Sunday, 12 January 2014

Driverless cars will still need to clear legal framework


Las Vegas: Hydrogen-and solar-powered vehicles are on the streets. So are cars that can get
you through stop-and-go traffic while you sit back and send texts from behind the wheel.
Cars are even using radar, ultrasonic waves and cameras to jump into the passing lane and
get around slowpokes.

Sure, all of these technologies are still in the testing phase, but that hasn’t stopped car makers and
technology companies from showing off a new paradigm of driving at the International CES gadget
show this week. It’s a world in which you no longer grip the wheel with excitement, but instead
relax with a book or movie as your car chauffeurs you to your destination.

That was the point of one simulation by Delphi Automotive PLC, a provider of auto parts and technology
to major manufacturers including Ford, GM and Volvo. The scenario, using a stationary but
souped-up Tesla Model S, imagines “autonomous driving lanes,” much like carpool lanes today.
The company imagines that vehicles might someday enter these lanes and then run on auto-pilot.
The feat is possible today with a mixture of technology that keeps cars inside lanes and adaptive
cruise control that matches a car’s speed to the vehicle in front of it.

While in the autonomous lane, the car’s window glass frosts up and functions that had been disabled
for the driver — like video playing from a mini projector — turn on. The driver can pursue
other activities, like surfing the Web or even taking a nap.

When the driver’s exit nears, the car gets increasingly persistent, demanding that the driver take
back control. First, the video player stops. Then a female voice intones, “Place both hands on the steering wheel and look ahead in the driving direction.”

Finally, the seat starts vibrating and a driver-facing camera ensures he or she is looking at the
road. The driver taps a steering wheel knob, takes control, and drives on. The experience is similar
to airline pilots who grab the controls for take-off and landing but let a computer do the rest.
“These technologies exist now and the carmakers assure us they’re ready to go,” said Jim Travers,
associate editor of autos for Consumer Reports magazine. “It’s really not that far off.”

Though technological innovation isn’t an issue, there are many speed bumps on the road to this
envisioned future. Consumers must accept the safety and reliability of such systems, governments
must draft and pass legislation and the insurance industry needs to draw up guidelines to answer
tricky questions such as who’d be at fault in the event of a crash.

“That’s one of the biggest issues for the industry as a whole for autonomous technology,” said Glen
De Vos, vice president of engineering for Delphi’s electronics and safety division. “The legal environment
has to keep pace. Today we’re at the very beginning.”




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