The Future of the Car 422
Gandul writes "Radar, lasers, wireless radio networks and other embedded tech will enable our cars to sense faraway traffic and stop accidents before they happen. But who will be in the driver's seat?"
A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that works.
Duh? (Score:5, Funny)
Whoever's driving the car, duh.
Re:Duh? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Duh? (Score:5, Funny)
Intelligence shows that in an unspecified Eastern European country, the car rides on the driver. Reports that this unnamed country is Soviet Russia are unconfirmed. Details at 11.
Toonces, The Driving Cat (Score:2)
Re:Duh? (Score:4, Funny)
You'd have to get laid first. Since you're posting on slashdot on a friday night, I'd say this is pretty much a non-issue.
PS: I am posting this while making love to many beautiful European ladies and reading up on the next absurdly elaborate and expensive sports car I'll be buying. Since the probability of one person as awesome as myself reading slashdot is as close to zero as possible, it's safe to assume that you are my inferior, and therefore fair game for my petty jabs.
I just got one question (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I just got one question (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I just got one question (Score:2)
You know, I'm still waiting myself, but I was thinking about this a while back and came to the conclusion that they're already here. Of course, not everybody can afford them, much less have sufficient piloting ability. Here's just one of the many companies who make them [cessna.com].
Re:I just got one question (Score:3, Funny)
I used to want a flying car. Then started looking around at how some of the dipshits we have around here drive on the ground. Then imagine all those assholes with flying cars. They'd be chasing flocks of geese trying to reach out and grab one, buzzing people's houses, cutting across controlled traffic flight patterns. No thanks. It's dangerous enough with those retards on the ground.
Unless it's strictly auto-pilot. Then the most damage they could do is flying is drinking b
More to the point... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:More to the point... (Score:3, Informative)
http://biodiesel.org/ [biodiesel.org]
Also, keep in mind that a computer controlled vehicle will get much better mileage. Almost no one gets the mileage listed in the window on purchase. Heavy feet on the accelerator and brakes take a toll on fuel efficiency.
Re:More to the point... (Score:2)
Not exactly. (Score:3, Informative)
A better way to minimize load (since romping on the gas doesn't affect mileage nearly as much as people think it does) is to make your average speed higher. By
Re:More to the point... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Make me. (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway, I was going 30 and she was going about 5mph. Was she a dangerous driver? Yes! Were either of us speeding? NO!
It seems to be the case that there are two types of dangerous drivers. First, the morons that drive recklessly, drink and drive, cut people up, etc. These people tend to *also* drive fast. The second type is a member of the "oblivious masses" that can only see things that are in front of them. To these people mirrors are odd devices that have limited use. Sometimes their motto seems to be "slow is safe!" regardless of the situation. They don't understand road rules, they make bad decisions (not deliberately - they're not reckless in a deliberate sense) and that causes accidents. The lady I hit falls into this second category. She probably thinks she's a "safe" driver because she never goes over the speed limit. Remember, "slow is safe!".
Likewise, we can split safe drivers into two different categories - ones that stick to the speed limit and ones that don't. 60mph at night in the pouring rain may be an appropriate limit at that point in time, but it bears no similarity with that same stretch of road on a Sunday afternoon in dry sunny conditions. The speed limit is a conservative limit, given that it is not practical to have a variable limit across large sections of freeway. Just because you drive the speed limit doesn't in itself make you a safe driver.
Finally, it will always be true that people that drive slower than me are morons, and people that drive faster than me are idiots. :)
Re:Slow people cause Frustration if they don't yei (Score:3, Informative)
Good. I now know for sure that you are a liar. I know traffic lawyers, so I hear cases that go through. There have been people cited, while traveling the speed limit, for a violation. They may have been going the limit, but they were in the left lane and the other cars were traveling faster. "Keep right except to pass" will get you a citation if you are in the left lane and not passing, whether you are going u
Re:More to the point... (Score:2, Insightful)
Hybrid design will allow us to transition from our current fuel of choice to a continually greater role of electricity as an energy source.
Hopefully not people (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd rather have robots drive.
