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  2. David Stavens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Stavens

    Academic publications from the team (by Stavens along with Hendrik Dahlkamp, Adrian Kaehler, Sebastian Thrun, Gary Bradski) state that they applied self-supervised learning, to detect drivable surfaces in the desert for self-driving cars which led the vehicle to win the race. [23]

  3. Udacity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Udacity

    In April 2017, Udacity announced a spin-off venture called Voyage Auto, a self-driving car taxi company to compete with the likes of the Uber ride-hailing service. [59] The company has been testing its project, based on production consumer vehicles, on low-speed private roads in a retirement community in San Jose, California. [60]

  4. Impact of self-driving cars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_of_self-driving_cars

    The impact of self-driving cars on absolute levels of individual car use is not yet clear; other forms of self-driving vehicles, such as self-driving buses, may actually decrease car use and congestion. [7] AVs are anticipated to affect the healthcare, insurance, travel, and logistics fields.

  5. Sebastian Thrun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sebastian_Thrun

    He is chief executive officer of Kitty Hawk Corporation, and chairman and co-founder of Udacity. Before that, he was a Google vice president and Fellow, a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University, and before that at Carnegie Mellon University. At Google, he founded Google X and Google's self-driving car team.

  6. Self-driving car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-driving_car

    A self-driving car, also known as a autonomous car (AC), driverless car, robotaxi, robotic car or robo-car, [1] [2] [3] is a car that is capable of operating with reduced or no human input. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Self-driving cars are responsible for all driving activities, such as perceiving the environment, monitoring important systems, and controlling ...

  7. Stanley (vehicle) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_(vehicle)

    View of the computers in the cargo area of Stanley. The car began as a standard European diesel model Volkswagen Touareg provided by Volkswagen's ERL for the competition. The Stanford Racing Team chose the Touareg for its "drive by wire" control system which could be adapted (and was done so by the ERL) to be run directly from an onboard computer without the use of actuators or servo motors ...

  8. openpilot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Openpilot

    openpilot is an open-source, semi-automated driving software by comma.ai, Inc. When paired with comma hardware, it replaces advanced driver-assistance systems in various cars, improving over the original system. [7] [8] As of 2023, openpilot supports 250+ car models and has 6000+ users, accumulating over 90 million miles (140,000,000 km). [8 ...

  9. History of self-driving cars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_self-driving_cars

    The first self-driving car that did not rely upon rails or wires under the road is designed by the Japanese Tsukuba Mechanical Engineering Laboratory in 1977. The car was equipped with two cameras that used analog computer technology for signal processing.