Skip to main content

A meeting of minds

My campaign starts here: I think it's time that we should stigmatise those that are single.
February 27, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
Jason Barnes, Editor of ITS International
My campaign starts here: I think it's time that we should stigmatise those that are single. The police and other authorities should immediately remove from our streets all those not engaged in a mutually beneficial relationship.

Before you start to question my new-found (and probably ill-advised) interest in eugenics, I should explain that I'm not talking about humans.

As far as I'm concerned, the romantically displaced can remain as free as they like to stare longingly through the misted windows of restaurants, or else gaze wistfully after couples who pass, hand-in-hand, oblivious to all else around them. It's not for me to change the order of such things and, besides, the breweries need all the help they can get in the current economic climate.

No, I'm more concerned with single application technologies. Many of these are fast becoming anachronisms. Moreover, they are unnecessary drains on capital and operational budgets, and it's time that some of those with the ability to change things recognised the fact and surrendered to the process of evolution.

We've achieved technical excellence. Embrace that statement: in nuts and bolts and bits and bytes terms, we now have pretty much all that we need to do what we want to in terms of making our road networks safe and efficient. It's taken us time and money but we're already there; it's journey's end, just look around you.

How galling it is then that much of the intelligence in our intelligent transport systems is stymied by how we currently operate.

Okay, some expect Moore's Law to have an unfavourable encounter with all that is physically possible in a decade or so. Equally, history is littered with examples of the insurmountable becoming entirely possible. That's perhaps a conversation to have with the Futurists - some of whom are probably single and would be happy to discuss it with you over a glass or three.

We set out to be wilfully dumb. I'd go as far as to say that the attitude of many of our legislators is pernicious. I can't go as far as to say wilfully so but I will say this: one of the responsibilities of those who set our laws should be to become as widely read as they can on the world around them. They shouldn't look to only deal with that which is placed before them. Technology might not have quite reached the point of omnipotency but it no longer allows us, reasonably, to exist in silos of thinking and/or operation.

With governments at all levels screaming out for efficiencies, can we not therefore take our eye off the technology for a moment? Nature abhors a vacuum. So does technological development. In other words, the technology will take care of itself as developers and producers continue to vie for advantage and market share - and it could well be that those providing the solutions aren't familiar entities. Cees de Wijs makes just such an observation when he talks about whether stimulus funding has worked or not in the interview on pp.14-15 of this edition.

So is it time for another evolution to take place? Should not our technology advisers become technology-minded legal advisers? There's a very good case for not having to wait a million years for this to happen.

Related Content

  • MoceanLab discovers new Covid car-share use
    October 20, 2020
    The coronavirus pandemic has prompted some radical re-thinking of mobility services. Ben Spencer hears how MoceanLab car-share vehicles are delivering care to LA's homeless
  • Island Radar: safely crossing continents
    August 6, 2020
    There is a safety flashpoint wherever roads cross over railways. Island Radar is using well-established traffic technology to keep all parties safe from harm.
  • Grey areas: who's legally responsible for C/AVs?
    October 22, 2018
    Connected and autonomous vehicles are an exciting development in the ITS sector – but amid the hype some big questions about their deployment remain unanswered, finds Ben Spencer Connected and autonomous vehicles (C/AVs) have the potential to change the way we travel - and to eliminate road fatalities. But policy makers and regulators will need to ensure user and public safety is included in future planning. The legal and insurance industries will have to catch up, too. For example, questions over who is
  • US economic stimulus package highlights ITS technology
    July 17, 2012
    US Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood talks to ITS International about economic stimulus funding and the absolute need to maintain and increase the use of technology in transportation. Of the total of $787 billion of funding announced under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), the economic stimulus package which was signed into law by US President Barack Obama on 17 February 2009, $48.1 billion will go to the US Department of Transportation (USDOT). Of that, $27.5 billion is for highway in