Google is Testing a Driverless Car

June 8, 2022

There are exciting things happening in the world of motor vehicle transportation. And though US Sedan doesn’t expect this latest news to affect, or have any impact on executive transportation in the Washington DC region anytime soon, it’s downright fascinating, and something we think you need to know.

Google, and the launch of a driverless car

The following text was originally published by Popular Science on August 31.

[Google gave the public its] first glimpse of driverless cars came in 2012. Since then, Google has confined most of its test-drives of these vehicles to the roads outside its headquarters in Mountain View, California, and recently expanded tests to Austin, Texas (reports of other self-driving car tests by traditional automakers have surfaced in a few other spots around the globe).

Now the search company is bringing even more driverless options to the roads of Austin. Google announced the arrival of their prototype autonomous vehicles at the Thinkery Museum in Austin. In addition to the Lexus RX450h that have been retrofitted with driverless tech, Google will bring over their pod-like prototype.

Google cites Austin as a test area on its self-driving car project website as well and says the test vehicles include “modified Lexus SUVs and new prototype vehicles”.

The Google car prototype previously only saw use at the company’s campus and throughout Mountain View. The self-driving car will come with a removable wheel, accelerator pedal, and brake pedal in the event human drivers need take over.

It makes sense for Google to test self-driving cars in Austin for several reasons: not only is the city a vibrant tech and startup hub full of potential engineering talent, but Google is also installing its own experimental, gigabit Fiber internet service in the area.

The Google Self-Driving Car Project was originally announced in 2010. While some of the company’s cars are consumer vehicles retrofitted with Google’s technology, others are custom made. A small, two-seater prototype unveiled last year is is more like a “room on wheels” than any conventional car — it eschews the steering wheel entirely.

Altogether, Google’s reportedly completed more than 300,000 tests with no incidents of highway driving. Google’s self-driving car project could be great for transportation and fuel efficiency, not to mention the added bonus of enabling people more time for relaxation or work while on the road. The implications are even more important for drivers who are seeing-impaired, physically impaired, or elderly. This technology could also help those who are looking to ship their car.  Instead of getting a car shipping rate quote, they can just have the car drive itself! And with added pressure in the autonomous vehicle market coming from Tesla and potentially even Apple, competition could ensure driverless technology software won’t steer us wrong.

Meanwhile, at U.S. Sedan…

For nearly two decades, Washington DC has called on US Sedan to serve corporate and diplomatic travel needs from airport arrival and departure, to coordinated large event movements; rest assured that US Sedan Service is committed to quality, security, professionalism — and style.

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