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Volvo Promises 'Death-Proof' Cars By 2020 (extremetech.com)

mrspoonsi sends news that Swedish automaker Volvo has issued a bold promise: by 2020, there will be no serious injuries or fatalities in new Volvo cars. Volvo already has various smart features in its cars, but by combining them all, it becomes much harder to end up in a serious accident. Adaptive cruise control for example, is already available on many cars. It allows you to set a maximum speed, but uses radar to maintain a safe distance from the car in front of you. It can even apply the brakes if need be. This can be taken a step further with full collision avoidance. When a crash is likely, the driver will be warned. If action isn't taken, the car can begin braking to avoid, or at least minimize the impact. ... Cameras will also be used to watch for pedestrians in the vicinity of the vehicle. This is similar to the technology that is used in self-driving cars to identify potential obstacles on the road.

31 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. Challenge accepted. by jeffb+(2.718) · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Hey, y'all, watch this!"

    Unless the cars are entirely autonomous, AND automatically sedate the driver upon entry, I think they'll have a hard time achieving this goal.

    1. Re:Challenge accepted. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think they're trying to say that there won't be any new Volvos in 2020.

    2. Re:Challenge accepted. by Cigaes · · Score: 2

      Well, they need their car to be indestructible and make sure that guns and violence do not work inside them. No need to sedate the occupants, it is called “temporal grace”. I guess the next Volvo cars will all be blue and boxish.

    3. Re:Challenge accepted. by war4peace · · Score: 2

      On the same webpage you linked, if you scroll down at 60%, you see... Volvo trucks going that road.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    4. Re: Challenge accepted. by Qzukk · · Score: 2

      Wouldn't cost more than a dollar or two to include a tunnel detector and engine shutoff override.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  2. I'm sure they did not claim this... by Bearhouse · · Score: 4, Insightful

    After all, what can they do about a semi "driven" by a drunk or exhausted guy ploughing into you at speed?

    1. Re:I'm sure they did not claim this... by daq+man · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I was tempted to agree with you because I am a very attentive driver and have managed to survive by keeping an eye on everything that's happening and anticipating events but... you knew there was going to be a but... In thirty years of driving I have been in two accidents, both times my car was completely stationary. In the first one I was in stopped traffic when someone four or five cars back hit the queue of stopped cars at 60 mph. The front and back of my car were smashed but I was OK inside but things got progressively worse as you worked backwards towards the rear of the line. In the second occasion I stopped at a traffic light and the car behind me didn't, I had been stopped for a while when I was hit so it wasn't as though I braked hard or something. The other driver claimed to have not seen me, despite being in a bright red car stopped at a red traffic light in broad daylight. There were cars crossing the junction in front of me a stopped car to my left and right so nowhere to go.

      Then again, you did write "it's very, very rare that an accident 100% absolutely can't be avoided", maybe twice in thirty years of driving almost every day counts as very, very rare.

    2. Re:I'm sure they did not claim this... by Mal-2 · · Score: 2

      I've been sitting in stopped traffic and had the car behind me just decide to roll into the back of me even though nobody has moved for several minutes. Nobody hit him, he just lapsed in attention and let the car creep forward. I'd say that's 100% unavoidable on my part. Similarly, I've had the situation where I'm properly stopped for a red light (with traffic in front of me) and had someone plow right into the back of me. Another time, I was crossing a crowded intersection on a green light, and someone turned in front of me, which meant I suddenly no longer had room to clear the intersection. Despite this, someone in my own lane still managed to hit me from behind, and hard. I don't see how I could avoid any of these except by not driving.

      The only time being hit from behind while stopped at a light is the least bit avoidable is when there is only the one car in that lane and they could possibly jump the light and get out of the way. Even then, it may not be worth the risk of getting T-boned.

      --
      How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
  3. Death Proof by sanf780 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think I have heard that before from Stuntman Mike.

  4. Hmmm... History. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Death-prroof is a strong claim. I seem to remember a little incident in 1912 about an unsinkable ship.. How are these cars going to account for something like a 747 crashing into them from above?

    1. Re: Hmmm... History. by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      They're safe - Mythbusters is off the air now. Then again, Jamie might take that offer of an occasional special after reading this morning's news. "I could kill somebody in a Volvo."

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  5. Will they build RVs? by sabbede · · Score: 2

    Because if I'm going to live forever, I want a bathroom, kitchen and real bed.

  6. Have they found a fix for physics? by NotDrWho · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm pretty sure if you're ever hit head-on by a full-loaded semi at 70mph, all the safety features in the world won't help much. And the automatic swerve feature will only work if there happens to be somewhere to swerve *to*.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    1. Re:Have they found a fix for physics? by pr0fessor · · Score: 2

      My brother sold his truck and purchased something that handled much better on ice after it lost control on a long narrow bridge covered in ice that he has to travel every day to work.

