Wireless Street Lamps for Traffic Monitoring 563
RMH101 writes "The Register has a story about a UK initiative to create a country-wide wireless data network using street lamps. It's come to pass through a government initiative to monitor all cars' speed and location, all the time, everywhere. The company involved, Last Mile, are proposing an intelligent mesh of smart street lamps embedded with storage and wireless networking to create 200MBit network access across the UK, including remote areas not reachable by conventional broadband. Work is due to start this year."
What if... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What if... (Score:2)
For those who don't know, the 2CV tops out at around 80mph and its slightly larger cousin, the Dyane, at around 95mph. This sees its little 2-cylinder 600cc engine revving to over 7,000rpm, pretty close to its redline.
Now, when you fit a 1,300cc four-cylinder from a Citroen GSA, then fit a turbocharger from a Mini Metro GT, you have a frankly very, very silly car.
Re:What if... (Score:2)
GSA or Ami Super engines into ordinary 2CVs is a pretty old trick, but the problem is getting the engines these days. You could try any really compact flat-four (like maybe a Subaru, but then you'd need to
vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals... (Score:4, Interesting)
While this sounds like a cool idea, I see too much room for abuse... Besides, they're using it to track all this traffic activity... do you want to use the government's internet connection so they can track that part of your life, too?
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:5, Insightful)
That's why you put the antenna on the outside...
Street lights are what, 15-20 feet tall? (5-6 meters for our European friends
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:3, Funny)
> Street lights are what, 15-20 feet tall? (5-6 meters for our European friends
Ha! I see where people have left their tennis shoes up there all the time.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:3, Insightful)
Now of course those arent being used to track movements and issue speeding tickets but I wonder how many criminals will even pay attention to them after 5-10 years. How often do you notice the telephone boxes sitting out in plain site that you could hack/crack/vandalize?
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:2)
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:3, Informative)
The UK seems to be filled with obnoxious youths intent on damaging everything. Get a ne
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:2, Insightful)
I wish that were true, but some people [darwinawards.com] just haven't figured out it's a bad idea yet.
However, it is correct that cameras garner [rtmark.com] far [bbc.co.uk] more [bbc.co.uk] hatred [bbc.co.uk]. Also, some more amusing moments [bbc.co.uk].
Re:vandalism just got a lot more fun for criminals (Score:3, Insightful)
Craig
Cognative Dissonance in a nutshell (Score:5, Funny)
Gods and fishes! Somebody get me some aspirin!
monitoring (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:monitoring (Score:5, Funny)
Think of their safety!
Re:monitoring (Score:5, Funny)
Moderators, that's not funny. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:monitoring (Score:4, Interesting)
And damn right, too. Speaking as a cyclist, given the number of psychopathic, homicidal pillocks who are allowed to throw 2 tons of metal around on Britain's streets, I want even tighter controls on the speeders. The selfish little bastards put their (marginal) time savings over the safety of the rest of us. If I was as reckless with a gun as all-to-many drivers are with cars, they'd lock me in prison, not just suspend me from driving for a few months.
Re:monitoring (Score:4, Insightful)
I could not agree with you more. However, we do need AK-47's to change the Congress if we need to. That is the intent of the 2nd Amendment- to ensure the 1st.
Examples like AK-47's for hunting is a propaganda ploy, sad that you repeat it really.
.
Re:monitoring (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:monitoring (Score:5, Insightful)
The government?
Never in the US (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Never in the US (Score:2)
I can only imagine what driving on the right would do.
One problem... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:One problem... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:One problem... (Score:2)
satellite is not expensive (Score:3, Informative)
19.99 a month for 256k [silvermead.net] 59.99 for 2Mb
if you have SkyTV it won't cost you the 200 ish installation for a SkyDish
I'm told the latency is quite high so don't expect to play quake
http://www.silvermead.net/satellite
Re:One problem... (Score:4, Funny)
excellent!
Wrong topic methinks.. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a privacy issue, not a technology issue. This would allow the police to track your car all over the country.
