Uber launched a groundbreaking driver-less car service Wednesday, jumping ahead of Detroit auto giants and Silicon Valley rivals with technology that could revolutionize transportation.
In an ambitious experiment, a fleet of cars laden with
lasers, cameras and other sensors — but with no one’s hands on the wheel — were
to be deployed by the web-based ride service on the challenging roads of
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, steering themselves to pick up regular Uber
passengers who are used to being fetched by cars driven by humans.
Still, just to be sure, the Pittsburgh Uber regulars who
summon a driver-less car will also get two company technicians with them to make
sure everything goes right.
One will sit behind the wheel, with hands at the ready to
take over in sticky spots, while the other monitors the car’s behavior.
Uber will not give a timeline, but it aims to reduce that to
one technician, still behind the wheel, to intervene and to satisfy existing
state policies that require a driver in a car.
The goal, Uber officials say, is to get to zero
interventions, and no technician along for the ride.
The move has put Uber ahead of the rest of the auto industry
in getting such cars out for the general public. The major automakers all have
driver-less car development programs, as do tech giants Google and Apple. And
many automakers already have cars on the road with advanced driver assist technology,
most notably Tesla.
Indeed, Uber itself was beaten to the punch at launching the
first driver-less call service by the Singapore startup nuTonomy, which put six
cars on the road at the end of August.
But the Singapore experiment is so far limited to a smallish
area on the very flat, well-planned Southeast Asia island. Uber’s landscape is
the whole of Pittsburgh, a major US city with very steep hills, old narrow
streets and multiple bridges and highways built through the middle.
What allowed Uber to get to the front of the pack was not
auto engineering but rather its ability to accumulate and crunch massive
amounts of data on road and driving conditions collected from the billions of
miles driven by Uber drivers.
“We have one of the strongest self-driving engineering
groups in the world, as well as the experience that comes from running a
ride-sharing and delivery network in hundreds of cities,” said Uber founder and
chief executive Travis Kalanick in a blog post Wednesday.
The introduction of driver-less cars challenges the image of
what Uber has become: an app-based service of the “gig economy” that gave
millions of car owners around the world the chance to make money ferrying
passengers without taxicab licenses or other permissions.
But Uber’s vision suggests a world of taxis on call by app
with no drivers at all.
“Self-driving is core to Uber’s mission,” Anthony
Levandowski, Uber’s vice president of engineering.
That would be far away, Uber officials stress. They still
expect over the long time, a mix of cars with and without drivers on the road.
Levandowski came to Uber when it took over his own startup
Otto, which was developing self-driving technology for commercial trucks. The
company now has six driver-less trucks being tested on California roads.
Kalanick says the main aim is to create safer roads.
“Self-driving Ubers have enormous potential to further our
mission and improve society: reducing the number of traffic accidents, which
today kill 1.3 million people a year; freeing up the 20 percent of space in
cities currently used to park the world’s billion plus cars; and cutting
congestion, which wastes trillions of hours every year,” he said.
So far, company officials say, they have not experienced any
accidents. But they have trained the cars’ minders on how to respond if it
happens, which they say is inevitable.
Source: AFP
0 comments:
Post a Comment