Future Car Focus: Robot Cars
Google's landmark deployment of autonomous cars — vehicles that  can drive themselves — onto public roads and into live human traffic  last summer and early fall was announced casually, and after the fact.
Astonishingly,  the search-engine giant was able to set loose seven Toyota Prius  hybrids, all adorned with a dizzying array of odd-looking sensors, onto  Highway 1 between San Francisco and Los Angeles for several months  without raising suspicion. Each vehicle was piloted by  artificial-intelligence software designed to interpret the data  collected by the sensors and use it to mimic the decisions made by a  human driver. The goal: to fundamentally change the way we use cars.
How  so, you ask? Google believes that the use of autonomous vehicles could  nearly halve the number of automobile-related deaths — which it  estimates at 1.2 million worldwide per year — because computers are  theoretically more precise drivers than humans. In addition, the instant  reaction time and 360-degree awareness of computer-controlled vehicles  would allow them to ride closer together on the highway than vehicles  driven by humans, thus reducing traffic congestion. And finally, they  can be more fastidious with the accelerator, reducing fuel consumption  and carbon emissions considerably.
Essentially, riding  in an autonomous car could shave time off your daily commute, reduce  your carbon footprint, save you money and save lives in the long run.  And you don't even have to lift a finger. Instead of driving, you're a  passenger — working, watching television, conversing with friends.  Sounds idyllic.
Does this mean that self-directed robot  cars, the kind that science-fiction writers have been dreaming about  for decades, will hit the streets within a couple of years? No.
While  the Google project may be one of the most high-profile demonstrations  of autonomous-vehicle research, and one of the most successful to date,  the path to a production robotic car still remains uncertain and would  require clearing a staggering number of technical and legal hurdles. But  plenty of people, in both the academic world and in the  research-and-development divisions of carmakers such as GM and Volvo,  are working out the kinks.
 
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