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3 Myths about Self-Driving Cars

Several Volvo models, such as the S60 sedan in this photoillustration, come standard with automated braking that applies the brakes for you if sensors detect you're too close to the car ahead. · The Exchange · Volvo

There’s a lot of hype surrounding them. But where are they?

Driverless cars seem poised to be the next big thing in the auto industry, or maybe the next big thing after that. Google (GOOG) routinely turns heads on California roads with its famous driverless cars, which have logged half-a-million miles with barely an incident. California, Nevada and Florida have passed special laws allowing self-driving cars, with more states sure to follow. The federal agency that regulates car safety recently issued new guidelines for automated vehicles and might even begin to require some driverless technology that could significantly improve safety.

Piper Jaffray (PJC) analyst Gene Munger estimates that driverless car technology could ultimately mushroom into a $240 billion industry, which would be roughly three times the size of the cloud-computing industry that will supposedly transform data storage. Yet there’s a lot of confusion about what self-driving cars are, who’s likely to build them, and how the new technology will transform driving. So here’s a quick guide to the three biggest myths about self-driving cars:

Myth 1: They’re far off in the future. Gee-whiz stories about self-driving cars make it sound as if a fleet of robotic pods will materialize at some distant date and revolutionize driving overnight. In reality, driverless technology is already migrating slowly into new vehicles through features such as automated braking, which applies the brakes if you get too close to a car ahead of you; adaptive cruise control, which speeds or slows the car based on the speed of surrounding traffic; self-parking systems that use cameras to help back a car into a parking space; and lane-departure warning systems that read lane markings and sound an alert if your car drifts beyond them. Like a lot of new automotive technology, these types of systems tend to be pricey and available mostly on luxury makes. But they'll get cheaper and more commonplace.

Cars will become driverless in stages, as new software begins to tie together various automated systems. Steffen Linkenbach, an engineer who oversees North American automated vehicle programs for supplier Continental Automotive, foresees three basic phases. By 2016, he says, partially automated cars will be able to brake and steer at speeds up to 20 or 25 miles per hour, which ought to help reduce rear-end crashes in particular. By 2020, there will be highly automated cars that do the same thing at highway speeds.

You still won’t be able to recline the seat and take a nap while the car shuttles you around, however, because the driver will have to be ready to take over on a few seconds’ notice in case there’s a problem. “In reality, there’s rain, sleet, snow, and sometimes a deer jumps out in front of you,” says Paul Perrone, a roboticist who’s chairman of a committee at the Society of Automotive Engineers that sets standards for automated vehicles. “When it happens, you have to deal with it. You can’t be asleep hoping the technology will handle it."