Movement in the autonomous vehicle space accelerated once again.
Four ex-Google engineers, including the man who built Google’s first
self-driving car, announced “Otto”, an autonomous truck retrofitting
business.
The service isn’t vaporware. “Otto” is currently operating on Nevada
highways.
BackChannel reports The Man Who Built Google’s First Self-Driving Car Is Now a
Trucker.
Founded by four ex-Google engineers — including Anthony Levandowski, the
man who built Google’s very first self-driving car — Otto is applying
Google’s all-or-nothing approach to commercial big rigs: ditch human drivers,
avoid thousands of road deaths, help the environment, and if all goes well,
make a ton of money along the way.
Otto, which is based in San Francisco, currently has around 40 employees,
some of whom previously worked at Apple, Tesla, Cruise Automation and Here
Maps. Although the company was formed in January, the LinkedIn profiles of
three of Otto’s four founders still show them working at Google.
Otto, which came out of stealth today, is less interested in brand new
trucks than in the estimated 4.3m big rigs already on American roads. Otto
has already bought and retro-fitted three Volvo cabs with lidar, radar and
cameras, and driven a handful of fully autonomous miles — without
even a safety driver — on the highways of Nevada.
It says its aftermarket self-driving kit will sell for a “small fraction”
of the $100,000-$300,000 price of a new tractor cab.
Q&A With “Otto” Co-Founder
Backchannel discussed “Otto” with co-founder Lior Ron, an ex-product lead
for Google Maps and Google’s Motorola smartphones. A partial transcript
follows.
BackChannel: Why commercial transport? Is there anything
more old school than a tractor-trailer rig?
Lior Ron: Because of federal regulations, a truck can
only drive 11 hours a day today with a single driver. After 10 hours, the
accident rate goes exponentially higher. If we can make it drive safely 24/7,
more than doubling its capacity and utilization, that’s a very strong
financial argument.
BackChannel: I’m guessing that navigating state and
government regulations will be a big part of Otto’s future.
Lior Ron: The Department of Transportation and a lot of
other great folks are getting involved in bringing the right regulations. And
in many states outside of California, there are no specific regulations
either way, which means that it’s actually legal to drive and test autonomous
vehicles on many roads. We’re going to continue our testing with urgency but
also work with regulators and other bodies to show we can have a truck drive
itself more safely than a truck driver, all of the time.
BackChannel: But your technology will only work on
highways?
Lior Ron: That’s right. There are only 222,000 miles of
highway in the US, just 5% of the roads in the country. They’re easier to map
and it’s a much more constrained problem to solve than all those city and
rural streets. There are no pedestrians or traffic lights but you do drive at
high speeds and you do need to see far ahead.
We’re optimizing for this kind of driving, with sensors mounted up on the
cabin for a much higher vantage point. For now, all the technology is on the
tractor but we might add some components to the trailer in the future.
BackChannel: When will we see the first driverless truck
carrying a commercial cargo?
Lior Ron: We have the basic technology in place and are
already testing it on public roads. We want to demonstrate a cargo route in
the foreseeable future, to show that our technology is commercially viable.
We are fully funded by employees, who came together to enjoy this and get
there as soon as possible. The approach and the team we put together have the
ability to do that very fast.
Otto Video
Driverless Trucks On the Road
On February 16, I reported that a reader saw a Nevada truck that was
completely driverless. I believed the reader.
Flashback February 16, 2016: Driverless Truck Update: Next Phase “No Backup Driver” Hits
Nevada Highways.
Comments from skeptical readers were amusing:
TZ said: “Snap a picture next time. Bat boy and the area 51 aliens aren’t
very tall, so maybe one of them was driving – apparently aliens can get
CDLs.”
Mesomorph said: “Boy I can’t wait for driverless trucks. I’ll just cruise
the open highways until I spot a promising one. Me and the crew will slow to
a stop in front of the truck and it will have to stop. The target truck won’t
be able to reverse because we will back a truck up against it while we throw
the goods into our truck. We will be gone in less than a minute. Consider
yourselves lucky if we don’t set it on fire to cover our tracks.”
Mark said: “You can stop a driverless truck by putting a traffic cone on
the road. Do that on both sides of the highway and the police will be blocked
by the traffic jams created. A few miles of stopped traffic can disrupt the
economy of an entire city. Yeah, driverless vehicles are a great idea. No
problems there at all.”
Rich said: “Hyperventilating a wee bit here, possibly? I know you’re big
on anticipating the job losses likely associated with the adoption of
driverless trucks, but it does not help your case to make far-out
conspiratorial claims of secret driverless truck tests.”
Les Francais said: “Last week in my country, the main Telco lost all GSM
voice and data virtually country wide for two hours. Millions of services
were affected including control systems which have gone over to GSM
technology. Technology relying on GSM, GPS and radio has gone too far.”
Justaned said: “I-80 does NOT cross Nevada. I do believe the internet has
bamboozled you on this one.”
Mesomorph commented again: “So you are talking about adding hardware,
software, bandwidth and a control center staffed by humans. Sounds awfully
expensive for something that a couple bursts from my paintball gun will
render completely useless. If police respond every time a truck comes to an
unexpected stop they will be overwhelmed. If they are not I will make sure
they are. Mish, I know you are a busy guy but I expected more from you than
to say I have no faith or vision. I have faith that most humans are just
greedy, opportunistic primates. Saying that some smart people will have
enough of my tax dollars to create driverless trucks is no vision. I have put
forward my vision. Now how are you going to stop me?”
Mish Reply
- I-80 does go through Nevada.
- Totally driverless tests have been conducted.
- No one is going to erect a fleet of cones across the
internet to stop trucks. That idea is totally laughable. And even if one
did manage to do that, there is no way to hijack the truck and get away
with it.
- Driverless technology is here already.
- Technology is advancing faster than I expected.
Hub Solution
I have been sharing emails with reader “Vooch” for a few weeks. He thinks
autonomous trucking will happen by 2018. I thought he was a little early,
citing a need for enough trucking hubs.
Vooch pointed out eleven national Truck Stop Chains noting “Flying J has 550 locations.”
Otto precisely fits in with the hub solution I proposed several years ago.
Drivers take trucks from the warehouse to the hub. The truck drives itself
to the next hub. Then a short-haul driver takes the truck the last mile.
With today’s report, I bump up my timeline for this to happen by a year,
from 2020 to 2019. I also bump up my forecast from 2024 to 2022 as to
when millions of long-haul trucking jobs vanish.
Nikola One
Also consider “Nikola One” First-Ever 2000 horsepower (HP) Electric Class 8
Semi-Truck.
Many readers think Nikola is “vaporware”. I don’t. Regardless, it doesn’t
matter. By 2019 multiple solutions will be in place for long-haul autonomous
trucking.
Mike “Mish” Shedlock