Flamebait? wtf? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is plain truth. Most accidents are caused either because the drivers chose to drive wrecklessly and/or under the influence, or were caused simply because human reaction time is not as good as computers' reaction time.
Because of this, we have lost many civil liberties.
This is also true, and quite an insight. Think about random road blocks where you're tested for being under the influence even if you're NOT driving wrecklessly or even swerving. The equation is simple: am I willing to give up a little bit of my privacy to prevent myself from being killed? Generally, yes! Of course! But, if drunk driving didn't cause accidents because people weren't driving, there would be no need to pull this person over.
Mods, please please please stop modding based on your own beliefs, and rather based on the intelligence of people's responses -- I'm going to get modded down for that, eh?
Re:Flamebait? wtf? (Score:5, Funny)
uh, excuse me sir.
but wouldn't a driver who drove wrecklessly not be in an accident?
Re:Flamebait? wtf? (Score:2)
Re:Flamebait? wtf? (Score:5, Insightful)
Basically, if you fire enough people up about some 'thing', they will take action even if the the 'thing' doesn't pose a direct risk/hazard to them directly.
Kind of like the war in Iraq: scare enough people and they will do _anything_ to prevent it. In the USA for example, a country of 500 million people, the odds of being killed by a terrorist attack is infantesimal. Yet here we are, giving up our basic civil liberties in droves.
If you don't think our [US] society as become over-paranoid, try boarding a mass-transit vehicle while wearing a ski mask. You'll be stopped/searched/seized faster than you can say, "Land of the free".
They'll say they have 'probable cause'; you'll say 'it was cold out' or possibly 'I didn't want security cameras recording my every move'.
Welcome back to 1984!
Re:Flamebait? wtf? (Score:2)
It actually is either flamebait or a moron. Anyone with even a passing knowledge of the facts would realize how unneccesarily contentious a point he makes.
Accidents preventable by robotic driving are *not* the primary reason (or even close) for why vehicles can be searched, for starters. The more you unravel the statements he makes, the more asinine they are.
It's a very common trolling/baiting tactic to draw misleading/false conclusions after initially stating a fact that most would agree to (that human e
Re:Flamebait? wtf? (Score:2)
There are people walking around who have killed families with their driving. They aren't in prison, or destitute or threatened by anyone. At some point, they were indifferent to their responsibilities and wiped out members of our species.
A question; why is this tolerated? It is tolerated, no question. I'm not indifferent to it, yet I participate in spectating.
My answer is that this is my expectation. At some point, the fact that good answers aren't easy for anyone, including myself,
Re:Flamebait? wtf? (Score:3, Interesting)
So the solution to the US drunk driving problem is simple: Build more pubs.
That's contradictory (Score:2)
People seem so willing to give up freedom in exchange for safety. Seat belts. Helmets. Speed limits. Astronauts, the modern epitome of risk-taking adventurer, now have to be kept perfectly safe, even.
Tyranny is looking less and less like Big Brother and more and more
Re:Hopefully not people (Score:2)
Allow me to suggest a new one. People who can't see should not be allowed to drive. My grandmother (bless her soul) has no night vision whatsoever, but she is still allowed to drive. Having seen her drive, its a wonder she hasn't killed anyone yet. Unfortunately the burden of responsibility cannot be put on the family because old
Re:Hopefully not people (Score:2)
RAmen to that -- at least for general transportation / public roads.
but I'd still like to take the wheel 'round a race course here and there on any Sunday or two.
-calyxa
Re:Hopefully not people (Score:2)
Mmm... Ramen [mattfischer.com].
wrong RAmen... (Score:2)
http://www.venganza.org/ [venganza.org]
That is exactly why I drive a little faster (Score:2)
To get the hell away from them before their next accident.
Driving slower makes you the target for the next accident.
Good luck out there.
Statistics (Score:3, Interesting)
Well I was actually trying to be funny, but in reality when they raised the speed limit in Colorado from 65 to 75, accident rates went down.
