• ShredderFeeder@shredderfood.net
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    5 hours ago

    There was talk of embedding sensors in the roads that the auto-driving cars could track… Like Bots’ Dots but with RFID tags in them… I figure that would be a maintenance nightmore though…

    • pingveno@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      RFID tags seems like an odd choice. They have such a limited range. It feels like there would be a material that is extra easy for sensors to detect, and could maybe carry a small amount of information.

  • Wataba@sh.itjust.works
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    10 hours ago

    Trains cant take you to specific spots, especially outside the greater urban areas.

    When my public transport to work stops being 3-4x longer than simply driving, not to mention the inherent issues of being stuffed into a bus, let me know.

    • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      Trains cant take you to specific spots, especially outside the greater urban areas.

      That’s called the “Last mile” problem. Trains and buses aren’t much good for a whole day’s worth of shopping either. Try and haul 2 weeks worth of groceries for a family of 3 on a bus. But trains are great for longer distance travel from one area to another. And buses can be great for a quick one-stop trip to the hardware store. But a cargo e-bike would be better yet for light shopping.

      I’m all for banning all motor vehicles in major cities, except emergency units. And leave the daily driving to those of us that live in the middle of nowhere and seldom visit large cities.

      • Amberskin@europe.pub
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        5 hours ago

        Dense public transportation sorta fixes the last mile problem. And buying local fixes the Walmart/carrefour problem. I buy groceries every two or three days, and the grocery shops are always at walking distance from home.

        • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          “Sorta fixes” ain’t really a fix. And not everyone has the time or ability to go shopping every two or three days. Nor are grocery stores within walking distance for everyone.

          • Jiral@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            That’s the thing. Car orientation shapes how places look and function, but so does tranist orientation. What you consider a downside is actually driving that. Because transit focuses movement along hubs and spokes, this enables walking oriented infrastructure. And walking oriented stores at transit stops enable fast shopping. You can easily shop even daily when all it takes is maybe 5-10 additional minutes on your way home. In car oriented hypermarkets you can’ even make it to the back of the store in that time.

      • Jiral@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        That line of argumentation can only be made by someone who can only imagine a car centric way of life. Why would you even do a two week shopping if a well sorted super market is just around the corner or next to your final transit stop?

        That said, it is not much of a deal to do larger shopping. You can put a lot in a shopping trolley, also heavy stuff and move it with ease, to your very kitchen. The thing is, if you are shopping that much so infrequently you have to live orimarily from non-fresh food, or old food. Why would you want that?.

        • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          You assume large and well stocked grocery stores exist everywhere. That is most assuredly not the case in every city, town, or hamlet. And as for large amounts of shopping, you have never fed a teenage boy or girl have you. They can eat up their weight in groceries every week. And yes, fresh arugula is not readily available in many places. So that’s great for you. But again, don’t assume other people get to have the same choices you do.

          • Jiral@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            I am talking about urban and suburban context. Not rural scenarios where transit cannot be a full alternative.

            What you miss is that the way your city/suburb looks like is a direct function of your urban planning. Transit itself fosters the creation of super markets at its stops. Which is why you will usually find those at stops in transit oriented places. As their main customers are transit users they also cater to their preferences and are designed differently from car oriented stores. Usually they allow for much faster shopping while having a focused but complete sortiment (not just chips, sweets and beer)

            You’d be surprised, there are plenty of young families in Vienna in the new pedestrian oriented quarters, many if not most don’t even own a car. Somehow you can manage just fine that way. It is one of those myths that you need a car with young ones, if you live in a transit oriented place or suffer for it. If need be just get a shopping trolley, folding handcart or freight bike.

            PS: It is nice to see how you assume fresh bread, vegetable, meat etc are necessarily a luxury. I assume that idea also comes from the context of a car centric society.

            • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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              4 hours ago

              Spoken like an upper middle class person. And yes, fresh tomatoes and lettuce can be a luxury even in a dense city. Food deserts exist even there. Not everyone lives in Vienna or the Netherlands. And ordinary people do NOT get to choose the urban planning they can afford live in. Almost all of it was decided 100+ years ago. And is nearly impossible to change now. Unless you want to move large numbers of the population out of an area to demolish and rebuild that much new infrastructure, a thing that often gets called “gentrification”. And what of the poor people who can’t afford to live where you do and how you do? They very often live the farthest away from all those things you take for granted.

              • Jiral@lemmy.world
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                3 hours ago

                Like I said, your opinion seems to be formed by a car oriented society and you appear to struggle to imagine an alternative. If you need to watch your finances you can find all those fresh produces at urban discounters in transit oriented cities. Buying those without the need for a car is actually less costly than having a car and buying the cheapest worst kind of food.

