EU Approves Anti-Collision Automobile Radar 83
Oscar writes "The European Union has approved frequencies for short-range radars that can detect collision dangers and automatically apply cars brakes.
The technology should be available by mid-2005.
'Short-range radar can save lives,' said Viviane Reding, the EU commissioner responsible for the decision, which opens radio bands while preventing radio interference to other essential users of these frequencies. Full text of the legislation is available in English, French, and German in PDF format."
This is how it starts (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This is how it starts (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This is how it starts (Score:2, Insightful)
Will the cops be able to use it? (Score:2)
(Having never seen Minority Report, this might be redundant.)
I wonder if cops will be able to use this (after it becomes widespread, naturally) to stop criminals? There are two ways I could see this being used. First, like Lo-Jack, perhaps stolen cars could be stopped after it has been realized that they are definitely stolen. Secondly, crooks who are speeding away (or slowly driving away - see also white Bronco) could be stopped without causing excessive danger to other drivers (cf current police chases)
Re:Will the cops be able to use it? (Score:1)
Re:This is how it starts (Score:2)
Re:This is how it starts (Score:1)
Re:This is how it starts (Score:2)
I doubt it. Driverless subway trains [railfan.net] have been around for 70 years. Yet the vast majority of the world's subway trains are not controlled by AI. Despite:
Control can be centralized easily
You have a far simpler 'road network' to control
You have full knowledge of the location and destination of every train at any given moment
The 'freedom' of the trains ar
Re:This is how it starts (Score:2)
backup radar (Score:2, Funny)
Warning: I brake for BSODs! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Warning: I brake for BSODs! (Score:1)
women of the world rejoice (Score:3, Interesting)
Though to be fair the last study I heard showed that women were more likely to have a shunt in a car park, where said radar might prove useful. Wereas men were more likely to lose control and hit a tree. Radar less useful there.
CJC
Re:women of the world rejoice (Score:2)
That's all well and good (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:That's all well and good (Score:2)
(Playing devil's advocate)
Re:That's all well and good (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's all well and good (Score:2)
Like men's ego's follow that rule "But I'm a great driver"
like braking on a sharp turn because it sees a tree
another reason not to let machines drive
Re:That's all well and good (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Yes it does (Score:2)
If you are right up against the car in front you don't have that extra time to give the driver behind you and so then he does hit your car. Not your fault, but small comfort when you still couldhave avoided it.
Sam
Re:That's all well and good (Score:1)
Actually, driving behind commercial trucks (also known as 18-wheelers) is a pretty good idea. They are about 3 car lengths, so that eliminates the 3 cars ahead. The truck drivers tend to see the road better, plus that's what they do for a living and they have CB's, so if there is anything up the road or an asshole in front of them, they'll always leave enough distance between themselves and whatever is in front to safely br
Take a closer look (Score:2)
If a motorist uses the system's new type of cruise control and does not see vehicles ahead slowing or stopped, the
Re:That's all well and good (Score:2, Interesting)
The same thing that happens now. If I'm driving and you're riding my a$$ and I stop suddenly, you better stop before you hit me. If not, you're at fault, you're going to pay the insurance premiums, you're going to pay the fines, etc. I can't believe you got modded insightful for this.
Too many people today drive as if they are more important than everyone else on the road. They tailgate while waiting to pass, they cut off traffic because they stayed in the left lane (North America) too long and have to c
Re:That's all well and good (Score:2)
Re:That's all well and good (Score:2, Interesting)
The idea behind the technology is that the computer knows that most the time the car infront of you stops it's not necessary to *slam* on your breaks. It knows immediately how slowly you can break so as to keep your driving smooth but also slow down fast enough.
Bottom line, this technology would cut down on sharp breaks.
Re:That's all well and good (Score:1)
It could also reduce freeway congestions if its use becomes widespread. I know there's a physical limit of how many cars can actually fit on a freeway, however in my experience, most of the congestion on the freeways is usually waves of braking at places where freeways merge or at popular exits (one car brakes hard because someone cuts over, then the car behind brakes, then this propagates back for a long distance).
Then again, a more practica
I'd like to see that in the US (Score:3, Interesting)
Along with the integration of a cattleprod in the driver's seat, of course.