It turns out if you make smaller the DIFFERENCE in speed between other cars, you have fewer accidents - that's what people who dislike speeding cannot understand, overly slow drivers are actually just as dangerous as people who speed excess
Future of cars (Score:3, Insightful)
2. cruise control will advance to auto-following
3. diesel hybrids will take over, achieving awesome, high double digit mileages
Re:Future of cars (Score:2)
Re:Future of cars (Score:2)
The competition is about having the glitziest vehicle, nothing else.
Re:Future of cars (Score:2)
What are you going to do with that? Go into business selling to india??
drivers seat (Score:4, Funny)
duh
Re:drivers seat (Score:2)
Oh, yeah. So your car follows the ones in front of it instead of driving into the oncoming lane. I get it now. Smart.
The changes that should be made (Score:5, Interesting)
I definitely think it would takes a lot of time to complete and would cost a ton of money. But we as citizens and as a country would save a whole lot more money having this implemented as a final solution to all of the stable and rising issues that circles around transportation.
Like the Rapid Urban Flexible? (Score:2)
-russ
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:5, Interesting)
People aren't going to be running rails into their garages, to their front doors.. across the lawn to where you need to back up to hook up the trailer.. etc. When there's an accident a rail vehicle can't just drive on the dirt to go around which may not seem important until you think of the fire truck that's coming to pry someone out of the wreckage in that accident. Rail isn't flexible enough for a general purpose transportation system. That lack of flexibility is one of the two advantages you have with rail. It lets you predict exactly where things will travel and run things like power lines to them. That advantage is it's downfall when it comes to general purpose transportation though.
The other advantage is lower rolling resistance. As speeds go up air friction accounts for a larger percent of the energy used to keep the vehicle moving so as speeds increase this is actually less important.
Also, car insurance wouldn't go away it would just get cheaper. Gas may go away but you have to power the vehicles somehow and since we aren't building any more clean environmentally friendly nuclear power plants we'll probably be burning oil or more likely coal which dumps tons and tons of mercury into our food chain every year (anyone know what the half life of mercury is?)
The benefits you describe could be here soon, but the only realistic way to get them is if computers drive our cars. That's the right answer.
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:2)
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:2)
Also, you say "When" oil gets too expensive which is making a lot of assumptions.
People, very smart people, have always been around warning that you need to listen to them and do what they tell you to or all kinds of doom will come to pass. Rarely are they right. Human ingenuity and the free-market economy can route around just about anything. Most
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:2)
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:2)
Thank you for saving us all.
they're cheaper to build for the amount that can be shipped on them
No they aren't when you are lo
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:2)
If you are really interested in buying water for commercial purposes, you can buy reverse osmossis filtered, 99.999% pure H20 for about $0.13 per gallon.
Oil will never be cheaper than water in any serious economic consideration.
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:2)
That rail can be non-intrusive. 160 years ago, urban transit was done with horse-powered tramways that ran on rails, but could be routinely derailed to go to the curb to pick-up passengers right at the sidewalk. Then, the driver would simply drive the horses back to the cente
Re:The changes that should be made (Score:3, Interesting)
Honestly... (Score:5, Insightful)
Imagine having your own car that can drive you on its own, and you can sit in the back doing whatever you want, be it getting another hours rest on the way to work, watching a movie on the way home, fooling around, getting drunk, you name it.
The drinking aspect alone would make this a best seller. Can you say "Designated Driver comes standard with this model!"
Re:Honestly... (Score:2)
Re:Honestly... (Score:3, Informative)
If you want to be a taxi driver in London (with the iconic black taxi) and be able to pick up passengers in the street, you need to do 'the knowledge' [taxiknowledge.co.uk] - and know a vast amount about how to get from any A to any B in London.
In my experience, the prime qualification for a cab driver in Aus is to have an opinion about the 'abbos', and not know w
Who will be driving? (Score:3, Informative)
They suck. Assembled in Mexico from Chinese parts.
Garbage. OVERPRICED garbage..
My car is 30 years old and it still runs fine and looks fine. How is that? It was made in Germany where they appreciate and exercise quality control.
