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The Road to the Future (Autonomous Vehicles)
For Construction Pros ^ | March 6, 2017 | Jessica Stoikes

Posted on 03/16/2017 1:12:53 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

New research suggests that children born today will never drive a car. The auto industry's embrace of self-driving technology has been accelerating fast and those technological advances mean that by the time today's toddlers come of age, they'll likely never even have to get behind the wheel of a car, according to Henrik Christensen, the director of the University of San Diego’s Contextual Robotics Institute.

“My own prediction is that kids born today will never get to drive a car,” Christensen told the San Diego Union-Tribune in mid-December. “Autonomous, driverless cars are not 10, 15 years out. All the automotive companies—Daimler, GM, Ford—are saying that within five years they will have autonomous, driverless cars on the road.”

So what does that mean for our roads? Upgrades. And sooner rather than later.

“This transition is happening a lot quicker than we anticipated,” says Ronique Day, a government transportation analyst in Virginia, one of several states studying ways for roads and cars to communicate.

Other states across the country are following suit, installing digital signage above lanes that will aid in communication when self-driving cars become an everyday reality.

The signs are a first step toward what highway planners say is a future in which self-driving cars will travel on technology-aided roads lined with fiber optics, cameras and connected signaling devices that will help vehicles move as quickly as possible—and more safely.

Transit planners also say self-driving cars will unlock bigger benefits, including fewer accidents, faster trips and fuel savings.

While concrete and asphalt have long been the simplest solutions to easing congestion or meeting the need for extra road capacity, these technological advances have created new opportunities for addressing challenges. What that means is that we are going to have to figure out how to begin developing a smarter highway.

So far, the infrastructure behind these autonomous vehicles is lacking, having been built into just a few miles of highway in a handful of states.

How Will it be Done?

So how are states handling this? The first step will be deciding how to communicate with cars as an array of auto makers and tech companies independently have developed autonomous-driving technology. No common standard has been established for how a new generation of smartcars will receive information from smart roads—or how they will handle alerts once they get them.

Policymakers looking for blueprints on designing smart highways should look to the states that are currently piloting studies on their roadways like Virginia, California and Utah.

Utah is undertaking a test of the technology on a stretch of Salt Lake City’s Redwood Rd, a major north-south commuter route. Sensors on traffic lights connect to public buses and can adjust red and green signals to help buses stay on schedule.

But highway researchers say their biggest hurdle is ensuring they have technology that can work. CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION

Road connections to cars have mostly used dedicated short-range communications, or DSRC, a wireless link commonly used in transportation systems to manage stoplights and tolling. But researchers say the industry may settle on cellular-data systems used for smartphones or WiFi if the technology can handle information more rapidly and reliably.

Virginia has strapped one-foot-square DSRC devices on light poles and bridges on various roads, including Interstate 66 outside Washington, D.C. The gadgets watch the highway and allow workers at a central-control site to change recommended speeds lane-by-lane depending on traffic and communicate that to drivers with the signs mounted over the highway. They also send messages to state government road-maintenance vehicles about traffic flows and road conditions.

Those emergency messages will be communicated on electronic boards on many highways and would arrive through a smartphone-like app that displays alerts on drivers’ dashboards. The sensors can then monitor traffic flows and see that wheels are losing touch with the road as a rainstorm builds. The signs can lower the speed limit for the current situation and the road devices could alert cars miles away to slow down or even give them new routes to their destinations.

Planners say billions of federal dollars will likely be needed to wire the nation’s more than 4 million miles of paved roads and 250,000 intersections and with many states struggling to cover basic highway maintenance, this infrastructure seems far fetched.

Right now, it seems car manufacturers have put the cart before the horse in developing autonomous vehicles before the infrastructure to support it is ready. Still, we hope this means funding for this type of work and plenty of jobs for contractors in 2017 and beyond.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: autonomousvehicles; driverlesscars; infrastructure; postmillennials; sensors; transportation; virginia; warnings
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To: cicero2k

This will go the way of the Flying Cars idea—Just not going to happen. No Money in it.


21 posted on 03/16/2017 1:46:54 PM PDT by Forward the Light Brigade (Into the Jaws of H*ll Onward! Ride to the sound of the guns!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
"self-driving technology......So what does that mean for our roads? Upgrades. And sooner rather than later.

Self-Driving technology is just another public transportation system, not to mention another large element of governmental control over the population.
22 posted on 03/16/2017 1:49:20 PM PDT by indthkr
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

I the robot cars can pay the taxes of the unemployed truckers, bus drivers, delivery people etc.


23 posted on 03/16/2017 1:49:29 PM PDT by Sybeck1
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

How do these things work when the road is covered with snow?
Can’t see lines. Can’t see curbs. Traffic signs plastered with snow. Sensors covered with ice.


24 posted on 03/16/2017 1:50:04 PM PDT by toast
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To: Forward the Light Brigade

There’s money in control, for a bureaucrat in government or the insurance industry.


