He talked a little about the Google driverless car but lots of other very interesting material as well. I think it can be seen at the CR website - takes about an hour. He said the traffic in the Silicon Valley is worse now than in Manhattan, where he was today. Google is starting up an office in Manhattan that will be home for some research people from Cornell and the Technion in Israel.
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Jerry
My son who works for Google is in New York right now and his hike from the hotel to the Google site is 20 minutes. He tried his California shoes the first two days and wore blisters in his feet so now he has dressed down to tennis shoes in a city where they all dress up compared to the other coast. Having a walking perspective of the traffic flow in that part of NY is different way of looking at this problem. I assume there is not a subway to hop on if he is hiking 20 full minutes in that part of New York. I guess the subway is only for some subset of the city.
I would love to build a 180 mph guideway between the new Google New York office and reasonably priced apartments. My son said one of his co-workers who is there pays $3,000 a month for his little apartment and walks further than his hotel at 20 minutes. I paid $9,000 for my first mansion just out of school. (in a federal target area in south central Fort Worth)
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From: Kirston Henderson <kirston....@megarail.com>
To: transport-...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 12:48:20 AM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
On May 23, 2012, at 11:06 AM, Jerry Schneider wrote:
> Judging by the way he perked up when asked about the Google car, I think that Larry Page has been a driving force behind the development effort. Perhaps it would help if KH would spend some time getting acquainted with LP and the way he thinks.
I presume that I am the KH that you refer to. If so, I doubt it because we obviously live in different worlds. (We may not even speak the same language.) I have enough trouble with mid-western English. I may not have worked for the great Googe, but I have a lot of years experience developing advanced systems using computers, including the means that modern, distributed computers communicate and are programmed.
I also am beginning to accumulate a significant amount of experience in developing guideway-based vehicles wherein the computing requirements are relatively modest but by the time that you develop systems with the essential levels of automated self-testing and failure tolerance to make them safe for human use, you find a lot of hurdles working with only a single dimension wherein you have near absolute control over the operating environment. If you add all of the other dimensions and multitude of environmental factors, the problem becomes impractical to solve. Not only that, if you manage to do it, just how much have you contributed to solving the problems of congestion and air pollution caused by the current set of automobiles and big trucks?
Kirston Henderson
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Any more considerations? Why would your choice be best?
Dick
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From: Jerry Schneider <j...@peak.org>
To: transport-...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 7:02:25 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
>>>> Well, it has been at least 40 years since some reasonable PRT concepts were defined Since then there have been alternative designs, and some minimal levels of cussing and discussing. Widespread visibility and public interest levels are still dismal.
Autonomous vehicles are relatively new on the scene and have gotten more broad and high level attention in the last few years that PRT has gotten in 40 years. We need to see what might be possible in terms of an evolutionary path, some decent cost estimates, some decent societal impact estimates (i.e. benefit/cost) and a whole lot more before a credible "better" judgment can be made.<<<
Here we go again. How can you say there are no "decent cost estimates"? What is a "decent societal impact estimate"? Do you mean approval by the academic society...the same type of people who changed Morgantown to GRT because they could not get their little minds around the PRT concept?How can we get any of this if ALL the money goes into failed projects, one at a time? And what do you mean by "it has been at least 40 years since some reasonable PRT concepts were defined"?Jack Slade
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> - Jerry Schneider -
> Innovative Transportation Technologies
>
> <http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans>http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
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- Jerry Schneider -
Innovative Transportation Technologies
http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
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100 years from now,if Jack's statement is published in the "100 years ago" section of Aviation week, what wold be the reaction?
I realize one definition of a piolot;s life is"Hours and hourd of bordom, with a few cases of sheer terror in between".
But what about real time ground response to automated passenger flight problems; and maybe all landings to start?In flight anomoly allerts the ground "pilot" who manages the correction with what is available, and if nesessart initiates emergency automated landing.
Could such hamdle the landing in the Hudson?
In the safety comparison, how do you count accidents caused by the on-board pilot? The Buffalo crash couple years was cased by the pilot and would not have happened under automatic control.
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Aircraft automation usually includes a lot of thinking that has been omitted with car automation.
"Redundancy" is one term that I have not heard used, ever.
This means having backup systems operating constantly, so that failure of one system does not cause a crash, or other problem. Space travel is even worse: The Moon trips had 5 on-board computers....quadruple backup. This all costs more, of course, but if it avoids one accident it has paid for itself and saved the project.
