The Phnom Penh Post

Self-driving buses roll off assembly line at China’s Baidu

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CHINA’S internet giant Baidu announced on Wednesday that it had begun mass producing the country’s first autonomous minibus, as the firm prepares to roll them out in tourist spots and airports.

CEO Robin Li watched the 100th vehicle roll off a production line of a factory in the southeaste­rn city of Xiamen.

“2018 marks the first year of commercial­isation for autonomous driving. From the mass production of Apolong, we can truly see that autonomous driving is making great strides – taking the industry from zero to one,” said the CEO.

The 14-seater Apolong, about one-third of the size of a normal bus, has no steering wheel, driver’s seat, accelerato­r or brake.

Co-produced by Baidu and Chinese bus manufactur­er King Long, they will soon be pressed into commercial use in enclosed places such as tourist areas and airports in several c i t i e s i ncl udi ng Bei j i ng, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, and the country’s new megacity Xiong’an.

Early next year, they are set to enter Japan’s self-driving market as shuttle buses at nuclear power stations or in Tokyo to ferry around elderly people in local communitie­s.

The vehicles have the “fourth level” of automation as defined by the Society of Automotive Engineers, meaning they can operate within an enclosed location without the interventi­on of a human.

This is one short of the highest level, where vehicles can operate anywhere on the road.

“I took a self-driving car to go to the developer conference last year, and ended up getting a ticket on [Beijing’s] fifth ring road,” Li quipped.

Baidu, often referred to as China’s Google, operates the country’s leading search engine and also invests heavily in services ranging from online payments to connected devices and artificial intelligen­ce.

“In the past, China exported cheap commoditie­s to the world. In the future, China will export AI technology to the world,” Li said at the firm’s annual AI developer conference. He also announced a new AI chip called Kunlun at the conference, which can support a wide range of AI applicatio­ns including voice recognitio­n, natural language processing and autonomous driving.

 ?? CHINA OUT/AFP ?? An Apolong self-driving minibus by King Long is exhibited at the Consumer Electronic­s Show (CES) Asia in Shanghai on June 13.
CHINA OUT/AFP An Apolong self-driving minibus by King Long is exhibited at the Consumer Electronic­s Show (CES) Asia in Shanghai on June 13.

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