- All right, I'm about to
go for my first ever ride in a fully autonomous vehicle. Whoa, no driver. All right. - [Electronic Voice] Good morning, Derek. This car is all yours
with no one up front. - I really like the idea of
fully autonomous vehicles, but it's weird getting
into a car with no driver and just trusting the car. I'm gonna report back how this ride goes and how I feel about it. Oh, but full disclosure, this
video is sponsored by Waymo. (car door clicking) (seatbelt clicking) Start ride.
(car navigation chiming) Ha ha! - [Electronic Voice] Make sure
your seatbelt is fastened. (Derek vocalizes)
For any questions, press the Help button to speak
with a rider support agent. - Okay. Now let's see where we go. It's looking at this car coming
here. What's it gonna do? Oh, and it pulls in
very smoothly behind it. No problems. Did not turn into traffic. Waited until the cars
went, and then it turned. I like that. I polled YouTube viewers
about autonomous vehicles and half of you are excited and ready for them to be on the roads, but over 40% said you
thought the technology was still over 10 years away. And for those people, I have news, which is that, well, there
is no driver in this car. I'm currently inside a fully
autonomous vehicle driving around a suburb of Phoenix, Arizona. Now I get that in some parts of the world, like, the roads aren't
well enough maintained and people don't stay in
their lane necessarily, and so it'd be very hard for
a computer to drive there, but at least under good conditions, the technology is currently functional. (downtempo music) (bright comedic music) - Now Waymo started out as the Google self-driving car project with what is possibly one of
the cutest cars ever made. I am inside the world's first
fully autonomous vehicle. Back in October 2015, this
car went on a public road, ridden by Steve Mann, who has a disability, he is legally blind, but he could get around in this thing, which is affectionately
known as the Firefly. This is such a simple vehicle. There's basically nothing in here. There's no steering wheel, no dashboard. This car is super basic. There is no AC, but there
is an emergency stop button. (button cover clicks) That's my favorite button in the car. It reminds me of elevators. One of the important
measures that they had to put in automatic elevators
was a big red stop button. Did you know that before the 1940s, almost all elevators had drivers in them? And when people started putting
in driverless elevators, well, the public was very concerned, and they didn't wanna
ride in those elevators. There was one guy who was like, "I don't care if I have to
walk up 12 flights of stairs for the rest of my life. I'm not taking that elevator." And adoption was slow. I mean, they tried to advertise to help people understand
that it was in fact safe, but, ultimately, there was
an elevator drivers strike in New York City, and that
really annoyed people, and it helped the adoption
of automated elevators. If you found a driver
in an elevator today, you would wonder, "Why are they there?" Now you might think an
elevator is just so simple, I mean, it is effectively
one dimensional motion, but airplanes are also flown
extensively by computers. (tense percussive music) I saw this particular landing where a plane is coming in into Vienna, and it's just so foggy that the pilots can see almost nothing. I mean, this is the view from the cockpit, and yet, they make a perfect, a textbook landing right on target. So how do they do it? The answer is the pilots didn't do it. It was a CAT II autoland procedure. The plane just came in and
landed itself essentially. Now, of course, the pilots are important and they're monitoring all of
the instruments and controls, but it's actually the plane and its computer getting the
plane to land appropriately. I was surprised to learn that
humans are much more likely to take manual control
and land on sunny days, like July 6th, 2013, when
Asiana Airlines flight 214 was on final approach to San Francisco. Attempting to manually land the plane, the pilot accidentally
left the throttle at zero, and by the time they realized and tried to abort the
landing, it was too late. The plane crashed into the
runway seawall and split in two. Three people died in the
aftermath of this accident. I think the counterintuitive thing is that we expect the humans to be better, particularly in tough situations, but when it comes to
airplanes, if it's bad weather, you actually want the plane flying itself. So the obvious next question is, would you want the same thing for cars? (oscillating music) There are all these
different levels of autonomy, and everything up to four
requires a human driver to be responsible and have
the wheel at all times. In the early days of the Google
self-driving car project, they had a vehicle that
was not yet level four, so it still required a human driver. They let Google employees borrow the cars, but they still had to be
in control of the wheel. And the volunteers were informed that they were responsible
for the car at all times and that they would be
constantly recorded, like video recorded, while
they were in the car. But still, within a short period of time, the engineers observed
drivers rummaging around in their bags or checking
phones, putting on makeup, or even sleeping in the driver's seat. All these drivers were trusting
the technology too much, which makes almost fully
autonomous vehicles potentially more dangerous
than regular cars, I mean, if the driver is distracted or not prepared to take over. So this is why Waymo decided that the only safe way
to proceed is with a car that has at least level four autonomy. This is the depot where the cars go when they're not on the road. And it's also where people monitor all the rides in progress. - Yes, so that's where my team sits. You see three teams basically here. One of the teams is my
team of fleet dispatchers, so basically making sure that all the mission
are assigned every day and they are completed
