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Google to build a (comic looking) autonomous car

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Old May 29, 2014 | 05:16 AM
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Default Google to build a (comic looking) autonomous car

http://www.apnewsarchive.com/2014/Go...744d5608517e31



LOS ANGELES (AP) — Google plans to build and launch onto city streets a small fleet of subcompact cars that could operate without a person at the wheel.
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This image provided by Google shows a very early version of Google's prototype self-driving car. The two-seater won't be sold publicly, but Google on Tuesday, May 27, 2014 said it hopes by this time next year, 100 prototypes will be on public roads. (AP Photo/Google)
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Actually, the cars wouldn't even have a wheel. Or gas and brake pedals. The company says the vehicles will use sensors and computing power, with no human needed.

Google Inc. hopes that by this time next year, 100 of the two-seaters will be on public roads, following extensive testing. The cars would not be for sale and instead would be provided to select operators for further tweaking and have limitations such as a 25 mph top speed.

The announcement presents a challenge to automakers that have been more cautious about introducing fully automated driving and to government regulators who are scrambling to accommodate self-driving cars on public roads. Other companies are working on the technology but none as large as Google has said it intends to put such cars in the hands of the public so soon.

To date, Google has driven hundreds of thousands of miles on public roads and freeways in Lexus SUVs and Toyota Priuses outfitted with special sensors and cameras. But with a "safety driver" in the front seat, those vehicles were not truly self-driving.

Instead of the standard controls, the prototypes would have buttons to begin and end the drive. Passengers would set a destination. The car would then make turns and react to other vehicles and pedestrians based on computer programs that predict what others might do, and data from sensors including radar and cameras that read in real time what other objects are actually doing.

The route might be set by typing a destination into a map or using spoken commands, Chris Urmson, the leader of Google's self-driving car team, told reporters Wednesday.

The car will be powered by electricity and could go about 100 miles before charging. Its shape suggests a rounded-out Volkswagen Beetle — something that might move people around a corporate campus or congested downtown — with headlights and sensors arrayed to resemble a friendly face.

Major automakers have steadily introduced technology that helps cars stay in their lanes and avoid accidents. However, all those vehicles come with a steering wheel and pedals — and the expectation that a driver will jump in should trouble arise. Several companies have said they expect by 2020 to market vehicles that can drive themselves under certain conditions.

"Nothing is going to change overnight, but (Google's announcement) is another sign of the drastic shifts in automotive technology, business practices and retailing we're going to witness," said Karl Brauer, a senior analyst at Kelley Blue Book's KBB.com.

A French company, Induct Technology, has produced a driverless shuttle, which in February drove people around a hospital campus in South Carolina. But in terms of a truly self-driving car from a major company, Google looks to be first.

The tech titan began developing the prototype more than a year ago after it loaned some employees its retrofitted Lexuses and saw that some "would basically trust the technology more than it was ready to be trusted," Urmson said. Making a car that drives itself seemed more practical than somehow ensuring that people zoning out behind the wheel could take over at a moment's notice.

The first 100 prototypes will be built in the Detroit area with the help of firms that specialize in autos, Google said. It would not identify those firms or discuss the cost of each prototype.

This summer, Google plans to send test prototypes on closed courses, then later this year on public streets. Those test cars will have a wheel and pedals because under California law a test driver must be able to take immediate control.

By summer 2015, however, California's Department of Motor Vehicles must publish regulations allowing the public to use truly driverless cars. Big questions the DMV is wrestling with include who is liable if a driverless car crashes and how the state can be confident that an automated car drives at least as safely as a person.

That change in the law would allow the 100 prototypes that would be intended for a public "pilot project"— details to be determined — to not have a steering wheel or pedals.

Though next year is the goal for the pilot project, Urmson said public access "won't happen until we're confident in the safety."
Personally, I can't wait for autonomous cars so people stop mucking up regular cars with automation features.

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Old May 29, 2014 | 06:19 AM
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I wonder if terrorists will figure out how to load a bomb in one and send it on its way...
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Old May 29, 2014 | 06:32 AM
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Originally Posted by tiger1964
I wonder if terrorists will figure out how to load a bomb in one and send it on its way...

Well, that didn't take long. Haha.
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Old May 29, 2014 | 07:26 AM
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My s2000 is autonomous
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Old May 29, 2014 | 08:13 AM
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Originally Posted by tiger1964
I wonder if terrorists will figure out how to load a bomb in one and send it on its way...
No. Since Google (and everyone else it seems) just feeds your information straight to the NSA and other agencies, the bomb/you will be outed long before the car sets off.
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Old May 29, 2014 | 08:17 AM
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As long as it doesn't crash into my S2000 or anything in that matter...
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Old May 29, 2014 | 08:18 AM
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Originally Posted by tiger1964
I wonder if terrorists will figure out how to load a bomb in one and send it on its way...
Seriously?? You read this article and that's the most relevant comment you can make?
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Old May 29, 2014 | 09:15 AM
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Originally Posted by deepbluejh
Seriously?? You read this article and that's the most relevant comment you can make?
Certainly it's relevant; here's a new technology and all the ramifications haven't been thought through yet.
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Old May 29, 2014 | 09:26 AM
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It is important that we embrace the technological pursuit even though it seems to counter our own hobbies or passions. Frankly, the idea of completely automated vehicles sounds intriguing to me. Use of these vehicles in urban areas can be very beneficial and the number of features that can be developed/used with these cars can be immense. It seems all the right steps are being taken by Google and state legislation.
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Old May 29, 2014 | 10:35 AM
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I don't think auto driving cars will ever catch on with the public at large in my lifetime. I do, however think they have some limited application as transportation for the blind or the very elderly, as long as they have lots of cash.
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