Consumers Expect Their Cars To Become Mini Data Centers (networkworld.com) 146
coondoggie writes: Many consumers expect self-driving cars to become common in the not-too-distant future -- cars that diagnose problems without human intervention, cars that adapt to a particular driver's behaviors and react to its environment. Those are some of the conclusions from IBM's 'Auto 2025: A New Relationship – People and Cars' research involving 16,000 global consumers who were asked how they expect to use vehicles in the next ten years. IBM found consumers have the expectation that cars will soon communicate with other vehicles and infrastructure around them, integrating easily into a broader collection of traffic. More than a third of consumers said they'd be likely to allow collection of their driving data to support these services -- a notable figure, given that IBM is partnering with Ford to do exactly that.
Re:Onions (Score:4, Interesting)
A car used to be about independence, it was really the BIG first step in becoming and independent person from your parents, and was a symbol of individual freedom.
Now? I dunno....in the excerpt, it shows a growing number of people, willing to give up private, aggregate data about themselves, for the "greater good"....for some perceived and possibly realistic possibility of greater safety.
My question is, are you really that scared? Are you that scared of your driving ability to avoid wrecks? Are you that worried about people around you?
I just don't see it as "that bad".
I want to be the one in control of my car. I like to drive. Hell, I've never owned anything but 2x seat sports cars since I bought my first one in high school (exception my old '86 911 Turbo technically had 4 seats, but the rear two weren't functional for human usage). I like to be in control. I like to have a car that stops as well as it accelerates and handles. I don't want a computer intervening in my driving.
That sad thing is...that while I really don't have that problem with some folks that do want the aid....is that having your car be in control as described, will soon NOT be a choice and will be mandatory. It already is trending that way as that just the other day I saw a blurb on TV with a federal official saying this cooperative car, inter-vehicle communication would by law start becoming mandatory.
I dunno. It bothers me with this trend towards autos, and more generally, the fact that the individual is being celebrated less and less in our culture, in favor of everyone is equal, everyone MUST cooperate for the greater good. Cooperation and community DO have a place in our US culture, but the balance seems to be tipping to where we're moving more to be a part of the collective on everything.....and that is NOT where boldness, creativeness and greatness comes from.
OH well....I guess while I still can, I should move on buying that old 70's muscle car, and maybe do a resto-mod on it to improve the handling and braking. But then, I'll be able to have a car sans computer control, a 455 4-Speed engine, and open up the old air restrictions and get something in the 500HP range. Something fun to drive, and that isn't part of the hive mind growing today.
I'll try to do it while I'm still able to....legally.
I never thought the Rush song Red Barchetta would be quite so prophetic.
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I get this, I actually felt the same way. I still maintain an old 86 Toyota MR2. Mid engined, RWD, no ABS... A hoot to drive. However it certainly isn't my daily driver, and my eyes were opened when buying a new car.
I thought, BAH! begone with your technological answers to questions I didn't have. I don't want a car that parks itself. But what I've found is that my car will now beep if a pedestrian is about to walk behind my vehicle when reversing out of a parking spot. I've never reversed into anyon
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FWIW, it will probably also beep if any of the sensors is covered with ice or snow. At least my wife's car does.
On the whole, I think many of the new capabilities are positive. A backup camera is useful, and I wouldn't mind automatic parking.
However, the rich feature set is largely obviated by atrocious and frequently incomprehensible user interfaces. Just one example of way too many, my wife managed to somehow (she has no idea how) turn the volume on the GPS (dubbed Miss Guided in honor of it's sometime
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my wife managed to somehow (she has no idea how) turn the volume on the GPS (dubbed Miss Guided in honor of it's sometimes problematic routings) to zero. She called the dealer service department, but was apparently unable to describe the problem in terms they could deal with. Or maybe they simply didn't know how to fix the problem.
