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Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

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I'm not sure how a self-driving taxi would cope on Green Lanes. It's one thing for prototypes to perform well in ordered grid like streets in Califormia where there is lots of space. Its entirely different on Green Lanes with fake-plated mopeds driven by often unlicensed drivers weaving between traffic combined with cyclists who ignore traffic lights, pedestrians who wander onto the road without looking and shop delivery vans whose drivers think nothing of doing a three point turn in the middle of peak hour.

Sounds like a typical day on Market Street, San Francisco (where they also have to deal with cable cars)

I'm not sure how a self-driving taxi would cope on Green Lanes

I'm not certain either, which is why they are currently in testing mode in London. However self-driving taxis enjoy fundamental advantages including:

  1. no ego
  2. no anger
  3. no illness
  4. no drug-use
  5. no tiredness
  6. no tail-gating
  7. no aggression
  8. no showing off
  9. no heart-attacks
  10. no use of cup-holders
  11. no one-handed driving
  12. no aged slow-reactions
  13. no youthful inexperience
  14. no hatred of other road users
  15. no revving of big engines - as can be heard among the boy-racers ofGL
  16. no forgetting to check mirrors (this omission killed a cyclist in Camden)

Apart from these items (and more), what have self-driving taxis ever done for us?

Oli Brown, can you tell readers of this website about your own situation? For example whether you live or work in Haringey; use Green Lanes as  a walker; cyclist, car driver or otherwise? Do you have family members who use the local roads. Are there particular concerns for their safety e.g. kids going to school and restrictions on school streets? Have you or a family member or close friend who is elderly or disabled?

Do you perhaps have some general aim or hope in raising this issue? I sometimes think back to my diabetic grandmother who was killed crossing the road near her home in East London. Or reflect on times when I used to regularly bike around as a young man and narrowly escaped possible injury.

Please note that in posing these questions  I'm making no assumptions about your own views. 

Hmm. A strangely emphatic set of seemingly coordinated responses to a simple observation on my part. It appears that disenting views must be policed.

Happy Christmas Oli

Merry Christmas Michael. 

Hmm... Oli, 

1. "Strangely emphatic?"
 Yes, you're right.  I'm emphatic about trying to prevent road deaths and injuries. To my knowledge, over the years  at least three family members of mine were killed in car accidents. (Two of them a small child and their young mother.) Turning this over in my mind, I wonder how many people do not have such a tragedy in their own families?
Your challenge leads me  to ask myself why I'm not and should be utterly rigid on the issue of road safety.

2. "seemingly coordinated responses"?  You're partly right in that Clive Carter is a friend of mine and has given me strong and repeated  arguments about self driving taxis; persuading me that they stand a realistic chance of reducing road deaths, accidents, and injuries. Michael Anderson's posts have been informed and helpful. Also contributing to my change of mind/emphasis on this issue.

3."Dissenting views must be policed?  Absolutely not!!  So please dissent away!  But with sensible, informed, well argued dissenting views. Surely one of the excitements of being alive is when someone comes along and tips  the received wisdoms in surprising new directions. 

I expect that, for the foreseeable future, there will be accidents where a driverless vehicle is involved.

And irresponsible commentators may draw undue attention to them. Such accidents are unlikely to be caused by the Driverless vehicle. For example, being rammed in the rear by a human driver, or a human careening their car out of a hidden side street and T-boning the Driverless vehicle.

Even Musk's second-rate Tesla RoboTaxi may be safer than humans.

Although such accidents may happen, the big picture is that Driverless will kill and maim fewer road users and at a lower rate … than human drivers.

For all the reasons already advanced, and more.

Plus, a good human-diver will react to a sudden risk in about half a second. If WayMo's reaction time is anything approaching a cat—about a 25th of a second—then Driverless looks excellent for cutting accidents.

In this video clip, a WayMo is stopped at lights and then moves forward. From the left, a car with a human at the controls flies into the intersection. The WayMo reacts quickly and safely … before two other human-controlled vehicles are hit by the human.

Maybe in 100 years' time all—or nearly all—vehicular traffic will be Driverless and accidents will have been eliminated. By then, the current very high standards in aviation will have been applied to motor vehicles and not before time.

In my view, Driverless cannot come soon enough!

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