What is a Robocar?

In writing about robocars -- self-driving cars -- I have a particular vision in mind. It is not an uncommon vision, but neither is it the only one.

Here are the key elements of this vision:

  1. No new infrastructure: The robocar is able to drive on unmodified city streets, shared with cars driven by people. No new infrastructure is necessary, though some forms of cheap infrastructure (particularly non-physical infrastructure like networks and databases) may be built as desired to make things even better.
  2. Autonomous: The robocar works almost all the time by just being given a destination. The occupants do not have to monitor it, though it's not out of the question their advice might be used in unusual non-urgent situations. That means they can always operate safely, but may sometimes need human judgement on navigation or getting out of an odd situation. Thus vehicles can also operate without people in them, to deliver themselves, recharge themselves and park/store themselves. While they might find uses in communicating with other cars or with central city or street computers, this must not be essential to their operation.
  3. Safe: Robocars don't get approved for the road until they can demonstrate a safety record a fair bit superior to human drivers, and in fact safer than sober, alert drivers.

There are a few other attributes which are highly valuable, but not absolutely essential:

Some may view the safety point as a cheat: I am defining a robocar as a vehicle that's demonstrably safer than human drivers. That diverts an otherwise important question of how safe the vehicles will be and how they will become that safe. I discuss this issue a fair bit, but my main goal is to explore, "what happens when we can make the safe robocar?"


Other Visions

There are other visions of a robocar future, or the path to it.