Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Slashdot Log In

Log In

Create Account  |  Retrieve Password

EU Reserves a Frequency For Talking Cars

Posted by kdawson on Wed Aug 13, 2008 04:47 AM
from the long-as-they-don't-use-cell-phones dept.
Iddo Genuth writes "The European Commission has recently decided to reserve, across Europe, part of the radio spectrum for smart vehicle communications systems. The decision is part of the Commission's overall fight against road accidents and traffic jams, and the hope is that vehicles' developers will create wireless communication technology that will allow cars to 'talk' to other cars and to the road infrastructure providers."
+ -
story

Related Stories

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More
Loading... please wait.
  • KITT (Score:5, Funny)

    by Daniel Weis (1209058) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:49AM (#24580117)
    But KITT always talked on the human audible range... Can you reserve that? Talk about road noise...
  • by scsirob (246572) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:50AM (#24580123)

    I can see my wife come home saying "Honey, the car has crashed..." And not a scratch on the paint..

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I remember hearing something about a windows car going bsod and locking someone in for 2 hours in the sun.

      No laughing matter, unless that someone is bill gates, mitch bainwol, or some bastardized clone combination of the two.

    • Doesn't look so bad when you consider the alternative meaning of "crashed". An alternative that is becoming less common every year because of the "computer stuff in cars".
    • Car viruses (Score:5, Funny)

      by Nycran (1282174) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:59AM (#24580163)
      Just wait until we have car viruses. We could have cars that don't start, cars that seek out head-on collisions, and cars that start playing Rick Astley when you're out on a date.
      • >and cars that start playing Rick Astley when you're out on a date.

        Considering how young most slashdotters are, I wouldnt be surprised if more than one person reading that was conceived in a car while Rick Astley was on the radio. You may partly owe your existence to Rick Astley.

      • "Honey, the car won't start, I think there's water in the carburettor."

        "and how on earth do you conclude there's water in the carburettor"

        "Because I parked it in the canal..."

  • And soon... (Score:4, Funny)

    by PJCRP (1314653) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:55AM (#24580133)
    The RI/MPAA will be suing car providers for allowing illegal C2C movie sharing. :V
  • Now you can phish my car...
    • Imagine the spam. "Free oil additives that make you feel younger and more virile. Just drive to 110 148th street without your owner. Make sure you bring your keys for a bonus offer"

    • And hack it to honk at all truck drivers, only do max 30km/h on highway and always run the fan at maximum speed and max temperature in the summer.

    • I can now see it ....

      Car receives V14gr4 Spam and the hood pops up.

  • by HungryHobo (1314109) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:56AM (#24580143)

    I think it's only a matter of time before computer controled cars come in.
    Problem is that even if they wait till they can build ones which are 10 times safer than human drivers and have far fewer accidents the first time one glitches and someone dies there will be the technophobes screaming about how you can't trust machines and that the killer cars need to be made illegal.

    • by HungryHobo (1314109) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:59AM (#24580165)

      There's just so much time wasted on the road.
      Link all the cars and let a computer control them and the moment the light goes green all the cars could accelerate at once rather than the first car moving off, then the second, then the third etc. On top of that throw in smarter traffic lights, better public transport systems(since there would be no need for drivers the money could be spent on more busses/trains) and being able to sleep on your way into work and you have a big winner

      • >Link all the cars and let a computer control them and the moment the light goes green all the cars could accelerate at once rather than the first car moving off, then the second, then the third etc.

        I've heard in some countries drivers already do this?

        Certainly wouldn't work around here.

        • by $RANDOMLUSER (804576) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:45AM (#24580389)

          Link all the cars and let a computer control them and the moment the light goes green all the cars could accelerate at once...

          I've heard in some countries drivers already do this?

          In Chicago, the moment the light goes green, all the cars start honking their horns.

      • by Narphorium (667794) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:40AM (#24580363)

        The real problem, as I see it, would be how you transition from a system of millions of non-robot cars to a system where all the cars drive themselves.

        I've always imagined that there should be something analogous to the carpool lane except that it would be for robot cars. A driver would be able to manually pull up beside the "robot lane" and request to join it. Then the other cars would automatically open up a spot and he would be automatically merged into the robot lane.

        Once you have a convoy of vehicles that can automatically drive within a safe stopping distance of each other you can ramp up the speed of the robot lane so that everyone gets to work much faster and they can even read the paper on the way there.

        • And while you're at it, the same wires or rails that delivered control signals could deliver power to top of your electric vehicle.

          You'd simply pull into the robot lane, and a peg on your car would drop into a kind of ... guide slot thingy, with a pair of power and signal rails on either side.