I have several trucks that are 20 years old or older.
Guess what? I can fix them all myself. There is nothing in any of them that I can't troubleshoot or repair.
I wouldn't have one of these new cars that you can't work on without $100,000 car-o-scope and a PHD..
Screw that. I've never taken a car to be repaired by someone else except one time when I was traveling and had no tools.
Son of a bitches told me the transmission was blown and it was going to cost me $800 to have it fixed.
I told them to stick up their ass.
They put the transmission in the trunk and I called a tow truck to bring it home for me. My dad came out to help me with it. The repair cost $24 in parts and took one day. That was the LAST time I ever took anything to someone else for repair. And that means anything.
I get the service manuals, schematics, tools and test equipment for every thing I own, what tools or skills I don't have, my dad can cover as he's good with cars.
Bottom line, I'll never purchase a new car, ever, for any reason. The older the vehicle, the better I like it.
Re:Who will be driving? (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't there some saying about it being better to not say anything and avoid looking stupid than to open your mouth and remove all doubt?
Re:Who will be driving? (Score:2)
Japanese cars have low-quality components, and very skillful, high-quality assembly.
Japanese cars made in America have low-quality component and very shoddy assembly...
Re:Who will be driving? (Score:3, Insightful)
American cars have shoddy assembly, and Japanese and German cars have high-quality assembly. The interesting part is that it doesn't matter much on which continent the assembly took place. What matters is who owns and runs the company. Japanese companies know how to operate efficient, well-run factories, whether they're using Japanese or American laborers. American companies don't have a clue about how to operate factories dec
Re:Who will be driving? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Who will be driving? (Score:4, Insightful)
You're quite wrong about new cars being worse than the old stuff. It was not so long ago that a car ran for 100,000 miles before it was at the end of its usable life. Well built modern cars are expected to go well over 200,000 miles before needing major repairs. Even Ford Exploders last longer than the old stuff. Not only that but modern cars use much less gas due to better engine design and electronic fuel injection and are many times safer. Perhaps you've heard of airbags and ABS?
Just because you don't know how to use simple modern diagnostic equipment doesn't mean it's useless or made the job any harder either. It's invaluable to be able to plug in and find out that the problem is the oxygen sensor in bank 2, or that there's an overheating condition in the transmission. I'd like to know when your carb lets you know that the power valve is stuck open and has been spewing gas all over for the last few weeks or that your 13.8 AFR isn't optimal for cruising.
The $800 repair was $24, eh? (Score:4, Insightful)
I told them to stick up their ass.
They put the transmission in the trunk and I called a tow truck to bring it home for me. My dad came out to help me with it. The repair cost $24 in parts and took one day.
Sorry to point this out. But the parent poster hasn't given us enough information for us to deduce to whether this repair was truly a huge ripoff.
The repair only cost him $24 in parts, but he didn't specify what the problem actually was. Transmission repairs can be very labor intensive. He didn't say how long the repair took in hours either (and keep in mind this is two people working together). On a front wheel drive, transverse mounted engine, you might find transmission removal to be a simple bolt-off affair, but on an older, rear wheel drive car removing a transmission may mean hoisting an engine or removing major suspension parts.
So to give a more accurate comparision between these two jobs consider:
* The shop is charging probably $60/hour in labor for the repair. The poster had "free" labor (I'm sure beer was involved).
* The shop has various environmental/shop fees it charges. Not to mention state taxes.
* The shop repair undoubtedly has a warranty of some sort (many shops give 1-3 yrs/12-36,000 mi depending on what they're doing).
* The tranny was already off the car by the time the poster started working on it. (I'm sure the shop wanted some reimbursement for the time they spent pulling it).
* The poster had to have his car towed home to work on it - that wasn't free.
Re:Who will be driving? (Score:2)
Sometimes it takes some efficient Germanic words to form the proper response to such obnoxious statements.
