I don't think this will work very well. Already younger people can't drive properly. Taking the responsibility for learning to drive well away from the driver more and more will bring about merely having a passenger behind the wheel of a car which is only partially equipped to handle all eventualities on the road.
If 'they' designed a car that could drive automatically from North to South of a country like India for instance, without incident, that would be a winner for anywhere on Earth.
Then you wouldn't need sensors on the sides of highways and byways.
I'm imagining compound eye sensors on front and rear of motorcars.

I don't think this will work very well. Already younger people can't drive properly. Taking the responsibility for learning to drive well away from the driver more and more will bring about merely having a passenger behind the wheel of a car which is only partially equipped to handle all eventualities on the road.
If 'they' designed a car that could drive automatically from North to South of a country like India for instance, without incident, that would be a winner for anywhere on Earth.
Then you wouldn't need sensors on the sides of highways and byways.
I'm imagining compound eye sensors on front and rear of motorcars.


Nobody is talking about doing what you say. They are talking about adding information to that available to the driver, not driving for them at all. Why would it be a problem to be able to have more information available?