SAN FRANCISCO
Google announced Tuesday that the first completed prototype of its self-driving car is ready to be road tested.
“We’re
going to be spending the holidays zipping around our test track, and we
hope to see you on the streets of Northern California in the new year,”
the Internet titan’s autonomous car team said in a post at Google+
social network.
The prototype is a manifestation of
plans that California-based Google revealed in May to build its own
autonomous car minus typical features such as steering wheels.
“They
won’t have a steering wheel, accelerator pedal, or brake pedal...
because they don’t need them. Our software and sensors do all the work,”
Google’s Chris Urmson said in a blog post in May.
Technical specifics about the prototype were not disclosed on Tuesday.
FOR UTILITY, NOT LUXURY
For Google, the car marks a shift away from adapting vehicles made by others in its quest to pioneer individual transport that needs only a stop-and-go function.
For Google, the car marks a shift away from adapting vehicles made by others in its quest to pioneer individual transport that needs only a stop-and-go function.
Google said early this year that
the top speed of the battery-powered prototypes will be 25 miles (40
kilometres) per hour and that they would be designed for utility, not
luxury.
The blog post, on Tuesday, showed a white, rounded bug-looking vehicle.
“We’ve
been working on different prototypes-of-prototypes, each designed to
test different systems of a self-driving car-for example, the typical
car parts like steering and braking, as well as the self-driving parts
like the computer and sensors,” Google said.
“We’ve now
put all those systems together in this fully functional vehicle-our
first complete prototype for fully autonomous driving.”
Several
automakers have been working on autonomous or semi-autonomous features
for cars, such as self-parking, but no fully autonomous car has come to
market.
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