Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Transportation Google Security Wireless Networking IT Technology

A Fleet of Trucks Just Drove Themselves Across Europe (qz.com) 156

An anonymous reader shares a report on Quartz: About a dozen trucks from major manufacturers like Volvo and Daimler just completed a week of largely autonomous driving across Europe, the first such major exercise on the continent. The trucks set off from their bases in three European countries and completed their journeys in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. One set of trucks, made by the Volkswagen subsidiary Scania, traveled more than 2,000 km and crossed four borders to get there. The trucks were taking part in the European Truck Platooning Challenge, organized by the Dutch government as one of the big events for its 2016 presidency of the European Union. While self-driving cars from Google or Ford get most of the credit for capturing the public imagination, commercial uses for autonomous or nearly autonomous vehicles, like tractors from John Deere, have been quietly putting the concept to work in a business setting.In related news, as tipped to us by a reader, "Swedish automaker Volvo is planning on bringing a fleet of 100 self-driving vehicles to China from next year, in a project which will see local drivers test autonomous cars on public roads in everyday driving conditions. Dangerous driving and congestion in Chinese cities will likely prove a difficult challenge for the fleet." I am particularly interested in learning how this autonomous truck is controlled. From the article, it appears that these vehicles utilize Wi-Fi. Based on so many security incidents we continue to come across, perhaps these companies should first work on solving the technical challenges to make these trucks safe -- that is, bolstering the hardware and software security.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

A Fleet of Trucks Just Drove Themselves Across Europe

Comments Filter:
  • by NotInHere ( 3654617 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @01:44PM (#51861843)

    Being more secure than humans is enough. And that can be easily measured, in the number of accidents that the cars caused.

    Traffic accounts for far more deaths than plane travel, still the media attention after plane accidents is much higher. Its good that now the roads are made safer as well.

    • by tnk1 ( 899206 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @01:50PM (#51861897)

      I actually agree with you 100% and think that self-driving trucks and autos will make the roads safer, even if they don't make accidents impossible.

      When I see this, however, I do wonder what they are thinking about the truck drivers that they are eagerly working at putting out of work. CDL driving isn't a job that I want to do myself, but it is relatively well paying and supports a number of working people who are not exactly STEM material. I hope someone has some idea on that front, or you'll find that you're working on creating even more Donald Trump-type voters.

      • When I see this, however, I do wonder what they are thinking about the truck drivers that they are eagerly working at putting out of work.

        They're not going to be 'put out of work'. Commercial trucks have an even greater potential to cause loss of human life, therefore it's even more important that they be as safely operated as possible. Since so-called 'self-driving' vehicles, including trucks, will never be able to 100% guaranteed to be able to handle 100% of all situations that might arise on the open roads, all so-called 'autonomous trucks', just like all so-called 'autonomous cars', will be required to have a human driver behind the full

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          >To do otherwise is sheer madness and inviting disaster.

          Goddamn luddite. A computer doesn't get tired, a computer doesn't need to take no-doze to make that time sensitive delivery. A computer doesn't speed so it can get home to its family faster. A might misjudge the grip it has on a wet road, but it won't willingly risk wiping out a bunch of other drivers in the wet because it wants to get somewhere faster. A computer takes inputs, makes predictions, and operates on those outcomes. Exactly the same as a

      • "Even if they don't make accidents impossible"

        They had better be impossible from the standpoint of the automaton, otherwise it opens all kinds of legal issues. If I own an automatic car, I'd better be assured it won't cause millions of dollars worth of damage or kill someone. If I am to accept financial responsibility for any of that then I'll just keep driving myself, thanks. I'll insure the vehicle *as property* so if someone throws a brick through the window I don't pay to get it fixed, but I won't
    • by msmash ( 4491995 ) Works for Slashdot
      I agree with you, too.
    • When they talk about security, I don't think they mean safety from injury - they mean security from hacking and theft.
    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      And pollution from motor vehicles kills 20 times more than road accidents, this is something that rarely gets a mention.

