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A Robotic Taxi Named robuCAB

Roland Piquepaille writes "According to ICT Results, an EU-funded project named Embounded 'has achieved the twin, and apparently contradictory, goals of making embedded systems both smarter and tougher.' One example is the robuCAB, a '4 seat automated people mover' developed by a French company and built from a 4 wheel-drive electric chassis with on-board PC. This autonomous vehicle follows the curb and carries several embedded systems, with one camera on the path edge, another device tracking the angle and direction of the curb, while others control the gearing and acceleration. robuCABs are not totally independent. They move over pre-defined circuits which contain a series of sensors below the ground. But read more for additional references and a picture of two robuCABs on the road."

69 comments

  1. Wrong Name by k_187 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm not using it until they change the name to JohnnyCab

    --
    11 was a racehorse
    12 was 12
    1111 Race
    12112
    1. Re:Wrong Name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Douglas Quaid: Where am I?
      Johnnycab: You're in a Johnnycab.
      Douglas Quaid: I mean, what am I doing here?
      Johnnycab: I'm sorry. Would you please rephrase the question?
      Douglas Quaid: How did I get in this taxi?
      Johnnycab: The door opened. You got in.

    2. Re:Wrong Name by glavenoid · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ehh, might as well post a link to the video.

      --
      I, for one, am looking forward to the inevitable /. beta rollout fallout.
    3. Re:Wrong Name by Thwomp · · Score: 1

      You beat me to it! At the very least I'll accept a cab voiced by Robert Picardo.

    4. Re:Wrong Name by TheTornOne · · Score: 1

      A HA HA, you think this is the real Quaid...?

    5. Re:Wrong Name by inasity_rules · · Score: 1

      Yes, the Rob-u-Cab. You get in, and when you get out, you find all your possesions have been lifted. Seriously, is anyone thick enough to ride in a cab that will rob you?

      --
      I have determined that my sig is indeterminate.
    6. Re:Wrong Name by PReDiToR · · Score: 1


      Not all cab drivers are trying to rob you, but some do.
      This is stupid, but they are so thick they don't realise it! Here is why.

      The first mile of any cab journey is the most profitable for any cab driver.

      The starting price in cabs where I live (UK) is £3.00 (about $1.50), and after that each mile costs £1.20 ($0.65).
      Going the long way round or taking a "scenic detour" is not worth the driver's time when you consider the payouts that guy has on his sheet.

      Getting a drive can cost up to £250.00 a week here.
      Getting a licence to drive costs about £100 a year.
      Fuel comes straight out of the driver's pocket, so doesn't need to be wasted on long, unprofitable journeys.
      The longer a punter is in the car, the more chance there is of a disagreement (pissed up fools finding something to argue about).
      The next job might be a really good one so get back for it.
      Taking "marks" for a ride will only make them use another company, thereby decreasing your revenue stream.
      Oh, if the idiot in your car clocks your badge number, they might get off their arse and report you.

      Cab driving is not an easy thing to do, it is a complex interchange of personalities, possibly ending in violence for the guy who took you home when you had had one too many. Sometimes cab drivers are people too, just like the kind of person that gets a +5 insightful on Slashdot (hint hint). They spend years learning how to get you to some shithole of a new condo development that isn't even on the (SHIT) SatNav system without you saying to them "do I get a discount for giving you directions?".

      Using a computer with built in GPS will have you totally screwed when the place you live has one-way streets and new roads.
      Syntax error: There should be a road here, reboot, go the other way
      "Hey, why are you going this way? This is a dead end street!"
      "I was following my SatNav, sorry! I messed up, I won't charge you for this, my mistake."
      OR
      ~bleep~ Direction unclear, please repeat request, thank you for using JohnnyCabs

      : note to non Trek geeks - "Direction unclear" line is the TNG sample I use on my XP setup for dialogue boxes, don't know if it is popular.

      If you want to check how screwed up GPS systems are (TomTom I'm looking at you) Try putting this short journey into your device:
      York, UK. The Roman Bath, in the square on the map, not behind it - A pub in the middle of a busy, historical, tourist-filled city centre
      to
      McDonalds, Blake St, just up the road. (Hint: the pub is on a square, head north-west for less than half a mile)
      The road between the two has been one-way since before I was born. Davygate. Blake St is also one-way. GPS? Tells you to drive up BOTH streets the wrong way.

      Do you really want to take a robotic cab whilst people are driving towards you and your cab is going the wrong way?

