Baidu Could Beat Google in Self-Driving Cars with a Totally Google Move


By building the Android of autonomous vehicles, Baidu thinks it will make them smarter and safer.

It’s a damp evening in early January, and I’m riding shotgun in a Lincoln MKZ hybrid as it traverses the dark streets of Sunnyvale, California. Traffic is light, even though it’s rush hour on a Thursday, so we take twists and turns at a good clip. It would be a largely unremarkable ride, if not for the fact that the guy in the driver’s seat doesn’t have his hands on the wheel. Traveling in Baidu’s self-driving car is comfortingly boring. The car, which ran the newest version of Baidu’s Apollo self-driving software, zipped along as the speed limit rose from 25 to 35 miles per hour, slowed down with balletic grace as we approached stop lights, and always—always—used its blinkers to signal turns.
Baidu, China’s giant search company, is a relative newcomer to the fast-growing autonomous-vehicle market, having begun work on its self-driving cars only about five years ago. Google started working on its self-driving-car project (now known as its Waymo business) back in 2009, and since then a number of tech companies and car makers have also invested heavily in the technology.
In an effort to catch up quickly, and raise China’s profile as an AI innovation center, Baidu is eschewing the secrecy that normally surrounds self-driving cars: as Google did with its Android smartphone operating system, it’s offering Apollo free to anyone who wants to use it.
Apollo 1.0 was released in July, and Baidu started testing Apollo-running cars on public roads in late 2017. Baidu hopes companies that use Apollo—it has 90 partners so far, including car makers like Lincoln owner Ford, car-component makers like Continental, and chip makers like Nvidia—will then contribute data that it can use.

“Autonomous driving is a once-in-a-century technology to make the world better,” Wang says.
Despite this optimism, Baidu, like other companies chasing autonomous dreams, is facing some very real obstacles. There’s still work to be done in perception, as Wang acknowledges, both in understanding what’s around the vehicle—cars, cyclists, pedestrians—and in predicting what may happen next.
I experienced this firsthand during my ride. At one point, the car suddenly slowed down in anticipation that a driver might pull out in front of it (which didn’t happen).
One obvious challenge: when multiple people using different forms of transportation approach a four-way stop at the same time. Wang says Baidu’s self-driving vehicles will respond “on the polite side” when encountering a human at a stop sign and act cautiously around cyclists to calculate enough space to make room for them on the road; beyond that, he suggests, the car may somehow signal that someone else should go first at an intersection.
“There’s still a ways to go,” he says. “When we’re driving around Sunnyvale, we’re not talking about San Francisco, or even Beijing.”




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