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Transportation Wireless Networking Hardware

Buses as Mobile Sensing Platforms? 52

Roland Piquepaille writes "According to European researchers, modern buses could be used as mobile sensing platforms, sending out live information to be used to control traffic and detect road hazards. The 3.83 million euro EU-funded MORYNE project was completed in March 2008 with a test in Berlin, Germany. During this test, the researchers 'equipped city buses with environmental sensors and cameras, allowing the vehicles to become transmitters of measurements, warnings and live or recorded videos to anyone allowed to access the data.' "
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Buses as Mobile Sensing Platforms?

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  • Traffic cameras? (Score:4, Informative)

    by religious freak ( 1005821 ) on Monday May 26, 2008 @06:11PM (#23549473)
    So what's the difference between this and the traffic/CCTV cameras which are already becoming ubiquitous? If a society wants to go this route, this seems like more hassle, if you ask me.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jsnipy ( 913480 )
      The difference is that the buses are mobile. Whereas the traffic/CCTV cameras are stationary.
      • Thay are unless there's traffic congestion, in which case the bus is just as stationary as a camera on a pole.
        • That's the point isn't it? It can transmit that it is stuck and then you know there is a traffic problem in that location. Additional information could be used to identify the cause and extent of the problem as well.

          • Assuming he has direct line of sight perhaps yes, but I don't see how this is much better than the driver calling base on his radio and saying "Laaahvadahck, it's totally chocker dahn the old Kent frog-and-toad, sahm dozy cahnt's gorn an plowed a blimmin chelsea tractor into a lamp post guvnor, and they're rahbbahneckin for England an' no mistake".
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by pha7boy ( 1242512 )
      buses are mobile, thus less likely to be vandalized, easier to maintain, probably less intrusive. And, it would probably cost less to install cameras on buses then to install CCTV at every corner.
      • by zappepcs ( 820751 ) on Monday May 26, 2008 @08:32PM (#23550479) Journal
        Not only that, but as a bonus, you only have to send the repair tech to the bus depot, not the street corner with a bucket lift.

        There are many possible and very good uses for mobile sensor platforms ... think "Can you hear me now?" and you're pretty close.

        Not only can they be used for traffic data, but also wireless network quality measurement. In addition to this, there are uses for short range wireless networks that could use buses as roving AP's for collection of data from those networks. Think of a WiFi network that mostly only needs connectivity now and then. As the bus drives by, boom, connection and data transfer.

        There are stand alone applications that don't normally need connection except to report telemetry data.. buses come in handy. Think of all those cameras, if their network fails, they have no way to report telemetric data... unless a WiFi mobile AP comes in range.. woot! As a back channel for all sorts of things, this works well in the coverage area of the bus lines, and is suitable for many applications without huge infrastructure or maintenance costs.
  • oblig (Score:1, Funny)

    by Cryacin ( 657549 )
    In soviet England, bus watches you.
  • How about sensing when buses aren't meeting their route schedule requirements and using this data to improve the public transit system? A somewhat "direct" application to be sure, but one that's sorely in needed in places like metro Atlanta that depend on MARTA [itsmarta.com] for mass transit. I can't even begin to estimate how many times buses have either been substantially late, not shown up at all, or passed right by a stop with waiting passengers. It actually prompted me to buy a car years ago.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Most transit agencies are already doing that. Unfortunately, it's still fairly tricky to improve schedules, even when you have a year of stop-by-stop arrival times. Planners already did pretty well with the schedules by trial-and-error. Most schedule delays now are caused by truly random occurrences.

      I have heard of transit agencies reducing early arrivals with real-time GPS monitoring, by contacting particular buses and asking them to slow their speed, or hold at a bus stop for several minutes.

      Many trans
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        The issue with MARTA is probably more political than technological. They've been in Atlanta news on more than a few occassions with stories of internal corruption and graft; it would seem that their "leadership" is (historically, at least) more interested in lining their pockets and those of their friends with state money than improving the city's transportation system.

        I make the bold assertion that accurate real-time tracking and management of MARTA buses would be heavily resisted by the management auth
        • by fishbowl ( 7759 )
          Just making it so ONE of those guys had to send letters from prison for a few decades or 99 years or so, might go a long way towards making it so officials seek other ways to benefit from the system, besides graft.

          Why don't people who blatantly embezzle money while in government positions ever wind up in a supermax for the rest of their days? Anything else equals acceptance of corruption. It should be treated like the highest of crimes.
          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            There was a time in this country when abuse of public power was a hanging offense. While I'm generally against the death penalty for civilians, I might make an exception for those who grossly abuse the public trust.
    • by EmbeddedJanitor ( 597831 ) on Monday May 26, 2008 @10:02PM (#23551241)
      One of the biggest hurdles to bus usage is that the customers don't know when the next bus is coming. Here in NZ we have a bus monitoring system that addresses this. At each bus stop, there's a low cost and reasonably vandal proof display with a wireless link. It tells you when the next bus is expected to arrive. This uses real-time bus tracking information which is pretty accurate. Each bus has a GPS and sends data to a central machine which does the tracking and sends out info updates to the terminals every minute or so.

      The result has been a huge improvement in bus user satisfaction (and the number of passengers).

