Source - http://www.theguardian.com/
By - Press Release
Category - New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
By - Press Release
Category - New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
New Orleans Extended Stay Hotel |
One of the UK's most congested highways, connecting the busy
container port at Felixstowe to Birmingham, is to become Britain's first
internet-connected road in a pilot project that could pave the way for everything from tolls to self-driving cars.
A
network of sensors will be placed along a 50-mile stretch of the A14 in
a collaboration between BT, the Department for Transport and the
Cambridge start-up Neul, creating a smart road which can monitor traffic
by sending signals to and from mobile phones in moving vehicles.
The
technology, which sends signals over the white spaces between
television channels instead of mobile phone networks, could even pave
the way for government systems to automatically control car speeds.
The telecoms watchdog Ofcom, which on Wednesday approved the project as part of its new blueprint for how Britain will use spectrum, is already forecasting what high technology traffic systems will look like.
"Sensors
in cars and on the roads monitor the build-up of congestions and
wirelessly send this information to a central traffic control system,
which automatically imposes variable speed limits that smooth the flow
of traffic," Ofcom said. "This system could also communicate directly
with cars, directing them along diverted routes to avoid the congestion
and even managing their speed."
Onboard computers could
essentially override the driver, imposing maximum speeds on the vehicle
by controlling the brakes and the engine. While the concept may sound
futuristic, Google is already developing a computer-driven car, which
uses cameras, radar, and range finders to detect obstacles and other
vehicles.
The Google smart car has been extensively tested on public
highways and smart roads lined with sensors.
The A14 project will
not involve smart cars, but is a first step in building the
infrastructure such vehicles will need. It could also lay the ground for
charging motorists to use busy roads.
The Highways Agency is proposing a £1.5bn improvement to the A14 which would be paid for by a toll,
with lorries paying up to £3 to use the improved route. The BT's sensor
project could help design the toll and the road improvements. The
project will initially gather information on car drivers before moving
on to collect information on heavy goods vehicles. The information will
be sent back to a database to which the Department for Transport will
have access.
"Understanding traffic patterns, in different weather
conditions at different times of day, will allow changes to traffic
regulation," said Stan Boland, chief executive of Neul. "In the future
it might provide data that could be used for road pricing, vehicle
tracking, and breakdown."
Within one or two years, Boland believes
the UK will have national, regional and city-wide networks of sensors,
connected to simple tracking devices monitoring everything from whether
council bins need emptying and which parking spaces are free to the
location of missing pets.
While traffic data is already gathered
by companies such as the satnav maker TomTom, using mobile phone
networks, the A14 project offers a low-cost alternative. Instead of
relying on mobile masts, which costs tens of thousands to install, Neul
will use small base stations that cost a few pounds and can be fixed to
street lamps or, in the case of the A14, the outside of nearby BT
exchanges.
The project is one of a series approved by Ofcom to
explore white space, which is currently used by cameras and microphones
for films, theatres and live events but in many areas lies empty. In
Glasgow, where consumer take-up of broadband is among the lowest in the
country, Microsoft will be using the spectrum to install free wifi in
the city centre. Working with the University of Strathclyde, the
software group will install sensors around the city to measure pollution
and humidity.
White space is also useful for getting broadband
signals into rural areas, because it travels longer distances and
through obstacles such as leaves and trees. On the Isle of Wight, an
Ofcom-approved trial will get remote homes online.
Google is also
taking part as one of a number of companies developing intelligent
databases that could eventually allow smartphones and tablets to use
white space to connect to the internet instead as an alternative to
mobile signals.
The databases will tell devices which bands are
empty in their local area, and at what power level the signal can safely
operate without interfering with nearby users. Demand for data over
wireless devices is forecast to be 80 times higher than it is today by
2030, and Ofcom is bent on increasing the amount of spectrum available
to connect machines ranging from computers to parking meter sensors to
the internet.
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