What could go wrong?
This scares the shit out of me. Not the technology itself, but the implications it's going to have for the millions of people who work in the transportation sector.
I imagine if there's still a "manual" driver mode, then we'll still need some amount of personal liability insurance. But I completely agree that we could be seeing an "insurance fee" of sorts built into the cost of the car. I'm curious how manufacturers will address those costs. One time fee at purchase? Or a yearly subscription?
Unless it becomes illegal. Which it has to at some point if we want to take full advantage of all the features of autonomous driving.
I can't wait for speed limits to increase and going at 100+ mph at intersections with only inches of clearance, which would be impossible if your slow ass brain is trying to control a vehicle manually on the road.
I can't wait for traffic lights to be a thing of the past, since every car can be fully connected and aware of all the other cars, making them unnecessary. You will see a dramatic improvement in traffic and commute times, but by all means lets forgo that so you can have "fun".
I'm thinking we'll see a major boost to track days, where you'll be able to drive your primitive cars in closed courses to your hearts content.
In the US, driving a truck is the most popular job in most states.
http://www.npr.org/sections/money/2015/02/05/382664837/map-the-most-common-job-in-every-state
Thats great until something goes wrong and slams you into a wall or other car.
you'll probably see both.
for taxi (uber/etc) surcharges on your per-ride (depending on the area you are in)
for car manufacturers, rolled into a "subscription service" that offers updates to your car and other value-added services.
thats as long as we have car ownership. we are going to be going in the direction where we aren't even going to have car ownership anymore as a common thing. similar to how not everyone owns a horse anymore.
leases will probably be reformed into essentially transportation subscriptions.
If drivers weren't such shit, maybe you'd have a case to make. Eventually the numbers, safety and efficiency, will overwhelm any argument. Eventually.I'll still drive myself.
which happens a lot anyway with humans driving. far more than it should.
Insurance. With much lower premiums, btw.So what happens if these cars get in an accident, scratch/dent another car?
I cannot see this being a full nationwide thing. I can still think of too many instances, while not every time I drive, that are common enough a computerized vehicle would have issues dealing with it. Mostly, snow related situations where there are no visible markers on the road and lane configurations have changed due to snowbanks/space. Somehow a computer is going to have to figure all of this out dynamically only from other traffic around it and completely ignore internal/gps maps. I can't even begin to think of how hard that would be to program, and how to program when it's appropriate and safe to do so. So yeah, good luck to them. They've got their work cut out for them.
This isn't going to ever happen. You still have pedestrians to worry about and 1000+ pound piece of metal will never be able to instantly stop (nor will the passengers survive such a stop). Speed limits changes will be a lot less impressive than people think. Again, sure the computer may be able to instantly react at about 10ms vs a human at 250ms to a deer suddenly on the road, but it's not going to matter when your autonomous vehicle cannot physically move itself away and you plow into it at 100mph. You're more dead than ever.
It probably makes driving that even easier and faster because a slow mofos will not be able to clog the traffic lolWill it work in this though?
Because that is what I need.
I'll add this as well. Autonomous cars are like #1 on my list of possible future things that I could obtain during my lifetime. Can't wait.
Maybe on the highways, but speeds wouldn't increase much in the cities. You still need to factor in pedestrians and bicyclists. Unless you plan on outlawing bicyclists also. And what happens to all the existing classic cars? They suddenly become lawn ornaments?
I disagree, cars could be built far more safely if they didn't have to be made with the driver in mind. Just like the Model S is the safest car in a collision because there is no huge, metal engine a driverless car can also do away with dangerous but necessary things such as steering wheels and tons of windows for visibility. Furthermore, autonomous cars would be able to predict collisions before they occur and trigger airbags and other safety devices before or immediately at impact.
As long as I can still drive my sports cars around, I welcome this advancement.
You better believe that sooner or later it's going to be illegal to manually drive a vehicle on public roads. The safety hazard of a manual driver will no longer be tolerated as transportation accidents and casualties dwindle down to almost-zero.
I think there are 3 million truck drivers in the US. If a mass layoff of truck drivers doesn't make us re-evaluate our concept of labor, nothing will.
According to the American Trucker Association, there are 3.5 million professional truck drivers in the US, and an additional 5.2 million people employed within the truck-driving industry who dont drive the trucks. Thats 8.7 million trucking-related jobs.
Human drivers have always been the major source of car accidents
It probably makes driving that even easier and faster because a slow mofos will not be able to clog the traffic lol
https://medium.com/basic-income/self-driving-trucks-are-going-to-hit-us-like-a-human-driven-truck-b8507d9c5961#.o27qlbj14
That's not including secondary employment from truck stops, motels etc serving truckers.
The government will have to do something. But idk what.it's incredible how big this industry is. the roll out of autonomous vehicles will probably take forever, especially to commercial trucking, but i wonder where the people will drift off to? it'll be something that they have to deal with at some point in their lives, even if it's not till 2030
That will be like trying to legislate guns in the us, cars are just as important culturally to us (city folk don't count)
We obviously don't care how many people it will kill (see alcohol, guns, cigarettes, corn syrup). Lives don't matter.
The insurance industry though will see this as a gold mine oppertunity. Not using a robo car? That will be an extra $300 a month for "human error" insurance
Imagine having that aspect of your course freed-up
It's comforting to know, in time, my children probably won't have to worry about bad drivers. I'm curious how long the transition period will be.
I wonder how Geohot's car is coming along after that article about his system last month.
it's incredible how big this industry is. the roll out of autonomous vehicles will probably take forever, especially to commercial trucking, but i wonder where the people will drift off to? it'll be something that they have to deal with at some point in their lives, even if it's not till 2030
I'm still not totally sure how these things handle parking and are capable of detecting entrances, but I welcome our robot driver overlords.
The government will have to do something. But idk what.
You tell a shipper they can ship cheaper, not having to pay a driver (of course there will be other cost) and faster, because robots don't have to stop and sleep for hours of mandatory downtime... yeah there's real incentive for change there.