OUT OF THE BOX

Paris experiments with driverless buses

Paris began its first experiment with driverless buses on Monday, with city officials saying they were eager to prepare for the coming “revolution” of autonomous vehicles.

Two box-shaped electric vehicles capable of carrying around 10 people have been deployed—within the safety of a special lane—on a bridge connecting two railway stations to the east of the city centre.

“Autonomous vehicles represent a revolution for every city on the planet… which will change our urban environment and public space in a spectacular fashion over the next 20 years,” Paris deputy mayor Jean-Louis Missika told reporters.

The test unveiled Monday, which will last three months, is the first stage of the city’s embrace of self-driving vehicles which use a combination of lasers and cameras to detect other objects and people around them.

The head of the Paris transport network, Elisabeth Borne, said she envisaged the buses being used one day to connect homes and railway stations in the suburbs, which are served by overland trains known as RERs.

“We dream one day of having buses like these parked near RER stations which would come to collect passengers on demand,” she told reporters at the launch.

The advent of self-driving vehicles poses a series of regulatory, ethical and economic questions which policymakers will have to grapple with as the technology improves and grows more widespread.

Paris’ driverless buses use a combination of lasers and cameras to detect other objects and people around them

One of them is: What happens to the humble bus driver?

“We need to start thinking from today about how to train drivers so they can shift into the new jobs created by autonomous vehicles,” Missika, who is a transport expert in the mayor’s office, told AFP.

In October, delivery drivers got an uncomfortable glimpse of the future when a self-driving truck built by Uber’s Otto unit successfully delivered a beer shipment.

Cars with some autonomous functions are already on our roads, and more than a dozen automakers including BMW, Kia, Volkswagen and General Motors are racing to get fully self-driving cars to market by 2020.

Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-01-paris-electric-driverless-minibus-pollution.html#jCp

Liat

Recent Posts

Quantum Machines Makes Second European Acquisition in Six Weeks as Quantum Closes In on Real-World Advantage

This acquisition further establishes Quantum Machines as the quantum company with the broadest global footprint,…

2 weeks ago

IQE and Tower Semiconductor Announce Multi-year InP epiwafer Supply Agreement

Supporting planned growth in InP silicon photonics technology Resolving all prior IP disputes between the…

2 weeks ago

Jedify Raises $24 Million in Series A Funding to Build Context Graphs for Enterprise AI Agents

Norwest leads the round with strategic participation from Snowflake Ventures, as Jedify addresses the AI…

3 weeks ago

Shifters Raises $10.2 Million Seed Round Led by Ace Capital Partners to Advance AI-Native Ground Robotics

Round brings total funding to $15 million from U.S., European and Israeli investors to support…

4 weeks ago

Quantum Machines Reaches a Novera QPU Performance Milestone with Its OPX1000 Platform

Quantum Machines achieves 99.5% median two-qubit gate fidelity when operating Rigetti Computing’s Novera™ superconducting QPU…

1 month ago