Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Interesting development..

Let us see when it can become mainstream... it will be really interesting to see how it goes and to what extent it goes.. there is potential for this technology to become robotics or self driven cars ultimately..


Wi-Fi network will let cars talk to each other


By Tom Krisher


Associated Press


ANN ARBOR, Mich. — In a few weeks, about 2,800 cars, trucks and buses will start talking to each other on the streets of Ann Arbor, Mich., in a giant experiment that government officials are hoping will lead to safer roads.

Wireless devices will allow the vehicles to send signals back and forth, warning their drivers of potential dangers such as stopped traffic or cars that might be blowing through a red light. They can even get traffic lights to turn green if no cars are coming the other way.

The U.S. Department of Transportation and the University of Michigan are hoping the yearlong, $25 million project generates data that show the devices can cut down on traffic crashes. Officials say eventually this could lead to the devices going in every car. About 500 vehicles with the devices are
 now on the roads. That will rise to 2,800 in about six weeks, officials said Tuesday.

“This is a big day for safety,” Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said at an event at the university formally kicking off the experiment. “We’ll use this information to decide if vehicle technology can be applied to daily lives.”

More than 32,000 people died last year in U.S. traffic crashes, down 1.7 percent from 2010. The number of crashes has fallen in recent years as automakers added safety devices such as air bags, anti-lock brakes and stability control, which helps drivers keep cars under control in emergency situations.

But LaHood said Tuesday that 80 percent of crashes in which the drivers aren’t impaired by drugs or alcohol could be prevented — or the severity reduced — if cars could talk to each other.





Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder helps launch the Connected Vehicle Safety Pilot with the Transportation Department in Ann Arbor, Mich.

MELANIE MAXWELL/ ASSOCIATED PRESS
 

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