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Transportation

Virginia Wants Your Self-Driving Cars 67

Nerval's Lobster writes: In a bid to help Google (and presumably other companies) test out their next-generation automobiles, the state of Virginia has reportedly opened up 70 miles of highway, overseen by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute (VTTI), to self-driving cars. Portions of Virginia's highways—most notably Interstates 95 and 495—are notoriously congested, which could present any self-driving vehicles with a real challenge. The state government has stipulated that any automated car will need a human driver at the wheel to take over in case of malfunction or emergency. California, Nevada, and a handful of other states already have roadways reserved for autonomous-car use. As one Virginia state official acknowledged to the Richmond Times-Dispatch, opening public infrastructure to new technology is seen as a way to attract top tech talent and companies. (Northern Virginia and Washington D.C. are already widely viewed as a tech hub, powered to a large degree by federal money.)
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Virginia Wants Your Self-Driving Cars

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  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @04:59PM (#49835061)
    there might be a lawsuit already filed.
  • by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @05:00PM (#49835073)
    The relevant roads are:
    "portions of Interstates 95, 495 and 66 as well as on U.S. 29 and U.S. 50 that are being dubbed Virginia Automated Corridors."

    Of course, that info was too complex to put in the summary.
    • Woohoo! Finally something good about living near DC.

      • As someone in Northern VA, I can say I'm excited to see someone driving around playing with their phone/tablet/radio that isn't just sitting at a green left turn light.
  • Self driving cars are interesting, and in most cases safer than people driven cars but they do NOT fix the congestion problems.

    This does not take a PHD to prove.

    • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
      It does if you can just summon a car with an app, and it is reused for other later trips. Even more so if the trips are shared with 2 or more passengers.
      • I can just see a traffic jam of unoccupied cars all tooling around trying to find parking.

        Oh, wait - the rules say that you need to have a driver in case of emergency. So you are sitting in your "driverless" car circling around to find parking, and you can't leave the car until it finds a spot.

      • by s.petry ( 762400 )

        What you point out is not losing congestion because of self driving cars, it's losing congestion because of turning cars into mass transit.

        Utopia looks really cool from outside, but when you find out that the person who is sharing your enclosed self driving car has a poor diet and flatulence problem.. well.. you will start to realize that your Utopia really is not.

        "you" in the 2nd part is a generalization, don't take that personally.

        • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
          I have poor diet and a flatulence problem. Want to carpool? Ideally, the mass transit apps can let users ban co-riders and will allow matching similar to dating sites for rider compatibility. you don't want a tebagger homophobe riding with Ms Jenner.
    • Self driving cars are interesting, and in most cases safer than people driven cars but they do NOT fix the congestion problems.

      That is not true. SDCs can drive much closer together, increasing the road carrying capacity. They also have faster response times, reducing the "accordion effect" as cars slow down and speed up repeatedly. They also may have more information about conditions ahead, so when traffic in front of them begins to speed up, they know if it is just going to slow down again, or whether this is really the end of the congestion and they should accelerate rapidly.

      This does not take a PHD to prove.

      At least one study [computerworld.com] showed that as few as 10% SDC wil

      • Where I am, the bad traffic is stuck at a standstill. No more room for any cars on the road. Whether you are driving the thing or the car is driving itself, it isn't going to move any faster.

        The only case I can see the benefit you describe is in somewhat congested roads where the traffic is still moving.

        • Where I am, the bad traffic is stuck at a standstill.

          That is because somewhere up ahead of you, some idiot is doing something stupid. SDCs don't yak on cellphones, they don't rubberneck, and they don't stop in the middle of intersections. With more SDCs, the standstill is less likely to happen, and when it does, it will clear more quickly.

          • No, the problem is somewhere ahead of you, there are people waiting for a traffic signal (blocked from moving most likely because the block on the other side of the signal is completely full). And the same goes for the block ahead of it, and so on, and so on.

