Yes. The short answer is yes, absolutely, vehicles are going to have so many censors. At one of the talks that I did recently where I was invited to speak, I used the example of potholes. Vehicles hit potholes. What if we could gather that information and send it back to a smart infrastructure? It would know which potholes are being hit, how severe they are, and how often they're being hit, and all of a sudden it would direct those resources to those areas that need attention.
To your point, yes, if there's black ice and if there are adverse weather conditions, the vehicle should be able to communicate back to the infrastructure and, again, warn other vehicles. You might get a warning in your car, for instance, as well as a warning throughout the community that there's black ice on such-and-such a road at such-and-such a location. Potentially, the vehicle would warn you and ask you if you'd like to take an alternate route.
It's the same thing when we look at first responder scenarios. I'm glad there wasn't an accident that you were involved in, but imagine if there were a situation and the vehicles were connected and you had cameras in the vehicles, which you will see and you're starting to see today. Imagine if in that first responder situation there were vehicles in the area and you could securely and safety tie into the cameras in the vehicles, so that you could have “eyes on scene” from the vehicles. When I say vehicles, I mean buses, cars, and any mode of transportation where all of a sudden they could get earlier access to information, which again would enable them to provide better service in an emergency situation. There are all these scenarios that come into play.