                That is the thing transit oriented cities generally enable that. I m well aware that not every city is transit oriented. I am not saying people living in these places have a choice. I am saying urban planers have a choice to change how the cities look for the next generation(s). You mentioned the Netherlands, they are a great example for that. 2 generations ago they were very car oriented following the US lead. Not 100 years ago, 50 years ago.

              • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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                3 hours ago

                It seems like you’re arguing that a better way of doing things is hard, therefore not worth doing, or that a century ago was the cutoff for deciding how we do transportation.

                The way our stuff is laid out makes it difficult to live without a car. That doesn’t make the car a necessity in the abstract when that layout and design is often the direct product of designing around cars in the first place. It makes the car a necessity in the specific system we have for many people.
                “We can’t do things differently because then it’s harder to do things exactly the same” is a weak argument.

                Spoken like an upper middle class person

                Are you actually using your perception of someone else’s economic class as an argument? When you’re arguing in defense of car based suburban sprawl and buying groceries by the carload?

          • JoeBigelow@lemmy.ca
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            4 hours ago

            And to be a dick about it too, really shows how disconnected from others reality some folks are.

  • Katana314@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    “I have invented a computer that can handle the complexities of a dense, conflicting network of streets prone to collisions with on-traffic. It just needs a specialized road that is less dense and doesn’t have conflicts with other on-traffic.”
    “Is your program just ‘Accelerator-turn-on()’?”
    “How did you get that information?? Who broke NDA!?”

    • SippyCup@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      They’re not really trying to do anything. They’re trying to get venture capital money. The more impressive and revolutionary the blender render is, the more likely they are to get some fat, unsecured VC money. Then they’ll cash out and move on to the next thing.

      It’s a grift. They just need the poors to be excited about their bullshit to convince someone with money that there’s money to be made with their bullshit.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      They insist on recreating everything in modern society from first principles, rather than just learning from the past.

      They can’t just accept that X is a bad idea, and we know this because we fucking tried it several times. That’s why we do Y, even though it might seem counterintuitive. They just need to go through it themselves, and fuck the people whose lives are ruined in the process. Collateral damage. To learn something that we already fucking know and have been telling them

    • brewbart@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Several years back there was a startup?, I think, that tried to revolutionize rail traffic with autonomous wagons that intelligently form wagontracks with decentralized coordination. The question, how they would coordinate between all the local rulings and different track designs, was answered with ‘There is data for that to use and everyone will restructure for their glorious idea’ - safe to say they didn’t went viral

      • Shindo66@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        There have been a few. The best idea was a rail that went down every road. You could call train pods like an Uber to go anywhere. Computers could regulate everything. Anyone could use them. Cars are dumb.

  • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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    11 hours ago

    Trains don’t rule that much when they lose power in a 40 degree heat which is happening all over Europe right now.

    • j5906@feddit.org
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      9 hours ago

      yeah because cars never break down during high heat or cold and ac never fails in them…

    • Jiral@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Trains don’t have a higher failure rate than car infrastructure. Most of the rail infrastructure works just fine, at 40C. Occasionally something can get damaged. Aviation is much more fragile regarding weather but interestingly doesn’t get all that heat from transit haters and cars are way more dangerous and on top of that can overheat at extreme temperatures.

      • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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        10 hours ago

        Yes, most of it works fine but when it doesn’t:

        • the AC stops working, the windows don’t open and it gets real hot real fast
        • unless it’s some extreme situation they will not let you leave the train
        • you’re stuck in the middle of nowhere, with no infrastructure in sight
        • it’s really hard to get you to alternative transport
        • fixing the issue can take hours

        With a car:

        • you can get outside
        • you will have to wait 30-60 minutes to get towed

        You see multiple news every day about trains in Spain,Poland or Germany with broken AC or just completely failing between stations.

        • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          3 hours ago

          They usually advise you not to get out of your car for the exact reason they advise you not to get off the train.

          I’m not sure what’s exclusive to trains about breaking down in the middle of nowhere. It’s not exactly trivial to get a replacement car either, nor is repair somehow instant.

          I get what you’re saying, but it’s way less one sided than you’re trying to convey. My car once broke down on the freeway in a city. I had to wait more than an hour for a tow and then walk home, which took two hours. Had to get random coworkers or friends to take me to work while my car was repaired over the next two weeks.

          Oh, and traffic jams are routine for cars.

          Nothing is gained by pretending there’s no downsides to any mode of transportation. They all have them. In aggregate though, most people would be better off if we had more available than just “car”.

        • huey_m@reddthat.com
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          5 hours ago

          the AC stops working, the windows don’t open and it gets real hot real fast unless it’s some extreme situation they will not let you leave the train

          That sounds to me like an extreme situation.

          All trains have emergency releases on the door to allow manual opening. Practically, if it is actually getting hot to the point of danger, no conductor is going to physically stop you from leaving the train. More likely they’d be the ones to let people off.

