View allAll Photos Tagged Driverless
The Hong Kong International Airport Automated People Mover is driverless train that operates in the basement of Hong Kong International Airport, to ferry passengers between the main terminal and the boarding gates that are a looooong way away. You can read more about the system on my blog:
www.checkerboardhill.com/2011/02/hong-hong-airport-driver...
A type of vehicle that will be used in an urban environment and an area where private cars have limited access. These vehicles are driverless.
The Google driverless car is able to create a 3D rendering of the environment, identifying pedestrians and signs with ease. Learn more here bit.ly/1z8r8v6
Michigan Engineering graduate students help Xplore Engineering camp participants Anna Palacios (center) and Jordan Ehner (right) learn how driverless cars use sensors, programming logic, and controls. Participants then program a semi-autonomous vehicle to race through a maze.
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Visual Communications Director, Michigan Engineering
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© 2018 Tina Wong; The Wandering Eater. All Rights Reserved. Images may not be reproduced, copied, or used in any way without written permission.
10 seat autonomous vehicle on public trials at the Birmingham NEC, October 2021
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The driver's mirror, for a driverless train, showing the station gantries of Canary Wharf DLR station.
Michigan Engineering graduate and undergraduate students help Xplore Engineering camp participants learn how driverless cars use sensors, programming logic, and controls. Participants then program a semi-autonomous vehicle to race through a maze.
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Visual Communications Director, Michigan Engineering
A lineup of trains waits to join the evening rush hour at Kelana Jaya on the driverless Kelana Jaya LRT in Kuala Lumpur
Operated by: Beep Technologies
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A Beep pod seen turning around at LYNX Central while running the off-peak Swan Shuttle loop. This is a pilot project to trial an AV shuttle for additional service on part of the LYMMO Orange Line.
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Please do not use this image without first asking for permission. Thank you.
Michigan Engineering graduate students help Xplore Engineering camp participants Anna Palacios (center) and Jordan Ehner (right) learn how driverless cars use sensors, programming logic, and controls. Participants then program a semi-autonomous vehicle to race through a maze.
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Visual Communications Director, Michigan Engineering
June 13, 2016. Cambridge, MA.
An audience of approximately 250 gathered Monday, June 13th at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for a forum exploring the transformative technology of autonomous vehicles and their likely impacts. The forum was moderated by MAPC’s Executive Director, Marc Draisen.Sponsored by MAPC and Transportation for Massachusetts (T4Mass), the event featured an expert panel from both the public and private sectors, and covered topics including: driverless car technology, likely timeframe for implementation, how driverless cars might change the role of driving and transit in our communities, and the role of government in the process.
© 2016 Marilyn Humphries
Thursday, May 29th, 2014
The 2014 McKinsey Global Infrastructure Initiative
Rethinking Infrastructure
12:10-12:20
INSPIRING IDEAS: THE DRIVERLESS CITY
The increasing deployment of sensors and hand-held electronics is rapidly turning the vision of the driverless city into reality. Successfully deployed, the driverless city will transform transport infrastructure, congestion, and many other facets of urban living.
Speaker: Carlo Ratti, Director, Senseable City Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Photograph by McKinsey Global Infrastructure/Stuart Isett
Michigan Engineering graduate and undergraduate students help Xplore Engineering camp participants learn how driverless cars use sensors, programming logic, and controls. Participants then program a semi-autonomous vehicle to race through a maze.
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Visual Communications Director, Michigan Engineering
This is a truly driverless "Monorail" system which runs around the reclaimed island of Odaiba, Tokyo. It isn't really a Monorail but they call it that anyway.