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Transportation Communications Technology

Honda Makes Motorcycle Talk To Oncoming Cars 146

An anonymous reader writes "The system generates warnings to riders and drivers of other vehicles by continuous exchange of positioning data from satellite GPS sources. This is particularly relevant as road users approach intersections, alerting them to other vehicles that are potentially on a collision course, allowing avoidance manoeuvres."
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Honda Makes Motorcycle Talk To Oncoming Cars

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  • But think of how many people would have to have these systems installed before it would really work.... I guess if a big company (such as Honda) started making them standard in each unit that would help, but it seems it would still take a fair amount of time to take off.
    • by LunaticTippy ( 872397 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:26PM (#25473743)
      It seems like a bad idea. If 95% of vehicles have it people will become lax in watching for those 5% that don't. Why not just pay attention with your vision orbs?
      • by Altus ( 1034 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:02PM (#25474375) Homepage

        Exactly. As a rider myself I would be wary of such a system. I'd worry that it would split my concentration and that I wouldn't be as focused on every curb cut and side street as a potential threat.

        On the other hand, I wouldn't mind it if oncoming cars were alerted to my presence before they come flying out of a side street (or merge into my lane on the highway if possible).

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          >I wouldn't be as focused on every curb cut and side street as a potential threat.

          That is exactly was airline pilot said when TCAS (Traffic Collision Avoidance System) was mandated. Today, most of them would feel naked flying without it.

          It just another tool to be integrated into your scan and could prove to be a life saving feature when approaching a blind intersection on an unlit country road at night.

        • by cailith1970 ( 1325195 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:43PM (#25474997)

          Something like this MAY have helped when I got collected by a 4WD (truck) with a bullbar last year while riding home from work. Here I was on a bright red sports bike, headlights on, stopped at an intersection behind a row of cars. BAM, right in to the back of me and pushed me into the back of the car in front like a pinball.

          He swore he didn't see me. Granted, he was DUI, but a little alert telling him that he was approaching something at 60kph that was going to break when he hit it would have been useful. And less painful. For me, anyway.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            If he was so drunk he didn't see stopped cars in front of him, what makes you think ANYTHING else would have gotten his attention?

            • He was apparently sober enough to do a runner :/

              My guess is that he saw the cars but completely misjudged the distances involved, especially with a bike as the tail reference point. If that was the case then a system that alerted him that there was something coming up would have had some remote possibility of preventing the accident.

            • If he was so drunk he didn't see stopped cars in front of him, what makes you think ANYTHING else would have gotten his attention?

              Maybe it wouldn't have, but this problem is a frequent one for more than drunk drivers. I've heard of plenty of cases where semi drivers forgot the truck in front of them and decided to pull a little further forward crushing the bike in front of them that they could no longer see over their hood. In fact, this problem is so common most motorcycle safety courses specifically instruct riders how to deal with it.

              Not that a system like this would necessarily work as a solution, just that you can't discount the

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            Or just do what I do when riding *or* driving - stop short (we call that Assured Clear Distance in the law enforcement business), watch your mirrors like a hawk and go to the right when you see the dumbass coming up on you like a freight train. I figure let him hit the guy in front of me, there's more metal between the guy in front of me and the crash than me, and if not there is at least less metal between my head and the guy trying to ass pack me.
        • Like you, I don't care if I have it or not, but I certainly don't mind others being alerted to my approach. However, with the way drivers ignore basic traffic laws and markings, I don't expect this to provide much more than a little passing help to those who already pay some attention. As a rider, the real problem I have is with silly (and extremely dangerous) little details they miss. For example, just today, I was almost sideswiped (well, I saw it coming before the driver made the move and was out of th

        • I think what you need is to perform whatever operation it is all of the other motorcyclists seem to use that cranks their engine noise into the 110+ dB range. That will alert motorists on side streets, as well as residents in a three-block radius, and make certain that any passing runners can hear it over their headphones.

          (As a runner myself, I have no difficulty telling when there are motorcycles coming up.)

          • by Altus ( 1034 )

            It depends on the bike.

            You can run a sport bike up to red line and it makes a ton of noise but its high pitched. You as a runner will hear it but the guy in the car might not.

