Source - http://www.pcworld.com/
By - John Ribeiro
Category - Suites In Downtown New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
Self-driving cars will be tested on road in the U.K. by the end of
this year, but will have drivers present in the cars, according to a
report from the Department for Transport.
By - John Ribeiro
Category - Suites In Downtown New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
Suites In Downtown New Orleans |
Researchers at the
University of Oxford are working with Nissan to create semi-autonomous
cars that will have a driver present "but are capable of driving fully
independently, using knowledge of the environment in which they are
driving," according to the report on improving the road network, published Tuesday.
A trial of the cars on the roads is expected to start later this year, it said.
While
there is interest from vehicle makers and their systems suppliers to
develop fully autonomous cars, further progress in that direction will
depend mainly on ensuring public safety and on updating the law to take
account of the new technology, according to the report.
Google and
other companies are testing cars that drive themselves, and U.S. states
like Nevada, California and Florida have permitted testing of the
self-driving cars.
But self-driving vehicle technology is not yet
at a stage that it can be authorized for use by the public for general
driving, according to a U.S. Department of Transportation recommendation to state governments in May.
The
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in the U.S. recommended
that states should ensure at a minimum that a person licensed to drive
self-driving vehicles should be seated in the driver's seat, if a state
decides to permit operation of self-driving vehicles other than for
testing.
The licensed driver should "be available at all times in
order to operate the vehicle in situations in which the automated
technology is not able to safely control the vehicle," NHTSA said.( It
said it wasn't aware of any systems intended for wide-scale deployment
currently under development for use in cars that will provide a level of
automation at which the driver will provide destination or navigation
input, but is not expected to be available for control.
The U.K.
has a "fantastic opportunity" to be at the forefront of developments in
technologies that can manage actions currently performed by the driver,
according to the Department for Transport report. "While the emergence
of semi-autonomous and autonomous vehicles will not remove the need for
investment now in our roads, they have the potential to transform the
way we travel on roads," it said.
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