"Virus kills hundreds on I-95" (Score:4, Interesting)
If a vehicle is "smart" enough to handle driving, it will have the computational power and flexibility to run reasonably sophisticated software. Consider that increasing wireless bandwidth (WiMax, anyone?) will lead to offloading the heavy-duty positional and map processing to a remote service over the Internet, with the software to display becoming a thin client for a remote database. A clever programmer will find a stack overflow in MapQuestClientForYourCar and BAM! Suddenly cars are automatically veering for each other instead of away.
The level of scrutiny and security applied to such systems will have to be on par, or higher than, such applications as air traffic controlling before it can be considered safe.
Re:"Virus kills hundreds on I-95" (Score:2, Insightful)
Most cars are locked down. You can't access their operating systems and other information. At least you can't create anything for them. The computers are locked down. They need to remain locked down and only available to
Re:"Virus kills hundreds on I-95" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:"Virus kills hundreds on I-95" (Score:2)
*Cough* OnStar??
Re:"Virus kills hundreds on I-95" (Score:2)
Politically, you are completely correct. People will tolerate humans killing each other much more than machines killing people.
-russ
Who cares who is in the driver's seat... (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course non-destination based travel idiosyncracies(sp?) arise because it is taken for granted that someone has to drive the car. Hence you have "cruising the strip", "joy-riding", "drive-i
But who will be in the driver's seat? (Score:3, Funny)
I don't think so. (Score:2)
Our vehicles don't need to become more complex - automakers need to focus first on making vehicles that dont fall apart while your driving them. Just go to the library and take a look at all the vehicle problems in the Lemon-Aid guides. If automakers can't make vehicles with reliable tie-rods or good quality alternators - then why would i want to ask them to add problems?
Ok, in
Re:I don't think so. (Score:2)
They can't. It would be unproductive. To survive, automakers have to make as much cars as possible, and convince people to change them
Automatic speed control (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not paranoid, just following the money.
Re:Automatic speed control (Score:2)
Re:Automatic speed control (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Automatic speed control (Score:2, Interesting)
Just a guess, but it sounds good.
Another "next-gen highway" concept (Score:2)
The true future is the antimatter-fueled car! (Score:2)
*No worries about Opec raising prices
*Unmatched acceleration ability. If you hit the accelerator pulling out of a light and see craters out the window, you've gone too far. Turn around and drive toward the round blue orb.
*Sure, you might get tailgated. But not twice by the same person!
Dual-mode vehicles (Score:3, Interesting)
Vehicles on a monorail will drive a 90 MPH, and do so with great safety. Even grandma, because the cars are computer-controlled on the monorail. You designate your exit, and the computer takes care of routing you. Each car does its own routing based on global traffic announcements. Just like BGP4 on the Internet.
Damn but I'd like to say "Take me to Boston and exit onto Boylston St." and then read a book, or fall asleep, or use the Internet access provided by the monorail connection.
-russ
Re:Strange design........ (Score:3, Informative)
o The brake is compressing a vertical fin, so there should be a minimum amount of debris sitting on it.
o because the car straddles the rail, it would have to break in half to fall off the trail.
o you get a fair amount of lateral stability, so as long as the rail is installed correctly, the car won't wiggle from side to side like a railroad car does.
o The position information of the car is encoded into
Sure, you fixed the cars, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sure, you fixed the cars, but... (Score:2)
what? (Score:2)
fuck all those lasers and radar, where is my Johnny Cab? [imdb.com]
Ford/Volvo (Score:2)
Thousands of deaths caused . . . (Score:5, Insightful)
As long as I turn it off (Score:2)
The Lexus mentioned in the article decides for you how hard you should be braking in an emergency. I wonder if you can turn that off ... That's just one example of computer interference in the article.
My car has traction control. I couldn't get it without it. It has a "Trac Off" button, but it doesn't completely turn off. It still chooses to apply brakes to wheels when it
Re:As long as I turn it off (Score:2)
So then, you can adjust your engine's speed within tens of RPMs, and modulate each brake cylinder 20 times per second or better?
I think not. A lot of people THINK they're better than the computer is, until the snow and ice come out anyway.
