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WHATS NEXT
Many drivers might be willing to give up their autonomy if it meant never being stuck in traffic.
hours of travel delays and 2.81 billion gallons of wasted hiel in America every year. If the network proceeds as planned, in 2013 the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration may promote consumer ji inption by requiring cars to offer a wireless system to earn its coveted five-star safety rating. The ITS's magical network, fully realized, will hinge on the valuable 5.9-gigahertz bandwidth set iiside by the Federal Communications Commission for --hort-range communications. This special channel will let cars securely "talk" to each other to cooperate and avoid crashes; trigger airbags and other safety systems before a crash occurs; "platoon" in close quarters on highways to ease congestion, pollution and driver stress; and eventually take over more and more of the .11 lual driving. Connect it all with the GPS,by-wire systems and sensors already in cars, and the result will be machines that broadcast their position, speed, vehicle weight and other crilica! data at least lo times per second. In effect, cars will become traveling probes, delivering real-time traffic, weather and accident data even on sparsely traveled roads. "Every car sends out a heartbeat," says Mike Shulman, a technical leader of Ford s "active safety" research team. "Collect all that data, and if there's any conflict, you warn the driver or take control." Naturally, this networked landscape has companies licking their chops over the possibilities for locationspecific advertising or high-speed tolling. Security is another issue: If you think hackers are dangerous now, imagine them sending out false messages or otherwise compromising a system that controls swarms of twoton vehicles. Automakers are devising and testirag complex authentication and encryption schemes to make the system as impenetrable as possible. Privacy looms large as well. The system could potentially be used to track drivers' whereabouts and enforce traffic laws. Ultimately the government might well argue to ban speeding altogether, with Big Brother controlling cars like pawns on a chessboard. (General Motors's wireless OnStar system already lets police remotely track and shut down a stolen car.) Yet many drivers might be willing to give up their autonomy in certain situationsfor example, if it meant getting to work on time instead of being stuck in traffic. ERL's Huhnke points out that in a poll, 70 percent of drivers rated their abilities as "above average." Ten minutes behind the wheel in any city is enough to prove how wrong they are. Who wouldn't want some of those crazies, lazies and cellphone chatterers to be rendered obsolete, replaced by a hypervigilant robo-car programmed to follow the niles and safeguard the life of any human it encounters?
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iM STICKY LANES
New satellites wilt allow cars to pinpoint their position within an inch. That "lanespecific" tevel of accuracy can help cars "snap to" a digitally mapped lane tike a slot car on a track when a driver daydreams or falls asleep, even on the snow-covered or poorly marked roads that confuse today's lane-departure cameras.
SMART INTERSECTIONS
You'll never see the drunk driver that's about to run the red light. But a smart intersection could save your life. Twenty percent of all crash fatalities and 40 percent of accidents occur at intersections. Smart intersections will communicate with cars, beaming them visual and audio collision warnings, and even taking direct action to slow or stop vehicles and prevent offenders from running red lights entirety.
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