In the book Red Thunder (highly recommended), the highways are under the control of some computer system. You approach a highway, get into some merge lane, and then a freeway computer takes control of your car, disconnecting the steering and foot controls and drives you along. When you want to get off, you signal, the computer moves you to an off ramp, and then releases control. It's efficient, with the computer putting cars bumper to bumper, with a few inches between them since everything is under control.
It sounds great to me, but I'm not sure we'll ever want to completely put our transport under so much computer control. However people are trying, with automated subways and trains, but many of these still have an operator. There are quite a few projects looking at bringing this type of control to cars, though I'm not sure if we'll ever get approval for something like this without some type of closed track that only allows automated cars.
Think about all the issues you see in computer software, even supposedly well-written software. There are always bugs and unexpected code paths or even demands being made of the software. There's also not enough testing to convince many people that we can really write extremely high quality, complex software that can handle something like traffic maneuvers.
Then there's the security. Whether it's a central system that controls flow on a road or a distributed system in each vehicle, can you imagine the possible consequences if there were some security breach? What if someone finds a way to do some sort of SQL-Injection like attack, such as the one I show above?
As much as I'd like to be able to ride in my own car, but have it handle the driving chores sometimes, I'm not sure our technology is anywhere close to the level it would need to be for me to trust it.
Steve Jones
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