Uber's First Self-Driving Fleet Arrives in Pittsburgh This Month (bloomberg.com)
Ride-hailing app Uber will introduce self-driving cars in Pittsburgh as soon as this month, Bloomberg reports citing many officials and engineers at the company. The move is the first part of a pilot program to explore the future of the technology, the report added. The company plans to test 100 Volvo XC90s outfitted to drive themselves. Still, the cars will be accompanied by two humans: an engineer who can take control of the vehicle when needed and a co-pilot who takes note. Bloomberg reports: The Volvo deal isn't exclusive; Uber plans to partner with other automakers as it races to recruit more engineers. In July the company reached an agreement to buy Otto, a 91-employee driverless truck startup that was founded earlier this year and includes engineers from a number of high-profile tech companies attempting to bring driverless cars to market, including Google, Apple, and Tesla. Uber declined to disclose the terms of the arrangement, but a person familiar with the deal says that if targets are met, it would be worth 1percent of Uber's most recent valuation.
Wasn't it Volvo that was trash talking Tesla WRT to self-driving cars like a month or two ago??
Yeah, they are totally not a taxi company but just two people sharing a ride because they're going the same way.
Even when the cars have no drivers.
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For liability issues it better be w2 ones or 3rd party victims may be left holding the bag.
At least for now. I suppose one negative is - you have to share a vehicle with an engineer. /ducks
#DeleteChrome
Pittsburgh's roads are... actually, a surprisingly complex test bed for this kind of thing. Between bridges, bridges over streets, bridges over bridges over streets, bridges over bridges over tunnels, the "Pittsburgh Left", potholes, the lower deck of the Penn Bridge, and intersections like this one, Uber will have plenty of good edge cases to test their AI on. ...though, you might not want to drive while the AI is being tested. Just sayin'.
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Much love for the city. But Uber must be pretty confident in its fleet to trial it in a city of demanding geography and interesting driving practices that gets Real Northern Winters.
My guess is it's a belated apology for absconding with CMU's robotics talent.
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Really getting tired of this nonsense. How much money has to be wasted before they realize they are chasing a wild goose? Our greed in America has already started to become our undoing.
TFA implies that Uber will be using a map based systems plus GPS to identify where the car is and I guess under what parameters it should be driving. This is OK for a reasonably static environment. But that raises questions some questions for me:
1. How do these type of systems know when the traffic lights change? (or even identify which lights they should respond to?)
2. How are they meant to cope when cop/worker directs that you have to take a detour around a transient event (EG car crash)?
3. How does the systems know when a temporary speed limit has been erected?
4. In VA at least, if there is a cop car on the side of a two lane the road you are required to move over when passing them. So how does the system spot that?
I know that this is really early times for driverless cars, but to me the map based systems can't deal with the above scenarios, and they are transient enough that by the time such a situation has been reported to a central mapping location the event could easily have already disappeared.
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Objective: Eliminate the need for drivers from our livery service to obtain cost savings and reduce personnel overhead utilizing automation technology.
Proposed solution: The self driving solution will operate the vehicle however requires and engineer to be present and able to take over driving and operation of key systems as required. Additional a co-pilot shall be present to record events and assist the engineer as required.
Progress!
*I get the presence of the engineer and co-pilot are temporary its still kinda funny though, they have replaced a low skill driver with an engineer, and probably someone with similar training/qualification as the former driver to be co-pilot.
Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
Uber has more than enough money to pay out settlements for the deaths they cause so why wouldn't they release vastly imperfect and dangerous self driving onto the streets? If it were a problem there would be some sort of legal regulation around it!
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
The dog is there to bite the "engineer" should he attempt to touch the controls.
The "engineer" is there to feed the dog.
Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
I thought they were still deciding the criteria for testing self driving cars to decide if they're road worthy. I know Tesla has its autopilot, but leaving that 'beta' aside who would Volvo have gotten permission to put them on the road?
Do a search for Tesla and you get warts and all videos on its autopilot:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slvgVpVCm1U
Do the same for Volvo and you get a lot of promo videos from Volvo, but where's the critical test by a party required to vet it safe?
Pittsburgh gets a decent amount of snowfall. I thought the one place where nobody was taking self-driving cars yet is through snowy and icy roads. Well, this'll be interesting.
"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
I drive through Pittsburgh most mornings and am annoyed by these cars because they are not aggressive enough. The cars, I believe are limited to 35 miles per hour, drive in ways that piss off anyone in a rush. Slow acceleration out of a green light with a truck in the right lane - I had to swerve around one the other morning. One time I swerved towards one in the left lane to see how it would react (I'm a troll, I know). It slowed way down and moved even more to the left. It's only a matter of time till one of these cars causes a major pile up. I'm sure I'm not the only one who enjoys robotophobic trolling behavior... And with a fleet coming... ugh. Though, the geek inside of me is nerding out. Self driving cars is the future, but IMHO, I think the only way it will be safe if there are automation only lanes. Pittsburgh is the perfect testing grounds. There are more bridges in Pittsburgh than any other city on earth, black ice in the winter, and a never ending mess of spaghetti routes and merging. If uber can pull it off here, it will go global.
OMG Uber is testing SELF DRIVING CARS!!!!!!! *
*Self driving only under ideal, open conditions, human operator at the controls about half the time.
Do you want to be the guy all banged up with bills racking up while the courts are dealing with who should pay?
Why should your health insurance pay you where hit by a car we are going after them! The drivers insurance says uber? not covered! Uber says on the app but not on a ride not covered!
Here it comes! Uber is moving in that direction... That's right! Towards making Total Recall's Johnny Cabs a reality. First it'll be self-driving cars with a driver onboard. Then, when they're comfortable enough with the vehicle driving itself.... "You're in a Johnny Cab!! Destination please??"
