Self-Driving Cars Avoiding Carsickness When the Cars Drive Themselves |
- Avoiding Carsickness When the Cars Drive Themselves
- Cruise doubles down on hardware
- GM’s Cruise to Unveil First Car Built to Operate With No Driver
- Slow-Light Waveguide Provides Beam-Steering Capabilities for Lidar
- In its current state, is Openpilot intended to retrofit lane-keep-assist and adaptive cruise control to 2015-2019 vehicles? Is there a benefit of using it, compared Toyota's version of those same features on 2020 models?
- Self-driving car prototype by Google in CA DMV reports
- Alibaba-backed autonomous driving startup AutoX bags eight-figure Series Pre-B investment round
Avoiding Carsickness When the Cars Drive Themselves Posted: 21 Jan 2020 10:37 AM PST
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Cruise doubles down on hardware Posted: 21 Jan 2020 02:04 PM PST
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GM’s Cruise to Unveil First Car Built to Operate With No Driver Posted: 20 Jan 2020 09:42 PM PST | ||
Slow-Light Waveguide Provides Beam-Steering Capabilities for Lidar Posted: 21 Jan 2020 01:38 PM PST
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Posted: 20 Jan 2020 03:03 PM PST I just got a 2020 RAV4 Hybrid and took a 4-hr road trip so far. I was surprised by the ability of the stock Adaptive Cruise Control and Lane Keep Assist. My only complaint is that the Lane Keep Assist loses the lane markings if the turn becomes too sharp. I noticed that the 2019 and 2020 RAV4 Hybrids are not included on the compatibility list of Openpilot. Is that because it's intended to be a retrofit for vehicles that do not already have those features? Or, is there value of purchasing the Comma Two for this vehicle? [link] [comments] | ||
Self-driving car prototype by Google in CA DMV reports Posted: 20 Jan 2020 11:23 PM PST Hi guys, I would like to ask you for a help. Reading through the incident reports on the CA DMV website, I am trying to determine what type of a car might be hidden behind the "Self-driving car prototype" by Google Auto. It is mentioned in reports from April 28, May 4, July 15, August 8 and 16, September 2, 7 and 14 and October 26 in 2016. I am thinking it might be their Toyota Prius or homebuilt Firefly, but two of these incidents happened during manual/conventional mode of driving and one of them during a disengagement phase, so this probably rules out the Firefly, since it did not have any steering wheel, so manual driving was not possibly an option. I am quite confused and would appreciate any help. In overall, Google and later Waymo mentioned three types of cars there: Lexus RX450h, Chrysler Pacfica and that mysterious "prototype". Thank you very much for any hints! [link] [comments] | ||
Alibaba-backed autonomous driving startup AutoX bags eight-figure Series Pre-B investment round Posted: 20 Jan 2020 05:53 PM PST
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