Re: Robotic Achievement
About 10 years ago now, a proto-version of what would become killer bees was released in the wild. At the time, there were several unsecured zigbee protocols running all sorts of major infrastructure (especially energy infrastructure) in the state. Even if all that the network was doing was sending data around, you could conceivably (and trivially) cause catastrophic failure by feeding the sensors readings that automated systems would react to.
You'd think security would rate in these scenarios, but it turns out in bigger industrial applications there more often than not would be more unsecured data flying everywhere and less security than retail/residential applications that use bluetooth, as there's simply a greater focus on the bottom line. So with little more than a low-power laptop and a few parts you could buy at Radio Shack then, or a $50 netbook and a Raspberry Pi now, you could conceivably open dam gates during floods or shut down, overload (or worse) natural gas plants.
Thankfully, most of that stuff has been caught up with and hardened some by now. But for a while, forget traffic choke points, imagine being able to cause a blackout and a massive explosion in a city during a flood downtown with a free download and $200 or less of equipment you could use remotely from your car...
Don't get me wrong...I'm no technophobe...but I also know that more problems can be created by this nonsense than solved a lot of times.
I mean, think of what you would do if you had congestion in a city and self-driving cars were not an option?
Well, you'd have to do a few things:
1. Build out mass transit, add streetcars and busses and subways and walkways and walk bridges.
2. Add lanes to highways and roads and build tunnels and bridges.
3. Add middle and low income housing directly in the city (increase density) to reduce commute times. Do not build exclusively luxury units.
We know this stuff works. Chicago opened the L in 1892. Boston installed a subway in 1897. New York did in 1904. Philly got there in 1907. Then nothing for 60 years. San Francisco gets one in 1964. DC (and Baltimore via Green Line) gets one in 1976. Los Angeles doesn't get one until 1993. San Juan just got one in 2004. I think that's it in the United States.
You know what the problem is? That's 8 cities, and 2 of them barely count. Brazil or France have that many. The US should have more. Of the top 20 cities in the US by population, do you know how many simply have no subway? 15. Houston, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego, Dallas, San Jose, Austin, Jacksonville, Indianapolis, Columbus, Fort Worth, Charlotte, Seattle, Denver and El Paso. Sometimes there's geographical reasons for this. Sometimes, it's because the population density is rather low even though they are so populous (spread out). But that's something we also know how to fix. It's ridiculous that it's 2016 and there is no subway line in the South at all and only 2 west of the Mississippi. That's where everyone lives now.
But instead of the obvious solution, we're going to look for the private one. And of course, autonomous cars are and will be too expensive for the everyman, who still doesn't want to cough up the dough for leather seats. But the only way to really get the traffic efficiency out of them is to ban human drivers. Which means punish those who can't/don't want to pay for a massive LIDAR/GPS/Tracking system on their automobile 24/7.
Seems to me the simpler solution is to just go, "Jeez, in 1966 there were only 250,000 people in San Jose. Today 50 years later, there's over a million. Maybe we better act like a big city and put in some big-boy infrastructure..." But instead it's a hail mary pass to self-driving car networks...
I guess because nobody ever became a billionaire off building subways...or maybe we're just easily bored and distracted by new and shiny things.
Originally posted by lakedaemonian
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You'd think security would rate in these scenarios, but it turns out in bigger industrial applications there more often than not would be more unsecured data flying everywhere and less security than retail/residential applications that use bluetooth, as there's simply a greater focus on the bottom line. So with little more than a low-power laptop and a few parts you could buy at Radio Shack then, or a $50 netbook and a Raspberry Pi now, you could conceivably open dam gates during floods or shut down, overload (or worse) natural gas plants.
Thankfully, most of that stuff has been caught up with and hardened some by now. But for a while, forget traffic choke points, imagine being able to cause a blackout and a massive explosion in a city during a flood downtown with a free download and $200 or less of equipment you could use remotely from your car...
Don't get me wrong...I'm no technophobe...but I also know that more problems can be created by this nonsense than solved a lot of times.
I mean, think of what you would do if you had congestion in a city and self-driving cars were not an option?
Well, you'd have to do a few things:
1. Build out mass transit, add streetcars and busses and subways and walkways and walk bridges.
2. Add lanes to highways and roads and build tunnels and bridges.
3. Add middle and low income housing directly in the city (increase density) to reduce commute times. Do not build exclusively luxury units.
We know this stuff works. Chicago opened the L in 1892. Boston installed a subway in 1897. New York did in 1904. Philly got there in 1907. Then nothing for 60 years. San Francisco gets one in 1964. DC (and Baltimore via Green Line) gets one in 1976. Los Angeles doesn't get one until 1993. San Juan just got one in 2004. I think that's it in the United States.
You know what the problem is? That's 8 cities, and 2 of them barely count. Brazil or France have that many. The US should have more. Of the top 20 cities in the US by population, do you know how many simply have no subway? 15. Houston, Phoenix, San Antonio, San Diego, Dallas, San Jose, Austin, Jacksonville, Indianapolis, Columbus, Fort Worth, Charlotte, Seattle, Denver and El Paso. Sometimes there's geographical reasons for this. Sometimes, it's because the population density is rather low even though they are so populous (spread out). But that's something we also know how to fix. It's ridiculous that it's 2016 and there is no subway line in the South at all and only 2 west of the Mississippi. That's where everyone lives now.
But instead of the obvious solution, we're going to look for the private one. And of course, autonomous cars are and will be too expensive for the everyman, who still doesn't want to cough up the dough for leather seats. But the only way to really get the traffic efficiency out of them is to ban human drivers. Which means punish those who can't/don't want to pay for a massive LIDAR/GPS/Tracking system on their automobile 24/7.
Seems to me the simpler solution is to just go, "Jeez, in 1966 there were only 250,000 people in San Jose. Today 50 years later, there's over a million. Maybe we better act like a big city and put in some big-boy infrastructure..." But instead it's a hail mary pass to self-driving car networks...
I guess because nobody ever became a billionaire off building subways...or maybe we're just easily bored and distracted by new and shiny things.
Originally posted by HP Lovecraft
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