            The reason that Harleys are "loud" (really any cruiser, not just Harleys) is that their exhaust note is low pitched. It might not actually be louder than the sport bike but the sound carries and penetrates like the bass notes at a rock concert.

            Personally, I do ride a Harley, but I don't run straight pipes or gun my engine in resident

            • It depends on the bike. You can run a sport bike up to red line and it makes a ton of noise but its high pitched. You as a runner will hear it but the guy in the car might not.

              C'mon. This is Slashdot. We can make pipes to alter the pitch of anything to be loud and lower pitched with a little physics.

              The reason that Harleys are "loud" (really any cruiser, not just Harleys) is that their exhaust note is low pitched.

              Well, the harley is a special case since they intentionally run cylinders out of synch to create a "distinctive" noise but for just volume they are no different than any other engine. Cruisers and touring bikes have lower RPMs for their displacement and so have a deeper sound with the same pipes, as compared to sport bikes, but anything you put stock harley pipes on would be loud bec

            • by jfengel ( 409917 )

              Personally, I do ride a Harley, but I don't run straight pipes or gun my engine in residential neighborhoods.

              Thank you for that. I've had more than a few motorcyclists deliberately gun their engines at me when I'm out for a run or cycling. I know that it's just that I remember the ones who do and forget all the ones who don't, so I try to keep a charitable disposition.

      • A Better Idea... (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        ...would just be to equip our motorcycles with RPG launchers for those idiot cagers who pull out in front of us. They'll only do it once.

    • You have to start somewhere.
      • Yes, it's interesting theoretically, but in practice, I agree with others it's not going to work. Accuracy is inadequate: GPS in my car occasionally puts me on the wrong road, for goodness' sake. It's particularly bad in cities with tall buildings. Also, as pointed out elsewhere, false positives alone will make it useless.
        • Yes, it's interesting theoretically, but in practice, I agree with others it's not going to work. Accuracy is inadequate: GPS in my car occasionally puts me on the wrong road, for goodness' sake. It's particularly bad in cities with tall buildings. Also, as pointed out elsewhere, false positives alone will make it deadly.

          Fixed that for you..

          "All clear a head"

          SPLAT!

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Tubal-Cain ( 1289912 )
            No, that would be a false negative. False positive would be detecting a car when there is none.
            • you sir, are quite correct.. I should learn to read what is written and not make up what I would like to have seen written..
              • If you could only pass that memo on to the other 99.99% of the human race as well, I'd be most exceedingly grateful. :)
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Pvt_Ryan ( 1102363 )

        Yea just what I need when cornering on my bike.

        "Sir, you realise if you go 1 more meter to you left you are road kill, sir can i warn you about the truck you are about to hit. CAR on the left pulling out. AHHHHH You are going down the middle of the road!!! we are surrounded, we are all going to die. AHHH! oh please noooo I don't want to die."

        • Sounds like my mum when I'm driving. Thank god my wife actually likes it when the car gets sideways... ;)
    • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

      This could be real useful in general. Cars could tell each other what speed they where doing, what roads they where on "for avoiding traffic jams". Weather info, gas prices....
      Seems like a good use for ZigBee.

      • Cars could tell each other what speed they where doing,

        Bad enough the police have radar without my car "helpfully" announcing my speed to them as I pass.

        • by LWATCDR ( 28044 )

          Simple enough to fix. Just have it report the locations where you couldn't go the speed limit.
          The idea would be to show where there are traffic jams.

      • Mod parent up.

        This is the start of cars driving themselves. There was recently a /. article on key based limiters - speed, volume of radio, etc. - for youth that their parents could enforce based on which key was in the ignition. [slashdot.org] As this stuff becomes more ubiquitous, people become more accepting of machines making their own decisions, maybe not my generation (born in 76), but maybe in my kids'. (none yet, I'm a /.er)
  • by MLopat ( 848735 ) * on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:24PM (#25473711) Homepage
    www.hondanews.eu [hondanews.eu]
  • by night_flyer ( 453866 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:27PM (#25473773) Homepage

    ...please dont hit me!"

  • Fantastic. Now we won't even be safe from spam when we're in our vehicle.