          I’d need to see a news story of this happening where they were trying to force people to stay on a dangerously hot train. This sounds like a made up scenario.

          • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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            5 hours ago

            I never said they will physically stop you from leaving the train so I’m not going to prove it happened.

              • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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                5 hours ago

                They will not open the door you dufus. They will not say “everyone can just jump out on the tracks and walk around”. There may be trains riding on other tracks and there’s no sidewalk next to the tracks. You can get a fine for using emergency exit. That’s why people stay inside, not because someone is holding them down.

                • huey_m@reddthat.com
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                  4 hours ago

                  They will not open the door you dufus.

                  No need to be prickly :).

                  They will indeed do exactly this in my experience. We even had a sort of viral video of this happening here in Hungary… train broke down, they opened the doors and walked people through the nearby woods to the nearest village.

                  If Hungary is managing a better train experience than Spain… I would understand your frustration, the situation must be pretty damn dire there.

                  But again, I doubt this has happened at all… even aside from physical, can you cite a situation where conductors would not “let people off the train” when it was getting dangerously hot during a breakdown? It’s hard to believe that Hungary would handle this better…

                  You can get a fine for using emergency exit.

                  In a non emergency, of course.

        • 0x0@lemmy.zip
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          5 hours ago

          You see multiple news every day about trains in Spain,Poland or Germany with broken AC or just completely failing between stations.

          Really? FoxNews?

        • mabeledo@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          None of these issues is exclusive to trains. I would argue that they are more common in cars, and even more, cars take, on average, longer to repair.

          You see multiple news every day about trains in Spain,Poland or Germany with broken AC or just completely failing between stations.

          I’m not sure what you’re trying to say here. Cars break down all the time, and there’s the entire car repair industry to prove that, but obviously they don’t make the news.

          • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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            6 hours ago

            None of these issues is exclusive to trains. I would argue that they are more common in cars, and even more, cars take, on average, longer to repair.

            You would be wrong. People absolutely can open windows in broken cars or get out of them. I had to call a tow track couple of times and it doesn’t take more than an hour. If it happens in a city you can wait in a bar or wherever. If a train breaks 10 meters from the station you will not be allowed to exit. And I don’t care about repair time, I care about the time I’m sitting in a metal box without AC.

            • mabeledo@lemmy.world
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              5 hours ago

              Where do you live, that trains don’t have windows or doors that can be opened, and these incidents happen so frequently? Because this is not at all my experience in Western Europe.

              Regardless, it is a fact that cars break down more frequently and remediations take longer.

                • mabeledo@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  Then that’s impossible because I know for a fact that long distance trains have windows. But also, RENFE incident dataset is publicly available and updated in real time, and there is no way in hell the number of reported incidents is higher than the overall number of broken cars, not even if we were to average by number of passengers, and especially given the fact that the average car fleet age in Spain is 14 years.

            • 0x0@lemmy.zip
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              5 hours ago

              If a train breaks 10 meters from the station you will not be allowed to exit.

              Stop FUDing, trains have had emergency release systems for decades.

                • 0x0@lemmy.zip
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                  4 hours ago

                  Of course it will. I doubt anyone would fine you if you were to use it in an overheated stopped train - although you would probably applaud the fine.

        • Jiral@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          Btw news bias. There are so many people dying in car accidents, that the news would be full of them, every single day, if they got the coverege that even non lethal technical issues with trains get.

          • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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            8 hours ago

            It’s all a matter of control, same as with planes. People prefer to drive because they want to be in control. They imagine they will be able to handle difficult situations and will not die. Being stuck in a hot train, not being able to even open a window and not knowing how long you will have to stay there is a nightmare scenario for many people. Of course dying in a crash is worse but it’s the lack of control that freaks people out.

            • Jiral@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              That is a completely irrational argument. Car drivers are not really more in control. They are stuck in traffic jams, beyond their control. I enjoy actually more flexibilty during commute than car drivers. They have to avoid rush hour or be stuck, while rush hour in my train is perfectly fine. Also in an urban environment car drivers are much less in control as you have to search ages for on street parking close to any poplar destination or pay up for a garage that may be also full during high demand. No such worries with transit. People are much more frequently stuck on clogged roads than on a train.

              Driving is also much more likely to kill you.

                • Jiral@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  That we can agree on. However urban planning and transport planning should not be based on irrational arguments. You get what you build. Weirdly enough, people in transit oriented cities are using transit as their main means of transportation, people in car oriented cities don’t.

        • Jiral@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          Traffic jam? Not sure how it is in Australia but where I live you are not allowed to leave the car and it can take hours. Traffic jams happen much more frequently than your scenario. Never had AC fail on me in the entire train and I use trains almost daily.

            • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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              5 hours ago

              Opening your helmet in this kind of weather feels like someone is using a hairdryer on your face.

