Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

GM Buys Software Company To Speed Autonomous Car Development

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2016 11:51 AM
    DETROIT — With hopes of speeding development of self-driving cars, General Motors has acquired a small software company that's been testing vehicles on the streets of San Francisco.
     
    The Detroit automaker says it purchased Cruise Automation, a 40-person firm that was founded just three years ago.
     
    The move, coupled with GM's in-house research, should help the company in its race with Google and others to have autonomous cars start transporting people on public roadways.
     
    GM wouldn't give a timetable for rolling out the technology, but President Dan Ammann said it would happen as soon as the company can demonstrate that the cars are ready.
     
    "It's our view that driverless technology will be demonstrably safer than the human driver," Ammann said in a telephone interview.
     
    Cruise Automation, along with Google, is among the few companies with permits from the state of California to test the cars, said Kyle Vogt, the company founder and CEO.
     
    The company is working to tackle the biggest obstacles to autonomous cars — seeing the lane lines in bad weather and integrating data from cameras and other sensors so the cars make the right decisions on the road, Vogt said. "I agree that's a challenge," he said. "Looking at lane markers isn't going to get you there."
     
    Cruise reported one crash to the state Department of Motor Vehicles in which an autonomous car rear-ended a city of San Francisco parking enforcement vehicle. Vogt said the car's backup human driver had taken control of the vehicle when it crashed.
     
    GM wouldn't disclose the purchase price of deal, which was announced Friday. It said all Cruise Automation employees will join GM and work as a separate unit, and there are plans to hire more people.
     
    It's GM's third high-profile venture this year in new mobility. The company has invested $500 million in the ride-sharing company Lyft and it has started a car-sharing service in Ann Arbor, Michigan that it plans to expand to other metro areas.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Microsoft phones with Opera browser to hit market early next year

    Microsoft phones with Opera browser to hit market early next year
     Microsoft is likely to launch smartphones with Opera Mini as default browser from early next year, an official of the browser firm said Wednesday.

    Microsoft phones with Opera browser to hit market early next year

    Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future

    Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future
    Researchers have improved a liquid battery system that could enable renewable energy resources to compete with conventional power plants.

    Liquid Metal Batteries To Herald New Future

    Physicists Verify Einstein's Time-dilation Theory

    Physicists Verify Einstein's Time-dilation Theory
    Do you believe that a person travelling in a high-speed rocket would age more slowly than people back on Earth?

    Physicists Verify Einstein's Time-dilation Theory

    An App That Helps You Cuddle Up To Strangers

    An App That Helps You Cuddle Up To Strangers
    Are you looking for a quick platonic cuddle? Then download the new app called Cuddlr - a cross between apps like Grindr and Tinder.

    An App That Helps You Cuddle Up To Strangers

    Facebook says won't miss out on key stories for its users

    Facebook says won't miss out on key stories for its users
    The social networking site Facebook is updating its news feed to feature right content at the right time, so that users do not miss out on key stories.

    Facebook says won't miss out on key stories for its users

    What? Newton Didn't Give Second Law Of Motion, Says New Paper

    What? Newton Didn't Give Second Law Of Motion, Says New Paper
    In Isaac Newton's time, the terms "acceleration" and "second derivative" did not exist, so he could not have deduced F=ma, the second law of motion. This has been unscientifically credited to Newton, says a research paper.

    What? Newton Didn't Give Second Law Of Motion, Says New Paper