      Coincidentally he sold it to our other brother who recently gave it to my son for his sixteenth birthday and thinks it's awesome because it slides around in the snow.

    2. Re:Have they found a fix for physics? by del_diablo · · Score: 2

      Actually they do. Ironically enough.
      It applies full braking before the driver reacts.
      Because ABS is a thing, and the car brakes extremely hard. Which means it can brake on snow and ice.
      So the car has lost most of its momentum before head to head.
      Because of deformation, the car engine and front deforms instead of hitting the driver.

      Now, the keyword here is "death proof" not "maim proof". And that opens up another ugly set of things.

  7. Then there’s Google’s self-driving car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'll pass on Google's cars. I don't want my car automatically pulling into the parking lots of every business that pays Google for the advertising.

    Driver: "Take me to the gym"

    Google car: "Arriving at Starbucks for your workout latte."

    Driver: "Take me to church."

    Google car: "Arriving at Joe's package store." Shit, the fucking Google car used Google to find out I'm Baptist.

  8. Swedish? by 110010001000 · · Score: 2

    I hate to break it to you guys, but Volvo was bought by the Chinese in 2010. So, um, yeah, good luck with that.

    1. Re:Swedish? by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... "[Volvo] is a wholly owned subsidiary of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group of China."

  9. If Volvo could just improve their handling... by Theovon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One of the reasons they need all that safety equipment is that the suspension system sucks. In many other cars, if you’re going down the road and start turning the steering wheel like you’re on a slalom, the car stay stable and steer and maybe rock a bit. In a Volvo, it will suffer massive body roll and basically go out of control. So they make up for it with electronics. Electronics are good, but why not fix the underlying problems first?

    1. Re:If Volvo could just improve their handling... by ArylAkamov · · Score: 2

      What volvo did you drive? I've always been pretty happy with their handling, though I've only driven 1997 models and older. Not as good as my classic Saab, but that's to be expected with macpherson struts.

  10. Subaru already has this in my car by jameson.burt2404 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The 2016 Subaru Outback calls this EyeSight, with stereo cameras near the rear view mirror. The Outback decelerates and eventually brakes to keep a fixed distance (I choose about 160 feet, but it's selectable) from any car ahead. When no car is ahead, the Outback accelerates back to the set speed; eg, 60 mph. If I stray off road lines, the car will beep and tug back some. I presume other manufacturers do similarly -- the technology has arrived, not Volvo has arrived.

  11. Re:18 Wheeler by U2xhc2hkb3QgU3Vja3M · · Score: 2

    The car will Omega back in time 13 seconds to avoid the collision in the first place.

  12. Proof against a Hellfire missile? by rossdee · · Score: 3, Funny

    Leaders of ISIL and Al-Qaeda would be interested

  13. The most recycled story of the past 7 years by Lucas123 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think CNN or some news site picked the story up yet again after an interview at CES. This is ooooold news. Every year or so, Volvo makes their "no deaths or injuries" car pledge to stir up interest. Here's a 2008 story in Wired about it. Here's one in 2012. Here's one in 2013. I'm sure there's more.

    1. Re:The most recycled story of the past 7 years by Lucas123 · · Score: 2
      Sorry folks. For some reason the HTML code isn't working, so here are the raw links:

      www.wired.com/2008/05/volvo-promises/

      www.am-online.com/news/2013/2/1/volvo-predicts-crash-proof-cars-by-2020-but-uk-drivers-remain-skeptical/32308/

      www.am-online.com/news/2013/2/1/volvo-predicts-crash-proof-cars-by-2020-but-uk-drivers-remain-skeptical/32308/

  14. Volvo AREN'T autonomous by DrYak · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Please don't put people in it if autonomous.

    The Volvo aren't autonomous in the sense that they don't handle the actual route.

    Volvo mainly use their sensors (though it's camera + lidar + radar, just like on autonomous cars)
    to detect possible objects that could collide with the car and break and/or sound an alarm.

    Note that the driver can still override by slamming the gas pedal. (People want to be able to have the last say).
    But if the driver doesn't do anything, the car will automatically slow down and stop before hitting the car/pedestrian/whatever in front.
    (And also, resume driving if the car in front starts moving again. That's a very useful feature in a traffic jam. Though if the Volvo has stopped for a longer period of time, it asks a confirmation from the driver (button or gas pedal) just to be sure to have the drivers' attention.
    After all, its NOT an autonomous car, and the driver is still responsible, so it would be better if the driver hasn't dozed off during the stop).

    Ok Volvo, see if your car can drive this

    Some of the feature of Volvo car are already useful in these situations.

    Again, Volvos aren't autonomous, it's NOT their job to actually drive though this kind of hell.

    BUT...

    The lidar and radar will correctly whatch for anything the car might crash into.
    The volvo will correctly stop before crashing into incomin vehicles or against the mountain (due to too narrow space for crossing).