" Maybe we should be vetting them first, huh?"
Some sort of test to check they can drive? That's a brilliant idea! Maybe test their eyes too and even their reflexes! Sarcasm aside, maybe you're onto something there. If you think of the learner driver test, maybe that's the level that needs to be reached for the car to take over. If a human driver can't go on the road unless they can steer around bends, then why should a car?
The more I think about it, the more that makes sense. Take it on the road test the same as a learner driver passing a test for their driving license! The car is the driver in this case, so it needs the driving license! Genius.
If you watch the Tesla test drive I linked to, Autopilot fails to take a hairpin, he saves it, he tries again but it won't turn on autopilot, so he takes over on the twisty road, and tries again on a straighter road, and it confuses an acceleration slip lane as the main lane, a minor error but still a fail in a driving test. He turns it off after that. All of those would fail you in a driving test, and should fail the Tesla in that test.
I see Volvo's have lasers too for ranging, which makes sense, but I wouldn't trust them from their promo videos alone. I expect the testing authorities to get their act together.
The last time Volvo had a big self-driving rollout, it didn't, you know, work out so well. But it was totally because of shabby roads and Americans' inability to paint white lines and in no way the fault of the technology.
http://www.reuters.com/article...
You are welcome on my lawn.
Soon, Uber will launch an entire fleet of driverless cars in every state.
That means they will no longer need human drivers, and take the profit all for themselves.
Just have a contest of some kind to get some test subjects. First prize: a one week trip to Pittsburgh.
Second prize: a two week trip to Pittsburgh.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
. . . will they slow down when they come to a tunnel, like every other fscking Pittsburgh driver?
I'm a frequent user of uber, but would pass on the auto driving option, and would not take a self driving car. I take uber a bit in downtown Boston and the UK. I just did this week. I found traffic bad near my destination, how do I tell uber 'pull me over here, traffic is bad, I'll just cut through this alley here'. My experience with non-local drivers in Boston isn't great. They blindly follow gps, and it gets confused easily with the one ways, and lots of buildings. Was picked up by an uber Tues night. The driver was smart enough to park across the street as the front of the restaurant was crowded. I walked across the street, problem solved.
Pittsburg is even worse than Boston. I'd not get into a self driving car there. The combo of PA drivers, PA roads, bridges, cliffs, and weather scares the crap out of me. I'm amazed that uber is leading that much, guess the 'not paying people' is a compelling factor ?
BTW, I still agree with other posters regarding unfair competition. Either free up taxis from restrictions, or require uber to play by the rules. I'm still taking uber when I can, but it's patently unfair competition.
@clonehappy. Do you have a reference for how much of the time that google cars are truly autonomous? I believe you, but would like to see articles.
It'd fill in a gap for me, as I cannot believe that given all the crap that happens on roadways - at least here on the east coast - that an auto pilot car wouldn't just give up a lot of the time. I live in a county with 300 miles of unpaved roads. The other night, I was diverted to a one way road off the main road. That one way road had a few dozen houses on it. It had tall grass growing up in the middle of the crown of the road. There's no way an auto pilot car would have known how to drive that road, but one which was perfectly safe for me to drive in my prius. Ditto Pittsburg and thousands and thousands of other places. It's not the highways, it's outside of the bell curve roads that'll get you, but those conditions occur all the time when driving.
Out here in the hate state, our governor, Doug Ducey, spent last year telling everyone how modern he is because he's bringing the Sharing Economy to AZ, letting little uber-lettes run wild, and even letting them into Sky Harbor Airport.
My Tea Party friends and family scoffed when I told them unless Uber was building a data center, there were no "tech" jobs coming with Uber. Being a taxi driver is about as not tech as it gets.
And I told them about Uber being all self driving cars in 5 years. More scoffing. Because I'm a lib'ruhl and not for being against not being for Freedumb, or something.
No one listens to me, but I console myself by having a good laugh every time Ducey says "People are calling me the hashtag governor".
Because no one calls him that.
Will the unmanned über vehicles be able to drive with no humans on board once the trials are over? Will we see swarms of driverless cabs outside airports and train stations?
Volvo said they would back the cars. But Volvo is now owned by china gov owned company. So when Volvo, with a level 2 rating slams into somebody ( as it has done multiple times ), the law suit will have to be moved to China. And who thinks that Chinese gov will be fair?
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
In America right now even hair brained schemes like driverless cars makes investors "fiat money points". If people die in the process, the lawyers make "fiat money points" win or lose.
This is a big scam because it is a new potential investment to make "fiat money points", and where do you find the FBI?
F B I in the middle of all scams and child sex trafficking and internet child porn and drug trafficking and international data sharing."
http://thenextweb.com/insider/2016/01/28/how-the-fbi-became-the-worlds-largest-distributor-of-child-sex-abuse-imagery/
Look, ppl have this wrong. Volvo is Chinese owned. Once Uber helps Volvo succeed with ap, then Volvo will sell cars to Chinese owned companies who will then set up in western cities and control the traffic.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
OK, but will they be able to do the most basic thing a taxi driver can, like: "Follow that car!"
And they're Volvos too? That may end up being so easy to "commandeer" if the right tools are available.
I love how it goes from some functions are automated all the way to full automation in one level. Just flip the switch! Good luck with that.
How will the system handle drunk yinzers who don't exactly know where the destination is, or the address...
but you get there by taking liberty till you pass the brewery the used to be a church and go up the hill and make the right turn, but the leftmost right turn, not the hard right, a block before the light, and back down the hill and stop at the bar before the christmas tree next to the bus stop.
Cause it appears everyone's quarterback today.
The only way to get driveless cars is to test, test, test.... and get all that data. Otherwise it's a pipe dream.