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Self Driving Cars

Students – I might have guessed

In all the noise and excitement (not least for this blogger) around self driving vehicles one thing that is pretty clear is that how people have fun (for which read the increasing chance of a seriously spectacular crash) in cars is going to change. At the very least we will have to find ways of e enjoying ourselves that don’t involve simply driving them.

And of course students have managed to find the way. From Stanford comes this great article about a new fun thing to do with self driving cars. Although what else you can do in this car while its in action is going to require some thinking through.

Categories
Self Driving Cars

Can sheep drive?

Can sheep drive better than people?

I guess we will find out soon; when we get the hang of leaving the driving to the technology. When cars and lorries start driving themselves I guess we will be able to answer the question.

Is car even going to be the right word for it?

Legislators are struggling to keep up with the pace of change around cars that drive themselves and while I will take a bit more of a look at this aspect in later blogs I thought for this one I’d try and address what might at first appear to be a relatively simple concern. What happens when someone needs to take over the control of the car from the machinery.

In most of the cars being tested currently you need a steering wheel and a qualified driver waiting to take over from the electronics should the car ‘decide’ that there is something it doesn’t like or understand.

So that’s OK then.

Unless of course you’ve been doing the crossword and aren’t actually paying attention at all. Grabbing the wheel as your car decides it no longer wants to drive is going to really tax your reflexes, situational awareness (whatever that is), nerves etc. And of course that assumes you have actually learned to drive. What happens if the driver is new to the roads and on their first trip out? Or if you’re happily debating with your partner about the direction taking as obviously, being a man, you still know better than the technology.

Perhaps as your mind is wandering through the menu of the restaurant that you’re heading to the car will bong and simply say ‘over to you, I’m out.’ Your reply is like to be something along the lines of ‘Oh ####’ or some such at just about the same time as you disappear off the road and into the tree happy in the knowledge that the IT engineers will donwload the data and make sure that this type of crash can’t happen again.

Do you want a 17 year old with all their youthfull exuberance hoping that the car will hand them control? How will you persude the software that on no account is it to allow the car to be driven manually. Even if it has to commit the equivalent of electronic suicide.

What happens if you or the 17 year old have had a drink. If you breathe heavily inside your car after a night out could there be an argument that your car is intoxicated?

There is of course a huge argument in favour of cars that drive themselves. Not the least is the reduction in accidents and injuries that occur every year. According to the august sounding body the ‘Association for Safe International Road Travel’ 1.3 million people are killed in road accidents every year and somewhere between 20 and 50 million are injured, so the benefits of cars driven by computers that don’t sleep, play on their phones or simply forget to stop at traffic lights is huge.

But there is still a huge amount to learn about how these cars, and perhaps a lot more importantly, how humans will actually work with them; and what happens when the technology does simply have an off day.

Some of you will recall the made up, but strangely prescient, discussion between Bill Gates the then CEO of Microsoft and General Motors. In 2005 Bill supposedly compared car companies to dinosaurs while GM alledgly responded along the lines of software designed cars needing to be rebooted every couple of hours for no apparent reason. It seems to me that, where we are today it is the drivers who may need rebooting while the car quietly gets on with keeping you safe.

Until it decides not to.

Categories
Self Driving Cars

It did what? 12 secrets about Autonomous vehicles

Ok that might have been a little naughty of me – just trying to grab some attention. It gets lonely out here.

Autonomous vehicles really are the flavour of the month and the pace of change is simply amazing. Every week there is a new announcement about an advance in the technology. And despite this the one announcement that we are waiting for, despite what I am pretty sure was an agreed ‘leak’ is the one from Apple confirming their entry into this market.

While on the subject of Apple (and if you’ll allow me a little diversion here {did you see what I just did}) I can confidently predict that in Hong Kong at least the new iPhone 6S will be a huge hit. And how do I know this? If you take a walk past the Apple store in Causeway Bay you’ll know why. The legion of resellers who stand outside the store selling the iPhone that they have just bought is the clue. So you can go into the store and buy a phone or pay presumably more to buy one from a street seller not 5 paces from the door to the store. The last time this happened was with the launch of the iPhone 5 and Apple themselves went on to mention that demand was extremely strong in Hong Kong. You heard it here first.

As I understand it Apple usually makes major product announcements once or twice a year so we may just have to wait for news. But if the length of lines and the resellers are anything to go by for a phone I confidently predict (here I go again) that should they develop something it will probably sell extremely well in Asia.

So Apple start here first – please….

 

 

Categories
Change People Risk Service

Why should you be talking about Driverless Cars?

Back to a theme of mine that I have blogged about before – Self Driving Cars. I am fascinated by the fact that people can see a time when you won’t need a steering wheel in a car and you’ll be able to get into a car and sit back and do anything you want. I can see a revolution coming in how people get around, work and interact with each other. With society relying so much on the car any change in how it works is going to have a profound affect.

In a small way Hanoi represents the future of the car. Last weekend found me and my family in a taxi trying to get from the airport to the hotel in the French Quarter of Hanoi. My son cheerfully described Hanoi as like Milton Keynes until we got into the center of the town which he then described as mayhem. In two years Hanoi has gone from a city that is all motorbikes to one that is being overrun with cars. And unlike bikes cars in Hanoi don’t swerve around you. And the point here is that cars being driven by computer, or robot depending on your view point, are much more likely to stop or steer round you than crash making towns and cities a much better place in the future.

Autonomous cars are coming and while there will be a long period of time before they come into their own there is one question we need to ask. Will they work?

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