The Mystery of the Cars Abandoned in a Robot Car Park (bbc.com)
The mystery of why a handful of cars were abandoned in a derelict car park in Edinburgh, Capital of Scotland, may have been solved. From a report on BBC: The $7m Autosafe SkyPark used robots to stack cars and was dubbed the "car park of the future" -- but went into receivership in 2003. After lying empty for more than a decade, the building in Morrison Street is now being demolished. And the work has uncovered eight cars which were left behind when the doors were closed. Images of the abandoned vehicles has sparked a number of theories about why they were never removed. But a former employee has said they could be old vehicles which were bought by the car park's former operators to test out the robot equipment. A spokesperson said: "We can confirm that there are eight cars present at the car park on the Capital Square site, which have been there since the car park closed in 2003. The owners of the cars are unknown and they are now the property of the demolition company who will remove the cars once work begins on the levels on which they are located."
If they left 8 test vehicles in the system, that was 8 spots they were not using for revenue. Speaks to the financial brains of the company running the car park being not so bright.
You use that word, but I don't think it means what you think it means.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
Do they not have title records for cars in the UK? It seems like it'd be a trivial exercise to look up the license plate or the VIN to determine the owner of those cars.
How is this story relevant to tech? Who cares about a bunch of cars left behind at an abandoned junk yard?
If I disagree with you it's because you are wrong.
VIN numbers?
FYI, it's the British for a parking lot or (like in this case) a parking garage. https://www.merriam-webster.co...
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
People leave the country and abandon the car. This is common enough at airports that there's a process for declaring the car abandoned and auctioning it off. I'd imagine something similar happened here, or maybe someone died and their car was in the garage. Shouldn't be major news or hard to track down though, there is a number plate and a VIN on the car ... see who owns it, send them all required letters/notice, then send to auction if they don't respond. The car dealer can cut a new key with the VIN and correct legal documents.
And, after a 10-year bender, he's asking himself "Now, where did I park my car?"
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Look who's talking...
Everything you need to know is in Adriana's farewell episode.
While he was waiting for the end of the universe.
A mystery raised and solved all in the same summary!
Talk about efficient reporting...
Or just fake news.. Depends on how you look at it.
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
There are also abandoned cars in my neighborhood. Slashdot, please help me solve this non-tech mystery on a supposedly tech-related site.
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GP's only point was that it's a VIN, not a VIN number.
Where's my car?
Have gnu, will travel.
Mystery appears to have been solved by a commenter on the story at the Edinburgh Evening News - seemingly the vehicles in question were purchased by the company which built the car park to conduct tests of the new system.
https://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/our-region/edinburgh/has-the-mystery-of-the-cars-in-edinburgh-s-robot-car-park-been-solved-1-4670137