Turn this one around in its head and there are significant limitations to the 
concept of ‘driverless’ cars.

For one, we don’t have the road infrastructure to cope (sealed roads alone are 
nowhere near well enough marked for the concept, forget about non-sealed roads 
or roads under repair). Secondly, we don’t have the overall connectivity to 
allow for full autonomous driving, both in cities and out of town, and thirdly, 
we have constraints over the application of the technology which impede the 
delivery of the technology (not just being out of range, but things such as 
vehicles with signage on the back inferring that the speed limit is what it is 
not, road marking indicating other road rules which are flexible depending on 
the region and time of day, and other circumstances), and the difficulty in 
dealing with situations which are not ‘ordinary roads’.

In other words, there are enough variables to make this a nightmare scenario, 
and not just because of congestion (which in some ways is easier to deal with).


> On 5 Apr 2016, at 2:28 PM, Jim Birch <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> David Lochrin  wrote:
> 
>> 
>> Call me over-cautious, but it will be a while before I entrust my nearest
>> & dearest to a driverless car.
> 
> 
> How do you feel about them getting in a car with a human driver?  It's not
> like they are accident proof.  People have all kinds of irrational fears,
> eg, fear of flying (which is actually incredibly safe.)  We are certainly
> hard-wired to find the unfamiliar stressful.  If the numbers says
> driverless cars are significantly safer, I'm going with that.  There may be
> some new and different problems but overall it's a benefit.  However, it
> looks like it might be going to take a while to convince everyone.
> 
> ----
> 
> Congestion is a complex issue.  I'm not expecting modern cities to return
> to a state of pastoral calm, I was just saying that driverless cars have
> advantages in terms of traffic throughput for a number of reasons, eg, they
> don't have egos.  The fact that there will always be death and disease does
> not make improving the health system a crazy idea.
> 
> Jim
> _______________________________________________
> Link mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link


_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to