The real future of the 'car' (Score:5, Insightful)
As the price of gasoline continues to go up, people who are currently driving giant SUVs (here I'm talking about Mommy going a mile to the supermarket in a vehicle that is almost as big as a space shuttle) will sell them off to the lower middle class and working class people.
Then as they break and wear out, the working class people won't repair them. Instead they will strip out the non-functioning systems. Here's a scenario from 2008:
Some light on the dash goes on that says "Engine problem". You take it to the dealer who charges you $80 to plug in an OBD cable and find out what the problem is. They say that it's a bad Bi-Nitrogen Catalytic Emission sensor (don't tell me that this doesn't exist, I know it. This is a scenario). It has an 89 cent microcontroller and a $3 relay in a $2 little plastic box. It costs $369.87 and you have to replace all four if one goes out because there 'calibrated' to each other.
So is the working-class guy going to replace the dohickey? No way. He goes to his brother-in-law's cousin who knows this guy who can take care of these little SUV problems. Year after year the car works less and less. Finally it doesn't pass emissions testing and can't get a registration renewal. Joe Six-Pack just say's the hell with it and drives it anyway, maybe even with a fake license plate year sticker.
One day the cops stop him and run the VIN through the DMV computer. They confiscate the vehicle and tow it. It gets sold at a police auction to a wholesaler who sells it again to an illegal immigrant no questions asked, no papers. It's back out on the street.
This is the real future of the car. Millions and millions of loud, junky, polluting, giant stupid and ugly half-broken SUVs. All driven by guys with no money and serious attitude problems.
Thanks a lot, Detroit. It's nice to know that we can count on you for well-balanced long-term positive solutions to our tranportation needs! How's you stock ratings? Still as junky as the SUVs that you sell?
Ratings (Score:2)
Yup, still as junky as the SUVs YOU buy.
The profit margin on truck based SUVs is huge. You, the consumer are willing to pay way over the odds for something that uses 1970's technology and a modern body. Quite why YOU are so happy to do this is a mystery to me, but, given that YOU want to pay me to do it, I am happy to oblige, since the profit margins n the rest of the range are pretty lousy. Incidentally did you know that Toyota claim a return on sales of 1% in Aus
Re:The real future of the 'car' (Score:2)
Newer cars are just as simple as an old carbureted car, just inherently different.
Put simply, the computer measures air in, meters fuel, and corrects itself based on exhaust oxygen. The only thing different about the mess is that a computer controls it, not a godawfully inefficient mechanical wonder on top of your intake.
If exhaust oxygen is low, catalytic converters work. Just like in an old car, you'd clean the carburetor, in a n
Its bleak. (Score:4, Insightful)
Forget about Hydrogen, it's only a means of energy storage not a source. There is no way we could biuld the infrastructure let alone produce enough hydrogen or hydrogen powered vehicles.
Forget about LNG, there's no way we can replace even 5 million barrels of oil equivalent given that natural gas will peak in the next 15 years and North America has peaked already.
Forget about biogas/biodiesel, most of it doesn't even have a positive net energy return.
I would hazard a guess that if we maxed out all the alternative liquid fuels that we could use for air/road transportation we might make up less than 5% of global oil demand. That's a guess, I would be interested in some real numbers.
Don't give me any of that "The markets will automatically react, adjust and allow alternatives to become economically viable" BS. The economic system that we live in depends on growing energy supplies to feed the system so that people can pay the interest on their loans. The energy supply is going to stop growing then start declining and the worlds economies will crash to various degrees: The larger they are, the harder they will fall.
Personally I think hardly anyone will be driving cars in 10 years time.
Re:Its bleak. (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't give me any of that "The markets will automatically react, adjust and allow alternatives to become economically viable" BS. The economic system that we live in depends on growing energy supplies to feed the system so that people can pay the interest on their loans. The energy supply is going to stop growing then start declining and the worlds economies will crash to various degrees: The larger they are, the harder they will fall.
I don't think this will happen - to the degree you seem to indicate.
Re:Its bleak. (Score:2, Informative)
Forget about biogas/biodiesel, most of it doesn't even have a positive net energy return.