  • How long (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    until cars have a midlife crisis and drive across the country randomly to "find themselves"?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Maybe it has been addressed before, but with the idea of trucks hauling goods across large distances, instead of people (as a car would), are they looking to remove drivers? If so, then how will they handle refueling? Will we see a resurgence of employees washing windshields and pumping gas for a tip at stations?

      That might be interesting.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maximum_Overdrive

      • by Anonymous Coward
        Just thinking off the top of my head, I imagine there are advantages to autonomous trucking even if there is always a person in the vehicle to do all the other associated tasks besides driving. The vehicle doesn't need rest breaks, or a limited daily schedule. In the extreme, it could travel almost 24 hours a day with a "custodian" who eats and sleeps in the vehicle and just deals with fuel stops, loading and unloading, deliveries, and his or her own daily needs.
      • by Teun ( 17872 )
        Automated filling stations are not exactly new...
        Windshield washing is a waste of time, just make sure the camera's have a clean lens :)
    • I'd be more worried about them heeding the call to "Transform and roll out!"
  • The EU has a lot to cover the displaced workers in the usa they may need to turn to the jail / prison if they need a doctor.

    • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

      Anything under a 6 digit income in the US and this is a very real consideration.

      • I built a self sufficient, solar powered off grid farm with 100m^2 luxury house and over 16 hectares of land over the period of the last eight years and under $50,000 cash. I started out living in a tent and was a lot of work, but it comes out to ~$7,000 year investment. That works out to $3.50/hour based on a 2,000hour work year. The rest of the world can melt down or flood or whatever and I should be fine.
        • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

          I commend you but I warn that if the Government doesn't or didn't tax it chances are what you have will be declared illegal, robbed from you and sold to the highest bidder for a new development.

          • It is fully permitted. I did everything fully legal. Except maybe the solar. The house is wired for 120vAC and the solar is not permanently attached to anything. I bring in 30A 120AC from a UL listed inverter [outbackpower.com] through the breaker panel on the side of the house. It was assumed the house would run from a generator, but 120vac is 120vac and I get much cleaner power off of the inverter than the generator. And I do pay tax, but it has gone up a lot since I finished the house. Still only a few hundred dollars/yea
            • by Hylandr ( 813770 )

              It is fully permitted.

              The only place I see this flying is in Alaska. Otherwise local citizenry or local government would be raiding your home and burning it down. What state did you pull this miracle off in?

              • Huh? My friend just finished building a house in "overregulated" California, in a crowded suburb of the bay area. He did full permits on everything, and some items such as the foundation were done by professional crews. The vast majority of the work was done by amateurs using scrounged materials. It's a small house but it cost around $50k to make in an area where you can't find a shitty condo for $300k.

                I think you can pull this off most anywhere. Some cities are more uptight than others, but as long as you
        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          You know when that is useful, exactly when that is useful, when 7 billion people can do it. Earth is 51.01 billion hectares, of which 3.107 billion hectares is arable so as we would need 112 billion hectares, we do you suggest we find the other 36 earths so we can all live like you, or do you suggest we simple eliminate sufficient people to end up with 1 36th of the number of people we have now. If you seriously think when the rest of the earth's ability to sustain the current population diminishes, you'll

  • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @02:30PM (#51862215)

      Trying to pre-emptively legislate based on speculation or predictions seems like a really bad idea. Let's address issues as they arrive. It's not like this is going to happen overnight.

      Anyhow, to your point... railroads and trucking are rather different in their advantages and disadvantages, and so I suspect there may be less competition among these industries than you believe. Trucks will *never* match the efficiency per-pound of bulk goods carried by rail. However, rail can never match the speed and flexibility of trucks to make smaller point-to-point deliveries.

      • > However, rail can never match the speed and
        > flexibility of trucks to make smaller point-to-point
        > deliveries.

        A significant contributor to this, though, has been poor urban planning that insufficiently utilizes rail. If corrected to more efficiently utilize the rail lines and hubs, those flexible point-to-point trucks could be smaller, lighter, and less damaging to the roads. Compare and contrast, for example, the lorries and "heavy trucks" used in the UK and Japan vs. the monstrous beasts on o

        • by Teun ( 17872 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @04:43PM (#51863451)

          Compare and contrast, for example, the lorries and "heavy trucks" used in the UK and Japan vs. the monstrous beasts on our roads here in the US.