    The camera tracks the road and can sound an alarm if the driver risks quitting the path.
    (Though unlike other brands like BMW, the Volvo won't correct the course by itself. It just sounds an alarm when detecting that the driver was swerving away of the path and either:
    - hopes that the driver will wake-up correct and course
    - of the driver will turn on the turn signal, because the driver was actually swerving away from the current lane on purpose - he/she wanted to change lane, but without the turn signal, the car couldn't know it and sounded an alarm anyway. Of course that last one applies to changing lane on a multi-lane highway.
    Not trying to stay in path in the kind of hell like this mountain "goat-path-except-there-are-truck-on-it" from your terrifying example).

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  15. Opposite approach to Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It is interesting to watch Volvo taking an opposite approach to Google. If you watch Google's TED talks on their autonomous cars (the one from last year) you'll hear the speaker go on and on about how there will be no way for a car using an incremental approach towards automation to offer 100% safety, and the only possible way to do it is to delete that approach from your thinking and design completely from the ground up that the car must be 100% autonomous from day one.

    Personally, I think Google's approach is flawed because they make a flawed assumption: That the driver will, as automation increases, stop paying attention even faster and thus have increasing numbers of accidents. This is flawed because there is nothing preventing the automation from simply being offline until the last moment when it can prevent the collision. ie: The driver must remain fully engaged. And states in-between can similarly fully engage drivers by keeping one aspect of driving constantly required (Moving the wheel, maybe moving the pedals, changing gears, etc). No, not the way Mercedes does it where you can tape a bottle to the wheel and the car keeps moving it for you. No, I mean you just don't automate that part of driving *at all* until the last second before an accident, at which point the result will be the car coming to a stop at the side of the road. The kind of thing that will happen within seconds if you just let go of the wheel on a highway. The kind of inconvenience you aren't taping a water bottle to the wheel to experience.

    Another argument presented was that semi-autonomous cars would have to engage the brakes and slow down the car, which would be unacceptable to drivers. I find that faulty reasoning as well because I don't see why a driver who cannot accept the computer making that decision for him will be any more accepting of it because the car is fully autonomous. I watched this play out, personally: Took a megabus. The driver was having to hit the brakes a lot due to traffic. The bus was too late for a few of the passengers to get to their destination on time for a concert they were to be singing at. This group decided to bug the hell out of the driver, clearly displeased by his having to slow down. Frankly, there's not really much difference, for a passenger, between a bus driven by a driver, and an autonomous bus. They'd be equally pissed off.

    I'm happy to see that Volvo is taking the step-by-step approach and look forward to what they produce.

  16. I can see the advertising featuring Kurt Russell by imatter · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hey, Pam, remember when I said this car was death proof? Well, that wasn't a lie. This car is a hundred percent death proof. Only to get the benefit of it, honey, you REALLY need to be sitting in my seat.

    - Stuntman Mike

  17. Y'all know how this works... by LaurenCates · · Score: 2

    Someone makes something death-proof, they just go and make a bigger death.

    Or something like that.

    --
    Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
  18. Study the cultural background before the ridicule! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The swedish and other scandinavian people are suprisingly honest: words mean a whole lot to them, it doesn't even have to be put in writing. They feel like cold and reserved, but if they promise then they will deliver, no matter what. That is hard to grasp from a north-american viewpoint, where media is much influenced by cunning jew-think and cheeky fraud is the laudable moral code baseline.

    That difference is one of the reasons the little SAAB JAS-39 Gripen fighter jet has been sold / long-term leased to several countries in 4 continents, despite enormous marketing and political pressure behind the american F-16 / F-35 bandwagon. The head of czech airforce stated it openly to the press they have 10 years of experience where Sweden always delivered on time and within agreed budget, while in fraternal beer-meetings other airforces often complain of being fscked financially and capability-wise by the Lockheed / Pentagon cabal on every possible occasion.

    Therefore if Volvo says 2020, then it will be 2020. China now owns them, but the people sliding the sliders are still swedes. You can't realistically expect them to prevent tailpipe loopback suicides, drug cartel shoot-outs, car bombings, Chixulub asteroid impacts and Dakar Rally sand sinks. Yet, I am willing to believe they can successfully prevent all preventable civilian, gentlemen driver road deaths, among 1-70 year old (*) reasonably healthy occupants in new-make Volvo cars by 2020. Maybe they will even deliver for the promise to people ouside the Volvo vehicle, like pedestrians, cyclists, prams, etc.

    (*) I feel it would be excessive to demand they protect 99 year old frail, barely alive to begin with occupants in german autobahn unlimited speed ramming vs. a shinkansen. For the little children promise, that is only valid if the kid is placed in a certified safety cradle-seat as recommended by every 1st-world car maker and legally mandated in many developed countries.

  19. 2019 Clearance special! by atheos · · Score: 2

    which begs the question, who the hell is going to purchase the 2019 models?