Ubers Self-driving Trucks Haul Cargo On Arizona Highways
FILE PHOTO – A partially self driving Uber semi truck at the Mcity autonomous vehicle testing facility in Ann Arbor Michigan, U.S., September 12, 2017. REUTERS/Joseph White Uber’s trucks are being operated through “Uber Freight,” a shipping-on-demand app
Uber’s [UBER.UL] self-driving trucks have been hauling cargo on Arizona
highways, the U.S. ride-hailing firm said on Tuesday, laying out plans
for autonomous vehicles to work with truck drivers to move freight
around the country.
In a YouTube clip released Tuesday,
Uber said it would integrate manual trucking with self-driving trucks by
deploying the former for short hauls and the latter for longer
distances. bit.ly/2I3SQGl
Self-driving trucks will also require the “hands-on work that only truckers can do,” the video added.
The Uber logo is seen on a screen in Singapore August 4, 2017.
REUTERS/Thomas WhiteIn October 2016, Uber demonstrated the first
real-world commercial use for self-driving trucks, announcing it had
transported Budweiser beer cans over 120 highway miles. reut.rs/2I6xw2T
Uber’s involvement in trucking stems largely from its 2016 acquisition
of Otto, the self-driving vehicle firm that was at the center of a
high-profile legal battle between Uber and Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O)
autonomous driving unit Waymo.
Uber is competing in the self-driving vehicle market with Tesla Inc
(TSLA.O) other Silicon Valley firms as well as traditional automakers
including General Motors (GM.N) and Ford Motor Co (F.N), which are
racing to bring fully commercial self-driving vehicles on the road.
Transportation experts have predicted that the earliest applications of
autonomous driving technology will be in trucks, thanks to the relative
predictability of long hauls on highways compared with busy city
streets.
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