Hundreds of computer driving your car?! Nope. There are a myriad of systems performing very specific tasks. An example that comes remotely close to "driving the car" is the electrically-actuated steering. If you have the lane keep assist ON, then that system works in concert with the ADAS forward facing camera to keep the car centered in the lane you're on. I still wouldn't call that "driving your car", since again it is focused on performing one very specific task, which is overridden as soon as the driver turns the steering wheel to change lanes, take an exit, or bang into a retaining wall, etc. Same thing applies to cruise control.
Take the "drive-by-wire" throttle system. This is a typical servo system that strictly follows the driver's input command at the accelerator pedal and actuates the throttle body accordingly. While the mapping is not be 100% linear and will vary depending on the driving mode you set, the "computer" strictly follows what it was programming to output per the driver command. Only a layperson - or an idiot - would construe that as "computers driving your car".
Now then, once you get into self-driving systems like what Tesla is trying to dupe the public into accepting, then yeah, that's a different story. However, that is neither what
@ominousone was talking about, nor most of us here in this G70 thread. We are not even talking things like adaptive cruise control. This here thread is discussing the "consider taking a break" alert the G70 pops up when we are actively driving the car.