          Oh? Over here in Europe(*) a regular heavy truck is depending on the number of axles up to 40 metric tons and in The Netherlands 50 tons, heavier special (not regular) transport needs an easy to get licence.
          Road trains go up to 60 tons, in Sweden 80 tons.
          Th basis of the legislation is between 10 and 11.5 tons per axle.
          (*) Exceptions are the UK and Switzerland with a max. of 38 metric tons.

          In the US the maximum weight without additional permit is 80,000 lbs or 36.28 metric tons.

          • by throx ( 42621 )

            80t? Pff... In Australia we can do up to around 130t for the properly massive trains (HML BAB Quad)

            Refer https://www.nhvr.gov.au/files/201602-0116-mass-and-dimension-limits.pdf

          • There are US states with higher weight limits than national standard..

            The maximum allowable gross vehicle weight on the heaviest "Michigan-weight-law MDOT Intermodal Policy Division truck" is 164,000 pounds,

            https://www.michigan.gov/docum... [michigan.gov]

      • > However, rail can never match the speed and
        > flexibility of trucks to make smaller point-to-point
        > deliveries.

        True enough. But for that sort of traffic, don't the drivers often/usually unload the trucks?

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Well, perhaps after a few years of that roadway chaos; sanity will finally prevail here, and we'll actually raise those fuel taxes to reflect the true cost of maintaining and building the roads. Yeah, it's a long shot. But stranger things have happened. And perhaps if the roads do get bad enough to start impacting corporate profits, even the republicans will finally understand that they do have to be paid for.

      But as for the rails, I'm kind of torn. We desperately need a systemic upgrade to something mod

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        raise those fuel taxes to reflect the true cost of maintaining and building the roads.

        The idea that the two are related was always nonsense. Money is fungible. It doesn't matter the name of the tax, or the name of the program, money is money.

        I benefit greatly from those trucks on the road. My grocery store has food in it, for example. I don't really care which tax the roads get pad for out of - maintaining the roads is worth every penny. It's one of the few good things the government does - honest to goodness infrastructure. Let's have more of that.

        • It doesn't matter the name of the tax, .... I benefit greatly from those trucks on the road. My grocery store has food in it, for example. I don't really care which tax the roads get pad for out of - maintaining the roads is worth every penny.

          But it makes a difference to you and me where the tax is coming from. You (or I) would benefit more if the tax came from someone other than ourselves. Tax those trucks more and the groceries might cost you $10 more per week but you might be $20 better off if you are taxed less as a result, leaving you $10 in pocket. Or you might be no better off, leaving you $10 out of pocket. Depends on what your tax circumstances are.

          In the UK most companies find it cheaper to send freight by road than rail, despi

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            But it makes a difference to you and me where the tax is coming from. You (or I) would benefit more if the tax came from someone other than ourselves. Tax those trucks more and the groceries might cost you $10 more per week but you might be $20 better off if you are taxed less as a result, leaving you $10 in pocket. Or you might be no better off, leaving you $10 out of pocket. Depends on what your tax circumstances are.

            No, and no. First off roads are worth paying for. I don't care if one way costs me more than another - I benefit and I don't mind paying. I'm happy to pay for one of the very few useful things the government does!

            Secondly, you're talking about me benefiting from a regressive tax. The total cost to society is the same. Trucking has very thin margins, so the costs will be passed to customers. So we're comparing a "tax" on food to a tax on income, really. I'm not even a fan of the progressive income tax

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            What is this fetish that liberals have for train sets? I've never understood that. Train freight is already very cheap and efficient, but it doesn't scale down. Hauling freight is pretty thoroughly optimized, whatever armchair experts might imagine.

  • by jasenj1 ( 575309 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @01:56PM (#51861937)

    "Volvo is planning on bringing a fleet of 100 self-driving vehicles to China from next year,"

    Forget self-driving vehicles. Tell us more about this time travel technology!