However, since they auto industry doesn't employ BAEFHs (bastard automotive engineers from hell), a simple "Warning - tailgating" or a beeper would be acceptable.
Re:I'd like to see that in the US (Score:2)
Many times, slowing down doesn't work either. I've had cases where I was in the right lane, there are two completely empty lanes next to me that someone could use to pass, but they insist on tailgating me. So I slow down, and they still tailgate me. I come to a complete stop,
Re:I'd like to see that in the US (Score:1)
iRobot (Score:2)
Also I did like what appeared to be the drive system of the cars to be large balls that could move in any direction powered by magnets levitating the car off them and moving them around.
Re:iRobot (Score:1)
The large balls were eyecandy. The power generators needed to magnetically levitate a car (around 1 metric ton) cannot be fitted even in a truck and no breakthrough is in sight.
Haxorization (Score:2)
Not so fun... (Score:4, Interesting)
Apply copiously to a stream of traffic to find the few cars that automatically brake.
Watch the cars behind them plow into them.
Profit! (If you're a body shop or tow truck)
Of course, the signalling is going to be sufficiently difficult that you have to aim it at the car you intend to fool and send a special signal specifically designed to affect just the one car. If the system sees a car 50 feet ahead, then one a few inches ahead it'll probably ignore it is a spurious signal if the changre happens 'instantaneously'. If it sees a car move into its lane from the side the signal would be different, and if the car in front slowed quickly the signal would also be different.
Still, I can't wait for people to start complaining about accidents that happened because they thought the car would stop, or rear end collision because the car did stop. There's so much liability that car makers are about 15 years behind where we could be.
-Adam
Re:Not so fun... (Score:2)
Re:Not so fun... (Score:2)
But only a few that can be done from a distance with no witnesses and absolutely no trace of the crime after you turn off your transmitter.
-Adam
Re:Not so fun... (Score:2)
Which is probably why this is happening in Europe, where people are less litigious.
(See the NYT story "Three things your automobile can't do [nytimes.com], which adresses this issue)
You would hope that since Americans love their cars so much it'd inspire some tort
Re:Not so fun... (Score:2)
Americans love their cars, but it's not because of any technology. They love big, loud, gas-guzzling engines, and lately they love big, ugly trucks to put them in. Americans don't care about driving being easier, safer, or more convenient, or even about going faster. They just want to be noticed.
Notice how popular Harley motorcycle
Re:Not so fun... (Score:1)
Re:Not so fun... (Score:2)
This is a disaster in the making (Score:2, Insightful)
I wonder where the "acceptable" distance from the car in front will come from? Acceptable for whom? A distance that a young adult can stomach and handle is far outside the scope of your average geriatric. So will we force young people to feel like they're
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
The brakes only cut in if you're using cruise control. If you're using cruise control, hopefully you're in a pretty safe environment already.
Current cruise controls disengage if you touch the brake. The radar kind could also disengage if you hit the gas.
The "acceptable" distance will probably come from physics - you need x amount of space to brake at y mph, plus a little more for reaction time.
Finally, if you absolutely hate this idea anyways, you can always NOT USE IT. It is OPTIONAL.
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:1)
When are you not hitting the gas during freeway driving? You constantly switch between braking and accelerating. Radar braking during the former is redundant; during the latter, DOA (if accelerating is supposed to stop the braking).
> The "acceptable" distance will probably come from physics - you need x amount of space to brake at y mph, plus a little more for reaction time.
No offense, but is that how you drive? Binary? Either gun it or sla
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
When are you not hitting the gas during freeway driving? You constantly switch between braking and accelerating. Radar braking during the former is redundant; during the latter, DOA (if accelerating is supposed to stop the braking).
When I'm using cruise control, my foot is not on the gas - that's kind of the whole point, it maintains speed for me. Using the new radar cruise control, my foot would not be on the gas either. In regular cruise co
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:1)
See below.
> Let's say you need 1 ft to stop for every mph you're going (50 mph needs 50 feet, 60 mph needs 60 feet)
The use of the word 'need' here implies a minimum braking distance which implies a maximum braking force. Which is, not coincidentally, my point: your solution above means that the distance to which it is set can only be meaningful by slamming on the brakes. Since this is not the best idea, it would likely need m
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
As a matter of fact, I've been in several actual accidents. :)
If there's a car in front of you at 55, and you're going 80, the car would obvioulsy NOT just run up at 80 until it had to slam on its brakes to drop to 55. It would go 80 until it was no longer safe, then drop to 79, then to 78, t
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:1)
If you enjoy having a motherboard drive for you, cool. I couldn't imagine trusting some dumbass engineer's handiwork with my life on the L.A. freeways, but...