          Seriously, this wouldn't be such a bad idea for small electric personal commuter vehicles. You'd program in your destination, the car and network would figure out whether you needed a power boost to reach it. Most

        • by swillden (191260) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Wednesday August 13 2008, @01:24PM (#24587435) Homepage Journal

          Once you have a convoy of vehicles that can automatically drive within a safe stopping distance of each other

          Also, the safe stopping distance between computer-controlled vehicles can be much, much shorter. Rather than relying on human reaction time to engage the brakes, which is at least a substantial fraction of a second in the BEST case, and well over a second in most cases, computers could coordinate velocity changes with sub-millisecond latencies. Each vehicle computer would have to know the capabilities of the vehicle, and some slack would probably be added for less than perfect road conditions, but stopping distances could be calibrated very precisely.

          That, in turn, would mean that most of the time vehicles would be traveling close enough to draft off one another, which would make all but the lead vehicle substantially more fuel-efficient, even at much higher speeds. Some intelligent ordering based on vehicle size would help even more, though that would tend to place the largest (and generally most fuel-hungry) vehicles in the "trailbreaking" position where their fuel consumption would be high in order to improve the efficiency of the following vehicles.

          I think your basic idea, a robot lane, is the most workable approach. Rather than trying to make cars smart enough to navigate safely when intermixed with manually-controlled vehicles, specific areas of the road would be designated for automatic controls. They'd still need to have some ability to detect manual vehicles in order to address situations where a manual vehicle improperly enters the automatic lane. Over time, as a greater percentage of vehicles acquire automatic control systems, a greater portion of the roads would be given to automatic control, until eventually major highways would be purely automatic.

          Hopefully by that time, automation will have progressed enough that guidance can be added to smaller roads as well, safely handling a mixture of automatic and manual traffic. Over time, the manual traffic would probably dwindle to next to nothing anyway.

          At some point, it's even likely that private ownership of vehicles would decline. Why own a car yourself if enough autonomous taxis are circling the streets, using smarter and smarter algorithms to make sure that there's always one nearby when you need it? Drivers are the largest expense of a taxi fleet, and eliminating them would make taxis very cost-competitive with private vehicle ownership. Or perhaps cooperative ownership would become the norm.

          With fully automated roadways, I think bus and train traffic would decline. Fuel-efficient, automatically-convoying, publicly or cooperatively-owned cars would be cost-competitive with traditional public transport, with the flexibility and end-to-end delivery capability of automobiles. Automated cars would also eliminate parking problems. Even if your car was privately-owned, not a taxi, a public car or part of a co-op, the car could drop you off at your destination and then drive to a parking location, even if it happened to be some distance away. Or maybe your car could turn into a taxi that operates itself for your financial benefit while you're shopping. In any case, a few minutes before you're ready to leave, you'd call the car with your phone, and have it waiting for you when you emerge.

          There are so many advantages to automated automobiles that it's an idea that absolutely will happen.

          • by Opportunist (166417) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @11:20AM (#24585029)

            Fog is no problem until the first car hits something unexpectedly because even a computer with top notch sensors and zero reaction time can't react to a deer jumping in front of it. Even computers can't change the laws of physics and breaking from 200 to zero in half a yard.

            And if they somehow figure out a way to do that, it certainly ain't much better than crashing for the human inside. Decelerating from 200 to zero within a few yards IS actually much like hitting a brick wall head on.

      • by Renegade Lisp (315687) * on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:51AM (#24580411)

        There used to be an ad here in Germany that showed a long row of cars, tightly packed after one another. Caption: "In principle, that's the right approach. Now everybody please go 240 km/h (150mph) at the same time."

        It was an ad by the German railroad.

        • by HungryHobo (1314109) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:56AM (#24580431)

          Out of interest can anyone tell me why we still have human drivers on trains?
          What exactly does the human do that's so hard do for a machine?
          I mean it always seemed like such a perfect system for automation to me and wages are such a large cost. If you didn't need a driver for every train it would open it up to having far more small commuter carriages buzzing around.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        There's just so much time wasted on the road.
        Link all the cars and let a computer control them and the moment the light goes green all the cars could accelerate at once

        If all the cars are linked why have traffic lights? The car will know the route of all cars moving through the intersection, and the server could tell individual cars to speed up and slow down to go through the gaps of traffic (and even to make the gaps). Obviously there'd have to be a significant safety margin, but cars wouldn't necessarily even need to stop in a fully computerized system. As soon as you enter your destination it should have the whole route programmed to within seconds, only making slig

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          I've honestly been dreaming of building this system since I was 9 years old.

          I'm in my late 20's now, so needless to say, I've given it a lot of thought.

          Implementing an autodrive system like this on city streets is at least an order of magnitude more difficult than it will be on limited access highways.