  • Movie Plot (Score:5, Insightful)

    by irrational_design ( 1895848 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @01:56PM (#51861939)

    I'm very surprised there hasn't been a movie yet (that I'm aware of) featuring an autonomous vehicle being hijacked remotely to do some dastardly deed.

    Other than China, they also might want to try driving the vehicles through Cairo. I remember taking a taxi once from the area of the zoo to a hotel near Giza once and the number of near accidents, crazy driving, etc. in that 20 minute trip was greater than everything I've seen in every other country I've ever visited put together over the span of my entire lifetime (40+ years).

    • Maximum Overdrive
    • I'm very surprised there hasn't been a movie yet (that I'm aware of) featuring an autonomous vehicle being hijacked remotely to do some dastardly deed.

      Maximum Overdrive?

    • I'm pretty sure at least a couple of episodes of Knight Rider and one of Airwolf involved KITT or Airwolf getting hacked and turned evil for an episode.

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      An old sci-fi book from 1966 by George Henry Smith called "The four day weekend" Basically car worship and AI has run amok to the point that cars are almost sentient and lots of people have fetishes about them. But the cars remain (sort of) subservient until Aliens trigger a "car-mageddon" over a (you guessed it) 4 day weekend.

      Cheesy pulp sci-fi but I liked it way back when.

    • Did they have seat belts? I only remember being in three cars all the time I was in Kenya. They were optional an few people could afford them. And if you crashed, you'd just lay crumpled up in you car until someone notified your family to come get you or what was left. I got t see ths more than once.
      • by Teun ( 17872 )

        Did they have seat belts?

        Why?
        Cairo is in an Islamic country, Allah will protect you better than any man made item can.

    • dozens of movies have done this.

      How about Terminator 3 [youtube.com] - self driving vehicles, controlled by a maniacal bitchbot...

    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      Cars in Cairo have more gears than in other places, four on the floor (stick shift in the USofA) and ten more in the center of the steering wheel, in other countries they call it a horn.
    • by Teun ( 17872 )
      The hijacking is considered, have a good read of the second link in the article:

      The Netherlands Vehicle Authority evaluates test applications in three stages:

      written evaluation, roughly comprising an overview of changes to the vehicle, and the impact these have on safety, and counter measures;
      functionality testing (at a closed facility), of aspects the applicant seeks to test on public roads: the ‘happy flow test’;
      a stress test at a closed facility. This tests system robustness, both in technical and functional terms.
      If this phase is completed successfully, consideration will be given – in consultation with the road manager(s)
      – as to suitable locations to be opened up and under what circumstances.
      This may involve recommendations from knowledge institutes like the Road Safety Research Institute (SWOV)
      or cyber security experts.
      The exemption lists all relevant circumstances together with the licensed drivers,
      the duration of the exemption and the vehicles.

  • They just sent a bunch of gamers an early beta of "EuroTruck Simulator 3" which was actually just a thinly veiled tele-operation console for these trucks.

  • Convoy!!! (Score:4, Funny)

    by scubamage ( 727538 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @02:05PM (#51862007)
    Ah, breaker one-nine, this here's the Rubber Duck v1.0. You gotta copy on me, Pig Pen v1.1, c'mon?
    Ah, yeah, 10-4, Pig Pen v1.1, fer shure, fer shure. By golly, it's clean clear to Flag Town, c'mon.
    Yeah, that's a big 10-4 there, Pig Pen v1.1, yeah, we definitely got the front door, good buddy. Mercy sakes alive, looks like we got us an autonomous convoy!
  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @02:06PM (#51862009) Journal
    Going from "largely autonomous" to "fully autonomous" is probably tougher than going from nothing to "largely autonomous."
    • Going from nothing to largely autonomous also has by far the largest safety and efficiency improvements.

      This is a significant step.

      • Going from nothing to largely autonomous also has by far the largest safety and efficiency improvements.

        I'm not sure that's true. Forcing someone to sit behind a wheel and wait until the car beeps at them to take control is asking for accidents.

