Uber debuts self-driving
vehicles in landmark Pittsburgh trial
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[September 14, 2016]
By Heather Somerville
PITTSBURGH (Reuters) - When Pittsburgh
wakes up on Wednesday morning, some residents will have the choice
of going about their day in an Uber that drives itself.
The launch of Uber's self-driving pilot program marks the public
unveiling of the company's secretive work in autonomous vehicles and
the first time self-driving cars have been so freely available to
the U.S. public.
More than two years ago Uber - like most in the car business -
identified autonomous driving technology as the springboard for the
next stage of growth.
The aggressive San Francisco-based startup has already shaken up the
world’s taxi services, earning a valuation of $68 billion. It plans
ultimately to replace many of its 1.5 million drivers with
autonomous vehicles.
But it is not as if robots are taking over the Steel City. There
will be only four self-driving vehicles available to passengers, to
start, and two people will sit in the front to take over driving
when the car cannot steer itself.
Uber provided ride-alongs to reporters on Tuesday. During a ride of
about one hour, Reuters observed the Uber car safely - and for the
most part smoothly - stop at red lights and accelerate at green
lights, travel over a bridge, move around a mail truck and slow for
a driver opening a car door on a busy street. All without a person
touching the controls.
But the Uber driver and the engineer in the front two seats did
intervene every few miles.
Since opening its Advanced Technologies Center in Pittsburgh last
year, San Francisco-based Uber has moved quickly, hiring away some
40 faculty and researchers from Carnegie Mellon University - a move
that ruffled feathers locally - and forming partnerships with
automakers including Volvo.
But the company is competing in a crowded field. From Alphabet Inc <GOOGL.O>
and Baidu Inc <BIDU.O> to Tesla Motors Inc <TSLA.O> and General
Motors Co <GM.N>, technology companies and automakers are hustling
to build autonomous vehicles and develop new business plans for what
is expected to be a long-term makeover of personal transportation.
By integrating self-driving cars with its ride-services app, Uber
may be the first introduction to autonomous cars that many people
will have.
“If Uber scores a home run with this it's going to be wonderful for
the planet," said Andrew Moore, dean of the School of Computer
Science at Carnegie Mellon. "The reason is we will see a much safer
world and much more efficient world where we have to use less energy
to move people around."
Still, Moore said at least another decade of research and
development is needed before there would be a significant number of
truly autonomous cars on the road. Industry executives remain
sharply divided on the timeline, with some expecting fully
autonomous cars within five years and others predicting they are
still decades away.
“I don’t think that Uber by any means has it in the bag,” Moore
said.
A DOUBLE BLACK DIAMOND
Uber's Pittsburgh fleet consists of Ford Fusion cars outfitted with
3D cameras, global positioning systems (GPS) and a technology called
lidar that uses lasers to assess the shape and distance of objects,
mounted somewhat crudely to the vehicle's roof. The company is also
outfitting Volvo SUVs that will be added to the fleet.
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A roof mounted camera and radar system is shown on Uber's Ford
Fusion self driving car during a demonstration of self-driving
automotive technology in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S. September
13, 2016. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk
The cars do drive themselves, but during Reuters' ride-along, the Uber driver in
the front seat took control, according to company protocol, to allow pedestrians
to cross the street, maneuver through a construction zone and make a left turn
across traffic at an intersection. An Uber engineer sat in the passenger seat,
occasionally adjusting the speed of the car, which mostly drove slowly.
While autonomous driving on highways is relatively easy - Carnegie Mellon
researchers built a minivan that in 1995 drove itself across the country and
remained in autonomous mode about 98 percent of the time - city streets, with
their traffic, pedestrians, potholes and construction, are a different matter.
"Since the mid-90s pretty much this entire field has been focused on doing that
last step," said Aaron Steinfeld, associate research professor at the Robotics
Institute at Carnegie Mellon.
Pittsburgh in particular poses challenges. The city is full of steep and narrow
streets, potholes, tunnels and more than 440 bridges. It has snow and ice in the
winter, blossoming trees that can hide street signs and traffic signals in the
spring, blinding sun in the summer and a slippery ground cover of fallen leaves
in the autumn.
"We really feel that Pittsburgh is the double black diamond of driving," said
Raffi Krikorian, director of Uber's Advanced Technologies Center.
Pittsburgh also offers Uber a welcoming mayor and city leadership, who have
rolled out the red carpet for Uber and a state law that allows for autonomous
cars, as long as someone is behind the wheel to take over if needed.
Among the residents, there are mixed responses. On the ride-along, some stared
at the autonomous car with mouth-gaping awe; another gave the car the middle
finger.
Others, like Robert Armitage, 55 and a lifelong resident of Pittsburgh, are
excited for his city - but skeptical of Uber's ambitions.
"I am absolutely skeptical as to whether they can pull it off in the winter, he
said. "Pittsburgh is awfully far north for this kind of experiment."
(Reporting by Heather Somerville; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Bill Rigby)
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