Tag Archives: Driverless

Before its time: Consortium pushed for automated driverless cars in the 1990s

Automated driverless cars have been a popular topic for some months now, brought to the forefront of public attention by Google‘s efforts to develop such vehicles. One would be tempted to believe – science fiction stories and movies aside – that such ambitions are a new reality, the result of our ever-expanding technologies that allow

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Larry Page defends Google's 'big bets' on Glass, driver-less cars

Google's core product may always be search, but the company is just as serious about providing in-the-moment information to users with emerging technologies such as Google Now, self-driving cars and Glass, CEO Larry Page signaled on Thursday.
Computerworld News

How Do You Give a Ticket To a Driverless Car?

FatLittleMonkey writes “New Scientist asks a Bryant Walker Smith, from the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School, whether the law is able to keep up with recent advances in automated vehicles. Even states which have allowed self-driving cars require the vehicles to have a ‘driver,’ who is nominally in control and who must comply with the same restrictions as any driver such as not being drunk. What’s the point of having a robot car if it can’t drive you home from the pub while you go to sleep in the back?”

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Driverless cars move closer in California

California’s State Assembly advanced a bill on Monday that aims to establish rules and regulations covering the safe operation of driverless cars on the state's highways.
Computerworld News

Japan eyes driverless cars by early 2020s

Expressways in Japan could start seeing self-driving cars in 10 years, according to discussions by Tokyo and carmakers.
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CNET News

Privacy group wants Google’s driverless cars kept off the road

Consumer Watchdog, a privacy group, wants the California Assembly to keep Google’s self-driving cars off the road until privacy protection for the cars’ users is in place.
Computerworld News

How Would Driver-less Cars Change Motoring?



Hugh Pickens writes “BBC reports that as Nevada licenses Google to test its prototype driver-less car on public roads, futurists are postulating what a world of driver-less would cars look like. First, accidents would go down. ‘Your automated car isn’t sitting around getting distracted, making a phone call, looking at something it shouldn’t be looking at or simply not keeping track of things,’ says Danny Sullivan. Google’s car adheres strictly to the speed limit and follows the rules of the road. ‘It doesn’t speed, it doesn’t cut you off, it doesn’t tailgate,’ says Tom Jacobs, a spokesman for the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles. Driver-less cars would mean a more productive commute. ‘If you truly trust the intelligence of the vehicle, then you get in the vehicle and you do our work while you’re traveling,’ says engineer Lynne Irwin. They would mean fewer traffic jams. ‘Congestion would be something you could tell your grandchildren about, once upon a time.’ Driver-less cars could extend car ownership to some groups of people previously unable to own a car, including elderly drivers who feel uncomfortable getting behind the wheel at night, whose eyesight has weakened or whose reaction time has slowed.”
Another reader points out an article suggesting autonomous cars could eventually spell the end of auto insurance.

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Nevada issues Google first US license to test driverless cars

Nevada has granted Google what is believed to be the first U.S. license to test driverless cars, Fox 5 reports.




FOXNews.com

Google Gets Driverless License For Nevada Roads



Fluffeh writes “On Monday, the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles approved Google’s license application to test autonomous vehicles on the state’s roads. The state had approved such laws back in February, and has now begun issuing licenses based on those regulations. The state previously outlined that companies that want to test such vehicles will need an insurance bond of $ 1 million and must provide detailed outlines of where they plan to test it and under what conditions. Further, the car must have two people in it at all times, with one behind the wheel who can take control of the vehicle if needed. The Autonomous Review Committee of the Nevada DMV is supervising the first licensing procedure and has now approved corresponding plates to go with it, complete with a red background and infinity symbol.”

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Europe’s Driverless Car (Driver Still Required)

European automakers pursue an evolutionary answer to Google’s experimental self-driving car.

Tucked away in the basement of an iconic office tower shaped like four engine cylinders, engineer Werner Huber is telling me about the joy of driving. We’re here at BMW headquarters, in Munich, Germany—capital of Bavaria, and arguably of driving itself. But Huber oversees strategic planning for advanced driver assistance systems, so in a way, his job is to put an end to driving—at least as we know it.







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Google Unveils Driverless Car Tech

Google co-founder Sergey Brin announced Wednesday that 10 percent of the company is working on innovative projects outside the web domain — including driverless cars.




FOXNews.com