    The real trick will be to figure out the algorithm so that impostor signals can be sent in the appropriate number and at the appropriate time such that the warning messages sound like a jingle.
  • It seems like the most important thing to get right with this project is the way of informing the drivers of danger. The article mentions a HUD, a display on the bike dashboard, and an audio warning. I'd be intersted to see how they manage to convey urgent information in a non-distracting way.
    Still, once that's overcome (maybe it has been already), it should be pretty useful.
  • by molo ( 94384 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:30PM (#25473813) Journal

    This could be very good for the safety of motorcyclists if widely deployed. Many motorcycle accidents involve cars pulling out in front of motorcycles and the car driver saying that they didn't see the motorcycle.

    My only concern is for privacy. The broadcast message should not include the VIN or any other unique identifier that could be used for tracking.

    More at the Honda Site [hondanews.eu]. It seems to use a Car-to-Car [car-to-car.org] protocol that is in development.

    All this kit though looks like it would add significant cost to a motorcycle. :(

    -molo

    • Mass produced on Honda's level of manufacture, it would probably not be a significant price addition. It also may lower insurance rates for Hondas if data shows that it saves lives and reduces accidents.
    • Looking at the Car-to-car site, it says it is based on 802.11 networking with something like wireless mesh routing. This means that they will have Wifi-like MAC addresses, which means cars will be uniquely identifiable and thus, trackable. :(

      -molo

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Applekid ( 993327 )

        ...cars will be uniquely identifiable and thus, trackable. :(

        I'm curious to how one would track vehicles to avoid collisions without, um, tracking vehicles.

        • by molo ( 94384 )

          You only need to use an identifier for a short period of time. The solution would be to randomize the mac address when you start the car. But that won't happen.

          -molo

    • My only concern is for privacy. The broadcast message should not include the VIN or any other unique identifier that could be used for tracking.

      GPS> "Motorcycle coming around bend in 3, 2, 1. Bonus points available !!"

  • So what happens when 2 people are warned of a possible collision course at an intersection and they both slam on their brakes, avoid the accident, but cause the person behind them to be completely blindsided by the situation and rear end them? I know its a stretch, but I can foresee problems with this (maybe not that one specifically). I'd like to see more of this technology to address traffic issues instead - rerouting individuals to optimal traffic flow.
    • That's what proper following distance is for... didn't you pay attention in driver ed? If you keep the right amount of following distance, it would prevent said scenario.
      • That's what proper following distance is for... didn't you pay attention in driver ed? If you keep the right amount of following distance, it would prevent said scenario.

        How exactly will maintaining the correct following distance (call it A) between myself and the car I'm following prevent an accident with the car following me at 0.25A when I slam on my brakes?

    • If you're 'blindsided' by the person in front of you hitting their brakes, then either you're tailgating them or you're fiddling with the radio. Drive at the appropriate following distance based on your reaction time and car's braking ability, and pay f**king attention.

      Of course, that last bit would probably solve the problem on its own so I guess we can discount it as an option. :/
  • The real scoop (Score:3, Interesting)

    by bendodge ( 998616 ) <bendodge@@@bsgprogrammers...com> on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:34PM (#25473879) Homepage Journal

    The article link goes to an ad-plastered blog that tells you nothing more than the summary.

    Honda made some thing that uses GPS to figure out when you're going to meet another vehicle, and then uses technology from the Intelligent Car Initiative (European Commission) to wirelessly transfer info between vehicles in the 5.9GHz range. It appears to use ad-hoc and repeater-type infrastructure, although the stuff I found is a little unclear on the ad-hoc.

    The car driver gets some kind of warning, although it's unclear exactly what. The motorcycle driver is wearing a HUD that gives him a visual and audio warning. It's clever, but I find the whole CAR 2 CAR project (which this is part of) to be much more interesting.

    Some real links:
    http://www.hondanews.eu/en/index.pmode/modul [hondanews.eu]|detail|0|1010,DEFAULT|21|text|1/index.pmode
    http://www.car-to-car.org/fileadmin/gfx/inhalte/IP-08-1240_EN.pdf [car-to-car.org]

    • by Altus ( 1034 )

      Ill tell you this. The idea of a HUD sounds really cool and futuristic, but Id rather not have anything in my field of vision when I'm riding.

