News

If you had the chance to take a ride in a self-driving vehicle, would you?. Most Americans would say no, according to a recent survey by AAA. "Most drivers are interested in advanced technology to ...
Features Of Self-Driving Cars. Google's Waymo project is an example of a self-driving car that is almost fully autonomous. It may require a human driver from time to time to be present. This human ...
Two decades ago, the US military kicked off the race to build self-driving cars by sending a fleet of fledgling robot ...
The General examines autonomous vehicle crash data, disengagements, and tech limits to find out where the road is headed for ...
Self-driving cars are much more advanced now compared to when they were first developed, said K. Venkatesh Prasad, senior vice president of research at the Center for Automotive Research.
Consumer Reports fills you in on the state of self-driving cars. You might think based on marketing hype that you can buy an autonomous vehicle, but you really can't.
Bad weather is a major weakness due to sensor interference, especially for Tesla's FSD system. Geofencing limits self-driving cars to specific areas, hampering universal rollout and scalability ...
Self-driving cars quick facts There are different levels of self-driving capabilities in cars. Many new cars driving on today’s roads offer some level of self-driving capability.
For self-driving companies, that appears to be a challenge they're eager to meet, full speed ahead. For more CES coverage, take a look at the official 2025 Best of CES winners , selected by CNET.
General Motors bought a self-driving company in 2016. Ford followed suit a year later with Argo AI. Uber rushed to scoop up engineers from Salesky’s alma mater, Carnegie Mellon.
Tesla Self-driving cars are coming. It remains to be seen how long that will take. Plenty of vehicles can more or less drive themselves on highways, but for now, they still can’t completely ...
The road to self-driving cars will almost definitely include someone trying to cut one off. That’s not a metaphor for anything; it’s literally going to happen.