It was a chance for the private sector and federal and state regulators to get together to talk about the future, in which human driving becomes passé and
driverless cars become the dominant form of transportation.
This could change in the future, as
driverless cars become more dominant.
Even if Google's
driverless cars become adept communicators, you bet we're still going to stop, look and listen before crossing the road near one.
I see a future where
driverless cars become the norm, but mostly on dedicated highways at first, all in a row in a single lane.
Not exact matches
We will end up playing catch - up with the rest of the world and miss out on the most amazing transition of our lifetimes: into an era in which we
become the drivers in
driverless cars.
Thanks to nuTonomy and MIT's partnership with Singapore, a country with dense urban areas has been highly receptive to
driverless car technology, the comparatively small company could
become the first to operate fully self - driving
cars, known as «level four,» in a city commercially.
Driverless racing
cars are only recently
becoming a thing with initiatives like Roborace, but what if autonomous tech had established itself 50 years ago?
Writer Ben Collins dubbed
driverless cars «terrifying» and said they could
become a liability if the sensors get «fogged up» by bad weather.
Imagine densely packed cities and suburbs thick with Google - developed, fully automated
cars zipping silently alongside more conventional vehicles that
become driverless at the touch of a button.
There is no question that
driverless cars with fully automated driving systems will
become a reality in the very near future.
driverless cars with fully automated driving systems will
become a reality in the very near future.
With motor vehicles
becoming «smarter», and with «
driverless cars» eager to get on the road, how do you see these developments transforming the personal injury sector?
But given the technology that now exists, we can predict with a much higher degree of confidence that
driverless cars will
become ubiquitous and transformative within a couple of decades or so, perhaps considerably sooner.
Speeding tickets and other driving violations will
become less common because police officers will have no reason to pull over an autonomous
car... except for that
driverless Google
car that got pulled over for going too slow.
Cars currently on the roads already have features akin to this
driverless car as vehicular controls
become more and more automated.
As it
becomes a
driverless -
car testing ground.
But like it or not,
driverless cars are
becoming a reality.