      I might be willing to deal with an audio warning, but I don't want anything in my field of vision when I'm riding. My life (and sometimes other peoples lives) depends on it.

  • the best way to do this is have vehicles emit a low powered, low range signal that other vehicles and detect.
    Wire the sound to the speaker nearest the location of the vehicle broadcasting.

    Have the tone volume correlate to overall speed, and differential speed.
    So that motorcycle zipping through traffic would be louder then one 'pacing' you.

    Have it off when traveling under 20MPH.

    • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

      no way.

      have it cranked up to 150db when going under 20mph. I typically am attacked by careless drivers who are stopped or going under 20 mph.

      I'm going down the road, they wait until I'm 120 feet away and then pull out trying to kill me. I want their eardrums to pop and bleed if they start moving from a stop when a motorcycle is within 500 feet of them.

      90% of the problems with cars is at intersections with them stopped waiting for traffic, not on the highway.

  • by vjmurphy ( 190266 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:39PM (#25473973) Homepage

    It should warn when the motorcyclist is doing something asinine, which many in my state seem to do.

    <kitt-voice>
    Michael, you are not wearing a helmet.
    Michael, perhaps driving between rows of cars is not the best method of saving time?
    Michael, do you know what "yield" means?
    Michael, zooming down the highway at 80mph isn't very safe.
    Michael, watch out for that dangerous inters - *Connection severed*
    </kitt-voice>

    • by dltaylor ( 7510 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:27PM (#25474771)

      I'll grant you three of five, but "lane splitting" (legal in California under a large range of circumstances) really IS the best method of getting around Southern California. It doesn't add to the danger, if done reasonably, and the time savings are enormous. I've cut some trip times in half that way (90 min by car to 45 min on the bike), without speeding.

      As far as 80 MPH, there are times and places on the highways where riding less than that is more dangerous because you are exposed to a "rear-ender" by a driver who cannot see a motorcycle that is right in front of him. A better line might be to say that exceeding the pace of traffic so much that you have to constantly change lanes isn't very safe.

      • by illumin8 ( 148082 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @11:17PM (#25478323) Journal

        I'll grant you three of five, but "lane splitting" (legal in California under a large range of circumstances) really IS the best method of getting around Southern California. It doesn't add to the danger, if done reasonably, and the time savings are enormous. I've cut some trip times in half that way (90 min by car to 45 min on the bike), without speeding.

        It may indeed be faster, but it sure as hell isn't safe. Riding on a motorcycle is hazardous enough. When you're "lane splitting", all it takes is one car changing lanes or pulling over to the side of his lane, or another driver opening his car door to put you in the ER.

        How many times have you seen morning drivers open their car door in stopped traffic to dump out their coffee? Now how would you like to find out what happens when an object moving 40 mph (you) collides with a stationary object (car door)?

        • by dltaylor ( 7510 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @11:55PM (#25478535)

          "reasonably" means doing it when traffic is slow enough that lane changing is hard for the cages (cars/SUVs/pickup trucks), and still giving yourself enough time to see the potential change and avoid it. You learn to watch the faces of the drivers in the mirrors and you can see their head movements to give you information about their intent (it's not like anyone signals). It also means no splitting at 80 when they're doing 15 (yes, I have seen the bikes that do it, but that doesn't make it "reasonable", although it is sometimes "evolution in action").

          You also learn to watch out for situations that create "holes" in traffic, particularly when it is slowing or speeding up, and avoid being between the hole and someone looking to fill it. In fact, the situations when being between a cage and a gap when NOT lane splitting concern me more than when I'm splitting because the cages' freedom of movement provides more opportunity for them to try to kill me.

          The real danger to motorcyclists in stop-and-go traffic is that the driver behind almost never actually sees you and will (nearly always) stop just before his bumper hits the car ahead of him, regardless of the presence of the motorcycle between. We lose a few riders, including law enforcement officers on their "work" bikes, to that every year in Southern California.

        • (I am also a rider)

          It's a calculated risk... you know, like you do every day when you pull out into traffic in ANY vehicle. Just because you're in a car, doesn't mean you're not at risk from precisely the same things.

