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Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Google's Self-Driving Car Prototype Ditches the Steering Wheel

Google plans to build about 100 prototypes, and test them this summer. Early versions will have manual controls.


Google this week showed off a prototype of a self-driving car that the search giant created itself.

Google-self-driving-front-beauty

The small, Volkswagen Bug-esque vehicle does not have a steering wheel, accelerator pedal, or brake pedal, "because they don't need them," Google said in a blog post. Just get in, and Google's car will take you to your destination with the push of a button.

"Ever since we started the Google self-driving car project, we've been working toward the goal of vehicles that can shoulder the entire burden of driving," wrote Chris Urmson, director of Google's Self-Driving Car Project. "Just imagine: You can take a trip downtown at lunchtime without a 20-minute buffer to find parking. Seniors can keep their freedom even if they can't keep their car keys. And drunk and distracted driving? History."

Google plans to build about 100 prototypes, and this summer, it will test early versions of these cars that have manual controls.

Google-self-driving-rear-beauty

"If all goes well, we'd like to run a small pilot program here in California in the next couple of years," Urmson said.

On the safety front, Google pointed to sensors that remove blind spots, and can detect objects up to two football fields away in all directions. Right now, the cars also don't go more than 25 mph, so Google's vehicle doesn't exactly have a lead foot.


Google-self-driving- The Brain

"On the inside, we've designed for learning, not luxury, so we're light on creature comforts, but we'll have two seats (with seatbelts), a space for passengers' belongings, buttons to start and stop, and a screen that shows the route—and that's about it," Urmson wrote.

News of Google making its own self-driving car emerged last summer, when The Information's Amir Efrati reported that Google had talked with "contract manufacturers" to build a self-driving car. Efrati said Google failed to reach a deal with a major auto maker, so it pursued its own vehicle.

On Twitter, Efrati said last night that "one person on the Google car project told me last year that some [people] on the project believed that the traditional auto makers would win. But that they were happy they lit a fire under Detroit's arse and were pushing the industry forward. So didn't matter who won."

Google-self-driving- The Brain zoom

Google has largely been relying on a tricked-out Toyota Prius (see above) to test its self-driving car technology. In fact, it recently announced that it had logged 700,000 autonomous miles of testing.

Earlier this month, the California Department of Motor Vehicles approved new rules for autonomous vehicle testing in the state. Come Sept. 16, companies will be able to start testing self-driving vehicles on the open road, provided they have a trained driver behind the wheel, ready to take over in the event of a malfunction, and at least $5 million worth of liability insurance.

Google is not the only company pursuing self-driving cars, though. Car makers likeAudi, Mercedes, Nissan, and Toyota have autonomous vehicles in the works. Recently, Freescale Semiconductor announced a multi-year collaboration with Neusoft and Green Hills Software to develop a platform that will usher in semi-autonomous vehicles as early as 2017 and pave the way for fully automated cars, trucks, and buses within the next decade.

Friday, 23 May 2014

Google Developing 3D Tablet With Advanced Vision Capabilities To Capture 3D images

Google is developing a new tablet with advanced vision capabilities that can be used to capture 3D images.
Google 3D TAB

The Company plans to produce about 4000 of the prototype tablets beginning next month according to people briefed on the company's plans. The new tabletcould be ready before Google's developer conference Google I/O kicks off on June 25, the Journal said.

The tablet will have a 7-inch screen, infrared depth censors, two back cameras and software for processing 3D images, and will be part of Google's Project Tango, according to the newspaper.

Project Tango is Google's attempt to create a mobile device that shares a human's sense of space and movement and understands and perceives the world the same way we do.

A Google spokesman declined to comment on the tablet plans on Friday.

In February, Google launched a 5-inch Project Tango prototype Android smartphone combining technology from the worlds of computer vision and robotics to create a 3D model of the phone's surroundings.

This technology could for instance be used to quickly find the exact shelf where a product is located in a store or to make a 3D floor plan of a house before going out to shop for furniture. Project Tango could also guide the visually impaired around unfamiliar indoor places and provide step-by-step directions in stores.

These are all possibilities for the tablet too, reported the Wall Street Journal, adding that the technology could also be used for immersive videogames.

Two Project Tango phones are heading to the International Space Station during the upcoming Orbital 2 commercial resupply mission scheduled to launch on June 10. The phones will be attached to self-powered soccer-ball-sized robots called "Spheres" that will fly around inside the space station.

NASA will test how well the 3D modeling and visual odometry can be used to let the Spheres learn their environment based on what it sees, rather than relying on fixed sensors in the environment. One day, the 3D phones could also be used to fly around the outside of the space station or even for NASA's plans to land on an asteroid.


 

     (See video of the Tango phone and Spheres at NASA in a YouTube video.)

Google is not the only company investing in advanced 3D tech. Facebook is also interested and is in the process of buying Oculus VR, the developer of the Oculus Rift virtual-reality headset for about US$2 billion. That acquisition is about much more than gaming though. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg sees it as the next major computing platform, one that will be used for shopping, communication, education and more.