USA TODAY US Edition

Uber puts self-driving cars to the test in Pittsburgh

- Marco della Cava @marcodella­cava USA TODAY

The first Uber car that doesn’t need a driver has hit the streets.

The ride-hailing behemoth announced in a blog post Thursday that it has begun testing a selfdrivin­g car in Pittsburgh, home of the company’s nascent Advanced Technologi­es Center.

The car, a Ford Fusion Hybrid with a roof full of radar, lasers and cameras, will be collecting road-mapping data as well as testing its real-world traffic reactions. Uber’s interest in autonomous car technology dates to a year ago, when the $60 billion start-up began hiring Carnegie Mellon University robotics experts to staff its new center not far from the Pittsburgh-based school.

“If you’re driving around Pittsburgh in the coming weeks you might see a strange sight: a car that looks like it should be driven by a superhero. But this is no movie prop,” the blog post says. “While Uber is still in the early days of our self-driving efforts, every day of testing leads to improvemen­ts. Right now we’re focused on getting the technology right and ensuring it’s safe for everyone on the road — pedestrian­s, cyclists and other drivers.”

The post also notes that Uber’s self-driving mission echoes that of Google, which is to reduce the number of traffic fatalities that are largely caused by human error. Last year, 33,000 people died in the U.S. in car accidents and 4.4 million were injured, an 8% jump over 2014, according to the Na- tional Safety Council.

But self-driving has financial appeal for Uber as well. CEO Travis Kalanick has made reference on a number of occasions to the fact the driver is the most expensive part of its financial model, not to mention being the source of an ongoing fight over whether such drivers should be employees or contractor­s. Uber recently agreed to pay $100 million to settle a lawsuit over driver status.

“When there’s no other dude in the car, the cost of taking an Uber anywhere becomes cheaper than owning a vehicle. So the magic there is, you basically bring the cost below the cost of ownership for everybody, and then car ownership goes away,” Kalanick said at the Code Conference in 2014, shortly after Google unveiled its self-driving car prototype.

Google has been testing selfdrivin­g car technology for the past seven years, using primarily Lexus SUVs strapped with technology. Google currently is road testing in Mountain View, Calif, Phoenix, Austin and Kirkland, Wash. The search company began to accelerate its testing through a recent partnershi­p with Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s, which will build 100 Pacifica minivans that can accommodat­e Google’s technology.

Ford is testing its own selfdrivin­g tech lashed to a Fusion Hybrid at the Mcity testing facility near Ann Arbor, Mich., and has gotten approval from the California Department of Motor Vehicles to begin deploying the cars on the roads near its Palo Alto research center.

A growing number of automakers — from Audi to Kia — have begun adding sophistica­ted driverassi­st technology to their vehicles, features that are heading in the direction of full autonomy. Tesla recently introduced an Autopilot function to its electric sedans, which keeps the car within its lane by itself.

Given the pace of autonomous car research, many in the space believe driverless cars will be ready for consumers within the next three to four years. The bigger hurdles remain both regulatory and psychologi­cal.

 ?? UBER ?? Uber has been using a Ford Fusion Hybrid with a roof full of radar, lasers and cameras as its test model in Pittsburgh.
UBER Uber has been using a Ford Fusion Hybrid with a roof full of radar, lasers and cameras as its test model in Pittsburgh.

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