Web-based Road Monitoring 70
James Evans writes "The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) are testing a Web-based system for weather forecasting and winter road treatment that could soon save lives, cut costs, and help keep millions of drivers on the move. Highway officials and road crews in Des Moines and Ames, Iowa, will test the Maintenance Decision Support System (MDSS) February 3 to April 4. The MDSS uses several computer models to project hour-by-hour weather and road conditions up to two days in advance, with an update every three hours."
Re:I HAVE COME TO LIBERATE! (Score:1, Offtopic)
RFID? (Score:1)
nope (Score:1, Informative)
Does anyone ever pay attention? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Does anyone ever pay attention? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Does anyone ever pay attention? (Score:1)
1+view predicted weather and road conditions
2+monitor the potential for deteriorating road conditions
3+predict the impact of upcoming weather on specific road segments
4-assess treatment recommendations based on proven rules of practice
5-devise a plan for anti-icing, deicing, plowing, or other road treatment
1,2,3 -Means its not only for the plowers
4,5 -For the plowers
1,2,3 - Are already forcasted on Media
But eventually it all for the drivers
Re:Does anyone ever pay attention? (Score:2)
"Wait until the snow stops and make a half hearted attempt at plowing. Salt and such are only to be used in areas where big name retailers are located. To make interstates easier to clear, shut them down with cars on them, snow will melt off of the running cars instead of landing on the roadway, meaning less work for PennDOT."
Traffic vs. Traffic (Score:2, Funny)
Money well spent (Score:4, Insightful)
These are great measures against the deaths and injuries that every year happen in every road. That's something that the EU countries should copy from the US
Re:Money well spent (Score:1)
Also, I wonder how many people get killed every year while trying to read a small font weather forecast from their GPS LCD.
Re:Money well spent (Score:1)
Maybe you're from Northern Europe, where the rate of accidents is low... But if you were from Southern Europe you'd know what I'm talking about!
Re:Money well spent (Score:3, Insightful)
(driving 10ft off the bumper of the car in front is dangerous, driving 10ft off the dumper of the car in front in snow is suicidal.).
Re:Money well spent (Score:1)
I generally like free things (Score:2, Insightful)
I support their efforts, for a safer and more informed existance, but I hope they look at the ramifications before potentially displacing a market.
Re:I generally like free things (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I generally like free things (Score:1)
Re:I generally like free things (Score:1)
You're new here, aren't you? :-)
Putting anything on the Internet pretty much guarantees that people will jump to your site in droves, provided you get your site linked somewhere here on SlashDot.
If you don't get enough people flocking to your site, we have a courtesy service that'll repost the link again later the same week (sometimes even the same day).
This is the same mentality that cause the whole dot-com boom/bust.
No, this is the same mentality that causes sites to get slashdotted. Your confusion is understandable, since first their site's hit counter goes boom, then their web server goes bust, but those are simply intended to be humorous sound effects, not actual economic theory.
Re:I generally like free things (Score:2)
Re:I generally like free things (Score:1)
A engaging, constructive comment might be, say, "The dip in the tv industry's economy could be absorbed (kept from affecting the little guys) by providing the same type of services on this website, like advertizement." Unfortunately, though, that only affects the tv industry more, although I personally think that's fine. Most TV content these days sucks, and using silly underhanded tactics like putting the weather report after all the stuff people don't want to see only underscores the point that they have little to offer.
I'm not sure if it would be trustworthy (Score:5, Interesting)
Luckily, I only took their word for it the first time. I drove a Geo Metro (the only way I could afford the gas with the mileage I was putting on at the time) and never had any problem whatsoever with either highway.
I hope this system doesn't default to "roads are unsafe" or else people will stop bothering to check.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Iowa? (Score:3, Insightful)
Being from the east coast, I'm sick of people with the attitude that the only thing that comes out of iowa is corn. Iowa has one of the highest SAT averages in the nation, and some of the best universities, such as Iowa State and University of Iowa. Beleive it or not, there is a world outside of California, New York, and Philadelphia.
Re:Iowa? (Score:2, Informative)
Iowa is a good place to raise a family, but that's about it. Only 1 in 4 Iowa State students will stay in Iowa after they graduate. The majority of people that live in Iowa are either farmers, old, or have been there all their lives and never went beyond high school. It's pretty sad when I get off the plane from DC and look around at the people at the airport - all old people.
BTW, I also happen to live right near the DOT in Ames. I was surprised to see a story featuring Ames/Des Moines of all places.
Re:Iowa? (Score:1)
I'm more than a little wary of this... (Score:1)
What is worse, local weather is forcast from more than 800km away. The forecaster can't even look out the window to see if their satellite is lagging or not.
Will this help... (Score:2)
upstate NY 4' of snow in 02-03 and counting!
What if "On-Star"... (Score:3, Funny)
So, if you had (n)cars on the road in a given area, you could tell the weather at all the doughnut shops in the state.
This isnt the best thing since sliced bread. (Score:3, Informative)
View predicted weather and road conditions monitor the potential for deteriorating road conditions.
Predict the impact of upcoming weather on specific road segments.
Assess treatment recommendations based on proven rules of practice.
Devise a plan for anti-icing, deicing, plowing, or other road treatment.
If you ask me, it still looks like they have to physically go out there and do something if it snows. It appears it will only be of major use if the roads are too dangerous to drive on and they can close the roads, or if travelers actually check predicted road conditions before they go traveling.