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
I believe your original question was who decides the acceptable distance. My answer was that has to be a minimum from physics, but they could indeed make it larger. So the answer is that the car company's engineers would decide - actually have already decided, since radar cc is already available - the acceptable distance.
If you enjoy having a motherboard drive for you, cool. I couldn't imagine tr
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
If you apply the brakes and someone hits you, it's their fault. Don't drive agressively, your life and others' aren't worth it.
That's what I love about cars that will drive themselves: they'll communicate conditions, and drive safely and efficiently. And I would imagine they'd have coupling devices like trains, so they could conserve fuel. Commuting in cars is going to be just like the train (read/sleep/etc.), except that it'll be when I want
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:1)
Lovely ideas, really. But I'd love to hear on what basis you make such lofty predictions.
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:2)
Re:This is a disaster in the making (Score:1)
And this has what to do with the price of tea in China?
Road surface conditions, context (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Road surface conditions, context (Score:1)
You know... (Score:1)
This is like putting the cart before the horse.
Honestly, 90% of the problems on the roads are not due to us not having enough techology in our vehicles. Alot of it is due to incompetent drivers.
If people on the road started to pay attention to how they were driving, and drive within the bounds of caution, we wouldn't need all this fancy technology to protect us.
Consider how many people get into collisions because they are busy chatting away on a cell phone, and are not paying any attention at all to
Re:You know... (Score:1)
BTW, i just want to make sure you don't think I am trying to give a holier that thou speech. I've rolled stop signs, I consistently drive over the limit etc. However, I pay attention to my driving, and I believe that makes my driving alot safer than someone who stay well within the law, and doesn't pay any attention at all to what they're doing!
Re:You know... (Score:2)
Re:You know... (Score:2)
You're kidding, right? Why would governments ever want to raise speed limits? To do so would only reduce the amount of revenue they get from tickets.
The timing of stop lights is already tuned to maximize the number of people running red lights, at intersections with red-light cameras. Any other changes governments make to traffic laws will have the same goal.
Remeber Ohio... (Score:2, Interesting)
In Ohio, they had alot of troubles with ABS. What happened was that the state troopers got a new radio system. There was a small problem however. Whenever a trooper used a radio beside a newer Caddilac with ABS, the Caddy would start braking hard randomly as the driver was driving.
When they eventually started looking into this, it turned out that the state trooper radio was tuned to the same frequency as that used to control the Caddilac ABS, therefore ca
Re:Remeber Ohio... (Score:2)
From pages 10,11 of a NASA report [nasa.gov] on Electronic System Failures caused by Electromagnetic Interference. The cases related here are with aircraft and Mercedes automobiles.
From another site [antony-anderson.com] that summarizes the above document:
this could also be quite dangerous (Score:1)
imagine you're crusing down the street at 70km/h [44mph] and you drop your twinkie [or any other food or beverage you may happen to be consuming] onto the floor. naturally, you reach down to pick up the fallen foods, and imagine your breaks are automatically applied, bringing your head right into your steering wheel, causing an enourmous gash on your forehead, and you start bleeding uncontrollably and grip the steering wheel, and you swerve trying
Re:this could also be quite dangerous (Score:1)
Secondly, read up on how these systems actually work. It seems they only truly apply automatic breaking when cruise control is on, otherwise they just flash a warning indicating that you may need to break, and even with cruise control on, it seems that the cars have
Big Problem. (Score:2)
Avoiding a car or avoiding an extreme thunderstorm. Hmmm. Tough choice.
Citizen's arrest, anyone? (Score:1)
Would this person be able to stop my wife's car entirely by simply getting in front of them and coming to a complete stop? If so, the implications of this are horrifying. (Sorry for the frightening scenario, but it could conceivably happen)
Re:Citizen's arrest, anyone? (Score:2)
What about speed-trap detectors? (Score:1)
Will this make such radar-detecting devices useless, by giving too many false positives?
PS. No, I don't own one, I'm just curious.