It took me way too many hours of my life to discover that I could restore the volume to normal by turning on the GPS, turning on the radio, driving somewhere, waiting for the radio volume to fade when approaching a turn indicating that the GPS was trying to talk, and then (and only then) adjusting the volume control.
If this is indicative of life in the future, you folks have a truly dismal experience to look forward to.
How could she not explain it to the dealership? Even if English is not her (or their) first language, it seems to be easy enough to explain, here's a perfect English sentence she can use: "GPS no make sound. Me no hear direction. You fix". If that doesn't work, it would just take a trip around the neighborhood with a service tech, or even a sales guy to demonstrate the problem.
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Being covered in snow or ice makes the reverse sensor on mine go crazy... I know only a couple people that think autonomous cars are a good idea and everyone else thinks they are a pipe dream and a bad idea although they will take all the nifty features that come about because of research into it like back up cameras and collision warning systems.
Why are they a pipe dream??
How often does your computer, tablet, or cell phone freeze or crash? Maybe once a year, more if it's cheap, but it does happen and if th
Cars are transportation (Score:5, Insightful)
A car used to be about independence, it was really the BIG first step in becoming and independent person from your parents, and was a symbol of individual freedom.
Independence comes in many forms. A car is merely one way to get it. It's a state of mind. Are kids in NYC somehow less independent just because they don't need a car to get around their city? I live near Detroit and people celebrate cars around here but it's more of a fetish than a practical necessity. Cars are transportation first and foremost. Any sense of independence you get from them is secondary and to a large degree perceptual.
My question is, are you really that scared? Are you that scared of your driving ability to avoid wrecks? Are you that worried about people around you?
No, No, Yes. But if you asked me about other people my answers would be different. Put my grandmother behind the wheel and the answers are Yes, Yes and Yes. And frankly you aren't scared because you are accustomed to how things work. The objective safety record of cars is rather bad and much of that is based in human error.
I want to be the one in control of my car. I like to drive.
That's nice but not really particularly important to society. I like to drive too but most of the time I wouldn't miss it, particularly when commuting. Much of the time driving is merely a waste of time and not much fun. You might be a great driver and you might like to drive but the objective evidence is clear. Lots of people are NOT good drivers. Lots of people who are generally good drivers make mistakes while driving. Tens of thousands of people die in auto accidents each year and many of these are possibly avoidable with automation. Furthermore we waste vast numbers of hours driving that could be put to better use. Your desire to have some fun driving a car is understandable but there will be ways to maintain that in the future.
I like to be in control. I like to have a car that stops as well as it accelerates and handles. I don't want a computer intervening in my driving.
Really? The plain fact of the matter is that without computer assistance your ability to control the vehicle is limited, particularly in difficult corner cases. In the right conditions you WILL stop faster with ABS brakes than without. In the right conditions you WILL accelerate better with traction control than without. Etc. With a well designed computer assistance you will be a measurably better and safer driver. I love computer controls in cars that help me drive better and I love them even more in other people's cars so they don't crash and hurt anyone.
Think of it this way. Fighter jets are computer controlled but nobody complains about the computer interfering with the pilot's control.
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I want to be the one in control of my car. I like to drive.
That's nice but not really particularly important to society.
You making more money than you need to live is not particularly important to society either... and actually, it would be more beneficial for society if society took all of the money you did not need to live and spend it on society.
We are discussing the United States of America here. Take your ideas of society and go somewhere else where they fit.
I like to be in control. I like to have a car that stops as well as it accelerates and handles. I don't want a computer intervening in my driving.
Really? The plain fact of the matter is that without computer assistance your ability to control the vehicle is limited, particularly in difficult corner cases. In the right conditions you WILL stop faster with ABS brakes than without.
Actually, no. Many people can stop a car faster than relying on ABS alone will. Most of the American cars that I have driven start the ABS fluctuation early to prev
The general public (Score:3)
You making more money than you need to live is not particularly important to society either
What does a feeling of independence have to do with actually making cash? You or I making more money absolutely is important to society. It employs more people, it results in more taxes and raises all boats. The fact that people some people feel a bit of independence by getting a car is nice but doesn't matter nearly as much as the economic utility they achieve with one.