      --

      Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
    7. Re:Wrong Name by neumayr · · Score: 1

      Except for the mixup in currency conversion - it's more like two dollars per pound, not two pounds per dollar - I totally agree with you.
      Satellite navigation totally fails in most European cities I've been to, I don't see how an automatic cab would work except maybe on some well defined overland routes, like from the airport to some trainstation.

      --
      Truth arises more readily from error than from confusion. -Francis Bacon
    8. Re:Wrong Name by Jarik_Tentsu · · Score: 1

      But honestly speaking, without a human on board, what's the chance of abuse for this? Like, a bunch of guys drunk at a party, call over RoboCab...then decide to trash it since there's no one to tell 'em off.

      ~Jarik

  2. Nice name by kermit1221 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Little concerned about it though. Rob-U-Cab doesn't sound like a very nice thing...

    1. Re:Nice name by NeuroKoan · · Score: 1

      That's how I read it too.

      "Hey honey, want to ride the rob you cab? It'll be fun!"

      --

      "However," replied the universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation."
    2. Re:Nice name by nick_davison · · Score: 2, Funny

      You've evidently not paid a cab fair in London.

      Of course, RobYou-RefuseToTakeYouToABunchOfPlaces-GetLost-WeaveDownAlternatingStreetsToUpTheMileage-ForceYouToListenToCrapMusic-AndSpeakDebatableEnglish-Cab turned out to be a bit of a mouthful.

    3. Re:Nice name by Invictus42 · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hey at least it's a step up from the last version, stabuCAB.

    4. Re:Nice name by syousef · · Score: 1

      Rob-U-Cab doesn't sound like a very nice thing...

      When I work the late shift I get the cab home. Rob-U-Cab doesn't sound like anything new.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  3. Total Recall by TheTornOne · · Score: 1

    Also had Total recall come to mind on the subject line

  4. hmmmm by wizardforce · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Quick! someone tag this: whatcouldpossiblygowrong

    these cabs require an underground infrastructure [guides in this case] that doesn't exist on most roads/highways that are frequently used by people- no only that but the farther you get out away from populated areas or even connections between populated areas, the less chance there's going to be anything for the cabs to go by as far as navigation is concerned. The whole concept relies on the idea that most roads or at least the ones commonly used will have these markers imbedded beneath the road and that is why it's not going to work for a while.

    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    1. Re:hmmmm by QuantumG · · Score: 0, Troll

      Clearly you didn't RTFA as you would have seen they are not "cars". They are more like golf buggies.

      So your entire comment is stupid.

      RTFA.
      RTFA.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    2. Re:hmmmm by wizardforce · · Score: 2, Funny

      Clearly you didn't RTFA as you would have seen
      I'm a slashdotter, what did you expect you insensitive clod?!
      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    3. Re:hmmmm by lexarius · · Score: 1

      The targets for these carts is most likely things like retirement communities or other large, privately owned compounds (or cooperating businesses in a commercial district) of sufficient size to require roads.

    4. Re:hmmmm by Memroid · · Score: 1

      I've always wondered how long it would take, after the introduction of smart cars (which follow signals), for malicious people to create false signals, driving cars off of roads... or cliffs.

    5. Re:hmmmm by houghi · · Score: 1

      Quick! someone tag this: whatcouldpossiblygowrong
      How about a tag It is Roland again, so nothing to see here, move along.
      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    6. Re:hmmmm by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Did he say cars? His post is perfectly correct. They need an infrastructure they will get more difficult to get the farther away you town is from the main infrastructure.

      RTFP
      RTFP

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:hmmmm by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Dude, he's already admitted he didn't RTFA.. please RTETBP.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    8. Re:hmmmm by eggfoolr · · Score: 1

      If you use RFID chips embedded in the roads, you could quickly and cheaply create electronic lanes on all your roads.

      Punching them into existing roads would be easy. All you need to do is insure they are replaced (like road markings) when the road is dug up or re-laid.

    9. Re:hmmmm by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      The whole concept relies on the idea that most roads or at least the ones commonly used will have these markers imbedded beneath the road and that is why it's not going to work for a while.

      If they drop one sensor in every pothole in Manhattan, they will have all the streets on the island covered. Then they could replace, maybe a 25% (my rough estimate of the percentage of cabs that never go to the other boroughs) of the taxis with 3500 rob-u-cabs. Then we can all laugh as we watch robots try to navigate something like this. Notice at the end of the video, not only do the lanes get ignored, but there is a lady walking between the stuck cars. Anywhere that would have the population density to justify embedding the roads is going to have traffic situations like this.

