What will a world of self driving cars look like?

Imagining the future of transportation. (#Day39)

In the not so distance future, the world will be littered with self-driving cars.

For consumers, this transition away from human-run automobiles will have a similarly profound impact on our families, communities, government, and the economy as past technologies such as the internet, refrigerators, air conditioning, the radio, television, and the telegraph had upon their own respective diffusions into American Culture. Self driving cars will free our time and attention in fundamentally new ways, and this presents both opportunities and challenges for lawmakers and marketers alike.

More and more, automakers are looking to the car as an entertainment vehicle, one where you can use the newfound time in your car to buy more things or watch more shows with advertisements. Self-driving cars only speed up this shift. Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Business Insider’s Matthew DeBord commented :

“General Motors has made a big bet on high-speed wireless connectivity throughout its vehicle fleet,” he wrote. “Luxury carmakers such as BMW and Audi are rapidly enhancing the ability of the their cars to be as digitally enabled as smartphones, and Google and Apple are aggressively experimenting with both software and hardware, through Android Auto, self-driving cars, and Apple Car Play.”

Once self-driving cars are commonplace in suburban American driveways, the commute to work will take on a different form. No longer will commuting be seen as an attention obstacle. Instead it will represent an opportunity to relax, drink, use one’s smartphone, play with the built-in car features, or even just talk face to face with others.

Luxury travel such as cross-country road trips will be much more fun and less stressful. Goodbye fiddling with directions on Google Maps — hello automatic car routing and driving while asleep! Will people just get in the car on a weekend in Chicago and go to Wyoming? I’d expect this shift to have an impact on nomadic workers and real estate prices, too.

Photo Credit: Facebook.com.

Maybe road trips will be one giant party, similar to Croatia’s yacht week. Small towns in middle America such as Wall, South Dakota may benefit from their newfound automatically drifting tourist families greatly. Look for road trips to be “cool” again by 2040 at latest.

Traffic will look different and move more quickly, too. All cars dancing forward and changing lanes on a crowded highway synchronously. Maybe this will lower traffic wait times in hyper-dense cities such as Beijing?

Maybe cars will be even able to pay for road construction costs through micro-payments in cryptocurrency (a 21st century version of “road tolls”).

Moreover, new possibilities for crime arise with self-driving cars. The term “drive-by” takes on a new meaning. Grand Theft Auto video games will never be the same. Also, have you ever considered the possibility that someone could hack your (self-driving) car?

Photo Credit: Facebook.com.

Self-driving cars can indeed be used for spying. It is possible for self-driving cars to be used as surveillance tools if equipped with a camera. Pictures of civilians, houses, and other cars are all possible. Marketers will want this image heavy data and will develop new ways to analyze it too.

How will self driving cars and drones interact? Will cars turn amphibious or fly? Will drones be allowed to use self-driving cars as launchpads to lower their energy use while making deliveries? Companies such as a Ford and Google are already involved in both realms.

Ethical questions are arising around how to route cars in a collision situation.

Can Bitcoin or cryptocurrency built into self-driving car networks? For one, automobile financing and smart contracts are beginning to couple off, and further innovation is due which will use cryptocurrency to determine priority in the self-driving network. As an example, if Rob is in a rush and out pays Ian 3:1 for self-driving preference, then the computer network will route Rob’s car to its destination more quickly than Ian’s.

Tylrer Winklevoss, for one, already sees the potential here, stating:

“Computers and self-driving cars can’t go open up a bank account at JPMorgan or Wells Fargo, but they can plug into protocols. So if your power meter needs to purchase more energy, you can program it to do that with Bitcoin. The fact that the government is now regulating Bitcoin shows it understands that the currency is hugely transformative. This decentralized blockchain-type technology is here to stay. And it’s going to completely rewire the way the Internet works.”

Also stating:

In the future, you will summon an autonomous agent (e.g., self-driving car, drone) to pick you up and take you to your destination. You will be able to pay your fare in bitcoin which an agent will happily accept, and you will also use bitcoin to pay other agents such as roads for road-space or other self-driving cars to move out of your way if you want to go faster. It’s fun and easy to come up with endless examples of what is now possible.

Self-driving cars... See you around the road by 2030!

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