          I live in a state where lane splitting is illegal, more's the pity... but it's rarely a requirement here. When I was in England a few years ago on a motorbike though, it was definitely a great way to get through often standstill traffic, quite legal... and generally relatively safe.

          First, there

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Bryansix ( 761547 )
      Lane Splitting is legal. Motorcycles should only do it when speed is lower though. Lane splitting at 85 mph is a little sketchy

      pfft. 80 mph is the standard in Southern California. Welcome to the real world bub.
  • by Duncan Blackthorne ( 1095849 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:39PM (#25473985)
    I've been riding motorcycles for 26 years (more miles riding than driving cars) and my body of experience tells me this: it doesn't matter how many fancy gadgets they come up with, the average automobile driver just plain isn't looking for and doesn't see motorcyclists. The only way I have been able to preserve my life and retain all my original body parts is by assuming they're all actively trying to kill me, and protect myself accordingly.
    • by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @03:52PM (#25474193) Homepage Journal

      The only way I have been able to preserve my life and retain all my original body parts is by assuming they're all actively trying to kill me, and protect myself accordingly.

      Hence, the AK-47, body armor, and the grenade launcher mounted to the bike.

      • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:26PM (#25474741) Homepage

        Actually many cyclists wear body armor. my motorcycle leathers have it built in. I have kevlar and composite plastic in the back and elbows and shoulders. it's comfortable and from a friend that was ran off the road by some blond idiot in a escalade it saves your life when you wipe out at 30mph and eat a tree with your back.

        "oops I did not see you, sorry!" is their favorite line.

        • "oops I did not see you, sorry!" is their favorite line.

          <sarcasm>Oh, I bet that's comforting</sarcasm>

          Wait, you said it was a blond (I will assume female), didn't you? Depending on how sorry she is, it might be comforting after all.

        • Sure they do. I might even buy some of it one of these days, assuming I can find some that doesn't make me look like a motocross racer, or a crotch-rocket racer. :p

          Regardless of all that, I'd sooner rely on my skills in the saddle as opposed to hoping that expensive clothing is going to save me -- because I know that when it comes right down to it, it won't.

          • Actually, I rely on both... having had one relatively minor road-rash once in my life and found that it hurts like an SOB having your leg brillo-padded in the hospital to get the grit out.

            I wear a full-face helmet, gloves, a jacket and riding overpants... oh, and boots. ATGATT [urbandictionary.com]. I know from experience that the padding in good quality gear will protect you from the relatively minor impact you suffer when low-siding a bike... or even rolling off the hood of a car that just pulled out in front of you. I also kn

        • by Alioth ( 221270 )

          Here in Rightpondia, we have a word for it, "smidsy", which stands for "Sorry Mate I Didn't See You".

          Unfortunately, I have had two friends killed in the last 6 months by car drivers doing a smidsy. The first one, the car driver died too. He failed to stop at a stop sign, and drove straight out into the path of my friend, who was a big guy on a big bike. The most recent one, just a few weeks ago, was three 18 year olds in a people carrier (tr. US: minivan) suddenly pulling out of a junction without looking.

      • I'm waiting for the upgrade to my Shadow for all that. Don't like aftermarket so much. ;-)
    • by dltaylor ( 7510 )

      In fact, the "warning" is more likely to distract even those few who might have seen you, by leading them to look inside the car, rather than outside.

      This is a REALLY, REALLY bad idea.

      I've been riding for a few decades myself and have used exactly the same "system". When they "try" to kill me, I'm already a step ahead and out of the way.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by deander2 ( 26173 ) *

      unfortunately people don't see other cars either. i ride/drive *every* vehicle i own as if everyone else doesn't see me.

      of course it's human nature... i've made some boneheaded driving mistakes in my time too. i remember one road trip my gf fell asleep bear-hugging my right arm. drove an hour and a half home working the stick shift with my left hand. =P

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by snspdaarf ( 1314399 )

        unfortunately people don't see other cars either. i ride/drive *every* vehicle i own as if everyone else doesn't see me.

