Tag: self-driving cars

  • Volkswagen partners Aurora for self-driving cars

    Volkswagen AGVLKAY announced that it has entered into a strategic partnership with Aurora Innovation at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, United States.

    The collaboration intends to introduce self-driving electric vehicles as Mobility-as-a-Service (MaaS) fleets in cities.

    Started in 2016, Aurora Innovation is a leading self-driving technology company offering software and hardware for development of autonomous cars.

    Experts from both the companies have been functioning together for the last six months to incorporate Aurora’s sensors, hardware and software such as, machine learning and AI technology in Volkswagen’s vehicles to develop self-driving vehicles.

    This recent development is in sync with Volkswagen’s Together – Strategy 2025 under which, it aims to introduce highly automated self-driving systems in the market by 2021.

    The company’s association with Aurora will provide a significant contribution to its mission of becoming a leading provider of sustainable mobility with self-driving vehicles. The company also aims to develop new MaaS solutions with high safety standards, top user experience and digital intelligence for its customers.

    Last September, Volkswagen announced its plan to unveil a number of autonomous Level five electric cars, vans and trucks by 2021.

    Volkswagen apart, Aurora Innovations has partnered South Korean automaker, Hyundai Motor Company HYMLF.

    Under this partnership, the former will provide its self-driving technologies for the latter’s custom-developed models.

  • Self-Driving cars to get “Black Box”

    Self-Driving cars to get “Black Box”

    The Transport Ministry of Germany has concluded plans at a new legislation to require the manufacturers of cars equipped with an autopilot function, to install a black box that helps to determine responsibility in the event of an accident, on Monday at Berlin.

    The fatal crash of a Tesla Motors Inc Model S car in its Autopilot mode has mounted more pressure on the industry executives and regulators to ensure that automated driving technology can be deployed safely.

    Alexander Dobrindt, the Transport Minister stated in the proposal that “drivers will not have to pay attention to traffic or concentrate on steering, but must remain seated at the wheel so they can intervene in the event of an emergency.

    “Manufacturers will also be required to install a black box that records when the autopilot system was active, when the driver drove and when the system requested that the driver take over.”

    “The draft is due to be sent to other ministries for approval this summer,” said a transport ministry spokesman.

    Germany is said to be home to some of the world’s largest car companies which included Volkswagen, Daimler and BMW and the government has desired that the industry become a global player in the market for self-driving vehicles.

    Chancellor Angela Merkel has said in April that the industry should draw up a wish list for Berlin so as to help develop self-driving vehicles, ideally with a timetable.

    The Companies around the globe have been working on prototypes for self-driving vehicles, but such cars are not expected to be available for the mass market before 2020.

  • ‘Self-driving cars won’t stop road mishaps’

    ‘Self-driving cars won’t stop road mishaps’

    Each year about 33,000 people in the United States (U.S) die in a car accident. Around the world, that number shoots up to about 1.2 million people.

    Overwhelmingly, the vast majority of these accidents are preventable. The problem, in large part, is human error.

    Technology companies and automakers alike are trying to end these unnecessary deaths with self-driving cars. The bet is autonomous vehicles decked with sensors and cameras simply have more data about the car’s environment than humans, therefore, the computer can more quickly respond to potential dangers.

    But while all the major car companies are investing in this technology, the fact remains that there are a number of hurdles to be addressed before fully autonomous cars can hit the streets in any meaningful way in the U.S.

    Most automakers and industry experts estimate these vehicles will be on the road closer to 2030. However, technology does already exist that can make cars a lot safer.

    According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 80 per cent of all accidents occur because of some kind of distraction that happens three seconds before an incident.

    To help prevent these kinds of accidents, you don’t need a fully autonomous vehicle, you just need better safety technology, Michael Backman, a general manager at Mobileye, a tech company that makes the software and tech that enables advanced safety systems, told Tech Insider.

    “It’s amazing when you think about it that we allow people to perish at this rate in this country and also around the whole world. It’s terrible that this happens and we have the technology to change that right now,” Backman said.

    Instead of waiting years for the regulations and technology to be fully developed for fully autonomous vehicles, automakers should already be implementing semi-autonomous systems that help make vehicles safer now.

    By 2020, almost every major car company plans to have a vehicle with self-driving features— like autonomous driving for the highway, self-braking, and self-parking—available for sale.

