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I agree that the writing is in the wall with regard to my son's generation. He lives in Chicago and is a fan of public transportion and/or Uber. He says he doesn't miss driving at all - though he doesn't seem to mind driving when he comes home.
Are you advocating forcing everyone to live in Chicago or similarly densely populated cities? Because if not, any such transition to a state where nobody drives manually in any circumstances is simply not feasible any time soon, or possibly ever.
A million miles of self-driving cars compared to how many miles of manually driven cars?
Self-driving cars are basically robots, their intelligence only goes so far. Throw a new situation at them and they might fail completely. I don't trust robots.
And on a more general level, I think it is one of those cases where we are just not wise enough to simply say, hey, the status quo may not be perfect, but it is OK, let's leave it at that.
Also, many Americans say they like to drive and thus avoid public transport, so, should people one day no longer drive themselves, why not switch to public transport in the first place?
Please educate yourself by doing some research on connected cars and IoT. This is the near future. You should at least have an idea what you're talking about if you want to be taken seriously.
Please educate yourself by doing some research on connected cars and IoT. This is the near future. You should at least have an idea what you're talking about if you want to be taken seriously.
Define "near". I don't think it will be as near as some insist it will, and are so eager to force on the rest of us for some reason.
You would still have to insure your vehicle and would pay road tax, indeed more taxes may be applied to such vehicles especially in relation to congested cities.
Why would you still need full coverage? The premiums we pay now, go to pay for other peoples accident claims, they pay for medical bills resulting from accidents too...eventually there will be no accidents or medical treatment needed, because accidents will be extremely rare.
Besides that, I doubt they could demand coverage, when humans are no longer doing the driving, what could they base the rate off?
Most road taxes are in the fuel we buy, that wont be changing.
Define "near". I don't think it will be as near as some insist it will, and are so eager to force on the rest of us for some reason.
I'm not eager to force anything on anyone. I have no control over it. I'm just telling you what's coming. Things are moving exponentially faster than the were even a decade ago. I can't pinpoint an exact date for you, but this is happening already, and technology isn't going to slow down. If anything, it's speeding up.
Yes, this has been in the R&D stages for many years. Its literally right around the corner. The conversion will happen first to tractor trailer trucks from what Ive been reading.
Personally I think it will be a good thing, one it goes mandatory, there will not any more traffic jams, traffic lights, no more need for full coverage insurance, no need for police to be out patrolling the streets, no more traffic accidents, offenses or DUIs.
When my grandkids are grown up, they will be looking back and joking about the 'old days', when people had to drive manually!
I think a lot of resistance will come from sectors that are making money on some of the things you mentioned. Car insurance companies, cities that make a lot of money on traffic tickets and DUI's.
Just as the taxi driver will be out of work so will the car insurance salesperson.
Are you advocating forcing everyone to live in Chicago or similarly densely populated cities? Because if not, any such transition to a state where nobody drives manually in any circumstances is simply not feasible any time soon, or possibly ever.
What a dumb thing to say. It's hardly worth a response yet I will indulge you.
How they envision the future even in suburbia ~ is that people will forgo car ownership and instead utilize a 'fleet of vehicle'.
Please DO note that I didn't say for EVERYONE.
Please also note that I work in the insurance industry and they are very concerned when they look into the future - as to how this will impact us. It's not a dream.
Please educate yourself by doing some research on connected cars and IoT. This is the near future. You should at least have an idea what you're talking about if you want to be taken seriously.
Why? Are they not robots in a way? I do not like the idea of machines doing the thinking and making decisions where it matters.
And yes, I am against the internet of things. I want humans to remain in charge of independent things, even if they screw up from time to time.
I'm not eager to force anything on anyone. I have no control over it. I'm just telling you what's coming. Things are moving exponentially faster than the were even a decade ago. I can't pinpoint an exact date for you, but this is happening already, and technology isn't going to slow down. If anything, it's speeding up.
And I wonder why that is. Who is pushing it? We don't really need self-driving cars, networked washing machines and TV's etc. Why can't we just say no, that's enough. Like we did with the hydrogen bomb, humans simply agreed and said to themselves, no, that's just too much.
How they envision the future even in suburbia ~ is that people will forgo car ownership and instead utilize a 'fleet of vehicle'.
Please DO note that I didn't say for EVERYONE.
What about families with kids? Communal vehicles would not work in my situation. I have child seats and all sorts of activity related items packed up in my minivan and even if I am able, I am not willing to transport all of those items to external storage every evening and put them back in to a new communal vehicle every morning. Not to mention, I'm in a semi rural situation and neighborhood communal vehicles would be neither feasible nor desirable. And who will force my neighbors to clean their communal vehicle out every evening? Should every small neighborhood have government officials who force us to pick up after ourselves every evening?
Again there are some situations where such vehicles would eventually be practical, especially for young single childless people in big cities, but those situations are by no means universal.
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