        Agreed. USAA Magazine once ran a column where they said that at any given time, there is better than a 50 percent chance that the other driver is drunk, stoned, fatigued, or otherwise incapacitated or distracted.

        As far as car drivers making mistakes, I have been on both sides. I pulled out in front of a bike once. Fortunately, he was not one of the 50 percent above, and all it did was piss him off. In this case, his headlight was not on, but it taught me to look, not just glance.

        The flip side was that I had

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        unfortunately people don't see other cars either. i ride/drive *every* vehicle i own as if everyone else doesn't see me.

        *nodding* that goes without saying. If you spend most of your time in the saddle, the habits stay with you.

    • by Hucko ( 998827 )

      Yes, it has nothing to do with bikers riding between traffic lines or other traffic infringements at 10 - 20 % above the speed limit...

      * note you may not do this, but a large portion of riders do.

      • by Kyro ( 302315 )

        I often ride at 10% above the speed limit, however I never lane-split.

        Why do I ride at 10% above the speed limit? There is usually more traffic in the left lane and there is merging traffic and the like. So I ride in the right lane.
        If I was to ride the speed limit in the right lane, I'd be stuck in at least one car's blind spot at any one time. So I actively accelerate out of the blind spots.

        Other reasons why speed limits need to be exceeded include lorries! If part of their load falls off, I'm dead. If the

      • Yes, it has nothing to do with bikers riding between traffic lines or other traffic infringements at 10 - 20 % above the speed limit...

        I do it in a limited, restrained fashion: only when traffic is stopped, only when it's safe to do so, and never at an excessive speed. I am disgusted by other cyclists who abuse the fact that lane-splitting is neither legal nor illegal in most places by being unsafe about it and/or going too fast; they make life more difficult for the rest of us by making ALL of us look bad

    • I believe Harley-Davidson has already introduced a system for informing other drivers about nearby motorcycles. They just leave off the mufflers. And I can see you just fine, now put on some leathers instead of that damn t-shirt.

      I've been riding motorcycles for 26 years (more miles riding than driving cars) and my body of experience tells me this: it doesn't matter how many fancy gadgets they come up with, the average automobile driver just plain isn't looking for and doesn't see motorcyclists.

    • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

      I am not a motorcyclist myself, but if some idiot driver is going to look right through a motorcyclist or bicycle user what on earth makes Honda think they are going to hear some computer tell them they are approaching. There are enough idiot drivers out there that don't see cars approaching and just pull out.

      Personally I am in favour of taking away the driving license for life of any driver who knocks a motorcyclist or cyclist down, and their excuse is they didn't see them.

  • Oh Great... (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Another buzzer to drown out with the stereo.

    (I'm not necessarily against the idea, but the interface on these ideas is usually 'a blinking light and a buzzer'. By the time you've sorted out what this light means, you are already in the accident.

  • Of course using this system will distract the driver from using the cues provided by the natural environment (which are many)... thus it will have to not only provide a benefit, but provide enough benefit to overcome what is lost.

    Let alone what happens if someone's GPS is malfunctioning or even that a lot of people aren't going to have this system installed...

  • Wouldn't one receive a boatload of false alarms as they approached a split level intersection such as a highway cloverleaf or an underpass? How accurately can GPS determine altitude?
  • Imagine some psychopath who programs the GPS announcer to lie about its position, telling nearby cars that it's approaching them at 100 mph?

    In the best case, this leads to people ignoring the collision warning beeps from their cars. In the worst case, someone is develops a car that automatically performs some evasive maneuver based on that data.

  • I removed the exhaust baffles so cars know I'm filtering :) Harleys have had this technology for decades!
    • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:30PM (#25474819) Homepage

      and it's useless. Loud pipes are for annoying people not for any other use.

      it's simple physics... if the loud noise is exiting the BACK of the bike throgh a directed horn facing and traveling away from you, how the hell will the bimbo in the BMW that is 500 feet ahead of you going to hear it? she wont and she does not. even the big motorcycle safety organizations refuse the claims about lout pipes save lives.