Correct, ethanol is storage not power, but biodiesel does have about a 4:1 energy return, and biodiesel grown without petrochemical fertilizers can have an even higher energy return.
Many problems yet to be solved. (Score:3, Interesting)
Wireless ad-hoc traffic information networks run into some major security issues. How do you establish trust? If the trust model is basically wide open, then antisocial people are going to put together systems which look at your route and start telling other cars "Avoid these roads at all costs! It's backed up for miles!", so that their own personal drive is relatively free of cars.
How do you prevent this? Do you require warnings from multiple sources before you believe them? Then you've just increased the required critical mass before usability by an order of magnitude. Do you trust that automobile makers can put together some sort of embedded crypto system that's "secure enough" and "tamper proof"? Well, that's worked so well for the DRM people, hasn't it?
Of course, if you're relying on the wireless system for safety, you're essentially giving the ability to swerve/brake hard to systems you don't own, so the matter of trust becomes even more significant, and liability becomes killer. Any way you tie the systems together to try to keep people safer, there's someone who's going to argue (with a non-negligable probability of success) that you should have done it a different way, and now you owe someone $millions.
In addition, liability is going to keep this stuff down for a while yet. No autonomous system is ever going to be perfect, and when dealing with loss of human life, liability more or less demands perfection. If I could put together a fully autonomous system tomorrow which provably had 99% fewer accidents than human drivers, I'd still get sued by the 1%.
This is the primary reason all remote sensing tech on the market today is in the form of "driver assist". If your system screws up, it's still primarily the driver's responsibility to avoid accidents.
I'm not a complete pessimist. I don't think the issues I'm raising are insoluable, and I believe we'll have good autonomous systems eventually. I just think the problems are fundamentally hard, and the legal environment doesn't help; it may be a few decades before the more exotic stuff gets into production cars.
Will cars that drive themselves mean no more DUI's (Score:2)
Cop see's your car, driving normally, but you're asleep at the wheel. He pulls you over, starts giving the DUI tests. Touch your nose while standing on one foot, recite the alphabet backwards, touch your fingers, etc. You're obviously smashed.
Are you really driving drunk though? All you did was tell the car "take me home".
When cars do st
Talk about a many-body problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Imagine a simple accident on a crowded highway - most cars slow down but one doesn't get the message, and comes upon the accident simply too fast to stop as dictated by the laws of physics and traction. Blam! An accident that did not have to happen if a driver could have seen the whole thing from further away.
Is a computer supposed to really anticipate if an object by the side of the road is a hazard or not? I guess you bikers are out of luck because you'll confuse the hell out of the AI.
I can also see humerous stories about things like flying debris from a truck going through the windshield of a car, which then arrives at the destination with a dead driver. Great I guess because no-one else got hurt, possibly bad if a real driver could have seen the debris and swerved and didn't have to die to start with.
Take responsibility away from drivers and they really will abdicate all attention away from the road, meaning the most intelligent part of the car is out of commission. How soon to we get AI's that equal human intellect?
But who will be in the driver's seat? (Score:4, Funny)
http://msdn.microsoft.com/embedded/getstart/devpl
Clippy: "I see that you are attempting to apply the brakes. The Microsoft Brakes 2006 feature is not currently Installed. Please insert Microsoft Automotive Disk #7 in order to Install Microsoft Brakes 2006."
What? You'd prefer a "Johnny Cab?"
Re:Leaving this to computers will lead to traffic (Score:2)
Re:Leaving this to computers will lead to traffic (Score:2)
MOD PARENT DOWN - Modified article (Score:2)
Ha. ha. funny. You got a few moderators to mod it up.
Re:People. (Score:2)
Interesting. Will Geese run Linux as well? I wonder how long it will be before we get KMigration and GNU Flock...
Re:Where do you want to crash tonight? (Score:2)
Plus I just know that every time I arrive at a stoplight an animated steering wheel that looks suspiciously like a paper clip will jump onto my windshield and go "It looks like you want to make a left turn, how can the car assistant help you?" regardless of what turn I really want to make, if any.....
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Who's driving? (Score:2)