    In fact, in September, 10 major car companies — including Audi, BMW, Ford, General Motors, and Tesla — agreed to make automatic braking a standard feature in their vehicles. This kind of safety technology could help prevent or cut as many as 1,700 deaths caused by rear-end collisions each year.

    BMW’s all-electric i3 can already park itself and Tesla recently rolled out its latest autopilot features, which enables highway autosteer and parallel autopark, as part of a beta program.

    But new cars aren’t the only vehicles getting safer. Consumers and companies are also beginning to retrofit their dumb cars with smart car tech that helps them avoid accidents.

    Mobileye, which provides its technology to auto suppliers and manufacturers, powers 85% of cars with collision avoidance or some kind of driving assistance systems, Backman said. The company’s software communicates with sensors and cameras placed on a car to help warn drivers of possible hazards and to power self-driving functions.

    Tesla, General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, Audi, and BMW are just a few of the companies that use the company’s technology.

    MobileyeYouTube/MobileyeMobileye’s technology uses a camera-based system to sense what is around it.

    But Mobileye has another part of its business that uses its technology to basically make dumb cars a lot safer. The product, called Mobileye 5 Series, is a camera-based computer system that attaches to the dashboard to alert the driver to all kinds of hazards.

    For example, the camera in the system can read speed limits, so it will alert the driver by beeping when they are speeding. It will do the same if the driver is veering out of their lane, tailgating, or if it detects that the vehicle might be on a collision course with a pedestrian or another object.

    The system begins its warning sound up to about three seconds before it detects a potential threat.

    While the system is available to consumers, companies have adopted the product in a big way for their company fleets because it saves them money.

    “If a company wants to introduce safety technology into their fleet, they have to wait 15 years to buy all new trucks, so the idea of retrofitting vehicles with this device is very attractive,” Backman said.

    The technology also helps reduce accidents, which means less insurance claims for companies to pay out, Backman said.

    “What we see is very shortly after these are installed in fleets, everyone starts driving safer and then what happens very quickly after that is the accident rate gets reduced,” he said. “Their chargeable accidents go down by 50 per cent and their accidents across the whole board go down by 25 per cent.”

    While Mobileye is betting on self-driving cars in the long-term, advanced driving automobile systems in cars like semi-autonomous functions will be the thing that saves the most lives in the interim, Backman said.

    “This is just one example of technology that will one day be ubiquitous and every car will have it. But we are at the early stage adoption. We are at the early edge of widespread adoption, but it’s inevitable because the facts are there,” Backman said.

  • Self-driving cars and accidents

    Self-driving cars and accidents

    When the self-driving car was first introduced officially a couple of years back, the incidents of auto-crash were expected to become a thing of the past.

    Meanwhile, the new innovation is not impeccable in its self as faults are beginning to emerge. These faults are either man-made or failure in the part of technology.

    According to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), in less than thirty years self driving cars will make up 75% of all cars on the road.

    And these would raise the question of how many human beings are ready to commit their lives to the care of a car driving itself through the use of radars.

    The IEED also projected that the number of more autonomous cars by 2040 will provide world traffic lights; stop signals or any visible signals.

    “Intersection equipped with sensors, cameras and radars that can monitor and control traffic flow to help eliminate drivers’ collision and promote a more efficient flow of traffic,” said Dr. Azim Eskandarian of the IEEE.

    It was believed that the production of more self-driving cars will bring about decrease in accident rate, reduction of fuel consumption and decrease in traffic jams.

    We also would not forget the lacuna of job unemployment that would be left open across the global.

    But on the contrary, a couple of accidents have been recorded. Maybe not at the same rate as in the case of manned cars anyways.

    It was recently reported that four out of the about 50 self-driving cars rolling in California were involved in accident since September when the state issued permits to companies to test them on public roads.

    Two of the four cars involved were reportedly in self driving mode and Google, a major partner in the production of the cars, would not discuss the incidents in details.

    In an October 2014 accident involving Delphi, the front of its 2014 Audi Sq5 was moderately damaged when hit from the side by another car while it was waiting to make a left turn.

    In a statement, it claimed that since September, cars driving on streets near its headquarter in mountain view had a handful of minor fender benders, light damages and no injuries.

    Google, who blamed the accidents on female drivers also added that the accidents were caused by human error and inattention.

    According to reports, five other companies have testing permits and they all said no accident so far.