I mean isn't that what engineers able to control the engine from a cabcar?Has that ever been done on a passenger train?
Everything's wireless nowadays, why not this?Thru cables, standard practice, but using Locotrol, radio-controlled…I’ve never heard of its use on a passenger train…
I don’t know…maybe when it was first developed, it wasn’t considered reliable enough? Or maybe it was vulnerable to malicious hackers?Everything's wireless nowadays, why not this?
Everything's wireless nowadays, why not this?
Modern digital tech allows for virtually unhackable encrypted communications, if it is implemented correctly. (That's always a VERY BIG "if", though!) But sufficient computational power to do real-time encryption was either unavailable of extremely expensive until relatively recently, and trains need to be compatible or at least co-exist with equipment that is 50 or 60 years old! So lots of things that could be done much better are restricted to the lowest common denominator. Another issue is radio power. Bluetooth at a few meters or WiFi that works for 50-100 meters is cheap, reliable, secure and off-the-shelf, but neither would be sufficient for a mile-long freight train.I don’t know…maybe when it was first developed, it wasn’t considered reliable enough? Or maybe it was vulnerable to malicious hackers?
I really don’t have a clue…
Amen. Considering how many layers of restrictive access, paid bounties, and security revisions are required to partially protect vertically integrated consumer gear with relatively short lifespans that "if" is doing some massive lifting. Reliable security is surprisingly difficult to maintain long term and early communication standards ignored the kind of security we need in a super connected world with cheap and plentiful hardware. That leaves much of the security we still rely upon operating on top of an inherently insecure foundation.(That's always a VERY BIG "if", though!)
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