[nfbmi-talk] FW: [The-Facts-Machine] Driverless Cars Could Transform Auto Industry

Daniel Garcia dangarcia3 at hotmail.com
Thu Jun 14 20:51:45 UTC 2012


Never mind the auto industry, this kind of technology will transform life
forfor blind and sighted a like.

Imagine your car drops you off at work, then takes your kids to school, then
goes to the grocery store where workers load up what you have already
ordered online, then you get picked up from work, etc.

Also, there would be no problems with people putting on makeup, talking on
the phone, etc, on the car. In fact, just get rid of the steering column and
reconfigure the seats in whatever way you want.

I hope I don't have to wait 20 years for this.

Daniel


-----Original Message-----
From: nfbmi-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nfbmi-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org]
On Behalf Of Fred Wurtzel
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 3:50 PM
To: 'NFB of Michigan Internet Mailing List'
Subject: [nfbmi-talk] FW: [The-Facts-Machine] Driverless Cars Could
Transform Auto Industry



 

 

From: the-facts-machine at googlegroups.com
[mailto:the-facts-machine at googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Steve
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 10:55 AM
To: msb-alumni
Cc: the-facts-machine; blindtech
Subject: [The-Facts-Machine] Driverless Cars Could Transform Auto Industry

 


Driverless technology could transform auto industry By Alisa Priddle Detroit
Free Press Business Writer It could be 20 years before self-driving cars
become mainstream, but the technology could transform the auto industry and
transportation in general, speakers said at the first-ever Driverless Car
Summit in Detroit on Tuesday.

 

The impact on the industry could be huge as we move towards vehicles that
drive themselves," said Gary Smyth, head of the North American Science Labs
at General Motors. What we do in the next five to 10 years in this industry
will be critical. 

 

There are already vehicles on the road loaded with radar, sensors and other
technology that allow them to steer, accelerate and brake based on signals
from their surroundings. 

 

The impact on humanity would be huge," Smyth said. 

 

Autonomous driving addresses such global issues as urbanization, congestion,
safety, the environment and connected living, Smyth said. It could enhance
freedom for older drivers and open new avenues for those who have never
driven before, such as the blind. 

 

It is pretty powerful to do this," said Mark Riccobono, executive director
of the National Federation of the Blind, who made history in January 2011 by
becoming the first legally blind person to drive. He piloted a Ford Escape
around the Daytona Speedway, a feat made possible by new technology in the
car.
For the blind population, "this is our going to the moon," Riccobono said. 

 

Google has developed a fleet of self-driving cars, each decked out with
about $150,000 of equipment. Google has logged 250,000 test miles, said tech
lead Chris Urmson. 

 

Urmson hopes the technology is mainstreamed sooner than the 20-year
forecasts offered by some summit attendees. 

 

I'm trying to push it ahead," he said, adding the hurdles are not
legislation or technology, but consumer acceptance. 

 

Google has lobbied to get Nevada and California to pass laws governing
self-driving cars. Similar bills have been introduced in Florida, Hawaii and
Oklahoma.

 


Michigan has yet to pursue legislation, but Gov. Rick Snyder said he is a
proponent of driverless cars as the next logical step toward efficient
mobility.

 


I'd be happy to look at it," Snyder said at the two-day conference organized
by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International. 

 

The mandate of the summit is to lay out a foundation for driverless cars for
the next 10 years, said Michael Toscano, president of AUVSI. 

 

Snyder offered Michigan's partnership and support. Because he must now be
chauffeured as governor, he said he has come to appreciate the ability to
use drive time to get work done. We need to be careful of what's on the road
but other states have gone forward," Snyder told reporters after his speech.
We're
the motor state and we should be thoughtful and move forward on things like
that. 

 

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