As for timespan, autopilots were used in WW2, and I know that semi-automated landings were being tried as early as 1955. This is certainly different from the Rush-to-Judgement "Pass" that most gives Google and Robocars.
At 07:51 AM 5/25/2012, you wrote:
Interesting post Jack!
I learned several years ago that the transportation folks actually have a study for societal impact. It's called a, "Community Impact Assessment." (CIA) Since this tool is available, I've advocated using it to promote advanced concepts in transportation for some years.
An "assessment" is supposed to describe pros and cons - it's use as an advocacy tool should depend on the balance between the two - difficult as it is to sum them up.
They are filled with dubious assumptions and items that cannot be easily quantified. They are essentially forecasts.
From: Jerry Schneider <j...@peak.org>
To: transport-...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2012 2:19:48 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show>
> >>>I didn't know Google was in the car selling business or car manufacturing business - do you expect them to post a price for a produce that the don't have? It's an important question and one that needs some investigation and forecasting.<<<<
This is exactly what has been asked of those of us who propose other systems. If it is fair for us, why is it not fair to ask Google the same question?
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- ----- Original Message ----From: Richard GronningSent: Sunday, May 27, 2012 10:44 AMSubject: Re: [t-i] Re: Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
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Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 8:20:47 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Re: Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
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Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 8:20 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Re: Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
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From: Jerry Schneider <j...@peak.org>
To: transport-...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Monday, May 28, 2012 8:20:47 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Re: Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
At 03:41 PM 5/28/2012, you wrote:
> Walt:
>
> I might argue that both Heathrow, Masdar, and Morgantown are networks and not just APM loops or shuttles. They are very simple to be sure, but any vehicle can go non-stop to any station. APMs cannot do that.
That's true for Morgantown, but do Heathrow and Masdar have more than two stations? I wonder if airport-type APMs could be reprogrammed to do it with some new software and hardware? Or maybe a driverless train like Duabi-Metro could provide skip-stop service that might be needed for special events, or at certain times of the day, for example.
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Jack:
Glad to see you put it that way. It seems to be cemented into planners brains that only trains are suitable for high speed intercity ground transportation.. Single high speed vehicles ala PRT are what's needed. Why is riding a train seen as the only way?
High speed trains only connect major stations in bigger cities. Access points are about 50 miles apart. HS PRT can be accessible in every city not only along a major corridor but in a given area. The ridership for the PRT network would be vastly higher than any train system. Déjà vu all over again. HS personal vehicle versus mass transit. MT gets 2%. small vehicle gets 98%.
Dennis
He talked a little about the Google driverless car but lots of other very interesting material as well. I think it can be seen at the CR website - takes about an hour. He said the traffic in the Silicon Valley is worse now than in Manhattan, where he was today. Google is starting up an office in Manhattan that will be home for some research people from Cornell and the Technion in Israel.
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Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 11:29:13 AM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
You seem to be asking for perfection. With the criteria you suggest how can PRT ever be good enough?Dennis
From: Jack SladeSent: Wednesday, May 23, 2012 11:32 PMSubject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
Kirston, I am with you on this one. The best example is this, and I must explain why I say it. My background is mostly aviation, and I am familiar with the automated systems on aircraft. Having said that, here is what I feel about taking a trip on a plane that is fully automated, that is NO Pilot.I would have to be 'Nuts". Computers can be programmed to deal with situations that are known or at least anticipated. With every emergency that happens, there is always some factor that was unusual: something happened that both the builder and the operator did not anticipate. This means that the computer would not be programmed to handle it either.The same applies to cars. With over sixty years of driving all over North America you might think that I would have seen everything bad that can happen on the road. Think again. Every week somebody out there does something different from what I have ever seen before.So: Since I can only program a computer to deal with problems that I know, or even anticipate, how do I program it to deal with the ones that I do not know about, or one that has never happened before?Jack Slade
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 12:48:20 AM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
On May 23, 2012, at 11:06 AM, Jerry Schneider wrote:
> Judging by the way he perked up when asked about the Google car, I think that Larry Page has been a driving force behind the development effort. Perhaps it would help if KH would spend some time getting acquainted with LP and the way he thinks.
I presume that I am the KH that you refer to. If so, I doubt it because we obviously live in different worlds. (We may not even speak the same language.) I have enough trouble with mid-western English. I may not have worked for the great Googe, but I have a lot of years experience developing advanced systems using computers, including the means that modern, distributed computers communicate and are programmed.
