எதிர்கால ஆட்டோமொபைல் உலகினை தீர்மானிக்கும் தானியங்கி கார்களுக்கு
முன்னோட்டாமாக உலகின் முதல் தானியங்கி டாக்சி சேவையை சிங்கப்பூரில் நூடானமி
(nuTonomy) நிறுவனம் தொடங்கியுள்ளது.
கூகுள் , வால்வோ , ஃபோர்டு
போன்ற நிறுவனங்கள் தொடர்ந்து சோதனை ஓட்டத்தில் தானியங்கி கார்களை
ஈடுபடுத்தி வரும்நிலையில் சிங்கப்பூரில் செயல்படும் நூடோனமை ஸ்டார்ட்அப்
நிறுவனம் முதல் சேவையை 6 கார்களுடன் தொடங்கியுள்ளது. ஆனால் டிரைவர் இருக்கை
ஓட்டுநர் ஒருவர் வாகனத்தின் செயல்பாடுகளை கண்கானித்தபடி உள்ளார்.
சோதனை
ஓட்ட அடிப்படையில் தானியங்கி கார் டாக்சி சேவை தொடங்கப்பட்டிருந்தாலும்
பொதுமக்கள் பயன்பாட்டுக்கு அனுமதி அளிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
முதற்கட்டமாக 6 கார்கள் அறிமுகம் செய்யபட்டுள்ள நிலையில்
இந்த வருடத்தின் இறுதிக்குள் 12 கார்களாக உயர்த்த திட்டமிட்டுள்ளது. மேலும்
2018 ஆம் ஆண்டுக்குள் சிங்கப்பூர் முழுவதும் தானியங்கி டாக்சி சேவையை
வழங்க திட்டமிட்டுள்ளதாக நூடானமி தெரிவித்துள்ளது.
குறிப்பிட
இடங்களில் மட்டும் அதாவது 2.4 சதுர மைல் (4 sq km) தொலைவுக்கும் மட்டும்
அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ள இந்த சேவையில் பிக்அப் மற்றும் டிராப் சேவைகளை நூடானமி
ஆப்ஸ் வழியாக இலவசமாக பயன்படுத்தி வருகின்றனர்.
The world's first self-driving taxis are picking up passengers in Singapore.
Select members of the public began hailing free rides Thursday
through their smartphones in taxis operated by nuTonomy, an autonomous
vehicle software startup. While multiple companies, including Google and
Volvo, have been testing self-driving cars on public roads for several
years, nuTonomy says it is the first to offer rides to the public. It
beat ride-hailing service Uber, which plans to offer rides in autonomous
cars in Pittsburgh, by a few weeks.
The service is starting small — six cars now, growing to a dozen by
the end of the year. The ultimate goal, say nuTonomy officials, is to
have a fully self-driving taxi fleet in Singapore by 2018, which will
help sharply cut the number of cars on Singapore's congested roads.
Eventually, the model could be adopted in cities around the world,
nuTonomy says.
For now, the taxis are only running in a 2.5-square-mile business and
residential district called "one-north," and pick-ups and drop-offs are
limited to specified locations. And riders must have an invitation from
nuTonomy to use the service. The company says dozens have signed up for
the launch, and it plans to expand that list to thousands of people
within a few months.
The cars — modified Renault Zoe and Mitsubishi i-MiEV electrics —
have a driver in front who is prepared to take back the wheel and a
researcher in back who watches the car's computers. Each car is fitted
with six sets of Lidar — a detection system that uses lasers to operate
like radar — including one that constantly spins on the roof. There are
also two cameras on the dashboard to scan for obstacles and detect
changes in traffic lights.
The testing time-frame is open-ended, said nuTonomy CEO Karl
Iagnemma. Eventually, riders may start paying for the service, and more
pick-up and drop-off points will be added. NuTonomy also is working on
testing similar taxi services in other Asian cities as well as in the
U.S. and Europe, but he wouldn't say when.
"I don't expect there to be a time where we say, 'We've learned enough,'" Iagnemma said.
Doug Parker, nuTonomy's chief operating officer, said autonomous
taxis could ultimately reduce the number of cars on Singapore's roads
from 900,000 to 300,000.
"When you are able to take that many cars off the road, it creates a
lot of possibilities. You can create smaller roads, you can create much
smaller car parks," Parker said. "I think it will change how people
interact with the city going forward."
NuTonomy, a 50-person company with offices in Massachusetts and
Singapore, was formed in 2013 by Iagnemma and Emilio Frazzoli,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers who were studying
robotics and developing autonomous vehicles for the Defense Department.
Earlier this year, the company was the first to win approval from
Singapore's government to test self-driving cars in one-north. NuTonomy
announced a research partnership with Singapore's Land Transport
Authority earlier this month.
Singapore is ideal because it has good weather, great infrastructure
and drivers who tend to obey traffic rules, Iagnemma says. As a
land-locked island, Singapore is looking for non-traditional ways to
grow its economy, so it's been supportive of autonomous vehicle
research.
Auto supplier Delphi Corp., which is also working on autonomous
vehicle software, was recently selected to test autonomous vehicles on
the island and plans to start next year.
"We face constraints in land and manpower. We want to take advantage
of self-driving technology to overcome such constraints, and in
particular to introduce new mobility concepts which could bring about
transformational improvements to public transport in Singapore," said
Pang Kin Keong, Singapore's Permanent Secretary for Transport and the
chairman of its committee on autonomous driving.
Olivia Seow, 25, who does work in startup partnerships in one-north
and is one of the riders nuTonomy selected, took a test ride of just
less than a mile on Monday. She acknowledged she was nervous when she
got into the car, and then surprised as she watched the steering wheel
turn by itself.
"It felt like there was a ghost or something," she said.
But she quickly grew more comfortable. The ride was smooth and
controlled, she said, and she was relieved to see that the car
recognized even small obstacles like birds and motorcycles parked in the
distance.
"I couldn't see them with my human eye, but the car could, so I knew
that I could trust the car," she said. She said she is excited because
the technology could free up her time during commutes or help her father
by driving him around as he grows older.
An Associated Press reporter taking a ride Wednesday observed that
the safety driver had to step on the brakes once, when a car was
obstructing the test car's lane and another vehicle, which appeared to
be parked, suddenly began moving in the oncoming lane.
Iagnemma said the company is confident that its software can make
good decisions. The company hopes its leadership in autonomous driving
will eventually lead to partnerships with automakers, tech companies,
logistics companies and others.
"What we're finding is the number of interested parties is really overwhelming," he said.