25 posted on 03/16/2017 1:50:25 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

One EMP attack away from Lord of the Flies


26 posted on 03/16/2017 1:56:45 PM PDT by Sybeck1
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To: Forward the Light Brigade

Oh no, this not only WILL happen, this IS happening. Because there’s TONS of money in it. Ask anybody whose business revolves around drivers how much the secondary cost of drivers is. Keeping them insured, having to replace them if they get any ticket any time (transit licenses are delicate things), and of course you need more of them than you use so they can get sick and go on vacation. The commercial application of self driving vehicles alone is staggering. Then in non-commercial space the fact is not everybody actually likes to drive, and as traffic gets worse they like it less. Especially those people with big commutes that are (dangerously) finishing breakfast during the drive. Yeah there’s money in it, money enough to lure dozens of companies, many not even remotely tied to the car business, to it.


27 posted on 03/16/2017 2:02:04 PM PDT by discostu (There are times when all the world's asleep, the questions run too deep, for such a simple man.)
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To: mythenjoseph

Because you aren’t the masses. And frankly Americans suck at driving and need to either be retrained or replaced en mas.


28 posted on 03/16/2017 2:06:05 PM PDT by discostu (There are times when all the world's asleep, the questions run too deep, for such a simple man.)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Will they ban “classic” cars from the roads?

I say they will not.

Not everybody can afford a new car. Or, a new “old” car.

In 50 years? Iffy, but probably not.

But insurance could make them cost prohibitive. Robot cars will be FAR safer than regular cars...and so very boring. I’m glad I won’t live to see it.


29 posted on 03/16/2017 2:17:40 PM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: mythenjoseph

It’s because vintage stuff of some types is fairly easy to support is why I am revamping a couple of old Jeeps and a K5 blazer.

The only electronics are in the ignition modules. I despise points.


30 posted on 03/16/2017 2:20:04 PM PDT by wally_bert (I didn't get where I am today by selling ice cream tasting of bookends, pumice stone & West Germany)
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To: cicero2k

“Something like eight million jobs”

Robot trucks are CERTAIN and likely will be required in 10 years.

They can operate 24hrs per day excepting fuel stops. They can also pack up in convoys of dozens and travel at a perfect 55mph.

It will substantially reduce the cost of freight and provide a safer transit.


31 posted on 03/16/2017 2:20:59 PM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: discostu

I wonder how much the ambulance chasers and the body shop lobby will fight the autonomous (more or less) car?


32 posted on 03/16/2017 2:21:24 PM PDT by wally_bert (I didn't get where I am today by selling ice cream tasting of bookends, pumice stone & West Germany)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
This whole conversation ignores a lot of obvious problems. Here's just one of them:

How can the Federal Highway Administration possibly think a "driverless car" is a safe mode of transportation when the Federal Railroad Administration is studying improved safety standards for railroads that will require locomotives to have TWO engineers in the cab instead of one?

A train has much less variation in its mobility than a car. Who really believes that requiring two operators in a train and ZERO operators in a car makes any sense?

33 posted on 03/16/2017 2:21:56 PM PDT by Alberta's Child (President Donald J. Trump ... Making America Great Again, 140 Characters at a Time)
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To: pgkdan
I don't want a self-driving car.

I do, however, want almost everyone else to have one.

LOL.

34 posted on 03/16/2017 2:23:32 PM PDT by Alberta's Child (President Donald J. Trump ... Making America Great Again, 140 Characters at a Time)
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To: RayChuang88

Actually, autonomous car operation is more likely to be found in congested cities where safety is less of a concern because travel speeds are low. I think Pittsburgh just rolled out a pilot program with fully autonomous taxi cabs in the center of the city.


35 posted on 03/16/2017 2:26:47 PM PDT by Alberta's Child (President Donald J. Trump ... Making America Great Again, 140 Characters at a Time)
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To: Alberta's Child

Just center city or up into the surrounding hills? I’ve often thought those hills would be a very scary prospect in an ice or snow storm. Steep, San Francisco level steep.


36 posted on 03/16/2017 2:28:39 PM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: Alberta's Child

Cabs/Uber and long-haul trucks will be first.


37 posted on 03/16/2017 2:29:47 PM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

If the road has to be made into a ‘smart road’, it isn’t really a ‘self driving car’ at all.

I guarantee that kids born today...and kids born 20 years from now...will still drive cars.


38 posted on 03/16/2017 2:35:44 PM PDT by lacrew
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To: 2001convSVT

then you will be driving on the back roads, because it wont be long until ONLY self driving cars are allowed on the interstate.

They work best when all the other cars are also self driving around them.


39 posted on 03/16/2017 2:35:53 PM PDT by TexasFreeper2009 (Make America Great Again !)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Instead of gridlock it will be computer deadlock.

And what about viruses that cause the cars stuck in traffic to turn into a demolition derby. The cars probably all have to be connected to a network which makes them vulnerable.

Probably some prankster kid would do something like that.


40 posted on 03/16/2017 2:39:38 PM PDT by dhs12345
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