Monday, July 20, 2015

The City With No People

Researchers have constructed some form of city or town but there are no people in it because the only purpose of the place is to test driverless cars.  That sounds like an impressive commitment of resources and intellectual talent but none of it will deliver anything much different than what you would get from this:


A car doesn't do anything all that different today than it did with a Model A Ford but the sound systems are much better and air conditioning is nice.

The unusual thing is there is tremendous research going into extending century-old technology rather than looking for something truly novel and finding a better way to do it.  The tremendous amount of money being spent on research isn't so much indicative of any pressing need for electric cars except in the general ecological sense of reducing emissions.  The electric cars are expensive, slow, and uncomfortable.  Anyone wanting that can get it more easily by joining the Navy and getting a job on a submarine.

That so much money is being spent looks more like an antiquated system trying to use technology to keep itself alive even though it's highly likely better systems could replace it if given matching research dollars, etc to get it done.

The first problem they are trying to solve is humans often need to get from Point A to Point B.  The second problem they are not trying to solve is humans don't want cars.

(Ed:  evidence?)

In Germany, there are outfits which are essentially providers for co-op cars and the same car may be 'owned' by twenty people.  They use a car infrequently and this meets their needs.  This type of arrangement is not at all unusual.


An example of predatory engineering from previous times is from how automobile manufacturers worked assiduously and undermined as they could any effort to build subway systems in American cities.  That skullduggery is part of the same ridiculous effort toward driverless cars now because it created the need for more cars than were really necessary by artificially manipulating those needs.


A car spends most of its time in the driveway where it continually loses money through depreciation and it only lives when you use it and spend yet more money.  The problem to solve is that it sucks when that car isn't there.  The problem no-one addresses is why it sucks when it isn't there.

Mostly people need first to get to a market and we want that car because we don't want to carry back heavy bags of groceries.  However, if the car can drive itself then why go to the market at all.  Send the car down there and the market people can put the stuff in there.  Or the market could deliver your order with their own vehicle just as they do now with services such as Peapod and others around the world.  So the market isn't looking like that much of a reason for a car.


The technology just isn't that impressive when it only extends a problem rather than really addressing it.  There isn't any particular ecological benefit in self-driving electric cars because the things have hideously-poisonous batteries and building hundreds of millions of copies of anything is ludicrous in the context of ecological discussion anyway.


Often hipsters talk of 'wearables' lately as if it's some huge feat to have a computer monitor your heart rate or do some other zippy trick to impress your friends.

I want a wearable that flies.  I'll throw on my wearable, flying, eminently-fashionable jacket and, through the amazing power of modern technology, fly off to wherever I want to go.  To hell with owning a car as that's a lot of stuff I don't need which frequently breaks and costs a lot of money to fix.  With my wearable, flying, eminently-fashionable jacket, I only have to get it dry-cleaned once in a while.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Toyota Mirai hydrogen powered
JetPack Intl. $150k
TAM $250k

Unknown said...

Those technologies are cool and if it has to be cars then those hydrogen vehicles are likely the cleanest way to do it. (Seems I heard of some type of methane refueling explosion the other day. Unclear what it was.)

The rocket packs are great for James Bond but what a huge commotion for zipping down to the market. I'm thinking more like my convenient anti-grav wearable. Of course I control it by thinking because I have an implanted microchip in my head and that gives me WiFi. It didn't require surgery as it was put there by a nanobot that got into my body by drinking a milkshake.

I want to see more nutjob research. Anything cool in sci-fi always came from some crackpot nutjob so these guys need some funding.

Anonymous said...

I dont have a link for the group working on magnetic floor and hoverboard

Unknown said...

There are some cool Segway-ish devices for rolling about and those are novel for a five-mile radius but not so good for speed. Even the jetpacks aren't that fast as you need to hit 500 mph or so to get anywhere near commercial speed and that would be great except for ripping the skin right off your face. Expecting a personal force field along with my personal anti-grav machine is a bit much so my wearable flying jacket but need some more thinking. There's also the problem of what happens when flying people smash into each other. Messy. Extremely messy.

Kannafoot said...

"The second problem they are not trying to solve is humans don't want cars."

I can't speak for the rest of the globe, but Americans definitely DO want cars. What we drive says as much about us as our jobs, our clothes, or our hobbies. I don't know if Europe ever developed the love affair Americans have with cars, but it's definitely alive and well here.

Unknown said...

I'm not at all convinced I would get the same response from committed city dwellers, particularly in THE city. I doubt you'll get much car love from people who live with the problems of traffic systems which don't come even close to working. The show that never sleeps is also the town that invented gridlock (cough).

Anonymous said...

Tell the west coast city dwellers about not wanting cars. And they invented road rage.
As usual Kannafoot is correct. Car love is alive and well in America and across the pond including Germany that has given us
Porsche Mercedes Audi BMW
I know my driveway is full of love And it is expecting again

Unknown said...

Gents, ever since Harley started making an electric motorcycle, the love of internal combustion has faded from an opera to a Leslie Gore song. I love internal combustion as well but it's still more obsolete than a Dodo bird listening to Elvis on an eight-track tape. Let's see some of that visionary stuff. Do you think people will still love cars a hundred years from now?? Frankly, gents, I don't think you will even be able to find one in a hundred years.

Unknown said...

P.S. we don't care about the West coast as it will be underwater. The East coast is the only one that matters, except for their nasty habit of clam eating, and they love cars like horses love biting flies.