        • I'm not sure that's true. Forcing someone to sit behind a wheel and wait until the car beeps at them to take control is asking for accidents.

          More so or less so than forcing someone to sit behind the wheel on ludicrously long journeys stopping only to eat, shit, drink coffee, and maybe a 15min power nap because otherwise they can't keep their eyes open? Well okay that may not be 100% accurate. Sometimes the drivers also stop to take some harder drugs [reuters.com] to help them through their long hauls.

          You don't need to question whether that is true. The stats are building themselves continuously. So far Google's self driving cars which are largely autonomous

          • More so or less so than forcing someone to sit behind the wheel on ludicrously long journeys stopping only to eat

            It's much, much more difficult to pay attention when you aren't actually driving. Are you kidding?

            So far Google's self driving cars which are largely autonomous and still have people to take control are starting to rank in a really high percentile when it comes to accident free driving.

            The data Google gives us is highly selective, and chosen in a way that makes them look good. Don't believe me, try looking for solid complete data on their self-driving cars. You won't find it.

  • by ThatsNotPudding ( 1045640 ) on Thursday April 07, 2016 @02:14PM (#51862053)
    A map I saw last year (actually a slide show through a few decades) showed the current most common occupation in ~45 US states: Truck Driver.

    Depressing enough to think that's what's left of the US nowadays, but what the hell happens in the next 5 to 10 years as even those jobs are eliminated (all the while told by the Puritan ruling class we're bums if not employed)?
    • Were those "truck drivers" from the map all long-haul big rig drivers? Or did it include the urban divers working for the likes of UPS, FedEx, Cintas, Iron Mountain, and so on? There's a significant non-driving aspect to all of the latter jobs that requires a human being even if the truck itself is self-driving.

      Also, I'd be remiss in not pointing out that at one point 90% of the US population worked in agriculture. Obviously, that's not the case anymore. And our precursors seem to have managed the loss

    • by delt0r ( 999393 )
      In other news the economy still hasn't recovered from all the unemployed buggy whip manufactures and horse trainers.
  • Driverless trucks will be great for China. They've been dying for something to fix their labor shortage.
  • Did they have any "refugees" hiding in the back?

  • I'm waiting for my autonomous RV. Now is the time to invest in RV parks and KOA. Who needs a house when I can live in a new city every month.
  • The technique demonstrated here is platooning, where trucks can autonomously follow the truck in front of them. The truck at the front of the line is still driven manually.

    An interesting development, but not quite autonomous driving.

    The question that remains is how they'd prevent the convoy being broken up at traffic lights.

  • I saw this from my window at work today. Actually I spent more time staring at the helicopter than the trucks but I digress.

    The irony does not go unnoticed that in the video that they park these "eco twin" trucks promoting fuel efficiency and environmental savings right in front of the brand spanking new coal fired power station commissioned only this year at the Maasvlakte.

    I can't help but wonder if todays event was the reason that the station wasn't running and belching its usual big cloud.

  • if the truck still belches out toxic nano particles in it's exhaust and uses compression release engine brakes at 4 am that are so loud you can hear them from over 2 kilometres away. i.e. So what, this does not fix the existing problems with trucks and just causes one more problem, unemployment.
    • if the truck still belches out toxic nano particles in it's exhaust

      Oh, you mean gasoline vehicles? They emit more PM2.5 than diesels.

      and uses compression release engine brakes at 4 am that are so loud you can hear them from over 2 kilometres away.

      The autonomous trucks will be programmed to brake ahead of time, so they don't need to use the jake brake.

  • So you can have a truck that will drive itself to the moon and back, but how do you address certain situations such as inclement weather and mechanical safety? Someone needs to be there to install the chains when the roads get slick. Someone needs to inspect the brakes before heading down a steep incline. Perhaps the load has shifted, and needs straps tightened? Blown tire needs changing? Brake caliper stuck closed? A truck driver isn't just a meatbag that steers the truck and hits the gas and brakes. Even
  • what I'd actually be interested in buying is an autonomous lawn mower. Ball's in your court John Deere.

The goal of Computer Science is to build something that will last at least until we've finished building it.

Working...