Moving Closer to a Fully Autonomous Car – Recent Developments
Recently, there has been a lot of buzz around electric cars.
Tech companies are looking to make a mark in this booming industry, including
Google, Tesla, Ford, Mercedes, BMW, and even Apple. Business Insider reports
that there will be more than 10 million self-driving vehicles on roads by 2020.
There have been many recent developments in this industry as tech rivals plan
to take the bigger slice of the market.
However, first things first, self-driving cars are divided
into two categories – fully-autonomous and semi-autonomous. A fully-autonomous
vehicle is capable of making every decision without human intervention. A
semi-autonomous vehicle has some capabilities of autonomous vehicles, however,
they are not fully-autonomous. Features like complex parking routines have yet
to be implemented in semi-autonomous vehicles.
Here are some recent developments in the industry:
- - Elon Musk’s Tesla Motors announced a new ‘Summon’
feature in its Model S car that allows a Tesla car to intelligently park and
exit itself in places where it is hard to open the doors. He also estimates
that, by 2018, a user will be able to ‘summon’ a car across the country.
- - At CES 2016, Faraday Future (750+ employees) has
unveiled their FFZERO1 concept car (looks like a spaceship + batmobile) that
has four electric motors with 1000HP.
- - Ford is testing self-driving cars in snowy
environments. Recently, Ford posted a YouTube video showing a test at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
- - Recently, Apple and Facebook both registered the
.car domain name in the company’s name.
- - West Virginia has joined Connecticut, Utah,
Texas and Michigan in banning direct sales of Tesla cars (without going through
car dealers).
- - In a recent BBC interview, when reporters asked
Elon Musk about the development of Apple’s self-driving car, he responded: "Well,
it's pretty hard to hide something if you hire over a thousand engineers to do
it. This is an open secret."
"If you don't make it at Tesla, you go
work at Apple," Musk said, commenting on how Apple is poaching employees
for automotive companies like Tesla, GM, Ford, Chrysler and Volkswagen, among
others.
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