I have strange obsessions, I know. My obsession with vehicle traffic and intelligent traffic systems is only outdone by my obsession with intelligent vehicles. I'm one of those people who thinks driving is an enormous waste of time, especially time stuck in traffic. I would rather be able to program my vehicle with a destination, and then let it take me there, quickly and safely. Will it happen in my life time? It will if I have anything to say about it.
11 finalists to hit the streets in DARPA's $2M Urban Challenge
"The teams that competed in the [National Qualification Event] were
subjected to a series of rigorous tests to determine whether they were
equipped to compete in the Urban Challenge final event," said DARPA
Director Tony Tether in a written statement. "The NQE tested the
vehicles capability to merge into traffic, navigate four-way
intersections, respond to blocked roads, pass on-coming cars on narrow
roads and keeping up with traffic on two- and four-lane roads. In fact,
the only major difference between the NQE and the final event is that
other robotic vehicles will be part of the traffic in the final event."
The vehicles must accurately navigate a complicated course without
human assistance. No one is in the car to turn the wheel, apply the
brakes or figure out which way to go. The automobile must work its own
way through the course, navigate around about 50 human-driven vehicles
and do it within six hours.
Hows that for advancing the technology? It was only a few years ago that the DARPA contest was simply navigating pylons and other small obstacles. The vehicles in this years DARPA challenge can literally "see" the traffic around it. Check out some video.
Now if we could tie all these vehicle locations into a grid, we could get them to act in synch with one another, and the traffic system. Cars on the grid would know the traffic system, and would be able to navigate congested areas, and even predict road signal changes.
What this boils down to of course is a safer highway system, and cars that allow the drivers to do something else with their time, rather than stare at traffic.