Actually, no. Many people can stop a car faster than relying on ABS alone will.
That's simply not true unless you are talking about specific conditions. I'm an automotive engineer. I work with this stuff. UNDER TH
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"A car used to be about independence, it was really the BIG first step in becoming and independent person from your parents, and was a symbol of individual freedom."
A cultural change is underway. To old people, those who read Kerouac and listened to Springsteen, motor vehicles represented freedom. To today's young people, not so much. They gladly Uber everywhere, and they no longer believe so strongly that public transit is the devil's work.
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There is no cultural change underway... motor vehicles representing freedom and independence is a mid-west thing for all those kids that live in scattered little towns where public transit and Uber don't go. They also never thought public transportation was the devil's work... they thought it was to damn expensive.. when you have a community of 6000 they are weighing options public transit isn't big on the list for their tiny 4 square mile town.
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Of all my resources 'time' is the only one that I can't make more of.
If I could summon a car on my phone and it would take me anywhere I wanted I'd do it in a heart beat. How much time do you spend on your vehicle? Cumulatively over the last 2 decades of driving I've probably spent at least a few entire days of my life just filling up. With my wife's EV that's no longer a time consumer, it takes 10 seconds to plug it in when she gets home.
I'll probably keep my TDI in a garage for the apocalypse but for 90%
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LOL, no. To be in control of a basic car with four disc brakes, you'd need four brake pedals, or a joystick driving valves in a hydraulic manifold to direct the braking effort. Note the absence of such in the "me in control!" cars that you allude to. In fact, modern cars with electronic stability control at least give you some semblance of this by using the steering angle to produce steer torques from the braking system. You can't do that on a stock legacy car.
I happen to have owned a car where I have made
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Did you really believe the report wouldn't support Big Blue's agenda? And, while I agree with some of your concerns, it's not ll about being "scared". I could easily see a Waze-like app built into our vehicles, maybe warning me of upcoming hazards, construction, icing conditions, etc. But, if the auto companies think I'm going to accept a vehicle that's sending my personal data back to some mother-ship, they won't see a dime of my money.
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Are you that worried about people around you?
Um, yes? It must be incredible to live some place where you aren't.
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My question is, are you really that scared? Are you that scared of your driving ability to avoid wrecks? Are you that worried about people around you?
I am generally way more scared of driving and being in cars than I am of, say, terrorist attacks - something which everyone probably should be given the statistical risks.
I've lost way more freedom due to the war on terror bullshit. I'd be way more happy losing whatever driving freedoms if it leads to an actual improvement in safety (even better if those costs are borne by the private sector and not my tax dollars, like they are with the war on terror!),
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You are NOT giving up "aggregate data". You are giving up your personal data, where you drive, how you drive, with who you drive, to a corporation eager to maximize the amount of money they can earn for that data, but with very little experience in either preventing others from accessing it or in "aggregating" it so it no longer can be associated with you.
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" I like to be in control. "
Even if we stipulate that you are as good as you think you are, you are not in control because you are surrounded by OTHER DRIVERS.
Whenever I cross the street most of the drivers can't figure out where to stop. I have experienced drivers who were previously stopped but start accelerating while I am crossing directly in front of them. I have experienced drivers who has steered toward me and I try to dodge out of their way. You cannot depend on the average driver to be in control.
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Just want to drive (Score:5, Insightful)
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Might i suggest a completely unloaded and dreary Toyota Yaris for you then!
I can do without the dvd player, but just give me a music hookup and I'll be fine.
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Smart Trousers (Score:3)
yeah everyone knows the new way to make phone calls, surf the web and turn on light switches is with smart trousers (smart pants for you americans).