Re:Wrong topic methinks.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wrong topic methinks.. (Score:2)
Re:Wrong topic methinks.. (Score:2)
Putting expensive equipment (Score:3, Insightful)
But man, talk about scary big brother tactics: "a government initiative to monitor all cars' speed and location, all the time, everywhere"
Re:Putting expensive equipment (Score:2)
If you are implying that the network could be compromised by one of these snaping off; I'm sure there would be some redundancy.
why would the equipment be expensive? It certainly wouldn't cost more than a streetlight. Plus only the antenna would need to be on the streetlight itself, the rest could be bu
Re:Putting expensive equipment (Score:2)
A 17t unit was manouvering outside the yard and manage to wrench a lamp-post off its base by gently reversing over it (no real damage to the unit.
Now if the number of wrecked speed-cameras in the UK are anything to go by, the truck drivers will start going after these too.
Re:Putting expensive equipment (Score:5, Informative)
No, when a car hits them (which happens on a semi-frequent basis in any major metropolitan area). They're made to snap off to decrease the damage done to the car and occupants. They're also easier to repair if they snap completely off then if they would just bend when hit.
Next time you walk by one, take a little bit closer look at it. They're typically connected to the base by 4 large bolts usually with some type of cushioning, semi-plyable material in between. When a car hits it the four bolts snap and the pole falls over, typically breaking just the bolts and the light and causing minimal damage to the vehicle. To repair it they simply replace the light and the four bolts.
Plus only the antenna would need to be on the streetlight itself, the rest could be buried underground.
That wouldn't make too much sense and would be much more expensive/time consuming to install and repair. You don't see a lot of burried phone boxes. But who knows, this is the government.
Re:Putting expensive equipment (Score:2)
Not around here they're not. I saw a car go into a lamppost at about 20mph a few years ago; the lamppost is still there.
And some years before I saw the lampposts outside my parents' house being moved back so the pavement (sidewalk) could be widened. Thick metal tubes going at least 6 feet (2m) into the ground aren't about to snap.
YLMV...
Re:Putting expensive equipment (Score:2)
hmm... I guess I was making the (seemingly incorrect) assumption that most places had started using those. I've even seen a TV show that featured a section on them.
Oh well... again, I'm an idiot.
Re:Putting expensive equipment (Score:2)
Makes sense to me. They're high in the air over the road already, there's power there, and there's so damn many of them that the loss of one won't take down the whole system. It's perfect, in a technical sense.
War driving... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:War driving... (Score:2)
I know that your post was meant to be funny, but it brings up some interesting anonymity issues. If anyone with a laptop -- anywhere in the UK can have Internet access without accountability, does this open new doors for British crackers?
It's official (Score:5, Funny)
You guys seem to have so many cameras and tracking systems going in that country of yours you probably enjoy the privacy offered by Las Vegas casinos.
Re:It's official (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's official (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's official (Score:3, Insightful)
Not to mention all of the liberties taken away from Americans in the name of the "War on Drugs". But then again, American drug laws (and prisons) are less harsh than most other countries.
But let's not forget world's attitudes and drug policies came from urging and strategic policy meetings from America's first drug
Re:It's official (Score:3, Interesting)
It is the right to be free of the shared costs of potheads ruining their bodies and asking for my insurance fees to subsidize liver transplants.
Control your own body, I have no problem with that. Just don't ask for me to help you once you've ruined it.
Re:It's official (Score:3, Funny)
And apprently the brain.
Pot, Kettle, Black (Score:2)
1984 Anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
All brit's posting to slashdot have officially lost the right to make references to the U.S. being an orwellian, facist state in comparison to their own.
Surely, brother, we shouldn't make such references to our beloved state. The principles of INGSOC must be upheld in all aspects of life.
To do otherwise is CRIMETHINK. Please report to room 101 for re-education.
Re:It's official (Score:2)
Just because Brits make comments on th US doesn't mean we think our country's any better. Almost everything done in the UK now is for the benefit of making money, the ability to track every moment of your citizens lives is just a handy bonus.
UK politicians don't want to scrap the publicly funded services e.g. health and constantly seek new ways to raise money without increasing visible taxation.
For instance, speed cameras replace police in cars and traffic cops are put on to the latest "f
Re:It's official (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It's official (Score:3, Informative)
Not quite. If you turn up at a peacefull protest with an anti-Bush slogan, you will get asked to move to a "Free speach zone". No shitting here, google for it. Pro-Bush slogans don't get moved. If you refuse to move to the area (which is out of sight from Bush, the public and TV cameras)
Google - spelling fascists! (Score:3, Funny)
This creeping spelling fascism really has to stop - damn it, if I want to misspell stuff, then I damned well ought to be able to.
