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Science fiction writer Sir Arthur Clarke, in the mid 70s, predicted that we'd have self-driving cars - in the 2200s. And only on major highways. They'd still be under manual control on secondary roads and in urban areas. The "self-driving" part isn't the problem. It's everything else that the car can't control. The biggest issue facing autonomous vehicles on public streets is avoiding humans. They HAVE to be programmed not to hit a human - period. So what's to keep the humans from standing on the curb, until a car comes along, then stepping out just to watch it stop? Not only would the car never make any progress, but the computer would probably have a nervous breakdown. And there's no law, or any practical way to enforce one, against teasing a computer.
I've weighed in on this before, but I'll say it again: Our freight trains are already capable of running themselves, and quite well. Any train, any length, any configuration, any territory. I see it hands-on every day. I have a 300 mile run across sawtooth profile, 1% grades, speed-restricted curves. GE's "Trip Optimizer" can run it. I'm REQUIRED to let it run the train, when it's working. There will be advancements in software and hardware, and it will keep getting better. Give it full control of the air brakes and it will be all but over...It's just a matter of time. Call me pessimistic about the future of the profession.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
I mean this is the argument I see all the time. "But what stops me from just taking it/robbing it/etc." And my response is always the same, does it realistically change what was happening with humans instead? I doubt there will be a sudden uptick in desperate junkies committing massive felonies because its no longer a person at the wheel. Add on to the fact that I see it in my job semi frequently, people steal smart security equipment/rob robo couriers. But it seems they get caught way more easily because surprisingly, the thing covered in cameras constantly updating to the cloud, with a gps tracker is able to both ID exactly who stole, and if they took the whole thing, the second they plug it in it broadcasts their location for all to see. That was an awkward meeting at my co-workers firing.
The problem with the computer having to be programmed to not hit a human is that it is the carjacker's dream to be able to step in front of a car, point a gun at the person inside and NOT GET RUN DOWN.
... Just recently USA experienced such actions (the oil pipeline was out of commission for some time)...
The train does't need to 'look down the tracks' and predict to stop, it just needs to blow the horn.. If it thinks it hit something, then it needs to stop.. (areas prone to rock slides, mud slides, are special situations.. )Crossings shouldn't be an issue, you just need to teach it to read whistle posts and put up signs.. or hell, just do it with GPS.
That mess was somewhat misprepresented. The pipeline itself was NOT affected. The company's financial systems were by hithackers/ransomware, and that caused the company to shut them down, and that meant that they couldn't bill customers for transport. So -- they shutdown the pipeline rather than miss out on revenue.