Apple’s Autonomous Cars Require a Lot of Human Intervention

California’s Department of Motor Vehicles released its annual report outlining how frequently humans had to take over driving responsibilities from each company’s autonomous prototypes while testing on public roads. As you might expect, if you measure the number of miles per disengagement, Google’s Waymo is at the top. But you might not expect Apple to be at the bottom of the list…the very bottom of the list.

Bloomberg reports that Waymo’s prototypes were able to travel 11,000 miles between disengagements, with GM’s Cruise coming in a distant second with 5,200 miles. And Apple? Apple’s autonomous prototypes clocked in at an incredibly brief 1.1 miles per disengagement. That means Waymo’s vehicles travel 10,000 times farther than Apple’s before encountering a situation they couldn’t handle without human help.

To be fair, miles per disengagement isn’t the only metric that matters when it comes to developing autonomous technology. A mile of highway driving is a lot less difficult than a mile of city driving, and you’ll probably see a lot more disengagements in poor weather testing than you will when it’s clear and sunny. One company may have different standards than another for deciding how much risk it’s willing to take to avoid disengagements. But the fact that Apple’s prototypes have been disengaging every mile is still concerning.

The news coincides with Apple’s decision last month to lay off 200 people working on its self-driving car project, known internally as Project Titan. It’s also a great reminder that autonomous cars still have a way to go before they enter the mainstream.

Source: Bloomberg

The post Apple’s Autonomous Cars Require a Lot of Human Intervention appeared first on Motortrend.



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