successfully on the road. And then you have the Rider Support team that takes the calls. (electronic tone chiming) - [Beulah] Thank you for
calling the Waymo Rider Support. This is Beulah, how can I help today? - I just completed my ride, but I don't wanna get out of the car. I just wanna keep driving. Is there a way that I can do that? - [Beulah] Right now, I
don't see a trip started. Give me one moment here while
I partner with my team, okay? - Okay. (chuckling) Well, I just
left all my stuff in the car. I hope it comes back. (car humming) - I think there's a lot
of, still, resistance in terms of trusting the vehicle. And they ask you like, "How does it feel to be in
a car without the driver?" I was the first person to do public roads, fully driverless ride at night. I always share the experience with them. It takes about two minutes
for you to completely forget that you are in a driverless vehicle. If the system really provides
that feeling that you're safe and you see a couple of maneuvers, in less than two minutes, you're talking to whoever is next to you and not paying attention to
what's happening anymore. - Whoa, all right, it doesn't
make the indicator sound, so I just don't know
when it's going to turn, but if I was watching
the map, I would know. I think we have this bias to believe that we're better at certain
tasks than we actually are, like thinking that people
are good at driving. Surveys show 74% of people believe they are above average drivers. Think about that. In the 20th century, 60 million people were killed on the road. That's basically an extra
world war's worth of deaths. And we really have no one
to blame but ourselves. The National Transportation
and Safety Board has identified human error as
the cause of 94% of accidents. Most of these errors are
impossible for a machine to make. Every year when people are backing out of driveways or parking spaces, in the U.S, up to 200 people are killed, and it's frequently
older people or children, the children of the drivers. It's awful. And it comes down to the fact that we don't have eyes
in the back of our head, and even the backup cameras
still have blind spots. But if you have a vehicle that has LiDAR and radar and 29 cameras, you're just not going to hit them. Up here in the very prominent
top, there is a 360 LiDAR. So it can see all around the car. It can see up to 300
meters away with a LiDAR. The way the LiDAR works is it shoots out invisible laser beams, scanning around millions
of times a second, and then it detects the reflection, and how long it takes
to come back allows you to determine how far it is to that object. So what it's doing is
like painting a 3D picture of the world. There are 29 cameras around this vehicle, which gives you full 360 vision. It gives you close range vision, what is right next to the car, and also long range vision,
going out 500 meters. This car could detect a stop sign or a pedestrian 500 meters away. How many of us have
eyesight that is that good? There is also a microphone up on top to listen to what's
happening in the environment, and if there are sirens, then the car will pull over
to the side of the road. It's gotta be able to respond
to emergency vehicles. (light percussive music) What I wanna see here is, how
does it handle a parking lot where there's people
driving in unusual ways and possibly pedestrians walking around? (car humming) (tires squeak)
Whoa. That was a sudden stop. The car made a pretty hard stop there. I think it saw that guy
with a cart coming up on a pedestrian crosswalk. And one of the interesting things that the vehicle is always doing is not only seeing where things are and where they're going,
but also making predictions about where they're likely to go. So this car doesn't just
have one potential future. It's constantly imagining, "Well, he might cross at the crosswalk," or, "He might keep going,"
or, "He might turn left," and so it has to be prepared for all of those different options. And it even weights the options
of like how likely it thinks that he's gonna go on the crosswalk versus go straight versus turn. And you can see that with
the thickness of the line in the little simulated
graphic that they have. (seatbelt clicking)
Phew. A few years back, I think a
lot of people were talking about how autonomous
vehicles have to figure out who to hit in case of an accident, like do the pick the orphan or the nun? Should the car hit the
motorcyclist with the helmet on because his injuries might be less severe or should the car hit the motorcyclist who does not have a helmet on because he did not
properly protect himself? If cars were programmed to hit the motorcyclist with the helmet, that would mean that, in a way, it would become safer to
ride without a helmet. (whimsical music) But the reality is that 99%
of accidents aren't like that. Every year, around 1.3
million people are killed on the roads, almost all
of them due to human error. If autonomous cars can
reduce these fatalities, then the real moral dilemma is not getting them on the road sooner for fear we haven't worked
out exactly how they'll react to extremely unlikely
hypothetical scenarios. I think humans are becoming worse drivers because we're just so
prone to distraction. (light contemplative music) Think about the main
reasons why cars crash: because people are speeding, they're under the influence,
they're distracted. I mean, these sorts of problems, an autonomous vehicle would not have. You don't get a distracted driver. The ultimate question, right,
that everyone wants to know, that I want to know the answer to is, as these vehicles stand,
(car electronic beeping) are they better than the average human? Not than the best human, but
just like an average human. Like replacing some
random car on the street with one of these vehicles,
does that make the road safer? - Yes, it does. I think we would never
launch a rider-only service if we did not meet that
base safety framework. - If that's true, it
means like every vehicle that's not on the road is
kind of a worse situation, do you know what I mean?
