Most chip makers agree, Moore’s law fizzled out. Or is in the process of fizzling out. The cost curve turned out to go exponentially upward on dies below 4nm. There’s slow progress but it looks like the next big breakthrough would have to be via quantum physics.
This is why the marketing and engineering switched from faster processors to multiple core processors. Clock speed isn’t King anymore. Now it’s cores, cores, cores!
You also have the very real economic problem of power sources. That’s why much of the compute power did a 180 and went back to the mainframe model in many ways, with virtualization.
Or to put it another way, to do what you’re envisioning you either cram a supercomputer in a car, or you REALLY trust its link back to the big computer in the sky... neither of which is a trivial problem, considering I live where cell coverage dies three times on the way into the city and it’s probably the most robust RF data network anyone has yet built.
It’s probably a lot cheaper, resources wise, to just utilize the full potential custom designed computer in-between one’s ears, the augment it with smaller computers in the car that help make up for its known shortcomings.
Downside is, if the assistance is too good, it triggers one of the human brain’s shortcomings anyway. Inattention. We see it in highly automated aircraft, and we saw it in the Tesla driver’s death.
But for whatever reason, demanding folks actually use the darn thing they’re blessed with, and then TESTING that they know how to use it, in cars anyway, is taboo.
That taboo-ness leads to the idea that self-driving cars are “better” because there’s so many wrecks.
The chess story is a great example. How many people don’t bother to play or learn chess because “the computer can always beat me anyway” even in low level chess games.
Society would get a lot more bang for the buck out of mandatory driver testing and training, but we won’t do it. Because that same brain brings emotional garbage along with it and thinks that would be “mean”.
If we treated airplanes like cars we’d just put someone in an airplane with their parents for 16 years and then six months of scaring the hell out of their parents who aren’t licensed as instructors and then cut them loose in the sky and say, “If they want professional instruction, it’s available...”
Yeah the new driver thing is changing a little bit, but they still log a lot of time with non-instructors who may or may not teach them correctly.
We even have dumb car commercials about it. Montages of dad or mom teaching the spawn and close calls and whew moments and then it’s time for the spawn to drive away in the “all-new Whizzbang 6000 with driver safety features”! Or with Giant Insurance Company Twenty “protecting” them. LOL.
Nobody seems to notice an hour on a skid pad with a real instructor would do them all more good than either product being marketed.