The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Robotic delivery vans may come before self-driving cars

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THE FUTURE of driverless driving looks like a giant toaster with a funny hat.

That’s an approximat­ion of a new autonomous vehicle unveiled last week by Nuro, a Silicon Valley startup that’s been cryptic about its business plan since it launched about 18 months ago. Nuro’s shiny, minimalist appliance on wheels doesn’t have doors or windows to speak of, because it will be carrying packages-not people.

“We realised we could make it possible to deliver anything, anytime, anywhere,” said cofounder Dave Ferguson. “We like to call it a local teleportat­ion service.”

Nuro’s delivery pod weighs about 1,500 pounds, with most of that mass packed into a battery pack that powers its electric motor. It’s roughly the same length and height as a convention­al SUV, but only 3.5 feet wide. There is a glass windshield, mostly just to keep other drivers from freaking out.

Each will come with a modular, customisab­le interior that can carry about 250 pounds. A grocer will be able to opt for shelves and refrigerat­ion; a dry-cleaner can go with hanging racks; while peer-to-peer versions shuffling the detritus of Craigslist may have two empty cargo bays with some anchoring straps. “We spent a bunch of time doing ergonomic experiment­s,” Ferguson said.

Along the spectrum of selfdrivin­g technology, Nuro’s cargo vehicle falls somewhere between a car from the “The Jetsons” and one of those smart suitcases that follow travellers around the airport.

To be sure, the market is massive. UPS alone delivers about 19 million packages a day. Excluding management and pilots, it employs roughly 353,000 people and spends 57 cents of every sales dollar on compensati­on and benefits. Robot-cars, meanwhile, are far easier to negotiate with at review time and ask only for some electricit­y.

Of course, Nuro isn’t the first company to notice the Amazon Prime packages piling up on porches. Ford began testing human-free pizza delivery with Domino’s last summer. Toyota rolled out a delivery vehicle in Las Vegas this month. Dubbed e-Palette, the futuristic van already has partnershi­ps with Amazon.com and Pizza Hut. Renault-Nissan plans to unveil a driverless delivery van in September. Udelv Inc., a selfdrivin­g startup, is testing an autonomous delivery vehicle in California this month.

The Nuro vehicle, compared with similar robot cars, is skinny and slow, both of which make it relatively safe. It can avoid an errant child, for example, without leaving its lane. Meanwhile, it’s in no particular rush. “Most of these things sort of drive like my grandma,” Ferguson said. “If someone’s inside the vehicle, that’s annoying. If no one’s inside the vehicle, that’s actually a strictly positive thing.”

We realised we could make it possible to deliver anything, anytime, anywhere. We like to call it a local teleportat­ion service. – Dave Ferguson, Nuro co-founder

 ?? — Nuro photo ?? The new autonomous vehicle unveiled last week by Nuro, a Silicon Valley startup.
— Nuro photo The new autonomous vehicle unveiled last week by Nuro, a Silicon Valley startup.

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