              Still more comfortable than than being stuck in traffic, but it’s not great.

              • innermachine@lemmy.world
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                11 minutes ago

                Yea once ur above 98 F or so, going faster actually makes you hotter! Like being in an air fryer lol. The air can only cool you down if it’s below body temp! Thankfully where I live even 90f is a RARE heat 🤞 for now…

          • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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            8 hours ago

            Good for you then. Properly working trains are great. I will take nice train over driving any time. I’m just saying that often the reality is that trains are not that nice. Many countries in Europe struggle to found railway at the levels required to provide good service, especially with growing demand. I think recent events in Spain show that there are limits to how fast you can expand railway. Not everyone can just switch, it will be a long, difficult process.

            • 0x0@lemmy.zip
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              5 hours ago

              Many countries in Europe struggle to found railway at the levels required to provide good service,

              that’s not due to the technology but rather politics and privatization agendas.

            • Jiral@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              All problems of priorities and political will, like I said previously. Plenty of rail systems show they can work just fine. They are a lot safer than driving too. Problems can occur with all means and you are just as trapped on a highway as in a defect train.

              • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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                6 hours ago

                All problems of priorities and political will,

                I disagree. I can see what is happening in my city right now. They want to expand the train service at one of the lines by adding a new track and you can’t do that without stopping the whole service for months. They will provide buses as a replacement which will get stuck in traffic. There’s no amount a political will that will magically expand train service without major disruption. Highway? You can make a detour or slow the traffic down. Airports? You can add entire runways without stopping the service. Trains are different. Trains are difficult.

                Problems can occur with all means and you are just as trapped on a highway as in a defect train.

                No one will prevent you from opening a window in a car or getting out to stand in some shade. You can’t do that in a train. It’s also way easier to tow a car than a train.

                • Jiral@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  So your argument against trains is that expansion can’t be done without temporary closures and restrictions? Just like with any road project? The problems with cars are just as bad, detours and closures kead to traffic infarcts, and are at least as much of a hassle like transit replacement services.

                  Expanding airports can be better acommodated but is in many cases close to impossible. Having aviation carry the capacity of an HSR because national infrastructure is underdeveloped is a major issue and limits development.

                  If you leave your car in my country on the highway, without being involved directly in an accident or such, you have a good chance of losing your drivers license. Opening the windows in a car grilled by the sun, does no good either. Anyone can open the door in a standing train in case of emergency btw. If staff doesn’t allow passanger evacuation in case of danger to passenger health, that is an issue with badly run train services. Tunnels have to have an evacuation plan, at least in decently run systems.

          • kuerbiskernoel@feddit.org
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            8 hours ago

            We don’t have such problems in Austria. We also don’t have 40 degrees but I dare say it’s not inherent of trains.

          • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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            8 hours ago

            Many issues are inherent of trains. It’s easier to move people to another bus or tow a car. When trains failed in Spain last year on some occasions people got stack in totally inaccessible places and had to wait all night sitting next to the tracks (it was to hot to stay inside the trains without AC). You can’t pull up another train easily or walk people to a bus. Towing the trains was complicated for some reasons. And that were brand new trains failing because of some manufacturing issues.

            International trains from Poland have issues with AC because when they are in Germany, German technicians can’t/don’t want to fix them. Mixing operators like that is also an issue inherent to trains. You have different companies responsible for operating the train, the tracks and providing services inside the train. Planes are similar but international services are common and better organized.

            Many recent issues in Spain were due to people stealing electric cables. Another problem inherent of trains. You have thousands of kilometers of infrastructure that is difficult to secure but an issue in single place quickly spreads throughout the network.

            • mabeledo@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              You have different companies responsible for operating the train, the tracks and providing services inside the train. Planes are similar but international services are common and better organized.

              I’m not sure what you are trying to say here, because you imply that this isn’t an issue inherent to trains since the solution in the aviation world is to contract ground crew where airlines have none of their own, which could very well be done by train operators as well.

              Also, being stuck inside an airliner while taxiing, with no A/C, just because the systems malfunction slightly and tower don’t agree on which gate they could assign to the flight since it is very early, is a thing I’ve gone through a few times. So, again, not exclusive to trains.

              • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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                5 hours ago

                Ok, so it’s not exclusive. Does it make the problem any less real? EU did a study on it recently and it’s way more difficult to travel internationally by train than by plane. It’s just a fact.

                • mabeledo@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  Difficult, how? Be specific.

                  There aren’t many transnational train routes, even in Europe, compared to transnational flights. But that’s not inherent to trains as a means of transportation, but a bureaucracy issue.

    • CheerfulPassionFruit@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Self driving cars as so far pretty shit. They have a tendency to fail ungracefully leading to considerable death and destruction.