            In some cases the cars are waiting to merge onto another road that is also at a standstill. Or sometimes merging from 3 lanes down to two.

            There are a limited set of cases where human behavior causes problems, and you have enumerated some of them. But

      • Re:Not a solution! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Ichijo ( 607641 ) on Wednesday June 03, 2015 @05:26PM (#49835233) Journal

        Self driving cars...do NOT fix the congestion problems.

        That is not true. SDCs can drive much closer together, increasing the road carrying capacity.

        But because peak-hour traffic congestion rises to meet maximum capacity [theatlanticcities.com], increasing the road carrying capacity has no long-term effect on traffic congestion. Therefore, self-driving cars will not fix congestion problems.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          increasing the road carrying capacity has no long-term effect on traffic congestion.

          Total BS, that only applies to token efforts. In cases where increasing capacity didn't help you didn't increase it enough. When you increase capacity to the point where people are free to drive where they want, when they want, and stop doing inconvenient things to avoid peak traffic, everything's a win past that point.

          Build enough lanes, and you'll have no congestion. This may require a freeway 600 lanes wide, which I am totally OK with. Though often (usually) it's poorly thought-out surface streets th

          • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

            When you increase capacity to [600 lanes on the freeway] everything's a win past that point.

            But that would be such a tax-inefficient use of land that you'll bankrupt the city, so it's a non-solution.

            No, the fiscally optimal number of freeway lanes is not the number where there's never any traffic congestion, it's the number where the marginal cost (MC) of building another lane equals the marginal revenue (MR) from building it. Or in other words, when the cost of traffic congestion equals the cost of abatin

            • by lgw ( 121541 )

              Taxes all go to retirement pay anyhow - we could build 10x as many roads and it wouldn't affect overall spending worth mentioning.

            • Capacity is measured in vehicles/hr, and it's a function of speed and packing. Traffic is not a function of capacity at all. You can have a traffic jam without exceeding capacity (v/hr), and you can hit capacity without traffic.

              SDCs increase v/hr because they allow both higher safe speed AND better packing. And since most traffic is actually caused by aggressive and timid drivers, though mostly the latter [telegraph.co.uk], we can eliminate that factor as well!

              The scientists [...] found that timid drivers had the biggest

        • peak-hour traffic congestion rises to meet maximum capacity, increasing the road carrying capacity has no long-term effect on traffic congestion.

          By this logic, the best solution for congestion is to have NO roads.

          • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

            By this logic, the best solution for congestion is to have NO roads.

            And by that logic, the best way for eBay to prevent too many people from winning the same auction is to have NO auction.

            So I should have said, peak-hour traffic congestion on an unpriced road rises to meet maximum capacity. Thanks for pointing that out!

      • by s.petry ( 762400 )

        The "study" is you point at is not a study. It's an article which points to a simulation ran with perfect conditions for a self driving car demonstrating how they perform in _perfect_ conditions (key on that last part, it's like statistics but more blatantly fabricated).

        The main point of that article is safety, which I agree with. Come to the SF Bay area and follow one of the Google cars around. Interesting that they don't do any better going from San Jose to San Francisco as anyone else, and in many cas

        • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

          having nearly 9 million people in a very small area all sharing the same 3 Freeways will have massive traffic jams

          I think traffic congestion is more a factor of the number of vehicles, not the number of people. Leave all the people and take away all their cars and I guarantee it would completely eliminate traffic congestion.

          • by s.petry ( 762400 )

            having nearly 9 million people in a very small area all sharing the same 3 Freeways will have massive traffic jams

            I think traffic congestion is more a factor of the number of vehicles, not the number of people. Leave all the people and take away all their cars and I guarantee it would completely eliminate traffic congestion.

            That is surely true but the issues are related. There are many factors which are leading to every possible consumer purchasing a vehicle. Lack of good mass transit, lack of affordable housing close to work, lack of necessities like grocery stores near home, etc...