- We are really working really hard to launch this in larger areas and new areas too, but we
need to have the experience to show the regulators
why we believe it's safer, and, for that, you need
to be driving miles, a number of miles that
you feel comfortable with, statistically speaking. - These vehicles have way more experience than any human driver because
they've now accumulated data over 20 million miles of
driving on public roads. If you were an average driver, you'd have to drive for a thousand years to accumulate that sort of experience. And all of that experience can be used to train the systems, to fix the software, and used across all the
vehicles in the fleet. In 2019, Waymo released
a study of its data, over 6.1 million miles
of automated driving in the Phoenix, Arizona metropolitan area. Of the 18 total accidents that
occurred during the study, none were serious enough to expect significant injury or death. In Waymo's Safety Report, they found some types of accidents have been completely eliminated by this autonomous driving system, like the car doesn't go off the road and it doesn't hit stationary objects. Humans, humans do those things. If you look at the eight
significant accidents that happened with Waymo vehicles over the six million miles of driving, all eight of them involve a human driver of another vehicle doing something stupid, like driving on the wrong side of the road or running a red light or going through a stop
sign or failing to yield or going 20 miles per
hour over the speed limit. There were three incidents
involving Waymo vehicles and pedestrians, but in all three, the Waymo vehicle was
stationary and the pedestrian or cyclist/skateboarder
ran into the vehicle. Waymo also takes some
of that real-world data and they put it into simulations
and they tweak it a bit. So they try adding like
a bicyclist going fast or going slow, or they make
the car turn faster or slower. So they change all these
parameters and variables, and they see what the software will do. And they've trained the software on an additional 20
billion miles of driving, not on the road but in the simulation, so that's a thousand times
more experience again. The question for me is, when is stepping inside an autonomous car gonna feel the same as
stepping inside an elevator? Because I think that
time may be coming sooner than you think. I like the idea of this technology, but, honestly, getting in the car, I wasn't quite sure how I would feel. I was a little bit uncertain, but once I saw it just
handles so confidently... Like driving is one of those things that I feel like you can't hide whether you're a good or bad driver. It's just like, "Oh, what's gonna happen when there's a parked car or
a cyclist or a pedestrian," and it just sort of handles
all those situations with such confidence and ease that I think I stopped thinking about it. - After they pass a couple
of your mental tests, you're like, "I'm good." I think, again, "I'll
be okay." (chuckling) - Yeah, yeah, I felt the same way. I think a lot of people
miss the bigger implications of what is achievable once fully autonomous
driving is commonplace. Riders with disabilities, seniors, and the blind can get around more easily. Transportation will get cheaper. Think of all the wasted value in the cars that spend over 95% of their time parked. We can regain a bunch
of time and feel happier because commuting and being
stuck in traffic sucks. We can reduce traffic because vehicles will have
better awareness of each other. You can imagine one day when all the cars are fully autonomous, they can execute a beautiful
ballet driving together, and when that time comes, we
can eliminate parking lots and add green spaces to our cities. And, most importantly, widespread adoption of autonomous cars could prevent tens of
thousands of fatalities in the U.S. alone. When do you think that
this will be a reality, but clearly it's coming, but when?
- Yeah. If you're talking about big cities, I'm hoping the next five years
will be really game changing. - [Derek] I'm excited to see it. - Me too, believe me. Believe me. I just don't want to
commute to work anymore. I would love to sit in the backseat, do my work on the way there and
on the way back. (chuckling) - [Derek] Or do something
fun, watch a movie. - Or sleep, yeah. (chuckling) (futuristic tones beeping) (frequency tone whistling)
Buses? You might come into contact with the poors
I mean yeah the tech is cool and there may be some use for them in the future but you don't need to be a genius to understand how inefficient using them as a means of mass transportation would be.
I think I spam-replied the comments 100 times to go watch not just bikes channel. Everyone should do it. start with new comments.
I hate how so many popular channels are embrasing this(Like CGP grey aswell) its very damaging and unhealthy.
Of course it's in Pheonix
Carless drivers > driverless cars
Comment on his video. I think he might read it. It would be great if we brought him into our fold.
βOh and btw this video is being sponsored by the people profiting from these things πβ
Yes, let's climb into the backseat of Christine rather than take fucking bus or train.