Driverless Hype Collides With Merciless Reality
Insatiable need for tech progress sometimes pushes things sooner than they're ready. I do agree with the article. With roads as they are and the precedent of established driving law enforcement (a bit too lax these days), driverless cars are faced with too many challenges. It's all about the unpredictable nature of the human driver. If everyone obeys the laws, everything is fine. But as we know, from the huge success of auto insurance companies and repair shops, a notable portion of people screw up. And then there's road rage. Drivers who make highly unpredictable moves that driverless cars have a tough time managing.
I do think there's merit to the concept... only I think we have to wait a bit longer for it to be more practical. The first phase would be highway driving. Because highway roads are much straighter and more predictable than local roads, with just a few minor enhancements driverless cars could use them with little incident. The only problem is the unpredictable driver who recklessly speeds or cuts off. There would need to be some kind of deterrent to that kind of driving. Introduce the AMA - Auto Monitoring Assistant. For any driverless car, it's by nature keeping track of traffic around the vehicle. If it detects highly unusual or dangerous movement of other vehicles, it captures that info and is immediately relayed to the state authority. Once people who drive like that start to get caught, they'll realize the days of reckless driving with impunity are over.
For the local level, we need to achieve a point where more vehicles have automatic accident avoidance technology: a) quick braking to avoid front collision, and b) warning signal to drivers too close in the rear for the speed. As this becomes more widespread, local road traffic becomes more predictable. At some point, all vehicles would need to have accident avoidance systems, much like cars must have airbags. And then automated driving has a better chance of being a success.
Insatiable need for tech progress sometimes pushes things sooner than they're ready. I do agree with the article. With roads as they are and the precedent of established driving law enforcement (a bit too lax these days), driverless cars are faced with too many challenges. It's all about the unpredictable nature of the human driver. If everyone obeys the laws, everything is fine. But as we know, from the huge success of auto insurance companies and repair shops, a notable portion of people screw up. And then there's road rage. Drivers who make highly unpredictable moves that driverless cars have a tough time managing.
I do think there's merit to the concept... only I think we have to wait a bit longer for it to be more practical. The first phase would be highway driving. Because highway roads are much straighter and more predictable than local roads, with just a few minor enhancements driverless cars could use them with little incident. The only problem is the unpredictable driver who recklessly speeds or cuts off. There would need to be some kind of deterrent to that kind of driving. Introduce the AMA - Auto Monitoring Assistant. For any driverless car, it's by nature keeping track of traffic around the vehicle. If it detects highly unusual or dangerous movement of other vehicles, it captures that info and is immediately relayed to the state authority. Once people who drive like that start to get caught, they'll realize the days of reckless driving with impunity are over.
For the local level, we need to achieve a point where more vehicles have automatic accident avoidance technology: a) quick braking to avoid front collision, and b) warning signal to drivers too close in the rear for the speed. As this becomes more widespread, local road traffic becomes more predictable. At some point, all vehicles would need to have accident avoidance systems, much like cars must have airbags. And then automated driving has a better chance of being a success.