Dodge leading human resistance to robocars

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Dodge has released a few interesting commercials for its Charger muscle car, somewhat prematurely pushing it as the antithesis of a robocar. Most amusing is the second ad which features an ugly car with a literal robot in the driver's seat (something also seen in the Total Recall and I, Robot movies.) The first ad just has visuals of the car but actually mentions the Google car as one of the signs of increasing robot control. For some reason, the car, rather than the people behind it, is named the "leader of the human resistance."

It's easy to understand the sentiment behind these ads, particularly when you are trying to market a car as a powerful "man's car" oriented to the thrill of driving. The people who want the car to drive itself are not like you, you want an exciting drive and this is the car for you, it says. (Other ads decry an online test drive, and cars that get lots of "boring" miles per gallon.)

The ad does pose an interesting question. When I talk, I often get people who say that they have no interest in a robocar (and that Americans won't have interest in them) because they love to drive and would not give it up. I often ask back, "so do you love to commute?" It's also clear from the example of New York City that Americans will certainly give up driving if it's the right choice for their locale. People who grew up in L.A. don't try to keep their car if they move to Manhattan, they do what makes sense for their new area.

Driving is fun, of course, particularly on an interesting road with a powerful car. Indeed, many find driving a stickshift even more fun in such circumstances, though they are almost gone from U.S. cars. (I've mostly owned stickshift cars though when I bought my most recent I ended up with an automatic where you can manually change the gears. But I find I don't use the manual mode.) Being a passenger on windy roads is not nearly so much fun, and even makes many people a bit queasy, though this almost never happens to the driver even with the same moves.

Obviously I suspect the Dodge ad is wrong when it says that "robots will never take our cars." But human driven cars will also exist for a long time, and not just in the muscle car market. Many people will enjoy -- or even need -- a car they can take control of when the road gets "interesting." But in our ordinary driving, the road itself is rarely interesting. We may well take special trips where the software drives us to the fun road and we take over after that, though with a better safety system. On the other hand, when it comes to scenic drives, people will want to go slowly and be passengers, getting a chance to look out the windows and enjoy the view rather than concentrate on the road. We may see "tourist cars" in popular tourist spots which are either convertibles or have nearly transparent tops -- reminding us perhaps of the bubble roof cars from the Jetsons -- for those whose focus is on the view.

There will be a sector of the market that wholly buys into Dodge's tongue-in-cheek message. I'm pretty confident in predicting that the opposite segment that embraces the technology will be more than large enough for it to find all the early adopters it needs. As people get used to the idea, it will then go mainstream, even if it never captures everybody.

Of course, I'm almost certain the Dodge Charger, like all other cars, is full of processors with tons of code. The fuel mixing system that gives it its power is computerized in a typical car. One technology "leading the resistance" against another.

This does mean a lot of changes for the automobile industry, as I wrote in my article on car design changes. Today a car's price is remarkably correlated with its horsepower, which is part of the reason Dodge wants to advertise this way. Even when luxury is the real product, you will still find extra horsepower. This may change as people want comfort in their ordinary car, and only want horsepower in the vehicle they rent for the weekend.

Comments

I could certainly see a future where "driving", as an activity, becomes something like horseback riding; a recreational activity, mostly engaged in by persons with high levels of resources, occasionally performed competitively by professionals as a form of entertainment.

the Disco Dashboard in that Charger? The irony's delicious; no?

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