Uber, NVIDIA and autonomous driving
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Lucid aims to develop fully autonomous vehicles for private use and introduce artificial intelligence in its factories via a new alliance with NVIDIA.
Lucid says it will eventually sell “privately owned” autonomous vehicles with the help of Nvidia’s artificial intelligence technology. The company is the latest to declare its intention to sell Level 4 autonomous vehicles to its customers, despite a range of theoretical and logistical challenges standing in the way.
Former Google driverless car project leader Chris Urmson says autonomous vehicles are finally here, after almost 20 years.
Advanced driver-assistance systems are projected to keep improving, but that doesn't mean self-driving cars without limitations are around the corner.
“As vehicles evolve into software-defined supercomputers on wheels, a new opportunity emerges—to reimagine mobility with intelligence at every turn. Together with Lucid, we’re accelerating the future of autonomous, AI-powered transportation, built on [the] Nvidia full-stack automotive platform,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia.
Within 10 years, you will see the driving capabilities [of self-driving cars] on par with the best human drivers,” Tony Han said.
You may have seen self-driving cars roll out in other cities, and now, they're being tested in San Antonio.Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are being tested on local
The Boston City Council postponed a vote on Wednesday on an ordinance that would ban commercial autonomous vehicles.
Boston city councilors are proposing an ordinance that would put several speed bumps ahead of any autonomous car service beginning commercial work in the city.