All i have to do is lift my foot to my ear to take a call or make a switching like gesture with my ankle when i walk into a room to turn on the light... and most intuitive of all, i just have to roll around on the floor and flail my legs in the air wildly to surf the web.
I'm sure this is just the beginning, think of all the "smart" things that you can get techno
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... with American Smart Pants.
That does have a ring to it... "American smart pants" - tagline1 "you'l have to strip them from my cold dead body" - tagline2 "encourages smart device thieves to go one step too far"
And I want... (Score:5, Insightful)
And *I* want you not to crash in me/my car/bicycle/motor if *I* happen to be between your A and B.
Therefore, I want you car to be overstuffed with as much electronics as possible that can automatically break and avoid me in case you're distracted/busy texting/tired and not very concentrated/completely wasted, etc.
(That's why I'm happy that features like "CitySafety(tm)" and other such Forward Collision Avoidance Systems are becomming more common place. It used to be only on high end expensive cars like my father's Volvo, now it's even available on the cheapest VW Up! on my local car-sharing).
Driving is a dangerous activity. Driving causes way much more death than terrorism, illegal aliens, or any other of the bogeyman currently waved by the media.
Together with Cancer and Cardiovascular diseases, Driving is among the 3 leading causes of death. (Exact details vary depending on age. Youngs a more likely to die in a car crash, older are more likely to die of cancer or heartstroke).
I'm all for putting as much technology as possible to reduce risks of car crashes, and risks of me dying because I happened to be between your A and B point right at the moment you where distracted by the boobs on the model on some yogurt advertisement rather than paying attention in front of you.
Get off your cross (Score:2, Interesting)
"Driving is a dangerous activity. Driving causes way much more death than terrorism blah blah liberal crap snipped.."
Perhaps we should ban cars and see how life goes for you on your pedal bike when doctors and nurses, emergency workers, police, people who work the shops, guys who fix the roads, drive the buses and trucks plus 1001 other assorted activities can't get to work. You see I know this doesn't fit your standard issue left wing drivers-are-evil argument, but unlike cancer, terrorists and "the bogeym
Please, pay attention to the details (Score:3)
"Driving is a dangerous activity. Driving causes way much more death than terrorism blah blah liberal crap snipped.."
Perhaps, you shouldn't have snipped all the liberal crap, because you missed parts such as :
Therefore, I want you car to be overstuffed with as much electronics as possible
or
I'm all for putting as much technology as possible to reduce risks of car crashes
or even the begining :
And *I* want you not to crash in me/my car/bicycle/motor
2 out of the 4 transportation mean I've cited are powered by internal combustion engines. (Well, partly. The car sharing service I get my cars from also feature Renault's Zoé electric cars. But they are all *motorised* transportation whatever the motor).
Thus...
Perhaps we should ban cars and see how life goes for you on your pedal bike when...
I've never advocated banning cars (nor motors, btw, the other powered transportation I've cited).
My point is simply that driving i
Google's own experience (Score:2)
GP didn't seem to be advocating getting rid of cars.
Indeed, my initial idea is to supplement the human driver with as much assisting technology as possible to lower as much as possible the car crash fatalities.
And to a lot of people, nothing of value would be lost. The benefit of being able to drive your car manually is outweighed by the hassle and danger of having to drive your car manually. {...} The people {...} need to realize that people who don't like to or are unable to drive need the new tech.
Some people might enjoy staring at the taillights of the car in front of them for an hour a day. I don't, and I'd rather be able to let my car do the driving while I do other things.
That's also Google's own experience when they tried to scale-up their tests:
- They let some of their employee (outside the professionnal car-tester, I mean) test a first batch of autonomous cars. Not the cute golf-carts-like with no wheel. The regular-cars-augmented-with-assistive-electronics.