      The system as a whole tracks bus speeds, congestion etc and the longer term data is used to plan extra buses etc.

    • Vancover BC (BC Transit) just rolled out a system based on text messaging. You read the number on the bus stop, fire a text message to transit with the reference number, and it replies with the time of arrival of the next bus. There is an additional parameter if it is a multi route stop, you can ask for the next bus on one particular route. Seems to work great. I know of two regular users already. They do not have GPS on all the busses yet, so some are 'scheduled time' instead of real time. They are plannin
  • Why only buses? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    The US government and auto makers are working on the VII initiative http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle_Infrastructure_Integration [wikipedia.org] to collect similar information using all vehicles as probes. The idea is to mix existing electronic systems in vehicles with short range communications. That way cars could 'talk' to the road, the road could talk to cars, and cars would talk to each other.
    • Well, for starters, the government already owns the buses. That's got to be a major plus.
  • Networking? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by klapaucjusz ( 1167407 ) on Monday May 26, 2008 @06:40PM (#23549667) Homepage

    FTA:

    The computer can also send alerts to a public transport control centre via a variety of wireless connections, including mobile radio systems, wifi or wimax networks, and UMTS (3G).

    Does anyone know if it's IP? And what they're using for routing?

    It'd be fun to design a mesh routing protocol for mobile stations with no less than four radio links with very different characteristics...

  • Sad, but true (Score:3, Interesting)

    by OMNIpotusCOM ( 1230884 ) * on Monday May 26, 2008 @06:46PM (#23549713) Homepage Journal
    I thought this was going to be in reference to a flurry of bus-related accidents, like these [kcci.com] here [kcci.com], but apparently Iowa just has the dumbest bus drivers evar. "Hey, great," I thought, "they're going to have buses that will sense when people are near and not let you hit them." Then come to find what it's really about... and I'm not sure if I'm disappointed or not.
  • Cartel @ MIT (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    This is similar to Sam Madden's CarTel [mit.edu] project at MIT.
  • Typical (Score:4, Funny)

    by Linker3000 ( 626634 ) on Monday May 26, 2008 @07:52PM (#23550183) Journal
    You wait half an hour for a sensor then three come along at the same time!
  • Yes, you can put cameras and sensors on buses. You can put them on taxis. On cars. On cell phones. On carrier pigeons. On dogs. On ferrets. On snails. Up your nose even.

    Do we really need a story every time someone sticks a sensor in yet another place?
    • Yes, you can put cameras and sensors on buses. You can put them on taxis. On cars. On cell phones. On carrier pigeons. On dogs. On ferrets. On snails. Up your nose even. Do we really need a story every time someone sticks a sensor in yet another place?

      We must have these posts, and they must all be tagged bigbrother or whatcouldpossiblygowrong, and have several lame soviet references, although there is no indication of the aforementioned cameras and sensors being used for anything other than congestion control. welcome to slashdot!

  • Here in Melbourne, Australia [wikipedia.org], we have Smart Buses [vic.gov.au] that have sensors built on the bus, combined with readers at most stops along each route. The same stops also have electronic displays that show the next 3 buses scheduled combined with their ETA, based on realtime data retrieved from previous sensors along the route.

    The type of system described in the article wouldn't necessarily work here in Melbourne, because quite often the same routes are set up with priority traffic signalling with dedicated bus lan

  • It's a bit of an exaggeration, I suppose. But AM radio has been broadcasting "drive time" weather and traffic reports collected from local bus drivers since the fifties.

    I've come to believe that such a mass of raw data is less vivid and meaningful than the word picture created in a single sentence by a human interpreter.

  • São Paulo, Brasil, tests its system http://www.sptrans.com.br/olhovivo/ [sptrans.com.br]

    The sensors provide traffic info to colorize the map. Despite the creepy interface, the system is intended to provide roughly the status of traffic. Besides it is integrated to displays at some of the stops which brings schedules and delays information.

    However, the information cannot be understood as reliable for car traffic: buses do it their own way, both retarding each other and somewhat benefiting from dedicated lanes.

    T

  • I am not convinced it's all that useful to have a videocamera on a bus (hours and hours of boring video that someone has to watch), but I think it would be beneficial to have a real-time GPS tracker on every bus, train, and other public transport. If you are waiting for a bus and it's late, you could pull out your cell phone and figure out exactly where it is.
  • by zmollusc ( 763634 ) on Tuesday May 27, 2008 @02:04AM (#23552819)
    "Ooooh!, This is interesting, Bob. Every bus except 003729 shows real bad air quality and big queues of traffic. Pull it in and check out the sensor pack" .... ...

    "Hi Jeff! I am at the depot, and it seems that bus 003729 had its sensor pack attached to the FRONT bumper of the bus by mistake!"
  • The biggest "hoax" or whatever you call it is that you can buy a car which can go faster than maximum speed limit and pay extra taxes and also for speeding violations. Just think about it how much money could be saved if cars could only have 100 HP. However one could wonder and say, well you can still buy a knife and kill, ... well you will not buy a bigger knife if you do not need it, but you will buy a bigger/faster car because of you could show off and just one day by "accident" kill few people also.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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