      Loud pipes are simply for being a public ass. No other reason, stop trying to justify it and just admit you like annoying people.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by mr_spatula ( 126119 )

        I used to think like this as well - Until I was rear-ended. Twice. The second time took out my whisper-quiet exhaust, so I put in one a bit louder. Not hate-the-neighbors loud, but louder. I've noticed people being more aware of me - Not in the "glaring" aware, but generally people leave some more room now. And I haven't been rear-ended since (i know, i know, correlation is not causation)

        And I don't think sound is quite that directional... It's not like loud bikes are completely silent followed by a h

  • Hi, how are you todwrooom... *sigh*

  • by Hucko ( 998827 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @04:28PM (#25474789)

    I think they need to do buildings first. Maybe not to ward off on-coming traffic, but for triangulation. If buildings like the towns city hall were to pipe up and give out their latitude/longitude, it shouldn't be too hard to remove the unreliable gps from the equation. The more buildings of significance were to participate the easier it would be to create maps based on that town/city. Then cars can locate themselves and others. If 75% of cars have local positioning system, then it becomes mandatory.

    Security would be a nightmare though.

  • ... in a stark room with hot lights. Honda was later quoted as saying "He was a tough one, but eventually we got him talking."

  • Because the SUV drivers that are already intentionally trying to run me off the road are certain to respond favorably to the "Get the hell out of my way!" I'm constantly broadcasting while roaring down the road. And of course no friendly Law Enforcement Officers will have receivers for this and use the information to issue me tickets. I think I'll continue taking my chances operating in stealth mode and assuming every other driver is trying to hit me, thank you very much.
    • by Renraku ( 518261 )

      Most people would ignore it.

      I watch people look up, acknowledge that someone is coming at them with very little time to react, and then pull out in front of them and hope they have good brakes. A lot of people just don't care or understand the implications of the choice they could have just made.

      Its no deterrent to a lot of people that their actions could be the direct cause of an accident, as long as its someone else involved.

  • Not new. (Score:4, Informative)

    by Falconhell ( 1289630 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @08:47PM (#25477437) Journal

    Glider pilots developed a low cost collision avoidance system called FLARM.

    The small-size, low-cost, low-power device FLARM broadcasts its own position and speed vector (as obtained with an integrated GPS) over a license-free ISM band radio transmission. At the same time it listens to other devices based on the same standard. Intelligent motion prediction algorithms predict short-term conflicts and warn the pilot accordingly by acoustical and visual means. FLARM incorporates a high-precision WAAS 16-channel GPS receiver and an integrated low-power radio transceiver.

    See www.FLARM.com

  • Hmmm (Score:4, Funny)

    by speedingant ( 1121329 ) on Wednesday October 22, 2008 @09:02PM (#25477531)

    Motorcycle: Hey you! Car! Look out for me, I'm right over here!!
    Car: Wha..? I can't see you. Who the hell is this?
    Motorcycle: I'm right here! Can't you see me?!
    Car: I think I can.... oh I can s... *BLAM*

  • All aircraft should transmit their position and velocity to all other aircraft in the vicinity. It then doesn't take much computing power for the autopilot computer to calculate the minor course correction that would be needed to avoid the other aircraft (or even its wake vortices). It would make mid-air collisions a thing of the past (at least, while autopilot is turned on. All bets are off if a human's at the yoke.)

    • There is already a collision avoidance system in place, called TCAS [fas.org]. Unfortunately, that did not prevent all the mid-air collisions [wikipedia.org].
      • by GPS Pilot ( 3683 )
        Seconds after the Russian crew initiated the descent, however, their Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS) instructed them to climb, while at about the same time the TCAS on Flight 611 instructed the pilots of that aircraft to descend. Had both aircraft followed those automated instructions, it is likely that the collision would not have occurred. TCAS merely issued warnings that were not heeded. That's not the kind of system I'm talking about. I'm talking about a flight control system that automatic
  • I'm not a biker (yet), but I have to agree with a lot of the posts here. The biggest problem is people just don't pay attention. I'll be the first to admit, I push the limits a lot in my car, but I've never had a problem seeing either type of cyclist on the road. The only time there's any visual difficulty at all is when it's dark and one headlamp/tail-lamp is a bit difficult to use as a point of reference for distance. But that's never proved to be a big problem. I've also had other drivers pull out right

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