      This could be fixed by making purpose built roads for electric cars so that the environment is always predictable. However at that point you’re describing a train track and might as well run trains on it.

        • dustyData@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          I’m gonna lay this on you, but it is not an attack on you specifically. A railroad track, while way more expensive upfront, has a way lower maintenance cost on the long run. Asphalt road, while cheaper upfront, essentially needs to be rebuild virtually from scratch every six months or so. Depending on weather and heavy load usage, an asphalt road –despite being made out of almost 90% recyclable material– will cost just as much and maybe even much more than rail over the span of 10 years. On the same page rail is, not entirely but almost, completely impervious to weather and heavy load damage. So the maintenance costs are nearly fixed and highly predictable. Asphalt is variable and unpredictable, a road could last 18 months or 3 months. Finally, the labor costs of road maintenance are way higher than rail maintenance, while being several times more deadly. Because drivers keep insisting on running over road workers.

  • YaksPT@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I am currently at the tail end of a 3 week trip from Amsterdam to Lisbon, all via train. It is fucking awesome. Not to mention that as a tourist you can use the public transportation in various cities for free. Europe has it figured out.

    • huey_m@reddthat.com
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      5 hours ago

      Man, I’m surprised to hear that. International travel is infamously shit, that’s part of why so many Europeans fly. The trains themselves are fine, but there’s a mishmash of standards, electrical systems, booking systems, etc, and every country just wants to engage in protectionism and refuses to harmonize with others. Trying to book travel through multiple countries is usually seen as a bigger headache than it’s worth, not to mention more costly, than flying which is just backwards in terms of incentives.

      Maybe if you’re getting one of the tourist Eurrail pass thingies it isn’t so bad, but for regular international use (aside from just going to one country over, so just one journey) Europe really needs to standardize its rail travel much, much more.

      • ikt@aussie.zone
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        2 days ago

        why would an individual car “train” that can go anywhere (eg. train tracks on all roads for self driving cars) be shitter than a train that has limited availability and is extremely restrictive in where it can go?

        • Serinus@lemmy.world
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          Because you have to pay a good chunk of a year’s salary for one, store it around your house somewhere, and then when you finally do get to use it, there are a million other people with the same idea and you have to compete just for space in which to use it.

          And that’s before you get to all the maintenance the government has to spend on the paths (and make you pay tax for all that). Oh, and it’s incredibly dangerous, so dangerous that it’s one of the leading causes of death in the US.

          • ikt@aussie.zone
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            2 days ago

            We are talking about an equivalent ‘pod/train car’, not a car but I’ll bite anyway

            Have you ever been on a train? It sucks, a bus 10000% more, buses fuckin suck so much, I’m sorry for you to hear this in the echo chamber which features ‘fuck cars’.

            Like I said, trains and buses have 2 big negatives:

            limited availability and is extremely restrictive in where it can go

            Trains especially so, my local train would be a 20-30 minute walk away and it goes far south and to the city, if i don’t want to go to either of those I’m in for a 5 hour marathon of a trip at best

            But we should invest more in trains you might be saying, and again the question goes back to, why would a train be better than a pod/car that can roll around on train tracks

            This whole thread took the original meaning and warped it into a circle jerk about trains which is not what the OP was saying

            • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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              13 hours ago

              Have you ever been on a train? It sucks, a bus 10000% more, buses fuckin suck so much

              Skill issue. Japan, Korea, China all have extremely comfortable and efficient trains. Trains can be quite nice if the government is interested in having good trains instead of making infinitely dollars for the shareholders while spending nothing on maintaince and charging as much as possible.

              • ikt@aussie.zone
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                12 hours ago

                Thanks for mentioning Japan and Korea

                https://files.ikt.id.au/y0q8ls.webp

                Japan, South Korea and North Korea would all fit into a space the size of our second smallest state Victoria but that state has a population of 8 million, the combined Korea’s and Japan would be 200 million

                Speaking of large population sizes:

                We are nearly as big as China but with 1.4 billion, if you took their desert which has fuck all trains and transposed that onto Australia we’re actually pretty close in terms of trains and public transport

                But regardless:

                One in Four Japanese Households Do Not Own A Car

                https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-data/h00416/auto-appeal-fades-one-in-four-japanese-households-do-not-own-a-car.html

                Which leaves 3 in 4 who do own a car, so much for skill issue right :)

                • Jiral@lemmy.world
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                  10 hours ago

                  I almost thought you were American given your “rail doesn’t work, look how big our country is” BS argument. I guess it works for Australia too, though. Funnily enough your own map shows how Australia is actually perfectly siuted for extensive rail infrastructure connecting most of the metropolitan regions with each other.

