I know I posted about this yesterday, but this article does a much better job than I can.

  • PizzaMan@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    If I were designing it, it wouldn’t be instantaneous. It would ramp down. So it wouldn’t be much different than your engine giving out on you, which roads are already designed to handle.

    • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Except when the road is a shoulderless corridor, and now you’re blocking up traffic. Worse still if it’s caused by faulty sensors and not by the driver.

      • PizzaMan@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        I would rather have traffic slightly blocked up than a drunk driver kill people.

        And as for the sensor thing, it’s not that big of an issue. Trains have 3 speed sensors. If one fails, you get a warning. In a car system such as this, the check engine light should turn on until the problem is resolved. If a 2nd/3rd goes out, then the car shouldn’t start, but it will allow you to finish an existing trip.

        If I were the engineer on this project, that’s how I would start, I’d literally rip off how train safety systems work and tweak it to make sense on the road.

        • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          I was watching dashcam / accident videos and I’d seen one where a car got disabled in the middle of a highway underpass, which was a blind crest. Car after car after car would enter the underpass, unknowing of the disabled car there, and make emergency maneuvers, barely missing the car every time (and some didn’t). Several vehicles crashed at full highway speed into either side of the underpass trying to avoid the disabled car.

          That doesn’t sound like safety to me.

          As for trains, remember that trains only need to keep track of one axis of motion, the forward axis, as the train is not going to be maneuvering, as that would cause it to derail if it even could. Maximum speeds are a known factor on the line, and accurate timing is important to coordinate multiple trains on a line. Cars aren’t trains, and the requirements are a lot less predictable.

          Will the software know the difference between winter weather and drunk driving?

          Will the software know the difference between a windy mountain road and drunk driving? How about drunk driving on a windy mountain winter road?

          How about fix the problem of drunk driving being so prevalent, instead of adding additional points of failure to an already overly expensive vehicle?

          • PizzaMan@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            That doesn’t sound like safety to me.

            Sounds to me like the real issue there was the design of the road being such that it didn’t have visibility.

            As for trains, remember that trains only need to keep track of one axis of motion

            Technically that’s not true, they keep track of way more than that. But I understand what you’re getting at, and it doesn’t quite hit what I’m getting at.

            I’m saying we have a pretty good idea of what goes into a safety system on incredibly dangerous vehicles (trains), and some of it can be transferred to another set of incredibly dangerous vehicles (cars).

            Will the software know the difference between winter weather and drunk driving?

            If you’re swerving like you’re drunk in winter weather, are you really arguing that you should be allowed to keep driving? If you’re swerving at high speed in winter weather, you’re already doing something wrong and going to get somebody killed.