Friday, September 28, 2012

The ultimate cruise control: California OKs driverless cars

California Governor Jerry Brown signed a bill Tuesday that officially allows driverless cars on public thoroughfares.?Driverless cars are coming, whether we like it or not, according to the Car Connection.

By Richard Read,?Guest blogger / September 26, 2012

Google co-founder Sergey Brin stands on stage during a bill signing by California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., for driverless cars at Google headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., Tuesday. The legislation will open the way for driverless cars in the state.

Eric Risberg/AP

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Google began testing autonomous vehicles on California roads in 2009. Now, it can do so legally: yesterday afternoon,?Governor Jerry Brown signed SB 1298, which officially allows self-drivingcars?on public thoroughfares.

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As Mashable?points out, Google hasn't technically broken any California laws over the past three years, since the state doesn't require vehicles to have drivers. That's because when those laws were written, autonomous vehicles were as far-fetched as email and smartphones. Now that self-driving cars are a real "thing", however, Google and legislators like California State Senator Alex Padilla are doing the sensible thing and laying out some ground rules.

History

Google's autonomous?car?program is headed up by Sebastian Thrun, who led a Stanford team to victory in the?2005 DARPA Grand Challenge?with a self-driving vehicle that traveled 132 miles across the desert. The program began as a partnership with Google Maps, allowing autonomous vehicles to help gather information for Google Street View.

To date, Google has racked up over 300,000 miles in its autonomous vehicles. Those vehicles have been involved in very few accidents, and to the best of our knowledge, accidents have only?occurred?when human drivers were in control of the car?(or when other drivers have rear-ended Google's vehicle).

In the summer of 2011, Nevada became the first state to allow autonomous vehicles on its roads, and Google debuted?America's very first autonomous vehicle license plate?the following spring.

In April of 2012, Florida joined the autonomous car ranks, when?CS/HB 1207 unanimously passed?both houses of the state legislature. That said, the bill wasn't without its critics: in fact, some tried -- unsuccessfully -- to turn?autonomous?vehicles into?self-driving boogeymen to scare elderly voters.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/6eAGG59sYcU/The-ultimate-cruise-control-California-OKs-driverless-cars

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