Next thing you know, they'll ban waving your willy in public.
Bastards.
If you don't believe me, look here [google.com] for Googles jackbooted response to my exercising my freedom of speach.
1984... (Score:2, Funny)
Do people really put up with this? If this were implemented in the US, it would be 5 seconds flat til that network was cut into 500 million pieces.
Re:1984... (Score:2, Insightful)
The days of the american rebel are long gone.
1984 and American Rebels (Score:2)
The days of the publicly visible american rebel are long gone. Thousands of protesters appear outside government functions, but aren't given much mainstream press. Hundreds of journalists strongly critisize government policy, but none are given much visibility. A few Senators work very hard to prevent unjust laws from being passed, but aren't taken seriously.
The problem is the few ultra-rich corporations, including the mainstream press, work together with t
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The rebirth of hacker. (Score:2)
Ignore the sweetener, focus on the real use... (Score:3, Insightful)
euphamism for population control. Obviously the powers that be have decided that controlling a car is too dangerous a task for adults to be left with and must be relegated to a computer controlled government
network. Well no thank you! If I wanted to live in this sort of country I'd have gone to live in the old East Germany which modern britain is fast beginning to resemble. how long before we have
government schemes for informants?
Re:Ignore the sweetener, focus on the real use... (Score:2)
broken the speed limit by 5mph or have a negative view of the current government for example.
Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:4, Insightful)
However, these may not be the BEST solutions considering the sacrafices and even risks they entail.
You'd be a lot safer person if you never left your house but is that how you want to live? If yes, do you think it is right that others should be told or foreced to live that way for their own protection?
Re:Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:2, Insightful)
Or, let me see
Craig
Re:Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:2)
S
Re:Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:2)
How do you propose this is going to work? You can't retrofit this to existing cars, and people won't buy new cars with it fitted.
Re:Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:3, Interesting)
My car has no electronics under the bonnet at all. In fact, the stereo is the only electronic thing in the car. How would you fit one of these things to that?
Re:Great way to detect traffic jams (Score:2)
Re: Paying by the mile (Score:2)
Yes! An example is this proposed one. [geek.com] And car insurance by the mile [centspermilenow.org] exists right now. I, too, have heard of car insurance schemes that would charge different rates for driving at different times of day(but this [vtpi.org] is the only link I found on it.)
land of the free. home of the brave. (Score:3, Interesting)
The UK: WTF? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The UK: WTF? (Score:2)
But I've never seen the problem with being on CCTV. Maybe it's because England (specifically: Wales and Scotland aren't as bad) is such a damned overcrowded place that you don't have much privacy anyway. Like, USAians complain that the Appalachian Trail is getting crowded if they meet five other trekkers in a day. In
Re:The UK: WTF? (Score:2)
But don't you see, by then it will be too late.
P.S. GA->ME 2003
Re:The UK: WTF? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hopw long before we see... (Score:5, Funny)
I'm thinking about starting a theater company... (Score:2)
Forget Macbeth... wouldn't you tune in to the news for a rendition of Behind the Green Door on a traffic cam?
Re:I'm thinking about starting a theater company.. (Score:2)
Big Brother (Score:5, Informative)
The UK gov has an obsession with monitoring it's citizens. London already has more CCTV than any other capital. On average you're court on camera 300 times a day.
I expect their excuse is to improve road safety. The real reason is so they can issue more speeding tickets and increase the number of tolls.
The UK Motorist already pays 3 taxes to use the roads. Duty at the gas pump, Road Tax and tolls to use public roads in the form of the London congestion charge.
Re:Big Brother (Score:2)
Just y'know, FYI.
Petard.
Timeline: (Score:3, Funny)
2: Project is funded.
3: Press release about how the government is promoting small business.
4: Funding is approved.
5: Press release about how great the goverment is.
6: Work starts.
7: Press release about how the government gets things done!
8: BT and NTL realise how much money this will lose them, hands cash in brown envelopes to MPs.
9: Press release about our existing world-class interenet infrastructure that was pushed through by government.
10: Project cancelled.
11: Profit! (For existing telcos, the bastards.)
For pessamists, no ??? is required. We know that step, and it's bloody awful.
