The forum started talking about driverless cars. And I remembered why I have no confidence in such devices
I have a battered old book published back in the USSR. This is a collection of science fiction stories, all of them with a detective bias. There are stories by writers from Great Britain, the GDR (at that time), Poland, the USA, France, Czechoslovakia (then there was) and Japan. The book is called "The Dying Night", after the title of the short story by Isaac Asimov included in the collection.
Among the 16 stories there is one about a car with a human mind, written by the Japanese writer Koji Tanaka. Naturally, it did not lead to anything good I still don't trust driverless cars.
Among others, there are a few more that I remember. For example, the story "A Kind of Homo Sapiens" by the Polish writer Konrad Fialkowsky. Interestingly, Fialkowsky was a programmer operator of the first Polish computer and a specialist in the field of computer science and computer technology. Perhaps @puppy_apprentice has read not only Lem, but also remembers Professor Konrad
Also in the book there is a story by Pierre Boulle called "How much does a sonnet weigh?" The essence there is this. The writer dies at his desk and drops a match, which destroys his work. The heroes of the story are trying to restore the lost work. Not quite like Sherlock Holmes in the story "Dancing Men", but also interesting By the way, the author is the same Pierre Boulle who wrote "Planet of the Apes" and "The Bridge on the River Kwai".
The rest of the stories are also good, but I need an incentive, some spark to remember them quickly. It is best of course just to re-read it again