Notice that unlike the "Light Rail" they've put in in Phoenix at a cost of
>$10^9, digging up streets, inconveniencing businesses some of whom had to
fail, more traffic controls and accidents,  PRT just has to dig post holes
down the center of the road for the elevated rail -- minimal disruptive
measures, but alas, the vested interests still have the power  ( I know,
I've had to deal with them).

Hoyt Stearns
Scottsdale, Arizona US



-----Original Message-----
From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, February 09, 2009 7:34 AM
To: vortex
Subject: [Vo]:Another promising transportation concept


Hoyt mentioned this before. It seems to grow on you- in that the more you
think about it, the more sense it makes - especially if you have just taken
a $40 cab ride from the airport, 15 minutes worth, that was only $15 when
Bush took office.

http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/22083/?nlid=1761

... a version of it kinda reminds one of the "Johnny cab" in "Total
Recall"...

We are getting to the stage in "relative capability" that we will soon be
able to trust computer intelligence, for many dangerous tasks - more than
the human variety - at least as incarnated in the average cabbie.

The "vision" subsystems are not there yet, nor is natural language parsing-
but the decision-making ability of cheap computers is already superior in
most regards - even in expert systems (like medical diagnosis, which is
surprising).

That should make this concept popular in Sacramento, among other progressive
places (but there are no funds there to implement it, unless BO comes to the
rescue)...

A memorable quote from the flick - and it has weird relevance to sniffing
out the real 'brains' behind the $250 billion cash bonus given to Big Oil by
the Cheney, oops Bush Administration 'on the way out' (while blaming OPEC):

"Howdy stranger. If things haven't gone wrong, I'm talking to myself and you
don't have a towel around your head. Now whatever your name is, get ready
for the big surprise. You are not you, you're "me"."

Big Oil and OPEC - one and the same ? "if it walks like a duck..." you know
the rest.

Leading to this sentiment- which is too liberal for most of my friends on
this forum, but for me, there is little good argument to counter the idea
that the partial nationalization (of only the top 4-5) big oil companies
would be in the national interest. They are already bloated and corrupt
bureaucracies, so why not at least repatriate the profits to the taxpayers
and make them more accountable for what they have done to our economic
system?

Jones

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