Business

A self-driving race car drove straight into a wall off the starting line in the world’s first autonomous racing series

Acronis SIT Roborace
One autonomous race car had a rough start at Thursday’s Roborace event.

  • An autonomous race car crashed immediately during a Roborace event on Thursday. 
  • The car, fielded by Acronis SIT Autonomous, made a sharp right turn and accelerated into a wall right off the starting line. 
  • Roborace is still ironing out the kinks of its racing series, and just started its “Season Beta.” 
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Although driver-assistance technology has advanced considerably, we’re still a long way away from cars that can truly drive themselves on public streets. Both Tesla’s Autopilot and Chevrolet’s Super Cruise — the two most advanced driver-assistance systems — require full human attention and can’t be used everywhere. 

And a recent mishap at an autonomous racing event showcased just how challenging self-driving technology can be. 

Roborace — a new autonomous racing series that’s still in its testing phase — streamed one of its first live events on Thursday, and one car didn’t make it far before crashing into a wall. The vehicle from Swiss team Acronis SIT Autonomous lined up to begin a lap but immediately turned 90 degrees and accelerated directly into a barricade, as seen in the video posted to Twitter below.

And here it is from another angle: 

 

To be fair, Roborace just began what it’s calling its Season Beta, after completing a Season Alpha last year, so these kinds of mishaps and learning experiences are par for the course. 

The idea behind Roborace is to have teams each develop their own autonomous-driving software to run on identical vehicles. Currently, Roborace uses a vehicle called DevBot 2.0.

Recently Waymo announced it would begin sending driverless taxis around Phoenix, GM-owned Cruise announced plans to start driverless testing in San Francisco this year, and Tesla released a beta version of its “Full Self-Driving” feature to some drivers. But Thursday’s Roborace crash may serve as a reminder of how much progress still needs to be made when it comes to autonomous vehicles. 

Read the original article on Business Insider

Powered by WPeMatico

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.