Ricochet (Score:2)
Has anyone started working on consumer shielding? (Score:2, Insightful)
So I start a website selling nice decorative or transparent license plate borders that could shield or obfuscate and RFID signal and make $ of poor brits yearning to be free?.. I love being american
But seriously, I see a need for people to start developing counter-measures for consumers. Anyone have ideas?
What about just maintaining the roads... (Score:4, Insightful)
Some councils actually spend more money setting compensation claims from car owners who have had accidents due to poor roads than they do actually maintaining them.
Anyway, with a decent network in place, perhaps we'd need to use them less anyway!
Nothing else to do? (Score:2)
It seems to me that the British Government has way too much time on it's hands and is in need of downsizing and budget cuts.
Really? (Score:2)
It sounds like someone went for those X10 cameras from the pop-under ads.
This just sounds like such a bad idea. Why would you want this? It spies on citizens as well as will probably put law enforcement officers out of work.
Sure it wasn't Pompei? (Score:2)
Lurchio? Lurchio!
Don't like it? - Jam it! (Score:3, Interesting)
Then the police could check for the presence and operation of the device during road-side checks.
*So* Here's the trick - find its frequency and build yourself a nice little signal generator/transmitter to put out static at a higher power than the government device. (Duh, that was easy).
The thing that really upsets me about this is that you can almost guarantee the government will require car-owners to buy these units out of their own pockets.
Finally (Score:3, Interesting)
So I'm a biased pedestrian, but it does seem to me that given the hundreds of car fatalities that occur *every day*, monitoring what people do so that the drivers who "get away" with dangerous driving are caught is a good thing.
You might get away with dangerous driving. But the longer you do, the more dangerous you'll get. And then you're putting people's lives at risk.
Maybe you can justify breaking the law when it comes to software. I'm sorry, you can't justify driving dangerously.
Ever.
Re:Finally (Score:3, Insightful)
-- Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790), Letter to Josiah Quincy, Sept. 11, 1773.
Re:Finally (Score:5, Insightful)
So I suppose you wouldn't mind if the government planted a GPS unit in your person to make sure you only crossed the street at crosswalks?
Because speeding has little to do with accidents (Score:5, Insightful)
The other *93%* of accidents are caused by shit driving which can't be monitored by speed cameras or wireless street lights.
The accident rate in the UK was falling steadily *until* the police and local government started installing thousands of speed cameras everywhere. It is no longer falling because now shit driving is OK as long as you don't go 5mph over the bloody limit.
I break the speed limit *every* single day but I don't drive dangerously. Speeding and dangerous driving are *not* the same thing.
Safety Issue (Score:2, Insightful)
Adelaide already using street lights for wireless (Score:2, Informative)
Community Broadband Networks:
"City of Adelaide to offer wireless broadband downtown" [blogspot.com]
MuniWireless.com:
"Adelaide hotzone is up and running" [muniwireless.com]
Street Lamp Case Mod (Score:2)
I wish I'd turned it into a computer so that i could say 'hey look at my website! I already have one of these in my room!'
yay brits! (Score:3, Funny)
Well, whats the point of creating a wireless network using telephone poles, when the fucking telephone poles already carry wires.
"Well Bob, you see, there are these things called 'wires' that run between the street lamps."
"Ok Bill, can we do stuff with these 'wires'?"
"I don't know Bob. We might have to go wireless."
Scratch your head and run, it's safer that way.
Re:yay brits! (Score:3, Informative)
A picture of a typical suburban street lamp in Britain is here [leics.gov.uk] and one on a bigger, main road is here [huntsdc.gov.uk]. Note the complete absence of telephone lines.
Re:yay brits! (Score:3, Informative)
We definately don't run telephone poles along the route of major motorways.
Since there's already power to a streetlamp it's probably much cheaper to make each one a member of a wireless mesh network than it is to put lots more cable in ductwork under the road and pull it up through the streetlamp.
As the UK goes, so does the US (Score:2, Insightful)
THIS is the reason I own firearms, THIS is the same reason our Founding Fathers owned firearms - to hold off a tyrannical government. Unfortunately, the British people have given up their rig
I Can't Resist: Kings Quest 6 reference (Score:2)
sorry... couldn't be helped. Impulse posting. Yeah, its OT