            The "study" (quoted intentionally) mentioned above is not a study. It's a hypothetical simulation with two major flaws. First, the incorrect assumption that 1/4th of all traffic jams are caused by accidents. Perhaps even worse, is the assumpti

        • Almost every "solution" these days would qualify as help for boneheads. It won't do anything better, but if you are weak at something or have a short attention span, or are simply fascinated by things you percieve as cool there is a new solution for you.
      • That is not true. SDCs can drive much closer together, increasing the road carrying capacity.

        That is not true. Self-driving cars will be programmed to maintain an appropriate driving distance to insure safety, about 2 seconds distance. This happens to be larger than most humans drive from the cars in front of them (thus the reason for some many 3, 4, 5 or more car chain collisions). Therefore the number of cars on the road must be smaller, or the cars must go slower on that road. What will improve somewhat is stop and go traffic, as a line of vehicles will be able to react one after another more q

      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        Good grief not this again.

        SDCs can drive much closer together

        No, they can't.

        Reaction time is only a fraction of stopping distance and cars already drive too close so, no, SDC's will not driver any closer than the cars you see on the roads today. Also you have to factor in the vast difference in braking distance difference between cars, braking distance can vary up to a third - for the very same car on the same day!

        See:
        The Power to Stop - Car Comparison - Car and Driver [caranddriver.com]

        Autonomous cars still have to leave mo

  • As it isn't a Tesla, since you can't sell them there. Gasoline or diesel powered vehicles only, which is the wave of the future.
    • Really??? You can't?? We have a Tesla dealer just down the street from us, and yes we live in Virginia.

      • You certain it isn't a showroom? One where sales are not allowed under penalty of law? http://www.greencarreports.com... [greencarreports.com]

        http://www.washingtonpost.com/... [washingtonpost.com]

        Fome the greencar site:

        "While Tesla has a showroom in the fancy Tysons Corners Mall, employees are forbidden to discuss sales of the electric car. Virginia forbids any carmaker to sell cars directly to paying customers."

        • There is a 2nd location on Tyco Road - it looks like they have a service department there, but from the outside it looks like just any other car showroom.

        • Every state in the United States has the same set of laws banning anyone from selling new cars except members of the Dealer Cartel. This way they can outlaw any real competition. Car dealerships are second only to farmers in terms of congressional lobbying effectiveness.

          • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

            Every state in the United States has the same set of laws banning anyone from selling new cars except members of the Dealer Cartel.

            And yet somehow Teslas are being sold, despite the fact that Tesla does not partner with the Dealer Cartel. How do they manage?

  • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )

    most notably Interstates 95 and 495

    NOVA I can handle most days (excepting Tysons Corner). You should try 64 at the Hampton tunnel for fun.

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      most notably Interstates 95 and 495

      NOVA I can handle most days (excepting Tysons Corner). You should try 64 at the Hampton tunnel for fun.

      At least the HRBT has an excuse for slowing down. It's the random stoppages on 64 in New Kent that really annoy me.

      • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
        Ahh yes, accordion freeway heading inland for miles. I love it. Will be going to the outer banks this weekend, and look forward to it on the way back.
  • California, Nevada, and a handful of other states already have roadways that allow autonomous-car use.

  • That's great. Virginia wants my self-driving car. and by coincidence, I DON'T want my self driving car.
  • That seems like it could be a simpler problem.
  • Wait, California, which has 12 line wide highways of stop and go traffic has whole roadways reserved for the current volume (zero) of autonomous vehicles? Why aren't the citizens revolting and forcing the state to open those roads to non-fairy tale vehicles?
  • I'd love to see the original driving reports of these self driving vehicles. Maybe they are publicly available and I just haven't looked hard enough. I want to see how well these SDCs perform in pouring rainstorms; like a cloudburst where you aren't sure if having your wipers on the fastest setting is doing anything or not, or thick to no visibility fog, or a substantial snowstorm. Or how about plowing through a significant snow bank on the road. Or poorly marked detours in a GPS deadzone - they just hav

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