                  Adelade-Melbourne-Sydney-Brisbane covers most of Australia’s population and is a model case for an HSR corridor, certainly also has the population to support one as well. Add to that a Dutch style multimodal urban model and Australia could be on par with the rest of the developed world infrastructure wise. Perth and Darwin are self contained urban islands anyway, too far for attractive rail but also road connection

                • Alcoholicorn@mander.xyz
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                  12 hours ago

                  if you took their desert which has fuck all trains

                  They run hundreds of trains a day between population centers in that desert, I took them to get to Kazakhstan and back.

                  skill issue

                  The skill issue is being able to build efficient, comfortable, cheap trains, which Japan has the first 2, but they could be cheaper.

            • Zarobi@aussie.zone
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              13 hours ago

              The only reason cars are good right now is because countries like US and AU went 100% all in on cars. Do you have any idea the astronomical cost of public roads and car infrastructure? Imagine if we invested the same amount into a really really good train and tram system. Or, alternatively, imagine if we underfunded roads the same way we do public transport.

              • ikt@aussie.zone
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                13 hours ago

                The only reason cars are good right now is because countries like US and AU went 100% all in on cars

                Not 100%, Melbourne kept its trams around and Victoria still has massive car use

                We’re just a huge massive low density country so it’s hard to compare to inner western europe

                • Jiral@lemmy.world
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                  10 hours ago

                  Melbourne’s trams are terrible because cars are given priority even though having much lower capacity. The “low density” argument is meaningless. Most people live in metropolitan regions and they are as well suited for transit as you build it. Turns out, Australia went all in on car only design on new projects. Surprisingly that makes anything other than cars unattractive.

            • jtrek@startrek.website
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              1 day ago

              Have you ever been on a train? It sucks, a bus 10000% more, buses fuckin suck so much, I’m sorry for you to hear this in the echo chamber which features ‘fuck cars’.

              Have you?

              Trains and buses, when funded, are fine. Millions of people take them every day.

              I work from home but I used to daily commute by train. Walk to station. Wait a few minutes. Get on. Arrive at destination. I read so many books and finished so many games.

                • coffee_tacos@mander.xyz
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                  4 hours ago

                  The facts you are using to support your argument point largely to a failure of the particular transit system currently implemented in your country and area.

                  When a country invests heavily in car infrastructure, cars are easier to use.

                • jtrek@startrek.website
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                  18 hours ago

                  That’s not a general problem with trains that proves they suck. The suck is places have been built out for cars with other modes as after thoughts.

                  I live somewhere with much better train and bus coverage, and it makes it easier than driving for the vast majority of trips.

                  The day to day suffering is because of cars. So fuck cars. Fuck the culture that made them primary.

            • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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              1 day ago

              I take the train and the bus all the time, it’s awesome. No traffic, no road rage, no anxiety, no danger. I just shitpost on My phone until I’m at My destination.

            • Culf@feddit.dk
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              1 day ago

              Sure badly built or unprioritized public transit infrastructure might suck, but busses and trains sure are amazing when prioritised, built correctly.

              Many European cities combine well functioning train, bus and cycle infrastructure, which together makes it possible to go anywhere at any time for cheap.

              I think it really just comes down to prioritizing to develop the infrastructure (costs money and requires political will to move away from car based infrastructure).

              Also I don’t think a pod system would solve any of the problems of either cars or trains/busses and would be much more expensive…

              • ikt@aussie.zone
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                1 day ago

                can you name all these European cities combining well functioning train, bus and cycle infrastructure outside of the netherlands? (where the average person/household does not have a car as they don’t need it)

                • iknewitwhenisawit@fedinsfw.app
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                  1 day ago

                  Public transportation seemed to work well in Brussels, Paris, Prague, Copenhagen, and even Edinburgh. Just thinking of the last few cities I was in outside of the Netherlands (leaving out the USA, which is obviously a nightmare for transportation of all kinds). ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

            • ms.lane@lemmy.world
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              Buses are the worst (actually, pneumatic tyred ‘trams’ are the worst)

              Trains are great though.

              • ikt@aussie.zone
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                yeah tbh i was being a bit hyperbolic, i don’t mind my train trip to work despite it being slow af

                but it would take an insane public transport network to service south east queensland, until we find an infinite money glitch it’s only going to be used for a minimum viable amount of very popular trips, eg between brisbane and the gold coast and soon the sunshine coast

                but for example if you want to go to crows nest from brisbane there will never be a train that goes that way because of low numbers

                • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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                  Brisbane was built by car users for car users. If you go to central Melbourne, that’s a great place to catch the tram because it was built for the tram. On the other hand, the Melbourne suburbs stink ass because they were built after cars became popular.

    • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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      What if we had trains, but bigger?

      I’m not making a joke, I honestly think making the track a little wider would be a great innovation.

      • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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        Nah, that would make it hella dangerous to just be a person existing in that space. Much safer to use trains to get to a city and then travel in the city by personal conveyance, like a bike or something. Imagine how awful life would be if we gave all that space to train tracks just for individual use. It would be an isolated, lonely nightmare. Not to mention super expensive too. Train engines, no matter how small, are not cheap to own or operate.

        • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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          I’m going to want something with a roof, windows, and climate control, though – for when the weather is bad.

          I bicycle plenty, but there are definitely times when I’d rather not and it’s miserable.

    • peripheralneuropathy@lemmy.world
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      I agree about tunnels snakes. You cannot deny. They just manifested ruling in their default introduction and have not given one reason NOT to rule since. They too, are born from train’s sibling using a term someone made a portmonteau of the subterranian…WAY? Normalize subtrainian.

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    2 days ago

    The only way to solve the self driving cat issue is to ban all human drivers from the road.

    So, if some techbro wants self driving cars, just give everybody one. All electric of course.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      My hope has always been that if self driving cars are successful, almost nobody will own a personal car.

      Cars are massively wasteful. Put aside the idea you’re hauling around multiple tonnes of steel and glass frequently to just move one person. Ignore the pollution aspect too. They’re also wasteful because they’re used for maybe 2 hours per day, and the other 22 they just sit somewhere taking up space and getting rusty.

      Just think about how many stationary cars you pass when you’re out in the world. Nobody’s getting any use out of them, they’re just sitting there in case they’re needed, meanwhile they’re taking up useful space. There are other potentially expensive things you only use for a short amount of time each day: say, a good kitchen knife. But, most of them are indoors where they’re not exposed to the elements and deteriorating without being used.

      In a future with self-driving cars, owning a car could be a luxury that enthusiasts could pay for, if it was worth it to them, but everybody else who needed a car could just rent a car for an hour or two.

      • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I think that is the difference of perspective. Living in Germany, I did my driver’s license with 22, didn’t need it before. I could live without a car.

        Yes, many would profit from shared, autonomous cars. But many would profit from public transport here in Germany to, and guess what. They want cars.

        I hate this as much as the next dude. But if they really really want them, at least make them electric

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      The only way to solve the self driving cat issue is to ban all human drivers from the road.

      …and cyclists, and pedestrians, and farm tractors, and horses, and wagons, and stray pets, and wildlife, and…

      • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Cyclist belong on their bicycle lanes , and those lanes belong besides every road.

        Pedestrians belong on walkways, along every road

        What is about stray pets and railroads? Horses , dogs, cats?

        If we are talking about something so unrealistic and futuristic like autonomous vehicles lvl 5+. We may as well assume that we fixed everything else at that point of time.

        Or, we just can take this as what it is. A sarcastic joke

      • ms.lane@lemmy.world
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        Cyclists and pedestrians shouldn’t be on the road.

        Unless you’re in the US (my condolences) you have a footpath/sidewalk/pavement for walking.

        Bikes should (but rarely do) have their own physically seperated infrastructure, so they’re not getting hit by cars/busses/trucks/etc and not hitting pedestrians.

        • ReluctantZen@feddit.nl
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          Cyclists can go on the road just fine, as long as the road is built and regulated for more than just cars

        • huey_m@reddthat.com
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          Eh, it depends. Faster bike traffic shouldn’t really be in such close proximity to pedestrians. On a lot of city streets, a fast bike is way closer to the speed of a car than to a pedestrian. City centers, especially non arterials, I’d say they should be in the street if there’s no path. I’m not particularly fast at just under 30kph and it’s rare for traffic to be much faster downtown here, especially non arterials I’m often passing them. I think that’s generally too fast to safely ride on a sidewalk, but a safe speed there would make cycling not very practical for me.

          Which I can assure, unfortunately, no cycle paths is often the case in my part of eastern/central Europe

    • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Giving everybody a self-driving car completely defeats the purpose. Human-driven cars spend about 23 hours of each day just sitting around. A car that can drive itself doesn’t need to spend any time being parked - it can provide another ride! Liberally assuming a self-driving car would need to spend a full half of its time (12 hours/day) charging or being serviced, that would still mean that replacing all cars with autonomous vehicles could reduce traffic volume by a theoretical limit of 12× (12 hours/day/vehicle vs. 1 hour/day/vehicle).

      • Aniki@feddit.orgOP
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        20 hours ago

        you’re forgetting here that all people want to commute at the same time between 7am and 9am in the morning. so you can’t just operate 1 vehicle 24 hours around, you need the vehicles for these two hours especially and then some in the afternoon.

        • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          20 hours ago

          Elimination of personal vehicles would make public transit more attractive; with the previously foregone conclusion that one must own a vehicle gone, the choice is between a few dollars for transit, or several times more than that for a private vehicle. How many people currently choose to take an Uber or Lyft to and from work?

          Also, it’s certainly not all people, nor all commuters.

