 weeks pregnant with her fourth child, went for a routine scan...
England flooding: River warnings and rail delays continue
... Children and pets were carried to safety as people evacuated their homes in Doncaster Matlock clothes shop owner Kirsty Gilbert said flooding had ruined a significant amount of her stock...
'I think I inherited my loneliness'
... Kirsty McGrath fears passing on her feelings of loneliness to her children Kirsty McGrath thinks loneliness became a problem for her after her son was born five years ago...
Widow's fight to get partner's name on birth certificate
...Kirsty Gravett and Chris Vickery were together for 11 years before he died suddenly in 2017 A woman whose partner died while she was pregnant has said she suffered emotional trauma fighting through the courts to put his name on their child s birth certificate...
The robo racing cars accelerating driverless tech
... Kirsty Lloyd-Jukes says infrared heat sensing could help AVs spot pedestrians Like far infrared heat sensing, useful for spotting pedestrians, says Kirsty Lloyd-Jukes, chief executive of Latent Logic, an Oxford autonomous systems spin-off...
Cat of The Year Awards: Inspiring tails of the UK's finest felines
... Kirsty Ayre said her cat Sparky has helped her cope with every challenge she had faced Kirsty Ayre, from Clydebank in Dunbartonshire, had already lost her parents within a year of each other when she became the victim of a laser pen attack...
London Bridge attack: Victim's partner calls for legal aid
... Kirsty Boden, an off-duty nurse, was dubbed the angel of London Bridge in the aftermath of the attack A Ministry of Justice spokesman said the government had reviewed the inquest process earlier this year...
The robo racing cars accelerating driverless tech
This racing car has no driver but still manages not to crash
Johannes Betz is not your typical racing car driver.
For a start, he doesn't Get In The Vehicle - it's driverless. As a post-doctoral researcher, he is in charge of the Technical University of Munich's entry in the Roborace motorsport competition, now in its first competitive season.
All these cars are electric and self-driving. "We started in early 2017, when my professor saw this in a newspaper," he says.
"Each month, we have to develop our software a little further, And Then go to an Event - yeah, like Formula 1 ," he laughs.
Each Team - the University of Pisa and electric van start-up Arrival also Compete - writes software for an identical racing car, currently the DevBot 2. 0, which is capable of speeds over 200mph (322km/h).
It is guided by six cameras, two radars, 18 ultrasound sensors, and five lidar [light detection and ranging] sensors. The onboard computer processor is capable of 24 trillion operations a Second .
Johannes Betz leads his university's Roborace TeamIt was The First racing car to establish a fully autonomous official record at the Goodwood Hill Climb, an important motorsport Event in England's West Sussex , on 13 July.
This narrow, winding 1. 86 km (1. 16-mile) track climbs 150m (492ft) round slippery bends, hay bales, and flint walls.
And DevBot navigated it in 66. 96 Seconds - Eight Seconds faster than an unofficial attempt last year.
Now "there's around twelve Seconds left for the AI (Artificial Intelligence ) to find" before it can match The Best human drivers, says Bryn Balcombe, Roborace's chief strategy officer.
Of that, "Six Seconds we think is easily gained, And Then you're starting to get into The Unknowns . "
But what is The Point of racing driverless cars?
It's an important way to assess the quality of the sensors and cameras which autonomous vehicles (AVs) will rely on, explains Mr Balcombe.
And "testing performance limits on real roads is not something, as a member of society, I'm 100% comfortable with," he says.
He plans to introduce obstacles for the DevBots to navigate, such as slower-moving lorries and tractors. Overtaking is the hardest Race Course task to automate, says Dr Betz.
The ultimate aim is to find out whether driverless cars can eventually "perform at a level so you can't detect it's an AI," Mr Balcombe says.
Roborace plans to make it more difficult for The Cars by introducing obstaclesThis is the for AVs: to see if they can drive "as naturally as a human but without the mistakes".
Your ability to be autonomous "is based on your ability to see The World around you", explains Glen de Vos, chief technology officer at Aptiv, a car electronics company headquartered in Dublin.
So sensors are getting most of the attention these days.
Tesla's Elon Musk insists cameras can do The Job alone. Mobileye, owned by the giant chipmaker Intel, is making a camera-only AV, too.
But most automotive experts think you need lots of other kit, too - lidar, radar, ultrasound, inter-car wireless communication and so on - in case cameras alone aren't up to The Job .
Lidar is "really good at short distance, but gets really interfered with by weather", says Wael Elrifai, vice president of Hitachi Vantara, a subsidiary of the Japanese electronics multinational.
Cameras are "really good at managing shapes and colours to identify objects, and can even work at Long Distance ", but rain and fog frustrate them, too.
LeddarTech's Charles Boulanger is sceptical that cameras alone will be enough to make driverless cars safeAnd radar is "low resolution but works at long distances in bad weather, and is also good at determining the relative speed of something coming towards you", he says.
To be completely reliable, cameras would have to "match the ability of the human eye", argues Charles Boulanger, chief executive of Quebec lidar company LeddarTech. And cars would need "human brain" processing power to analyse all the images in Real Time .
But six lidars could add €15,000-20,000 (£13,700-18,300) to The Price of a car today, says Mr De Vos, so it's more likely this tech specification level will be reserved for driverless ride sharing, shuttle buses, automated deliveries and robo-taxis.
Once you remove the cost of The Driver and can use The Vehicle 24-hours-a-day, the sensors start looking affordable. And once commercial AVs become more Common - within the next five years some technologists predict - Sensor manufacturing costs will fall.
"Optimising design, materials and manufacturing, this hasn't really begun in earnest," says Mr De Vos.
A big move forward, in cost and performance, will come from lidars on a chip, or solid-state lidars, says Raffi Mardirosian, vice president of San Francisco-based lidar-maker Ouster. When technology systems can be built on a single silicon chip, it opens the door to making them much more cheaply.
You might have seen bulky lidars on top of prototype driverless cars, spinning round scanning The Environment . Solid-state lidars won't have Moving Parts , so one solution is flashing an entire area with laser light, says Mr Boulanger.
Other Sensor technologies besides lidars are also emerging.
Kirsty Lloyd-Jukes says infrared heat sensing could help AVs spot pedestriansLike far infrared heat sensing, useful for spotting pedestrians, says Kirsty Lloyd-Jukes, chief executive of Latent Logic, an Oxford autonomous systems spin-off.
But there is a long way to go to make all these sensors reliable and cheap enough to please regulators and manufacturers, particularly when a simple sticker or bit of spray paint can fool AI into confusing a stop sign for a speed limit sign.
There is also the issue of How To maintain and repair all this complex Sensor technology.
"We're used to yearly MOTs," says Ms Lloyd-Jukes, "but the existing ecosystem isn't going to be enough. "
Insurers, repairers, and regulators will need to adapt to this new autonomous world.
At the moment, humans collectively drive for at least Eight million hours on average before misidentifying something that leads to an accident. Currently, AVs can only manage 10,000-30,000 hours.
"When you have A Number like that, it's sending big flashing signals there's a lot of work to be done," warns Hitachi Vantara's Wael Elrifai.
But robo racing cars are at least accelerating development of this autonomous Future .
electric cars, robotics, driverless cars
Source of news: bbc.com