I also am beginning to accumulate a significant amount of experience in developing guideway-based vehicles wherein the computing requirements are relatively modest but by the time that you develop systems with the essential levels of automated self-testing and failure tolerance to make them safe for human use, you find a lot of hurdles working with only a single dimension wherein you have near absolute control over the operating environment. If you add all of the other dimensions and multitude of environmental factors, the problem becomes impractical to solve. Not only that, if you manage to do it, just how much have you contributed to solving the problems of congestion and air pollution caused by the current set of automobiles and big trucks?
Kirston Henderson
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From: Jerry Schneider <j...@peak.org>
To: transport-...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 7:02:25 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
>>>> Well, it has been at least 40 years since some reasonable PRT concepts were defined Since then there have been alternative designs, and some minimal levels of cussing and discussing. Widespread visibility and public interest levels are still dismal.
Autonomous vehicles are relatively new on the scene and have gotten more broad and high level attention in the last few years that PRT has gotten in 40 years. We need to see what might be possible in terms of an evolutionary path, some decent cost estimates, some decent societal impact estimates (i.e. benefit/cost) and a whole lot more before a credible "better" judgment can be made.<<<Here we go again. How can you say there are no "decent cost estimates"? What is a "decent societal impact estimate"? Do you mean approval by the academic society...the same type of people who changed Morgantown to GRT because they could not get their little minds around the PRT concept?How can we get any of this if ALL the money goes into failed projects, one at a time? And what do you mean by "it has been at least 40 years since some reasonable PRT concepts were defined"?Jack Slade
> F.
>
>
> On Thursday, 24 May 2012 15:59:35 UTC-4, jschneider wrote:
> At 12:03 PM 5/24/2012, you wrote:
> >I think that if you roll in the environmental cost, health care
> >costs, insurance costs, fuel costs, vehicle costs, maintenance cost,
> >etc. AND extra infrastructure to handle all these robocars, a case
> >can be made for guideway + cheaper, smaller, shorter-range electric
> >cars (DM). Unfortunately, many of these impacts aren't reflected in
> >the perceived cost of car driving. My statement was "overall cost"
> >- which includes societal costs as I see it. Google has made
> >selling DM that much more difficult by pushing it's vision that is
> >seen as "good enough". That's a shame.
>
> Fair enough - if you include the potential savings that might arise
> from greatly improved safety and mobility services to groups that
> would benefit from it (elderly non-drives, blind people, drunk
> driving reductions, and so on). I would hope that someone on the
> Google team is doing such calculations on societal impact issues. So
> far, I've not see much on the subject with the exception of Tyler
> Folsom's excellent paper on the subject.
> Link to paper
> entitled<<http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans/tyler-article.pdf>http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans/tyler-article.pdf>
> Social Ramifications of Autonomous Urban Land Vehicles, by Tyler C.
> Folsom (posted in 2010, my What's New page).
>
>
>
>
> >F.
> >
> >On Thursday, 24 May 2012 11:44:42 UTC-4, jschneider wrote:
> >At 05:59 AM 5/24/2012, you wrote:
> > >I think that the google approach is to slow down or stop if faced
> > >with something unanticipated, perhaps demanding driver
> > >intervention. It's harder to just stop in an airplane, but
> > >acceptable (to some degree) on the road. It may learn/record the
> > >correct response given the circumstance in the future. If cars are
> > >made to communicate with Google (instant tracking, crowd sourcing),
> > >reviewed interventions can be propagated to other cars in the same
> > situation.
> > >
> > >I know everyone here wants it to fail and don't want to hear
> > >different, but it will probably "work" in the statistical sense
> > >where fatalities match or better human fatalities. It's a shame
> > >this is what will be acceptable when near zero fatalities, no
> > >emissions, greater throughput and less overall cost would be
> > >possible with guideway based systems.
> >I'd be interested to know more about why you think "less overall
> >cost" - as it seems to me that lower cost (i.e. no guideway required)
> >is regarded as a very prominent reason that its supporters always
> >cite up front.
> >
> >- Jerry Schneider -
> > Innovative Transportation Technologies
> >
> ><<http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans>http://faculty.washingto n.edu/jbs/itrans>http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
> >
> >
> >
> >
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From: Michael Weidler <pstr...@yahoo.com>
To: "transport-...@googlegroups.com" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, June 7, 2012 7:32:39 PM
Subject: Re: [t-i] Larry Page, Google CEO, was the guest today on Charlie Rose show
RADAR (directed radio waves) doesn't do anything the humans. And LASERs don't do anything unless you are looking directly into the source of a high intensity beam. The LASER beams in question are both low power and invisible (infrared).