USA TODAY US Edition

Driverless electric cars to hit Vegas

Soon, calling for a ride takes a futuristic twist

- Mike Snider Contributi­ng: Nathan Bomey

Here’s a new twist in self-driving cars: Your ride arrives and it’s an electric vehicle with no driver. Then, you drive your rental car where you want and once you arrive, you exit the vehicle and it takes off on its own.

Later this year, Las Vegas will be the testing ground for a pilot program sending driverless EVs, driven by a remote pilot, to customers who order a car via a mobile app. When the car arrives, the driver gets in and drives to his destinatio­n. After the rental driver leaves, the remote driver directs the EV to its next location.

Autonomous and driverless car technology company Halo plans to make the service available initially in urban parts of the Las Vegas Valley. Remote drivers have a 360-degree video view – just as if they were in the car – and additional sensors eliminate blind spots. Video and data are sent via T-Mobile’s 5G network, the provider and Halo announced Thursday.

“You push a button and summon an electric car. It just comes to your doorstep,” Anand Nandakumar, the founder and CEO of Halo, told USA TODAY. “You hop in and you drive the car to your destinatio­n and once you are done, hop off and walk away and the car just disappears.”

5G behind driverless ‘magic’

T-Mobile, which launched its consumer 5G network last year, also in 2020 co-founded the 5G Open Innovation Lab along with several other tech companies including Dell, Intel and Microsoft. Halo has been in stealth mode for two years.

Despite the potential benefits of 5G connectivi­ty including faster data speeds on smartphone­s and a growing network of internet-connected devices, there’s not many real-world examples of how 5G can change things. Halo’s remote-piloted cars could change that.

“So many industries are already being transforme­d today by 5G, and it’s the startups and entreprene­urs – developers like Halo – that are making the magic happen,” said T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert in a statement to USA TODAY. “True, nationwide 5G is powering groundbrea­king new products and services that will change nearly every facet of our world, connecting people and things at massive scale.”

Originally based in the San Francisco Bay Area, Halo began testing remote control of EVs in California in August 2020. In February, the company moved its testing to Las Vegas, where Halo is now headquarte­red.

In addition to remote drivers piloting the Kia Niro crossover SUVs from Halo’s mission control, Halo equips the vehicles with an artificial intelligen­cedriven “Advanced Safe Stop mechanism” that automatica­lly brings the cars to a full stop when there’s a potential safety hazard, the company said.

Risks in self-driving car tests

The developmen­t of self-driving cars has been underway for more than four years with big tech names such as Amazon, Apple and Google’s parent company Alphabet involved, along with Tesla, Ford, GM and other auto makers.

But there have been setbacks such as the April crash of a Tesla in the Houston area that killed two passengers. In that case, the National Transporta­tion Safety Board said in a preliminar­y report the driver had been behind the wheel but came to no conclusion­s about the crash’s cause. Tesla says on its website that drivers are supposed to keep their hands on the wheel at all times, ready to take over when the semi-autonomous system is not able to steer, accelerate or brake on its own.

Uber sold its self-driving division last year to Aurora, a startup headed by Chris Urmson, who had led Google’s autonomous vehicle efforts. That came after a self-driving Uber vehicle, with a backup operator in the driver’s seat, fatally hit a 49-year-old woman in Tempe, Arizona, in March 2018. (Uber invested $400 million in Aurora, which is backed by Amazon, and Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi joined the startup’s board.

Las Vegas has been a hotspot for the testing of self-driving vehicles with demonstrat­ions held during the Consumer Electronic­s Show beginning in January 2017. Between May 2018 and February 2020 in Las Vegas, Lyft and autonomous tech company Aptiv delivered more than 100,000 robotaxi selfdrivin­g rides, with a human driver sitting in the driver’s seat. Lyft sold its selfdrivin­g unit in April to Woven Planet Holdings for about $550 million.

Halo’s program seeks to build trust in autonomous vehicles, as well as increase the use of electric cars, Nandakumar said. “Consumers never get an opportunit­y to actually see an autonomous car deployed on public roads. They never get a chance to interact with it or take rides with it,” he said.

Pricing has not been announced, but Halo rides will be “highly affordable for everyone,” the companies said.

Beyond that, Halo’s service seeks to solve the problem of “the last mile between your last transit stop and your workplace or your home,” said John Saw, executive vice president of advanced and emerging tech at T-Mobile. “It helps us show the world, hey, we are not just talking about it but we are showing what we can do with 5G.”

 ?? T-MOBILE ?? Halo CEO Anand Nandakumar, left, Justin Jones, vice chair of the Southern Nevada Regional Transporta­tion Commission, and Lukas Herman, software engineerin­g lead at Halo, which plans a driverless car test in Las Vegas.
T-MOBILE Halo CEO Anand Nandakumar, left, Justin Jones, vice chair of the Southern Nevada Regional Transporta­tion Commission, and Lukas Herman, software engineerin­g lead at Halo, which plans a driverless car test in Las Vegas.

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