afransen
Senior Member
I don't think re-signing the world's streets is really necessary or likely to happen. I don't think autonomy will require handling every scenario. Waymo already uses remote operation to address edge cases where the vehicle is unsure of how to proceed. Gradually the vehicles become more capable and 1 remote operator can handle more vehicles as interventions become rarer.I am surprised that a global standard for AI-friendly road marking and wayfinding isn't already out there and being implemented, at least where new roads are being built or for the core highway network.
I'm also surprised that the various developers have set the threshold for initial rollout such that one needs an all-knowing vehicle capable of handling every last scenario in North America. That makes the design process so much more complex.
The simple application is highway. The intermodal yard to the destination is the hard part--and also the part most likely to require a human driver (to disconnect the chassis etc,). TuSimple is already running unmanned trucks between their terminals in the southern US.I would have thought that the first step would be to exploit the "simple" applications - such as fixed routes for things like slow speed shuttle bus applications. A much more finite number of navigation challenges and road conditions, and potential to strategically target road anomalies that are the most challenging. Things like the shuttle between an airport terminal and the rental car operation, for instance.
As for intermodal, it must be much simpler to figure out the AI to allow drayage between specific key customers and the intermodal yard, than to figure out the AI for the entire TCH between container terminals on the Pacific Coast and the GTA, for instance. That's a very immediate savings without boiling the ocean. In the GTA, for instance, I bet one could pick the top 20 or 30 logistics centers and automate the drayage between these and the two (soon to be three) rail intermodal terminals. A very small set of roads to figure out and equip for smart vehicles.
The airport shuttle market (and it's like) is tiny compared to the TaaS market. There are companies working on short range autonomous shuttles, but you don't hear about them. They are IMO unlikely to succeed because the resources required to solve autonomy are only going to be justified by the TaaS market size and that capability will eat all the niches like airport shuttles.