- They wanted people to test the cars, carefully monitor and
Motorcycle ftw (Score:1)
...This is exactly why I ride a motorcycle. No extraneous bullshit distractions. I will admit, it's EASY to pick out the drivers who desperately need this kind of tech in their rides. It's also disturbing at how many of them there actually are.
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And *I* want you not to crash in me/my car/bicycle/motor if *I* happen to be between your A and B.
Statistically, you are safe from that happening. These new cars won't protect you from that. They are designed to protect you from yourself. However, if they are able to be user programmed to take on your own driving persona and aggressiveness, then it is unlikely they will succeed at protecting anybody.
Therefore, I want you car to be overstuffed with as much electronics as possible that can automatically break and avoid me in case you're distracted/busy texting/tired and not very concentrated/completely wasted, etc.
But why should I have to pay for your peace of mind? If you want that protection, then you should pay for it. Of course, most of this paying for it would be in the form of insurance premiums. But there,
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Yeah, but how much does Big O want for a set of those three meter diameter tires?
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9/10 accidents I see involving bikes, the car/bus/truck is stationary, or the bike hits another bike.
Probably the other vehicle's fault for waiting at the lights or being parked in a parking bay.
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Otherwise, if I need data or information I'll use my phone.
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Re: Just want to drive (Score:1)
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If the drive from A to B is interesting, sure. But if you somehow have to navigate I5 from the I805 split to downtown San Diego or Commonwealth Ave in Boston on a daily basis, being in control loses its charm after a while. Much better to spend your hour(s) in traffic answering eMail, working on your screen play, or listening to Grieg or Coltrane or Kris Kristoferson. Let the car handle the tedious details, and consult you when something like a 147 car pileup goes wrong. "Sorry to interrupt you master,
Mini Data Centers? (Score:4, Informative)
I think consumers expect their cars to become Cell Phones or Tablets, not Mini Data Centers....
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They are mechanical devices after all (Score:2)
What people want is different from what the industry wants.
The industry wants to expand, hence the push for a lot of crap being put in the dashboard, as if anyone wants to use Windows when driving.
But now the automotive market has been identified as non-saturated with IT crap, so the industry will fill this niche.
A consumer which is ready to splash over 10K on a car is much more likely to accept to spend a few hundred extra for the in-car entertainment system, which is esentially a tablet, while one looking
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To the average person, what's the difference?
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You're not the only one, but you are not the point of maximum profit that is being targeted.
You are basically saying you want to buy less stuff. This is not the path to more profit, unless you are also willing to overpay as much for less stuff as target market is willing to pay for most stuff.
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"... here, with snow and -35C..."
Judging from your accent, North Korea?
You don't say? (Score:2)
More than a third of consumers said they'd be likely to allow collection of their driving data to support these services.
I find myself surprised the percentage is not even greater, given that is the precise trade-off for joining the facebook or carrying a cellular phone.
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Not so many people actually think about the information they are giving away by using Facebook or a smartphone or any other online service though.
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Not so many people actually think about the information they are giving away by using Facebook or a smartphone or any other online service though.
True. Most folks don't give it a second thought, and too many of the ones who do are in the camp of, "Well, if you have nothing to hide..."
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I'm surprised it's not even greater, because you can get whatever answers you want if you design the survey, and they have a vested interest in making that number high. Maybe they want it to grow over time as they release more "features" to show what the tipping point is?
I've got good news! (Score:3)
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Does it save me a bunch of money on my car insurance?
That sounds very rational, but the insurance lobbyists would likely prevent it.
I'd like to prosthelytize further, but I'm off to divest my retirement account of the stock of steering wheel manufacturers.
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Insurance guys are already just fine with putting a black box in your car that records all your movements and adjusting your premium according to how risky your driving profile is.
Any insurer that doesn't get on board with charging less for auto-cars that have a lower risk of crash is going to be undercut by someone else.
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Insurance guys are already just fine with putting a black box in your car that records all your movements and adjusting your premium according to how risky your driving profile is.
