Autonomous Vehicles

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Autonomous Vehicles is a community dedicated to the news, discussion and exploration of autonomous vehicles and how we as a society, will embrace this futurology today!

founded 5 months ago
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cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/14965748

Archived version

The self-driving taxis have become popular — with Baidu offering super cheap rides to win customers — and the company is eyeing expansion into other Chinese megacities as local governments rush to issue policies in support of the new technology.

But the robotaxi revolution is also causing some public concerns in China, with the issue blowing up on social media after an Apollo Go vehicle ran into a pedestrian in Wuhan last Sunday.

Footage of the incident spread online has sparked a wide debate about the issues created by robotaxis — especially the threat the technology poses to ride-hailing and taxi drivers.

Authorities in Wuhan have felt the need to respond to the “rumors” about problems caused by robotaxis. The city’s transportation bureau told domestic media that the local taxi industry is “relatively stable”.

[...]

In response to video clips showing a pedestrian lying on the road next to an Apollo Go robotaxi which began trending within hours, a Baidu spokesperson told domestic media that the accident was a “mild” collision that had occurred because the pedestrian had been jaywalking.

[...]

In 2019, Baidu was among the first companies to obtain a business license for operating autonomous vehicles in Wuhan. Then, in 2022, it was granted a license to operate its vehicles on public roads without a safety driver.

[...]

But the robotaxis’ growing popularity has also sparked backlash. Wuhan residents have been complaining for months that Apollo Go cars cause traffic jams by driving slowly and stopping unexpectedly. Viral clips on social media show long lines of cars forming behind an Apollo Go vehicle that is blocking the road.

[...]

It’s unclear whether the controversy will affect China’s plans for autonomous driving. Beijing recently issued a draft guideline that would allow self-driving vehicles to be used in the public transportation and ride-hailing industries. Cities including Changsha and Jinan have announced plans to conduct robotaxi testing schemes.

[...]

So far, the publicity appears to be providing an unexpected boost to Baidu’s stock price. The company’s shares achieved their largest daily gain in over a year on Wednesday, and are still up for the week as of Friday afternoon.

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by Lugh to c/avs
 
 

You're the first people to join us since we set up. It's great to have you along. If you have any requests or suggestions please just say so. It would be great if we could get you some new subscribers from the 20 million people on r/futurology on Reddit. If you have any bright Ideas for making that work please let us know. We haven't had much luck with that so far. Most of the people in c/futurology are from elsewhere in the fediverse. We've had pinned posts in the subreddit that have been read by thousands, but it never seems to translate into many people singing up.

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Congrats on the new community launch. I hope this post fits.

If you're a bit of a tech head and want to experiment with a very autopilot-like system, you should give openpilot a look.

Just like autopilot(and "FSD" for that matter), it doesn't remove your responsibility to drive the car and remain alert, but what it does let you do is remove hands from the wheel if desired while you pay attention. It's driver monitoring for paying attention is actually a pretty well designed system too, and since it's fully open source you know that your data is yours alone, or at least you can verify and change it if you prefer.

There's a lot of user videos you can watch of openpilot in action on YouTube, and it's pretty amazing to see what you can do with an aftermarket driver assist system. While the newest dev kit is no longer an actual smartphone, the comma 2 was a literal smartphone you taped to your windshield that drove your car for you. It's amazing what's been engineered on such meager specs.

I've used openpilot for just under 100,000 miles, I will never buy another car that isn't compatible with openpilot or something better. Openpilot beats the hell out of Blue Cruise or Super Cruise, and it costs exactly $0 a month unless you want extra features.

Here's a link to the page you can use to check your vehicle compatibility. Most cars only take like 30 minutes to install.

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It would seem he's essentially blaming it on the fact that FSD isn't actually intelligent.

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