“The data we collect will inform our next steps – we may not look to test our self-driving system in Dallas immediately following this first round of data gathering,” Geidt writes. Depending on that, Uber will decide the next step in the expansion. Some of the data will be used in simulations and on the test track, to see how the car responds to real-life scenarios. The program kicks off in November and will see a Mission Specialist, defined by Geidt as a “specially trained vehicle operator,” driving through Dallas to collect data. The accident prompted Uber to shut down the program and reconsider the approach altogether, and from what Geidt is saying, it now includes gathering data with a self-driving car driven by a human in an initial stage. That’s where the “caution” part comes in: at the time of the 2018 crash, there was a driver in the vehicle but he was too busy streaming TV shows on his phone to pay attention to the road, though he had been instructed to do so. There is catch, though: the self-driving cars will be manually driven. Tests are already underway on the streets of San Francisco, Pittsburgh and Toronto, and Uber’s self-driving cars will be arriving next in Dallas, Texas, according to a Medium blog post by Austin Geidt, head of Uber ATG strategy.
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