Any insurer that doesn't get on board with charging less for auto-cars that have a lower risk of crash is going to be undercut by someone else.
I guess there are always enough idiots out there that still drive like an idiot even while they have the device installed. I know I was even more careful while I had the device in my car. It pissed me off several times to see "hard braking" show up on my profile just because some idiot cut in front of me without adequate room to squeeze in.
But I guess part of the driving profile is checking for the behaviors of the other idiots that you end up sharing the road with. It all needs to be taken into consider
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"I'd like to prosthelytize further, but..."
You're trying to convert people to believe in artificial limbs?
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"I'd like to prosthelytize further, but..."
You're trying to convert people to believe in artificial limbs?
Of course. I has to park the steering wheel money in another investment, didn't I?
More than a third... (Score:1)
Or, looking at it another way, Nearly two thirds would NOT be willing to allow this collection of data.
Become? (Score:2)
My newest car has over a dozen computers in it and it's almost twenty years old. Cars are already mini data centers. That they are not moving internet traffic around doesn't change that. PCM, TCM, ABS and climate control all regularly exchange data.
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Adapt to a particular driver's behaviors? (Score:2)
Adapt to what drivers behaviors? The car will be the driver!
Leading questions (Score:5, Insightful)
Alternate reality summary:
"After asking a series of highly leading questions, IBM shockingly discovers that what it is planning to do is exactly what consumers want."
Consumers were assaulted with an endless stream of buzzwords, and a response inculding glazed eyes and/or drool were taken as indications of approval. A spokesman for IBM gushed "Phew! We didn't know if we knew what we were doing, but now we have discovered that we're right, we can push ahead with, um, what we were pushing ahead with. Go IBM!"
Bullshit (Score:2)
Consumers expect their car (or, rather, any random car they plunk their ass into) to become a peripheral for the mini data center they already carry in their pockets.
If auto manufacturers are coming up with a different answer, they're asking the wrong questions. Or, more likely, the questions intended to elicit the answer they want to hear.
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Once we are at the point of self-driving cars, ownership becomes moot (for a lot of people anyway). You now have a taxi service that can eliminate one of the most expensive components, the driver, and allow me to nap gently without having to worry why we are taking the extreme scenic route. Parking structures can be reduced significantly as well as road congestion. I have little need for a personal car once public transport is on-demand and cheap. That will require Big Data to coordinate all of those demand
No (Score:1)
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And the sports car will be a stick-shift, so that the kid won't be able to borrow it.
What I want (Score:2)
I want my car to get me from point A to point B reliably and safely. Beyond that, it's nice if it has some form of GPS (mine doesn't) and the ability to make & receive phone calls (I can receive them, but making them is more trouble than it's worth). That's about the extent of the bells & whistles I want in my car.
Really? What exactly did you ask them? (Score:2)
Consumers Expect Their Cars To Become Mini Data Centers
So how did you phrase the question in order to get the response you wanted?
I also note that they used the word "expect" and not "want."
Remember what Jay Leno said... (Score:2)
"Great, I was hoping to have at least ONE hand free to drive..."
Utopian desire (Score:1)
Inevitable (Score:2)
I know plenty of people that commute into Manhattan to work. They get a lot of work done on the train in and out, so much so that some get paid to commute.
I'm thinking I should mount a hotspot in my car to solve the streaming problem and just do it for $10/month or so.
Uber clearly should be looking at self-driving cars as the solution to their most pressing problem - drivers.
And urban areas should see self-driving cars as a huge advantage, increasing the effective capacity of highways.Now we need electric
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"And urban areas should see self-driving cars as a huge advantage, increasing the effective capacity of highways."
Hah, yeah, right. Lets see how these autonomous vehicles cope outside the wide straight roads of north america. European cities for example - narrow twisty roads with illegal double parking , only enough room for 1 vehicle at a time on a 2 way street, junctions where no one ever lets you in unless you push in, mopeds cutting you up, roundabouts, the list goes on. And asia? Even worse.
