The Star Malaysia - Star2

Running on its own

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TWO types of self-driving bus are being tested out in Estonia as part of initiative­s that could revolution­ise public transport in Europe.

One of the services in tech-savvy Estonia, which is often used as a testing ground for innovation, offers free rides around a park in the capital Tallinn.

The other is part of an Eu-funded project and is ferrying people around Ulemiste City, a sprawling business campus near the city’s main airport.

Dubbed “e-stonia”, the EU member of 1.3 million people is known for being a trailblaze­r in technology, with Estonians having already helped pioneer the likes of Skype, Transferwi­se, e-voting and delivery robots.

The first project is a joint initiative being run by the Tallinn city authoritie­s, the Tallinn University of Technology (Taltech) and French company Navya.

Andrei Novikov, deputy mayor of Tallinn, said in a statement he hoped it could lead to “even more eco-friendly and smarter public transport”.

University students are present during the ride as bus operators and guides, and the bus uses GPS to run on a pre-programmed route in the Kadriorg park.

It is equipped with cameras and lidars, devices for measuring distances by laser light.

In line with virus-related restrictio­ns, no more than four passengers are allowed on board, and there is a bottle of hand sanitiser by the door.

Neverthele­ss, the bus is proving very popular.

Bus operator and Taltech student Hagar Nakkurt, 21, said there were often queues to use it.

Karol and Jaan, a 40-year-old couple taking a ride, said the bus would be perfect for parks or on campuses.

“I think that it’s a bit too slow to use as public transport,” Jaan said.

Karol added: “It reacts to every little thing, that also makes the journey longer. But it’s probably just a matter of time before it gets smarter.”

The plan is ultimately for the buses to run without operators, although Nakkurt said an intermedia­te step could be to have operators directing them from home.

Nakkurt said the bus was not difficult to operate but reacted to the smallest objects – even tree leaves or birds flying over the road – as potential obstacles.

The second test is part of the Eu-funded FABULOS (Future Automated Bus Urban Level Operation Systems). — AFP Relaxnews

 ?? — AFP ?? People using a self-driving bus being tested out on a tourist route in Tallin, estonia.
— AFP People using a self-driving bus being tested out on a tourist route in Tallin, estonia.

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