Google, Toyota and Audi are all developing self-driving cars

Google, Toyota and Audi are all developing self-driving cars Las Vegas – Arabstoday Automobile enthusiasts and technology firms are jumping on the latest industry bandwagon, the driverless car, until now a concept rather than a realistic platform for 21st-century technology to improve road safety. At the Consumer

Electronics Show [CES] in Las Vegas this week, Toyota and Audi showed off their ideas for autonomous vehicles, in the wake of a push by Google on its own brand of driverless vehicle. And others may now follow suit.
Toyota drew considerable attention with its electronically gussied-up Lexus Sedan, equipped with a host of sensors and cameras that can detect what is near the vehicle.
"It has the ability to drive itself, but we won't allow it," said Jim Pisz, Corporate Manager at Toyota North America.
Pisz said the technology is similar to Google's in terms of its use of electronics, but that "the Google focus is on software mapping, that's what they're really good at. Toyota focuses on safety programs and more integrated programs."
The Japanese automaker maintains that its 2013 Lexus LS, also being shown at the internationally renowned event, already has "the world's most advanced pre-collision safety system" but its driverless cars are so far only being used in closed research centres, unlike Google's much-publicised road tours.
The growing use of advanced electronics for auto safety, communications and entertainment has prompted a record eight car manufacturers to attend the Las Vegas show, along with dozens of firms working on related products and services.
"Electronics are vital to our cars. Today's cars are rolling computers," Audi executive Wolfgang Duerheimer told reporters at CES.
The German automaker's Ulrich Hofmann told international media that the new technology "helps the driver in situations where it's boring to drive, and leaves you to drive when it is fun."
Meanwhile Audi showed its own concept for a driverless vehicle in a simulator at the Las Vegas tech conference.
Hofmann said an autonomous car could be developed within five to eight years but noted that "there are a lot of regulatory and legal issues" to navigate.
Ford Motor Co researcher Pim van der Jagt said the US auto giant halted its programme on driverless cars several years ago.
The concert "seemed so far out, it didn't make sense having big teams working on it," he said, but added that "now, with the interest in the Google car, politicians are starting to speak about it" and Ford has resumed its existing programme.
Nevertheless, "a full autonomous car may never even exist," van der Jagt added.
Audi engineers say they can envision an on-off switch which could be used in traffic jams on highways, where vehicles could join a sort of motorcade travelling at identical speeds, freeing a driver for a few moments.
In September, California Governor Jerry Brown signed a bill clearing the way for self-driving cars to jockey with human-operated vehicles to test the technology on the state's roads.
The state of Nevada issued a license plate giving Google's self-driving car the green light to travel along public roads there in May.
The growing talk of autonomous cars has sparked fresh interest in how the tech sector -- which has been under fire for fuelling "distracted driving” with mobile phones, smartphones and other new devices in recent years -- can improve auto safety as well as the driving experience.
"Everybody gets distracted at some point," said Steven Wenger of Mobileye, a company that makes equipment for crash avoidance for major automakers and as a consumer aftermarket device.
"Three seconds could save a person's life. We want people to be aware of these technologies which can help avoid accidents."

Source: AFP