Riding in a self-driving Lyft car is Semi-dokyumento: Tokkun Meiki Dukuriway more boring than you'd expect. But that's really the point.
The ride, which I took on the streets of Las Vegas at the outset of CES 2018, was only remarkable in how mundane it was. Turns, lane changes, braking for red lights, accelerating for green -- it was all pretty much the same as if a human were doing the driving. Well, if it weren't for the display on the dash showing a LiDAR-constructed view of the streets around us, and the robotic female voice that would occasionally chime in with a "lane change checking" or some other status update.
SEE ALSO: Toyota tries to make its most advanced autonomous car look slightly normalAnd this is why the self-driving experience Lyft showed off -- developed by its platform partner, Aptiv (formerly Delphi) -- is so impressive: The drive felt just like an attentive chauffeur. The driving style was very focused on the passenger, certainly: There were no sudden accelerations to make a stale green light or catch up to traffic, for example.
But it was also very human: When waiting for oncoming traffic to thin out so it could perform a U-turn, the car didn't just position itself in the left turning lane and stop. It moved forward a bit, waited, then after a few seconds moved a bit more, turned the wheel slightly, then crept up a little more as the last couple of cars whizzed by, then did the full turn after they passed. If I didn't know better, I would have suspected the human safety driver, who by law needs to "spot" the wheel with his hands, was the one driving.
That's by design, says Lee Bauer of Aptiv. In developing its self-driving profile, it optimized everything for the passenger experience, making sure the ride was as smooth as possible so people inside the car could actually be productive.
"As you transition the mindset from a driver to a passenger, the experience has to be different," says Bauer. "You drive your car different than you want to be driven."
That became even clearer to me later in the day, when I transitioned back to a regular Vegas cab, and, in the midst of architecting a particularly nuanced tweet, the driver took a hard left turn to beat some oncoming traffic. The force of the turn took me out of the moment, breaking my flow. Where's a robot when you need it?
OK, so self-driving cars can behave better -- for safety and comfort -- but do they always have to look like cars with strange mechanical hats? Aptiv is making progress there, too, integrating sensors into the body of the vehicle in relatively unobtrusive ways. While the Lyft self-driving BMW 5 Series is loaded with two different kinds of LiDAR, radar, and more, it still manages to look like a car, something Uber's self-driving Volvos, with their camera-laden mechanical hats, can't claim.
Lyft already has a self-driving trial underway in Boston, but at CES it's making the service available to anyone with the Lyft app within 550 yards of the Las Vegas Convention Center. Starting Jan. 9, if you happen to be close by, and a car is available, Lyft will give the passenger the option to take a self-driving ride.
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That's definitely a taste of the future, though once they see the normal-looking car and take the quite predictable ride, they might have trouble getting excited about it.
Topics CES Self-Driving Cars lyft
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