All Content from Business Insider 10月29日 04:37
自动驾驶卡车实现10万英里无驾驶员运行,技术日趋成熟
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

Aurora Innovation首席执行官Chris Urmson,一位自动驾驶领域的先驱,在2015年曾半开玩笑地预测,他的儿子可能不需要驾照,因为自动驾驶汽车届时将普及。如今,这一预言正逐步变为现实。Aurora的自动驾驶卡车已安全无驾驶员运行了10万英里,并正扩展至新的长途运输路线。该公司采用“可验证AI”技术,确保系统决策基于现实世界的逻辑。随着技术不断成熟和部署加速,自动驾驶运输时代已悄然来临,有望降低成本、提高效率并减少排放。

🚗 **自动驾驶技术迎来突破性进展:** Aurora Innovation的CEO Chris Urmson,作为自动驾驶领域的资深人士,其多年前关于儿子可能无需驾照的预测正逐步实现。该公司已实现卡车10万英里无驾驶员运行,标志着自动驾驶技术已达到新的成熟度,并开始在实际商业运营中展现其能力。

📈 **商业化部署加速与路线拓展:** Aurora的自动驾驶卡车正在扩展至新的商业运输路线,例如连接Fort Worth和El Paso的600英里长途运输。这种快速的商业化部署速度,以及技术在新环境中的无缝迁移能力,表明了自动驾驶技术在适应性和可扩展性方面的潜力。

💡 **“可验证AI”确保安全与可靠性:** Aurora采用名为“可验证AI”的系统,该系统明确模拟车辆、行人及车道,确保自动驾驶决策基于真实的、可理解的逻辑。这种对AI系统行为的精确建模,是实现自动驾驶安全性和可靠性的关键,有助于建立公众对这项技术的信任。

💰 **商业模式创新与行业效益:** Aurora的商业模式正从“运输即服务”(TaaS)向“驾驶员即服务”(DaaS)转变,客户将购买配备Aurora Driver的卡车并获得授权。自动驾驶卡车有望显著降低运输成本,提高燃油效率,并解决高员工流失率的问题,为物流行业带来革命性变化。

Chris Urmson, CEO of Aurora Innovation

When I covered Google a decade ago, the company's driverless car project was a hot topic. Every time the press gathered, project lead Chris Urmson stepped up to answer questions.

Most of us journalists were desperately trying to learn the key technical details on the fly, so we often resorted to the same question that we hoped would yield an interesting story: "When will cars be fully autonomous?"

Urmson always did his best to answer, without committing Google to unrealistic timelines. After a while, he lost his patience or grew bored. One day in 2015, he made a joke, or rather, a combination of a joke and a fun prediction.

Urmson said his son might never need a driver's license because autonomous cars would be widely available by the time the kid got to driving age. We all wrote that up, and the prediction became autonomous lore: Driverless cars everywhere by 2020!

Back in 2015, Chris Urmson spoke to the media during a preview of Google's prototype autonomous vehicles.

It didn't happen by then, and the autonomous vehicle sector slipped into a bit of funk. But I always remembered Urmson's quip about his son. So, when I ran into the executive at a Goldman Sachs conference earlier this year, I asked what his kid was up to.

It turns out Urmson has two children. They're well into driving age and they both got licenses. Now though, a decade after that joke-prediction, Urmson is finally ready to declare victory: autonomous vehicles are here and they're working.

"It's exciting. I've been at this for a while, and it's one of these things where you're like, 'Will it? Won't it" for a while and then you get to 'this is going to happen, but exactly when,'" he said. "It's kind of neat to be in the place where it's happened."

A long road to self-driving cars

It's been a long road for one of the pioneers of driverless vehicles. In 2007, when Urmson was a professor at Carnegie Mellon, he was a member of one of the earliest groups to build a robot car as part of a DARPA Grand Challenge. That's how he ended up at Google, a position he held until 2016. A year later, he cofounded Aurora Innovation, a company that develops autonomous trucking technology.

A younger Chris Urmson, (left) with Google project team members Brian Torcellini, Dmitri Dolgov, Andrew Chatham, and safety director Ron Medford. Back in 2014 in Silicon Valley.

On Tuesday, Aurora announced a gaggle of gains that show why Urmson is now confident that autonomous vehicles have truly arrived.

The company said its driverless trucking operations are expanding to a new Fort Worth-El Paso route, a 600 mile journey that takes human truckers 9 to 10 hours to complete. The expansion happened roughly six months after Aurora's commercial driverless launch, one of the fastest deployments in the industry to date.

Urmson said Aurora's autonomous skills transferred to a brand-new area pretty seamlessly, showing how this technology can learn to adapt to new environments. That's a key part of the promise of driverless vehicles, and AI in general.

"Those skills transfer, and so each time we open a new lane, it gets easier and easier," Urmson said. "It's good when the thesis that you've been building around works out after 20 years of work."

Aurora also announced on Tuesday that its trucks have driven 100,000 driverless miles with perfect on-time and safety records. Next year, the company plans to deploy hundreds of trucks without human observers once it completes safety validation on trucks from Volvo and Navistar.

Aurora's new next-generation hardware, featuring its proprietary FirstLight lidar, can detect objects a full kilometer away, the company also said.

Aurora uses 'verifiable AI'

Chris Urmson standing by a prototype Google self-driving car that had no steering wheel in 2015.

Aurora relies on what Urmson calls "verifiable AI," a system that explicitly models cars, pedestrians, and lanes to ensure decisions are grounded in real-world logic.

Aurora wants to ensure that its autonomous systems actually express and understand the concepts that matter to driving, Urmson said.

"We want to make sure that when the part that's thinking about how to move through the world thinks about that, it's explicitly thinking about cars and pedestrians and cyclists and lane geometry," he added. "That whatever actions it's taking are actually based on that, rather than some other imagined reason that it's come to the conclusion that it should do this.

From TaaS to DaaS

An Aurora Innovation truck hauling freight between Dallas and Houston.

Aurora operates as a transportation-as-a-service (TaaS) provider, hauling freight for major carriers such as Werner and Schneider. Over time, customers will buy trucks equipped with the Aurora Driver and buy a license from the company. "Driver-as-a-service," as Urmson puts it (or DaaS).

The company says autonomous trucks can cut driver costs, improve fuel efficiency, and eliminate turnover costs in an industry with high employee turnover. Driving at 65 mph (as Aurora trucks do), instead of 75, also saves thousands of gallons of diesel a year, reducing emissions and expenses.

After years of hype, setbacks, and skepticism, Urmson says the age of driverless transport has finally begun.

"It's just exciting to see us go from telling the story of what it could do to being able to tell the story of what it is doing," Urmson said.

Sign up for BI's Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at abarr@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Aurora Innovation 自动驾驶 无人驾驶卡车 AI 技术成熟 Autonomous Driving Driverless Trucks Verifiable AI
相关文章