They want their car to become like appliances? (Score:2)
So now we want cars that will brick themselves after a year or two, not because
No they dont. (Score:2)
Why the hell are they talking to? not one person out there expects or wants this.
My cellphone does more than ANYTHING the car makers can come up with. What I want is the car to use fully open and well documented standards that my devices can easily pull information from.
Can't even build a highway in 20 years (Score:3)
In my area, they can't build a highway in 20 years, how in the world will they build a "intelligent" one in 10? The cost of upgrading all the roads and cars in the US to this new V2V driverless world will be in the quintillions. Why not just go with the Jetsons prediction and we will all be in flying autonomous cars with a robotic maid for our every whim by 2025? Saves the cost of all that road buildout.
Humans are still a problem (Score:2)
I get the hype over cars that can tell you what's wrong or that may be able to self drive. However, until all cars are self-driving and no human can thwart the system, I'll take my chances doing my own driving. In addition, I don't care how often the car tells me it's time for brakes or tires or whatever, until I actually drive the thing into the service department and shell out the cash to repair it, it does nobody any good. That's what's scary. How long before the car shuts itself down or the government m
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How long before the car shuts itself down or the government mandates repair rules and demands everyone upload their telemetry to the DMV for safety inspections?
Already happens in heavy trucks. If your emissions are out of compliance you'll run at reduced power output.
Data Center != A computer in my car (Score:2)
Obvious nonsense (Score:2)
I expect my car to go where I drive it. Primary expectation.
Beyond that, I'd like things that make that experience easier and more pleasurable. Climate control, some sort of audio entertainment capability, GPS is nice, and while we're at it... heated seats.
And for the record, totally happy with the radio/GPS etc functionality being provided by my smartphone which can be bluetooth slaved into the car.
Beyond that... I really don't want them to do anything to the car.
I don't like self driving cars because I kn
I already have a car that can self diagnose. (Score:2)
I already have a car that can self diagnose. It just has a problem telling me what's wrong I get this check engine light what's wrong chevvy? Is the gas cap loose? "purrr" Has one of the spark plugs gone bad? "purrr" Is one of the half dozen filters clogged? "purrr" is there a pressure leak in the fuel system? "purrr" Does the oil need to be changed? "purrr" Has timmy's fallen down a well? "purrr"
I suppose I will have to take it back to the parts store again and have them hook up their $2000 code reader and
I don't. (Score:2)
I guess I'm not a consumer. I'm okay with that.
One data center to rule them all (Score:2)
I don't want a smart car. I want ONE smart device that rules my car, my house, my friends... I do not want to learn and master five ecosystems. My life is already complicated enough.
Also, IBM found a false dichotomy in its "developing vs mature country" division. Actually it should be "drives a car vs doesn't drive a car". Anyone who already drives doesn't want a perpetual argument between car and phone and smart street signage and home server.
This is the problem with Apple Play now. My car offers map
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If you want something that tells you what's wrong with your car, your house, your friends, you .... then get married.
Consumers, apparently, are stupid, then. (Score:2)
Suicide bombs without all that pesky suicide (Score:1)
I'm just waiting for the outbreak of self-driving cars, delivering explosive payloads and not making martyrs.
Don't mind collecting data (Score:2)
It's the sharing of the data that I have a problem with. Getting the data to avoid collisions or using the GPS to map out my route is great. But I don't want that going to the car manufacturer, whoever made the OS for the car's main computer, or the maker of the on-board entertainment system and whoever they decide to share or sell it to.
Relevent Science Fiction stories (Score:2)
"The Machine Stops" by E.M Forster, ( http://archive.ncsa.illinois.e... [illinois.edu]), and "The Revolt of the Pedestrians" by David H. Keller. Extreme scenarios to be sure, but entertaining reading, and entirely relevant to the current discussion.