5/16/2015 06:51:00 pm
Watch the road, Google's self-driving cars will soon hit the streets of California

The first self-driving cars built by Google are heading to public roads for the first time.
A “few” of the prototype vehicles Google has developed will appear on
the streets of Mountain View, California, this summer, the company said Friday. Until now, those vehicles have been tested and driven on private property.
“Safety drivers” will go along for the ride, but they’ll take control
only “if needed,” using a removable steering wheel and brake and
accelerator pedals, according to the company.
The initial prototype Google showed in May of last year lacked manual controls and had only one button (for start/stop), but the company promised that later versions would include these components.
The prototype cars have been tested
to ensure that their sensors and software work as planned, according to
Google, which also released a video of a prototype car navigating a course of orange cones
and going over a bumpy track. Google reiterated that the cars’ speed
will be capped at 25 miles per hour, a point it made last year.
Google has been experimenting with autonomous driving cars for years.
The company retrofitted 20 Lexus sport utility vehicles with hardware
and software that allows them to operate without a driver. Those
vehicles have been tested on public streets with a driver behind the
wheel for the past six years, recording 1 million miles of autonomous
driving.
During that time, the cars have amassed a safe driving record:
They’ve been involved in 11 accidents, and in every incident the damage
was minor, no one was injured and the Google car wasn’t at fault,
according to the company. The software that powers the Lexus fleet also
runs the prototype cars.
Google said getting the cars on the road will let it gauge people’s
reactions to them and see how the vehicles handle challenging scenarios,
such as heavy traffic and road construction.
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