      • SwingingTheLamp@piefed.zip
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        2 days ago

        Is that realistic, though? A car is already a status toy, what’s to stop conspicuous consumption in the form of buying one’s own self-driving car? Or, say, moving to a cheaper house further from the city, because commute time can now be used as work time? Shared cars won’t work in that scenario.

        Also, rush hour is still a thing. There have to be enough UAVs to handle peak demand, and then most of them will be parked somewhere, idle most of the time. Or running errands. Traffic congestion is bad enough now, with average vehicle occupancy of 1.2 people; it’ll be apocalyptic when that number drops below one.

        Also, in cities with sky-high housing costs, i guarantee that people will live in self-driving RVs, because road space is “free.”

        In short, the only way to realize the benefits of the shared UAV future is to ban private car ownership, and cap the number of UAVs in a city. That sounds a lot like a train, except trains’ enormous capacity offers better service.

        • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I doubt that we’ll be seeing UAVs for personal transport anytime soon. Terrestrial vehicles are significantly easier to manage.

          The main thing that will prevent people from purchasing their own AVs will be availability. Waymo and Zoox, for example, are running services, not selling their multi-hundred-thousand-dollar vehicles to the general public. (I’m not bothering to address Tesla as their autonomy stack is an industry joke.)

          Elimination of personal vehicles would make public transit more attractive; with the previously foregone conclusion that one must own a vehicle gone, the choice is between a few dollars for transit, or several times more than that for a private vehicle. How many people currently choose to take an Uber or Lyft to and from work?

          Also, trains don’t have curbside service.

          • SwingingTheLamp@piefed.zip
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            2 days ago

            UAV meaning Unmanned Autonomous Vehicle. (In contrast to rideshare services, like Uber. When they were heavily subsidized, it must be noted, they increased traffic congestion.) Availability of them will increase. The reason that we have an auto-dominated landscape today is that car makers wanted to sell more cars. There’s approximately 0% chance that car makers today will be satisfied selling a limited number of vehicles for ride services, when they could sell vastly more cars to individuals.

            • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              UAV already stands for “unmanned aerial vehicle.” Besides, using both “unmanned” and “autonomous” is redundant. Anyway, the standard abbreviation for autonomous vehicles is AV.

              Buggy whip salesmen gonna have to deal with it.

      • Lodespawn@aussie.zone
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        2 days ago

        Why would it reduce traffic volume? The cars that are on the road are the ones that are currently in their hour of driving that day, it would more reduce the size of parking lots and parking space allocation, or at least move it to charging hubs away from where people congregate.

        • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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          it would more reduce the size of parking lots and parking space allocation

          Which would in turn affect city design, letting buildings be placed closer together, making it so you don’t have to drive as far, which would then reduce traffic.

          • Lodespawn@aussie.zone
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            2 days ago

            I think the reduction would be slight versus the reduction realised by improving the quality of existing human operated public transport like buses and trains. A mass transit system relying on individual automated cars is a tech bro brain fart.

        • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          Elimination of personal vehicles would make public transit more attractive; with the previously foregone conclusion that one must own a vehicle gone, the choice is between a few dollars for transit, or several times more than that for a private vehicle. How many people currently choose to take an Uber or Lyft to and from work?

          • Lodespawn@aussie.zone
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            2 days ago

            Yeah it would be better still if we we had actual improved public transport systems for carry more people at once rather than automated personal vehicles, even if those automated personal vehicles are shared like taxis. The cost of automation and requirement for removing all other vehicles, pedestrians, cyclists and animals from the roads is immediately removed and the benefits obtained by reducing traffic is immediately realised just by using human driven buses and trains.

      • ms.lane@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Giving everybody a self-driving car completely defeats the purpose.

        Not really, battery-electric cars can double as your household battery bank.

        • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          It seems a lot cheaper to buy a battery bank than to spend a sizeable fraction of a million dollars for the rest of the AV and the operational costs.

      • jtrek@startrek.website
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        2 days ago

        Get rid of privately owned cars and you might be on to something. If the state owned a fleet of self driving cars you could rent at the car library, that would probably be better than everyone having their own car they park somewhere most of the time.

        Building walkable living spaces with mass transit would be better for more people environmentally, economically, health-wise, socially…

        • ms.lane@lemmy.world
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          If the state owned a fleet of self driving cars you could rent at the car library

          Until Trump or equivalent decides you’re not allowed to leave the city because you posted some nasty things about him.

          Forcing non-private ownership means everyone is at the mercy of the state allowing them to borrow transport. How long before the Gays aren’t allowed to drive? Women can’t drive? That’s the future your espousing.

        • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Well, nobody’s gonna be able to afford an actual working autonomous vehicle, and it won’t make sense either economically or operationally to privately own one even if they could.

  • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Trains for long haul + autotaxis (or air taxis) for short, low speed rides actually sounds pretty dope.