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Transportation China

Baidu Has China's First Permits For Fully Driverless Robotaxi Services (newatlas.com) 32

China's first fully autonomous, commercial robotaxi rides -- with no safety drivers -- are about to open for public passengers in Wuhan and Chongqing, marking an inflection point for one of the key technological revolutions of the 21st century. New Atlas reports: The two newly-issued permits allow Baidu to charge for driverless rides within a 13-sq-km (5-sq-mi) area in Wuhan, between 9 am and 5 pm, and within a larger 30-sq-km (11.6-sq-mi) zone in Chonqing's Yongchuan district between 9.30 am and 5.30 pm -- so while they're currently set to avoid peak hours, they'll be mixing it up with plenty of daytime traffic. Each zone will run five 5th-generation Apollo cars, with remote drivers ready to assume control if the vehicles get themselves into any sticky situations. Home base will be watching closely through the cars' camera systems, particularly in these early days.

Baidu's Apollo Go is already the world's biggest robotaxi company, with operations already live in all tier-one Chinese cities using the same 5th-gen car, with backup drivers on board. The company recently revealed its 6th-gen design, its first ground-up fully autonomous car for mass production. The Apollo RT6 will cost just RMB 250,000 (US$37,000) to manufacture, says Baidu, and its optional, removable steering wheel and generous, configurable cabin space will make it one of the first proper mobility pod-type services when it hits the streets commercially in 2023.

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Baidu Has China's First Permits For Fully Driverless Robotaxi Services

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  • can't do night?

  • Great example of how the CCP treats human life as expendable. Let cars with advanced cruise control you can't turn off roam the streets.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      And in actual reality, it is a great example what innovation actually looks like. Not that China is fast or very innovative. But the western world has gotten more and more timid and is not getting anywhere in some areas now.

  • So what happens after the last passenger pissed themselves or vomited on the seat?
    • So what happens after the last passenger pissed themselves or vomited on the seat?

      The car drives itself to the nearest station where someone cleans it while topping off the battery.

      • How does the car know that it's happened? Are the cars equipped with adequate sensors & a system for cleaning?
        • How does the car know that it's happened?

          Vomit and urine contain chemicals that are easy to detect.

          A camera would also work, and could detect belongs left behind.

          So, it uses smell and sight just as a human driver would.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      We will find out whether that is actually a real issue or not. Not doing it is the choice of fear, not the one of innovation. Incidentally, what happens if somebody just sends your car on fire? Probably more likely as it happens to be _known_ who was in that car at a specific time.

      By more stupid arguments for not making the future happen?

      • Have a chat with a few taxi drivers about what people do in the back of their taxis. And that's when there's a human driver there watching them.
        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Yes, so? The ones doing this will have to pay for the cleanup and may face criminal proceedings for property damage as well. This really is no valid argument. You should look at what motivates your negative fantasy, because it obviously is not rational.

  • Cue the videos of toddlers getting run over by robotaxis in 3, 2, 1.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Yeah, sure, _that_ is going to happen. If you look at all the crap _human_ drivers do and at how many people they kill and maim every year, it is _really_ unlikely for automated vehicles to get anywhere close.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 )

    So this tech will finally get optimized and production ready. Apparently the west cannot do things of this magnitude anymore, so, regrettably, it falls to China to do it. That will come to bite us all in the ass. But at least we are finally getting tech we should have had 10 years ago.

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