I have been watching a series on National Geographic channel covering air crash investigations and a frightening trend is emerging, once the autopilot disables itself when a sensor fails or other control system incident the modern pilots seem incapable of flying the plane manually - strangely they were not taught to do it in training WTF. I would call them plane minders rather than pilots - one standout case was Air France flight 447 from Argentina to Paris in an AirBus A330 airliner - they flew through a storm and the pitot heads sensors got coated with ice and the planes computer lost its airspeed inputs so the autopilot disengaged itself. The two man crew (senior officer was asleep having a mandatory rest period after about 5 hours of flying into an 11 hour flight). The one pilot immediately put the plane onto full engine power and into a climb, which in thin air at 35,000 feet and a full fuel load was not a good idea, the stall alarm sounded and both controls sticks began to shake which is done by control system when stall alarm goes off to warn pilots physically what is happening - the co-pilot tried to push stick forward to gain airspeed and stop the stall but the aircraft was confused by conflicting control inputs, the crew were not watching altimeter which would have shown them plane was pointing upwards but falling towards the ocean at about 2,500 feet per minute, by the time the senior captain had been woken up and assessed the situation the plane was only a few thousand feet above ocean and too far gone to recover, the plane pancaked into the ocean at about 200mph in the middle of Atlantic killing everyone. I think once humans lose the skills for driving they will be in bad shape if things go wrong with computers, and we will all be at the mercy of technology controlled by a few huge global tech companies. Hacking of systems will be a daily occurrence , the only saving grace with road vehicles they wont fall out of the sky.