In self-driving car race,
winners get all the way around track
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[April 03, 2017]
By Peter Henderson
WILLOWS,
Calif. (Reuters) - Nine self-driving cars did not quite zoom around a
2-mile (3.2-km) course in Northern California over the weekend in a race
involving students and entrepreneurs from startup companies where the
real goal was just to make it around the track.
Alphabet Inc's Waymo, Uber and major auto companies are competing to
create the technology for an autonomous revolution that could reorder
the car industry and transform transportation.
The goals were more modest for contenders at the Thunderhill West race
course, about a two-hour drive north of San Francisco, in the second
challenge of Self Racing Cars. All cars competing had a driver behind
the wheel to intervene if necessary, and only four of the nine made it
around the curvy course without human help.
Location services startup Point One was the unofficial winner when its
car got around the track in three minutes and 37.9 seconds.
The cars took individual turns on the track over the course of the event
on Saturday and Sunday.
"Someday you will be able to see machines do things that people aren't
able to do. Today we are just trying to catch up with your teenage
child's first drive," said Self Racing Cars organizer Joshua Schachter,
a tech entrepreneur. He saw the race as a chance to push the envelope of
new technology.
For the small companies and students, the race course offered a large,
safe testing environment. Deciding how to slow down for a turn, for
instance, is a big question for a car that drives itself, and startups
cannot necessarily afford access to a major testing facility without
pedestrians.
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Technicians work on a vehicle during a self-racing cars event in
Willows, California, U.S., April 1, 2017. REUTERS/Stephen Lam
Some
cars used GPS and other location tracking to follow digital maps to get around
the course. That was the strategy for Point One, which is making a business of
determining location more precisely than GPS.
Students from online education organization Udacity used artificial intelligence
to teach driving on the fly, using a car owned by software company PolySync. On
a ride around the track on Sunday, the car navigated a few turns on its own, but
the human driver regularly yanked the wheel to keep it on the asphalt.
The Bay Area is the center of corporate efforts to build a commercial
self-driving car, and test vehicles navigate San Francisco streets with a human
behind the wheel.
Some are doing well. Recent state data showed that Waymo cars were traveling
about 5,000 miles (8,000 km) between interventions by the person in the driver's
seat.
(Reporting by Peter Henderson; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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