Uber is expanding its ride-hailing service into other areas like freight delivery and food delivery with its Eats app. So instead of just disrupting local deliveries using cars, Uber’s going to do it with trucks as well! This isn’t the first time that self-driving trucks have hit the road in Arizona (Google’s Waymo has been testing them out), but they are still an exciting development given their potential to reduce accidents by taking human error out of driving.
Uber Technologies Inc is putting its self-driving trucks back on the road
The ride-hailing company said on Tuesday it will start using self-driving trucks to transport goods in the United States for the first time, following a year of testing and safety concerns. The trucks will be used to transport cargo between Uber’s U.S. headquarters in San Francisco and its truck stops in Arizona.
Uber has announced that its autonomous trucking technology will be used to deliver packages for companies like Walmart and Kroger. This new revenue stream will help Uber to keep up with the competition and continue to be a leader in the ride-hailing industry.
Uber said on Friday it would resume testing self-driving vehicles on public roads this week, without providing details about where or when they might hit the streets again.”We look forward to continuing our work with cities across North America,” said Eric Meyhofer, head of Uber’s Advanced Technologies Group that includes its self-driving program.
Freight business in Arizona, Texas, and other states since 2017.
The San Francisco-based ride-hailing company has been piloting its freight business in Arizona, Texas, and other states since 2017. In May, it launched Uber Freight in Canada and plans to open up operations in the U.S., where it will compete with major established trucking companies such as Werner Enterprises Inc. and Swift Transportation Co., as well as smaller startups like Convoy Inc.
Has become an new revenue stream
Uber’s freight business has become an important new revenue stream amid regulatory scrutiny of its core ride-hailing business and mounting losses before it is scheduled to go public next year in one of the most anticipated IPOs.
This could be a huge advantage for Uber, as it could avoid some of the regulatory hurdles that have been preventing self-driving technology from taking off.
Uber is part of a larger ecosystem of companies that make self-driving vehicles. This includes Tesla and Embark Semis.
Uber delivers their cargo more efficiently.
Uber said its technology aims to help truck drivers find loads and deliver their cargo more efficiently.
Uber is testing its self-driving trucks in the real world as part of an ongoing partnership with Volvo Trucks. The goal of the partnership is to eventually have autonomous long-haul commercial vehicles. ..
As autonomous vehicle technology improves, truck drivers could be safer than their manned counterparts. They may even make package delivery more efficient by eliminating human error.
Uber self-driving trucks technology
If you’re a long-distance trucker, you may have heard about the new self-driving trucks from Uber and Otto. If not, here are some basics of what they can do:
The Otto trucks are equipped with cameras and sensors, but the driver is in control at all times. The trucks can only drive in areas that have been mapped out by human drivers, who were trained by Otto executives before being let loose on public roads within designated test sites.
Uber has announced that its self-driving trucks will be back on the road again after being suspended following an accident in Tempe, Arizona earlier this year. In March 2019, an Uber Volvo XC90 SUV operating in autonomous mode struck and killed Elaine Herzberg as she was walking her bicycle across Mill Avenue near Curry Road in Tempe; police later found that no one in the vehicle had been paying attention at the time of impact due to their involvement with other activities inside it.
“We’re very excited about the progress we’ve made so far,” Uber’s head of freight, Lior Ron, said in an interview. “It’s just a really good fit for us.”
Uber is among a handful of companies, including Waymo, that are aggressively testing self-driving vehicles with the goal of removing humans from behind the wheel. The goal is to eventually make self-driving cars a reality on American roads.
The company has announced that it will invest at least $450 million in its self-driving trucking business and will also continue working on its autonomous cars, which it pulled off public roads last year after a fatal accident involving a pedestrian in Tempe. ..
Uber has agreed to pay $286 million over five years to settle criminal charges related to the accident that occurred last month. safety drivers will now be required to have backup drivers with them at all times in case they need to take manual control of the vehicle.
Uber is not focused on mass-market consumer autonomous personal mobility today but instead on specific commercial use cases where autonomy can have great impact.