Autonomous cars – is this the end of driving?
Self-driving cars are a reality, with a host of companies developing autonomous systems
Google's self driving car
Google driverless cars could become part of a robo taxi fleet, says the company Photo: 2012 Getty Images
By Andrew English6:30AM GMT 16 Jan 2014
Deft PR by Google and the car industy, together with a couple of analysts' reports, put autonomous driving at centre stage in all the Detroit motor show interviews this week. The media seemed in accusatory mood, with most hacks demanding self-driving cars, now!
In fact, the first driverless vehicle - the Induct Technology Navia - is now on sale, and test vehicles from Google, Mercedes-Benz, Lexus and many others have driven themselves on public roads (under strict supervision).
BMW has displayed a car that can "drift" through corners without a driver, while Volvo has announced plans for the world’s first large-scale test of driverless cars and governments are framing permit legislation to allow the further research of such vehicles on the highways, so it's clear that most of the hardware to make a self-driving car is in place, expensive and is indeed on its way into your car some time in the next decade.
The Navia self-driving shuttle finds its way around using laser-based lidar (light detection and ranging) sensors
That's not to say your car will be driving itself home any time soon, as the paucity of ultra-detailed maps and enabling legislation, plus the spectre of ambulance chasing lawyers, will keep a lid on the technology's introduction for the moment.
Self-driving cars are a reality, with a host of companies developing autonomous systems
Google's self driving car
Google driverless cars could become part of a robo taxi fleet, says the company Photo: 2012 Getty Images
By Andrew English6:30AM GMT 16 Jan 2014
Deft PR by Google and the car industy, together with a couple of analysts' reports, put autonomous driving at centre stage in all the Detroit motor show interviews this week. The media seemed in accusatory mood, with most hacks demanding self-driving cars, now!
In fact, the first driverless vehicle - the Induct Technology Navia - is now on sale, and test vehicles from Google, Mercedes-Benz, Lexus and many others have driven themselves on public roads (under strict supervision).
BMW has displayed a car that can "drift" through corners without a driver, while Volvo has announced plans for the world’s first large-scale test of driverless cars and governments are framing permit legislation to allow the further research of such vehicles on the highways, so it's clear that most of the hardware to make a self-driving car is in place, expensive and is indeed on its way into your car some time in the next decade.
The Navia self-driving shuttle finds its way around using laser-based lidar (light detection and ranging) sensors
That's not to say your car will be driving itself home any time soon, as the paucity of ultra-detailed maps and enabling legislation, plus the spectre of ambulance chasing lawyers, will keep a lid on the technology's introduction for the moment.
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