Bangkok Post

BACK TO THE FUTURE

BACK TO THE FUTURE: Professor Han Min-hong’s autonomous car was decades ahead of the curve.

- By Claire Lee

A South Korean professor invented a selfdrivin­g car decades ago.

Decades before the race to build a self-driving car became a multibilli­on-dollar contest between tech giants such as Tesla Inc and Google, a South Korean professor built an autonomous vehicle and test-drove it across the country — only for his research to be consigned to the scrapheap.

Han Min-hong, now 79, successful­ly tested his self-driving car on the roads of Seoul in 1993 — a decade before Tesla was even founded.

Two years later, it drove 300 kilometres (185 miles) from the capital to the southern port of Busan, on the most heavily-travelled expressway in South Korea.

Footage from the period shows the car barrelling down a highway, with no one behind the wheel. A 386-chip-powered desktop computer, complete with monitor and keyboard, is placed on the passenger seat. Han is sitting in the back, waving at the camera.

“It felt extraordin­ary,” said the affable inventor. “The workload was very heavy,” but he and his team “had an enormous passion as it was something others hadn’t done yet, something that hadn’t come out in the world yet”.

At the time, South Korea was more focused on heavy industry, such as steel and shipbuildi­ng, with the average Korean not yet familiar with mobile phones.

The country was yet to become the tech powerhouse it is today, and was still pursuing imitation rather than innovation. On one occasion, Han was told: “Why develop a new technology when you can always pay for it?”

Han’s projects were seen as dangerous. He was once asked how much he was paying for his life insurance and whether his wife was aware of “these crazy activities.”

But Han was so convinced of his cars’ safety that he rarely wore a seat belt — and has never had life insurance.

Even so, unable to see much investment potential, the government eventually cut funding to his research at Korea University.

Now, Elon Musk’s electric car firm Tesla is a $600 billion behemoth, while Han’s Chumdancha is a small company in Yongin, south of Seoul, where he and one other employee still develop specialist warning systems for autonomous vehicles.

“Musk is a tremendous and outstandin­g person,’’ Han said. “He came up with his own, firm vision based on what others were doing, and that is really incredible.”

“But my invention could have paved the way for South Korea to dominate the industry,’’ he added regretfull­y.

Raj Rajkumar, an engineerin­g professor at Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics Institute, who reviewed the 1990s footage for AFP, said it “appears to be on par with some of the best work on autonomous vehicles during that period”.

“The professor and a colleague are not even in the driver’s seat — very bold, confident but very risky thing to do,” he added.

“It is unfortunat­e that funding for that project was cut. In hindsight, that was certainly not a wise decision.”

Korea University describes Han as “a pioneer and hero in the global field of artificial intelligen­ce”, who is known for developing the South’s

‘‘ My invention could have paved the way for South Korea to dominate the industry. PROFESSOR HAN MIN-HONG

first automotive navigation system and a minihelico­pter seen as a precursor to modern-day drones, as well as his autonomous vehicle work.

He is seen in the South as a genius ahead of his time — the 1990s footage has been viewed more than 1.5 million times since it was posted to YouTube in February.

Self-driving vehicles are a major technologi­cal battlegrou­nd for today’s automakers, with technology giants like Google parent Alphabet Inc spending billions of dollars in a market that is supposed to fuel vehicle sales.

Tesla said last year it was “very close” to achieving Level 5 autonomous driving technology — which indicates essentiall­y total autonomy.

But Han insists the American firm’s current offerings are effectivel­y comparable to his 1990s work.

“As Tesla is regarded as the best car in the world, if there is a chance, I would like to compare our technology to theirs.”

He suggested a challenge on the Bugak Skyway, a twisting, narrow road that runs over a mountain in northern Seoul.

“Of course Tesla’s invested a lot of money in testing, so it might be much better when it comes to sophistica­tion,” Han told AFP. “But there shouldn’t be much difference when it comes down to basic functional­ity.”

Even so, Han believes there are limits to what self-driving technology can achieve, and that true autonomy is beyond reach.

“Neural networks do not have the flexibilit­y of humans when faced with a novel situation that is not in their programmin­g,’’ he said, predicting that self-driving vehicles “will largely be used to transport goods rather than people.’’

“Computers and humans are not the same,” Han added.

 ??  ?? Han successful­ly tested his self-driving car on the roads of Seoul in 1993 — a decade before Tesla was even founded.
Han successful­ly tested his self-driving car on the roads of Seoul in 1993 — a decade before Tesla was even founded.
 ??  ?? LEFT
Han explains a specialist warning system for autonomous vehicles under developmen­t.
LEFT Han explains a specialist warning system for autonomous vehicles under developmen­t.
 ?? PHOTOS BY AFP ?? ABOVE
Han Min-hong poses during an interview at his office in Yongin, south of Seoul.
PHOTOS BY AFP ABOVE Han Min-hong poses during an interview at his office in Yongin, south of Seoul.
 ??  ?? Han poses next to his 21-year-old self-driving car.
Han poses next to his 21-year-old self-driving car.

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