      --
      We are all just people.
    10. Re:hmmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude. RTFGGP

    11. Re:hmmmm by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      In many cities I could see one or two road axis that would really benefit from a 24/24 autonomous transportation system. Putting wires down one or two roads couldn't be that expensive...

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    12. Re:hmmmm by Dextrously · · Score: 1

      Clearly you didn't RTFA as you would have seen they are not "cars". They are more like golf buggies.

      So your entire comment is stupid.

      RTFA.
      RTFA.


      This sounds really funny if you read it as though "Comic Book Guy" from The Simpsons were saying it.
  5. Rob You Cab? by h2oliu · · Score: 1

    Um, anyone else read it as that?

    --
    Ok, I give up, why you?
    1. Re:Rob You Cab? by 3seas · · Score: 1

      don't you know, computers don't lie.

    2. Re:Rob You Cab? by sdkramer · · Score: 1

      Sounds about right. Have you ridden with a hack from Midtown to CPW? 40 bucks my achin' @$$.

      --
      "I wish to God these calculations would have been made by steam." -Charles Babbage
    3. Re:Rob You Cab? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Computers don't lie, there just given counter instructions...and then kill the crew.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    4. Re:Rob You Cab? by owlnation · · Score: 1

      Um, anyone else read it as that?
      Only the people that have used taxis.
    5. Re:Rob You Cab? by pcgabe · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hey, good job on not making any grammar mistakes in your post!~

      --
      Don't put advice in your sig.
  6. Rob You Cab by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

    With marketing like this, the French taxi industry doesn't need enemies.

    --
    -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    1. Re:Rob You Cab by baldass_newbie · · Score: 1

      With marketing like this, the French taxi industry doesn't need enemies.

      Funny, but I was thinking of the Dutch taxi industry. They're always amazed when I tell them how to get to obscure little towns without grand detours, cutting their 'clip' in half.
      I now use the phrase 'honest as a Dutch taxi driver' with abandon and alacrity.
      --
      The opposite of progress is congress
  7. Seeing and Waiting... by TheLazySci-FiAuthor · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I love seeing the new technologies emerging, but with the world wide web and the speed of notification it offers, sometimes I feel a little chagrined that even though right here and now there are functional, autonomous vehicles, it will probably still be years before my first ride in one.

    Now, I could split hairs and note that every airliner I have flown on has had autopilot, probably of quality high enough to even land the plane, but it's not the same as sending a text and then 5 minutes later having a wheeled robot show up at my curb to whisk me away to....well, probably taco bell or something.

    I think about these things. Like, when will I see my first bona-fide working (i.e. employed) humanoid robot? I asked my wife and brother and both agree it likely will be another 5-10 years and it will probably be at some fancy hotel or resort. This is of course assuming I somehow find myself at a fancy hotel or resort - I guess that's something to look forward to as well!

    1. Re:Seeing and Waiting... by Cousarr · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually if you landed at a large airport in a large plane, the pilot probably had and used an autoland.

    2. Re:Seeing and Waiting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *cough

      Your plane probably HAS taken off and landed on auto pilot.

      Maybe not on the same flight.

      "curb to whisk me away.."
      never to be seen again.

      "Cab for Sarah Conner."

  8. .... nice pic ..... by akuma624 · · Score: 1

    those things look like golf carts

    --
    ... if music be fruit of love, play on ....
  9. I for one by Cctoide · · Score: 1

    ... look forward to the robuZIP and the robuUHA.

    --
    "Let's face it, it's a good story. Accuracy would kill it."
  10. Nova... by the_wesman · · Score: 1

    I speculate that this will encounter fate similar to that of the Chevy Nova. "No va" in Spanish means "doesn't go" - it wasn't very popular out Spanish speaking countries.... who, in the English-speaking world, is going to get into a "rob-u-cab" ?

    --
    calling all destroyers
    1. Re:Nova... by sobachatina · · Score: 1

      Except that the Chevy Nova did perfectly fine in Spanish speaking countries and there appears to have been no confusion about its name.

      http://spanish.about.com/cs/culture/a/chevy_nova.htm (This link is not meant to imply that about.com is an authoritative source of historical information. This was just the first hit on google.)