Regardless, they still have to anti-ice, d-ice, plow, etc. So this wont do any good to the traveler who is already on the road approaching said segment of highway/freeway/road to no where.
Altho I do think its a wonderful way to monitor many different roadways and see which ones need to be treated and which ones dont, which in the long run could save money and lives anyway.
Take it as you will.
My Favorite Site (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the site I check before I drive:
Road Conditions [209.82.51.53]
Also handy to call someone (when you have cellular service) and ask them to check the road ahead. I just wish they'd update the site more often.
States Missing - RI CT MA (Score:1)
While they are at it, maybe they can revamp the DMV as well.
Re:States Missing - RI CT MA (Score:1)
Hey, nobody said they could work miracles.
Why Ames and Des Moines? (Score:4, Interesting)
At first I though? What? Why are they testing this in Iowa? Then, I saw the light . . .
As a Des Moines native and a student at Iowa State University in Ames, I can see why they picked these roads. The sections of highway that were picked for this test have very predictable traffic patterns. One can always count on the Des Moines "rush-15-minutes" and the commute from surrounding small towns to Des Moines. By using roads in a smaller city, with very predictable traffic patterns, the National Center for Atmospheric Research and the Federal Highway Administration have eliminated many of the variables associated with larger cities.
Of course, this probably means that Iowa State University will be less likely to cancel classes due to poor road conditions . . . but I'm a Computer Engineer, so it's not like I have anything better to do than to go to class. :-)
Re:Why Ames and Des Moines? (Score:1)
Kentucky's snow plow out for repair today (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Kentucky's snow plow out for repair today (Score:2)
You're not from the north, eh? Where I'm from 3 inches of snow on the -road- is considered plowed. On the expressway that's pretty much unacceptable, but in really heavy snowing I've acdtually seen it happen. The "express"way drops to round 45mph and white-knuckle the wheel when going from lane to lane to get around people.
Uk system (Score:1, Interesting)
http://www.met-office.gov.uk/roads/about.html
congestion caused by too much information... (Score:4, Interesting)
However, a system which aims to provide better information about traffic congestion to individual drivers can have the unexpected consequence of making congestion worse --- one study by Mahmassani and Jayakrishnan showed that when individuals use a best response strategy the performance of the system as a whole degrades if more than 25% of drivers have access to real time traffic information.
We show how this concentration effect works in a paper on the El Farol bar problem titled "Coordination Failure as a Source of Congestion in Information Networks" (download from here [annmariabell.com]) --- when agents have "too much" information they are unable to successfully coordinate their behavior.
Re:congestion caused by too much information... (Score:3, Insightful)
Interesting, but that sounds like a different situation. The traffic congestion is caused by drivers, so the "smart" drivers cause new congestion when they try to avoid old congestion. The drivers don't cause snow/ice, so I don't think the same problem will happen here.
What about realtime? (Score:1)
MDSS==RWIS? (Score:5, Insightful)
This article seems to call these systems Maintenance Decision Support Systems (MDSS). But the term I am used to seeing is Road Weather Information System (RWIS), which are used for the same reasons. I guess that RWIS's could be part of MDSS's; Pennsylvania (as well as other states) use theirs to help predict where to send snowplows, etc.
RWIS's are also often found online. Pennsylvania's RWIS is online here [208.9.196.31]. You can click on any region, click on a station, and get live video, if the road is wet ("chemcial wet"==salted), what the temperature/wind speed is, etc. Pennsylvania also has self-salting bridges in a few spots; I don't know of any in other states, but it just might be me.
Ohio (not listed as an MDSS member) also has their own RWIS system [odotonline.org] (also called RWIS), although it presently covers only a few select areas.
I should note that even if you check a RWIS/MDSS, be aware that weather conditions can change quickly. The National Weather Service and the MDSS/RWIN you use might show only light snow, but don't be surprised if you have to seek shelter in a hotel overnight.
But what happens when... (Score:1)
just a thought
Mark.
In Finland... (Score:5, Interesting)
More useful (Score:5, Funny)
Online road monitoring. (Score:3, Informative)
Traffic [trafikken.dk]
The above link has a great replay function so you can see when there are heavy traffic and or just not moving at all. So it makes it easier to plan ahead if it is possible. road work [trafikken.dk]
In the winter months Road temperature [194.255.21.108]
These are always good to check in the office before leaving.
And then there is the webcams from the roads which I guess has no useful purposes for the average websurfer.
Personal Weather Station (Score:2)
My Weather station [fperkins.com]
So now... (Score:1)
So now the creators of Code-red and other worms, (not to mention microsoft servers' developers) will start to claim not only big DDoS's and network messes, but also, ROADKILLS! Nice...
I can see the ads for Norton Anti-Virus 22: lets you protect your data, your computer, your car and your life from evildoers! "Merci Johnson!"
And now for the weather report... (Score:2, Insightful)
Iowa doesn't properly manage roads in the winter. (Score:1)
Iowa doesn't spread salt on the roads in the winter. They spread sand instead, doing nothing about the snow and ice, instead helping out traction a bit. It's clearly a cost-cutting measure; one so grossly abused that every spring hundreds of Iowa kids write the governor complaining that it's unsafe to ride their bicycles until late summer.
With this in mind let me kindly suggest that Iowa is not a good real-world laboratory for winter time road management experiments. Thank you spin-your-tires through.
call it "The Information Superhighway"? (Score:2)
May be they could base it on this site. (Score:1)
several years now http://www.transguide.dot.state.tx.us/index.php [state.tx.us]
that even has cameras Big Brother is out there.