The flight went fine and I got picked up as planned by the taxi. Perfect service by the way including Internet access and bottled water to drink. As always the travel went smooth and perfect, so I could work my way through a stockpile of email to put some things into context, sort one or the other topic. Basically normal travel type of work. But then, something was brought to my intention. Heavy impact actually.
- All of a sudden the driver had to go into the breaks, not really, but strong enough for me to recognize, so I looked up to see whats up and of course the classical motorway road works traffic jam.
- I heard some breaks, but nothing really worrying and then suddenly the driver was taking his hands away from the steering wheel and in that very same moment a large truck was blowing his horn and then the noise of metal, plastics and humans screaming.
- Something bumped also in the car I was sitting in (normally I was sitting always on the front seat, but this time I was sitting in the back to work) and a giant truck was sledging diagonal from the back into my sight field and into the farming field next to the roadway.
- [total silence]
- The driver of the truck left his truck within 10 seconds as far as I was able to recognize unharmed and the driver of the taxi I was sitting in just drove 20 meter forward to secure a way for potential emergency cars.
- Then we left the car, and it was a field of demolition. Apparently a second truck was standing on the emergency lane obviously heavily hit by something in the rear. A small bus for 8 persons was wrecked and standing on his wheels but into the wrong direction (later my driver told me that he has seen that bus doing a rollover), 2 cars have been hit heavily (airbags executed) and bumped into the cars in front of them, one of them obviously hitting us.
- Almost at the very moment 4 people from Johanniter Unfallhilfe came running. I was truly impressed, but in reality it was just luck that they have been driving a couple of cars behind us. So the professionals could take over and did that really great. It was very fast clear that noone was harmed heavily. Everyone involved could walk, talk and was cleary able to response reasonable (despite some really shaking knees and white faces).
- Shortly afterwards police officers came to secure the area and a helicopter flew in. Impressive speed by the way, I haven't clocked it, but it for sure was well below 10 minutes till the helicopter with the doctor was there.
- The volunteer fireworkers from that area also arrived with quite some vessels and people.
- What was obvious in that realm of chaos was high professionalism, but also quite some communication and handovers. From Johanniter to police to doctors to fireworkers. The cars were triple checked (Johanniter, Policemen, Fireworkers) All of the involved professionals spoke to the people involved in the accident, quite some confusion about many things for example insurance (how irrelevant at THAT moment, yet important for some. As far as I recognized it, that insurance concept was at least one thing people understood in that moment).
- They collected all of us and explained the steps and there was a fairly good atmosphere, because everyone was well aware that things could have been way worse. Personal data was recorded by the police people, the doctors did a short examination and send those from the more heavily impacted cars into hospital, the fireworkers cleaned the street to allow the emergency cars to drive through, lots of pictures were made.
- Not that I want to make that experience again or wish that anyone, but it was brilliant to see them in action, coming from knowing nothing to full control of the situation in less then 15 minutes.
Given all what I learned at the Gartner EA Summit (and other events), why can that story not be told different?
- Preventive
- A Traffic Jam is signalled back to the following cars (and to traffic control) and warns the drivers (like red alarm in Star Trek if you want) or even better forces the car to slow down, no matter what the driver believes.
- A car in trouble signals to the other cars (and traffic control) that it is in trouble.
- Cars are forced to have a relevant safety distance.
- Cars are forced to not overspeed (yes, there will be people who believe this should not be done, but in that case it would have helped a lot and under worse circumstances it would have saved life).
- Impact
- On an impact the car or environment is signalling to other cars as well as to traffic control.
- Traffic control sends a drone to examine the area and create a 3D model.
- That 3D model gets send to all potentially involved parties which can use it to plan the operation while already driving to location.
- Each unit supported by augmented reality updates new information real time into that model, so that everyone involved has the full picture and can therefore act acordingly, e.g. more people, specialized vessels, specialized skills, but also retreat if the impact was less harmful than thought. There could be way more parties involved than in this particular case.
- Afterwards
- All the information can be directly fed into the system including the 3D model for reports, insurance, news, whatsoever.
So thank you consumer market for bringing us all these great new potential, but it is only interesting. Relevant is something else, nevertheless, please explore more, because it might be useful somewhere else. Truly relevant. Over to you.
P.S.: This was just a quick writing, the accident is less than 8 hours ago and I was doing quite some other things in between, but I believe there could be many stories created out of this and potentially there are already units in the world building this system so that it is usable, easy to use and as cheap as possible. I can only hope for that.
Glad to hear you came out of well, Kai - and all of the other road-users too, of course.
ReplyDeleteThere's nothing like a bit of real-life story to put abstract ideas into context!