Blogs
Making short-range electric cars more useful with staging lots
Submitted by brad on Fri, 2019-03-08 12:52
Visit to Lake Berryessa "Glory Hole" spillway gallery
Submitted by brad on Thu, 2019-03-07 13:17A minor local spot of interest here is the spillway for the Lake Berryessa reservoir. Unlike most spillways, this one drains from the top on the interior of the lake. It is called a "Morning Glory" or "Glory Hole" spillway. From time to time, the lake level gets above that spillway, sometimes far above, and it creates something that looks completely wrong, like a hole in the fabric of space time. So we went up to photograph it.
No criminal charges for Uber in fatality
Submitted by brad on Wed, 2019-03-06 11:37
Yesterday, it was announced the state attorney in Arizona will not press criminal charges against Uber around the fatality a year ago in Tempe. It is still not decided if charges will apply to the safety driver.
I have a Forbes.com piece on the nature of fault in the Uber crash:
Electric cars should stream TV when they are fast-charging
Submitted by brad on Tue, 2019-03-05 12:56The question every electric car buyer asks is how convenient charging will be, and how much will the range limit my travel - known as "range anxiety."

Where's my flying car? Coming in for a landing...
Submitted by brad on Mon, 2019-03-04 10:09
Readers all know I love robocars and write about the tremendous effect they will have on our lives and cities. But a new technology, running about a decade behind but now real, is coming which could have even more dramatic effects, the e-VTOL or "flying car."
Autopilot review Update
Submitted by brad on Fri, 2019-03-01 15:19Of course, just after releasing my review of Tesla Autopilot they announced new pricing and features, with some explanation of what "full self drive" is.
For now, it turns out it's still driver assist, but on city streets. It's an interesting question if that's a good idea. I offer some additional analysis and updates.
Read my Update to Tesla Autopilot Review
I still want better luggage solutions
Submitted by brad on Thu, 2019-02-28 00:37The more you travel the less luggage you want to take. Our world where a laptop and phone can almost do it all, combined with the cloud, is helping. But sometimes you have to bring stuff in checked suitcases.
When you do road trips, especially outside the USA, you learn that most cars don't have the trunk space of North American cars, not even close. You're lucky to get two rigid body suitcases in the typical small car, 3 needs a car with special capacity.
The robocars.com review of the Tesla Autopilot
Submitted by brad on Wed, 2019-02-27 09:38
There are many reviews of the Tesla Autopilot, and when I reviewed the Model 3 I left off Autopilot for a more thorough review.
We need a world where open source robocars are possible
Submitted by brad on Mon, 2019-02-25 12:49
We all love open source. But the usual rules of open source break down if every vehicle deployed on the road has to have gone through a complex and expensive safety certification process. You can't just download, patch and go.
So we need other solutions to allow the world of the tinkerer/hacker and the innovation and superior function it can provide.
Now that we can, what if we don't wipe out the disease-spreading mosquito?
Submitted by brad on Fri, 2019-02-22 11:42Ethics professors solve the "Trolley Problem" by debating switching tracks to kill 1 person vs. 5. Engineers solve it by fixing the brakes.
Submitted by brad on Thu, 2019-02-21 11:08Since the famous Trolley Problem has come up again recently thanks to the MIT Moral Machine, it's time for what seems to be an annual debunking of the notion.
This time, to illustrate the pithy headline above, I tell the story of why the hypothetical situation is even rarer than people imagine because of the way braking and steering systems are designed on robocars, and how their driving patterns will be designed to minimize risk.
Waymo shows off how it obeys a cop redirecting traffic.
Submitted by brad on Wed, 2019-02-20 12:45What's the true incremental cost of driving a car?
Submitted by brad on Tue, 2019-02-19 13:21
What is the incremental cost of operating a car? It's not very well understood and here I hope to, together with readers, come to some better understanding of it.
The end of the A380 and California HSR teach us smaller is better
Submitted by brad on Fri, 2019-02-15 11:08
I have written often about the new economies in transportation that future technology like robocars provide. In my research I've learned something that seems to not be well known in the transportation world -- that often, smaller is better and more energy efficient.
Does your robocar come home after it takes you to work?
Submitted by brad on Thu, 2019-02-14 13:34
This week we've looked at two issues regarding robocars in the city:
What do California disengagement reports tell us?
Submitted by brad on Wed, 2019-02-13 11:57California has released the disengagement reports the law requires companies to file and it's a lot of data. Also worth noting is Waymo's own blog post on their report where they report their miles per disengagement has improved from 5,600 to 11,000.
Replacing street parking with smartphone managed parking
Submitted by brad on Tue, 2019-02-12 13:15
Will Robocars fight break-ins by moving or fighting back?
Submitted by brad on Mon, 2019-02-11 10:36Handling the pick-up "rush" when everybody leaves at once
Submitted by brad on Fri, 2019-02-08 11:45
The discussion on cars circling to avoid parking fees (short-answer, they won't) leads to a few other interesting issues I want to cover.






