Would you buy a self-driving car that couldn’t
drive itself in 99 percent of the country? Or that knew nearly nothing about
parking, couldn’t be taken out in snow or heavy rain, and would drive straight
over a gaping pothole? If your answer is yes, then check out the Google
Self-Driving Car, model year 2014. Of course, Google isn’t yet selling its now-famous
robotic vehicle and has said that its technology will be thoroughly tested
before it ever does. But the car clearly isn’t ready yet, as evidenced by the
list of things it can’t currently do—volunteered by Chris Urmson, director of
the Google car team. Google’s cars have safely driven more than 700,000 miles.
As a result, “the public seems to think that all of the technology issues are
solved,” says Steven Shladover, a researcher at the
University of California, Berkeley’s Institute of Transportation Studies. “But
that is simply not the case.” No one knows that better than Urmson. But he says he is optimistic about
tackling outstanding challenges and that it’s “going to happen more quickly
than many people think.” Google
often leaves the impression that, as a Google executive once wrote, the cars
can “drive anywhere a car can legally drive.” However, that’s true only if
intricate preparations have been made beforehand, with the car’s exact route,
including driveways, extensively mapped. Data from multiple passes by a special
sensor vehicle must later be pored over, meter by meter, by both computers and
humans. It’s vastly more effort than what’s needed for Google Maps. I got this from this site.

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