          And while GPS is very helpful, I really don't think we can rely on a system like this, placing millions of lives every day into its hands, based soley on GPS. I think the road will need to be embedded with RFI

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          If all the cars are linked why have traffic lights?

          Pedestrians trying to cross an intersection?

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        You could also avoid "phantom" traffic jams, where someone braking suddenly (even a small amount) can cause a ripple-back effect, resulting in jams for hours.

        I think the militant driver lobbies will resist it strongly though.

    • by niceone (992278) * on Wednesday August 13 2008, @06:11AM (#24580497) Journal
      ones which are 10 times safer

      The problem is that although robot cars could be proven 10 times safer than the average driver, nearly all drivers think they drive much more safely than the average driver.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          I liked a system I saw in a few places in spain,
          The traffic lights had sensors which detected how fast you were traveling towards them and reacted accordingly.
          It see's you going over the speed limit and speeds up the timer and changes red faster.
          Then it's a simple matter of running a red light.

    • by st0rmshad0w (412661) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @06:49AM (#24580721)

      I can't stand the idea of robot cars. I ENJOY driving. I loathe being cargo, I don't even like being a passanger for more than a few minutes. And what about motorcycles?

      • by Martin Soto (21440) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @08:34AM (#24581887)

        Don't worry. By the time this becomes a reality, simulators will be quite good. Indeed, you'll probably be able to drive in your simulator during commuting, while the computerized driving system in your car protects the rest of us from your mistakes.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          compare : 40000+ deaths on US roads. on avergae, in the last 10 years, there where only 400 terror-victims, That's only 1% of that number ...

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      It's not just the technophobes, imagine the liability suits. The main reason cars aren't self driving already is not the tech, but knowing that if the tech fails the manufacturer could lose millions.

      i'd rather see cars talking to each other, relaying their speed to the cars around them. Integrate that with GPS navigation and you've cut commute times, fuel consumption and accidents drastically and without exposure to liability. The cars ahead of you relay that they are slamming on the breaks, your car aut

  • by I_am_the_cheese (1264298) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @04:56AM (#24580149)
    Ad-hoc vehicle-to-vehicle connections that can be hacked without vehicles crashing and are: Fast, Prioritizable, ("my brakes are broken" is more important than "I would like to turn left in 50 meters") robust, standardizable, platform independant, extendable, and don't depend on a vehicle ID. What protocol is that?
    • by HungryHobo (1314109) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:07AM (#24580197)

      Please god let the open source crowd get there before the manufacturers pull a VHS/Betamacs competition between their own protocols.
      Last thing I need is my car crashing because the section of road I'm on only runs a different manufacturers protocol.

      • by Nycran (1282174) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:12AM (#24580225)
        Or worse, we end up with the iCar. Every car will have the same numberplate "STEVE", and will only drive to places on Apple's white list.
        • and will only drive to places on Apple's white list.

          So, in other words, will only drive to Starbucks?

        • Ah but by then we'll all have an iChip in our brains to make us happy with the situation and praise the almighty Steve.
          I'm fairly sure they're beta testing this on the mac fanboys already.

        • Or worse, we end up with the iCar. Every car will have the same numberplate "STEVE", and will only drive to places on Apple's white list.

          To be fair, the grandparent did specify "Betamacs".
           

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          People drove on the left since Roman times [wikipedia.org], on the first true roads.

          It's you Yanks who are, or rather were, being difficult.

          Also, though the data is not solid, it seems that traffic accidents are rarer on LHS countries than RHS.

    • "I would like to turn left in 50 meters"

      Which never would work anyway considering that very few drivers actually use the stick by the steering wheel for what it's intended. Flashing the headlights seems to be the only thing they use it for...

  • by unikussituation (1327733) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:06AM (#24580195)
    ...HAL. "I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that." ... not until you've cleaned up under the seat.
  • by $RANDOMLUSER (804576) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:39AM (#24580355)
    I was promised a flying car!

    Seriously, it's nice (and more than a little surprising) to see a government body do something so forward-thinking. We'll probably see fusion plants (in another 10-20 years ;-) before we see anything like fully robotic cars. Every year we talk here about the DARPA Grand Challenge, and that's just for a single vehicle, albeit off-road. Still, we're likely to see incremental uses of this kind of technology, particularly combined with GPS: tailgating prevention, traffic jam avoidance, gapers delay prevention (yay!), emergency vehicle path-clearing, etc. Kudos to the EU for reserving a chunk of the spectrum now, rather than later.
  • More information (Score:5, Informative)

    by martimo (1343853) on Wednesday August 13 2008, @05:45AM (#24580385)
    One of the main european research projects behind this is CVIS: http://www.cvisproject.org/ [cvisproject.org] . There is lots of documentation already...