  11. RobuCab = Rob You Cab??? by CodePyro · · Score: 1

    Rob You Cab? Don't they already have these in New York city...

  12. Rob-U-Cab? by NynexNinja · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Sounds like its not going to be cheap!

  13. I can't wait. by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't wait for my self-driving car. Go to sleep in the car Friday night, wake up in Vegas/SanFran/Wherever in the morning. Visting mom would be a lot less of a chore. It's 8 hours of driving round trip for a visit that lasts a few hours at most. (I can't stay in her smoke-saturated apartment any longer than that.) Not far enough to make flying a viable option, no train station on her end. If I didn't have to pay attention to the road, I could play a game, read a book, watch a movie, read slashdot, take a nap, etc.

    1. Re:I can't wait. by Nataku564 · · Score: 1

      Kind of like grabbing a greyhound, amtrak or any of the major airlines ... well, admittedly the last one is much less convenient post 9/11.

    2. Re:I can't wait. by mbstone · · Score: 1

      I can't wait for my self-driving car. Go to sleep in the car Friday night, wake up in Vegas in the morning.

      1. Remove $ from wallet.
      2. Burn it.
      3. Drink 400ml of your favorite distilled spirits.
      4. Pass out.

      You've just saved 40 gallons of gas and two days' hotel bill!!

    3. Re:I can't wait. by Zoxed · · Score: 1

      > I can't wait for my self-driving car. Go to sleep in the car Friday night, wake up in Vegas/SanFran/Wherever in the morning. Visting mom would be a lot less of a chore.

      It's called train :-)

    4. Re:I can't wait. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said there's no train station you fucking idiot.

    5. Re:I can't wait. by deander2 · · Score: 1

      yeah, that's what i do in vegas too. "visit my mom" =P

  14. Ob by jcuervo · · Score: 0

    In Soviet France, cabbie robs YOU!

    --
    Assume I was drunk when I posted this.
  15. I'll start paying attention... by The+Ultimate+Fartkno · · Score: 1

    ...when they install a robot Ben Bailey.

  16. They named it WHAT now?? by LrdDimwit · · Score: 2, Funny

    You have to wonder at any company that picks the name "Rob-U-Cab". Most of the time the companies have the good sense and decency to at least pretend. After the Titanic, you didn't hear about any vessels named the USS Improved or the HMS Seaworthy, did you? Usually when companies are honest like this somebody gets fired...

  17. Overthinking the problem... by Viceroy+Potatohead · · Score: 1

    I can't wait for my self-driving car. Go to sleep in the car Friday night, wake up in Vegas/SanFran/Wherever in the morning. Visting mom would be a lot less of a chore. That's just technological overkill. I'm able to achieve the same results with 40oz of whiskey. It's cheaper, DIY, and probably safer.
  18. Payment? by Kingrames · · Score: 1

    What happens when you don't pay?

    oh.
    Will we have, say, 20 seconds or so?

    --
    If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
  19. tag: ohnoitsroland by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

    So I take it I must be the last person who hasn't gotten the Firefox extension that blocks articles by Roland Piquepaille? I see nothing in the comments or the tags.

    I should have recognized it from the signature link to his blog promising videos and/or photos at the end of the entry.

    - RG>

    --
    Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
  20. Cutting you off by fireheadca · · Score: 1

    Great... now who's going to program them to cut you off?

  21. Design by professorfalcon · · Score: 1

    One example is the robuCAB, a '4 seat automated people mover'

    Is this a true 4-seat mover, built from scratch that way, or is it just two 2-seat movers joined together? The real future is in the one that is built with 4 seats from the ground up.

  22. Easy by bigmouth_strikes · · Score: 1

    Well, the doors shouldn't open unless you pay and the Rob-U-Cab drives to the police station.

    --
    Oh, I can't help quoting you because everything that you said rings true
  23. tag: blogspam fuckroland by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
    Well, you can see how I tagged it...

    For a while the editors were good in snipping off his link whoring "for more information..." lines, but eventually he wears them down, I guess.

  24. ABS in toasters? by Lidberg · · Score: 1

    So what do these embedded systems? "They run ABS ('anti-lock breaking systems') in cars, avionics and high-tech toasters. Since when do toasters have ABS installed in them? Is it so your toast doesn't go skidding across the countertop?
  25. Where's the kerb? by LANS · · Score: 1

    The article says the car guides itself based on the kerb at the side of the road. What happens when someone parks on the side of the road, making the car lose sight of the kerb?