Robotic vehicles have been used in dangerous environments for decades, from decommissioning the Fukushima nuclear power plant or inspecting underwater energy infrastructure in the North Sea. More recently, autonomous vehicles from boats to grocery delivery carts have made the gentle transition from research centers into the real world with very few hiccups. Yet the promised arrival of self-driving cars has not progressed beyond the testing stage. And in one test drive of an Uber self-driving car in 2018, a pedestrian was killed by the vehicle. Although these accidents happen every day when humans are behind the wheel, the public holds…
This story continues at The Next Web
What’s it going to take to perfect self-driving cars?
The Next Web
0 shares
1 views
You might like
Related news coverage
Buy them before we do: second-hand picks for 30 April
Autocar
Any trawl of great-looking cars worth its salt must mention the Jaguar E-Type. We can debate whether it's the best-looking of them..
-
Tesla: 5 things to take away from the Q1 results
Proactive Investors
-
Elon Musk trumpeted self-driving cars, joked about vampires, and recalled a USB-cable hunt on Tesla's earnings call. Here are the 11 best quotes.
Business Insider
-
IM Motors Airo: New Routemaster designer creates air-cleaning EV
Autocar
-
Volkswagen Project Trinity to herald car-buying revolution
Autocar
Advertisement
More coverage
Honda to stop selling combustion engines globally by 2040
Autocar
E city car is Honda's debut EV
Japanese manufacturer details a bold £33.5bn development drive; will launch new EV..
-
Tesla boss Elon Musk counters police claims over 'driverless' car in Texas crash
Proactive Investors
-
Self-driving car conundrum: Tesla's latest crash raises concerns about Autopilot safety claims
USATODAY.com
-
Two killed in crash while reportedly using Tesla Autopilot system
Autocar
-
How To Play The $2.6 Trillion Clean Energy Investment Boom
MENAFN.com