Automakers, Google take different roads to automated cars


  • TECH
  • Friday, 04 Sep 2015

Incremental rather than sweeping changes: Rajkumar (left) at a demo of Carnegie Mellon's autonomous car demo in Washington last year. Rajkumar believes self-driving cars will evolve in stages, with people still holding the reigns for the foreseeable future.

DETROIT: From his laboratory at Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University, automated vehicle pioneer Raj Rajkumar says self-driving cars will evolve step-by-step, with humans staying in charge for a long time to come. 

More than 2,500 miles west in Mountain View, California, Chris Urmson, head of Google Inc's self-driving car programme since 2009, has a different view: A fully automated vehicle that requires no input or intervention from humans is a safer choice, and one that could be ready for production by 2020. 

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