Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Google tests cars that drive themselves

Add as a preferred source on Google

The cars are using artificial-intelligence, as reported by The New York Times, to make themselves aware of obstcacles and respond as a normal driver would to road conditions.

The cars have always had a technician behind the wheel, in case the computer malfunctioned, but the test has had surprising results. Google drove seven cars for 1,000 miles with zero human assistance and 140,000 with occasional human intervention. There has been one accident — one of the test cars was rear-ended at a light.

Recommended Videos

As The New York Times reports, “Robot drivers react faster than humans, have 360-degree perception and do not get distracted, sleepy or intoxicated, the engineers argue. They speak in terms of lives saved and injuries avoided — more than 37,000 people died in car accidents in the United States in 2008. The engineers say the technology could double the capacity of roads by allowing cars to drive more safely while closer together. Because the robot cars would eventually be less likely to crash, they could be built lighter, reducing fuel consumption. But of course, to be truly safer, the cars must be far more reliable than, say, today’s personal computers, which crash on occasion and are frequently infected.”

The cars can be programmed to mimic our own driving styles. They can drive more safely or aggressively depending on what is input by the driver.

Google’s willingness to investigate future technologies is nothing new for the company. And while they may not have a clear business model in place for how to actually capitalize if this were to become public, it’s possible they could sell navigational software to compliment an autonomous vehicle.

Does this mean we’ll be seeing autonomously driven cars in the future? Right now it’s too early too say, but Google is committed to making the technology safe and pushing the boundaries of what man and machine can achieve.

Laura Khalil
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Laura is a tech reporter for Digital Trends, the editor of Dorkbyte and a science blogger for PBS. She's been named one of…
Topics
From Handhelds to Monitors, these were the biggest glow-ups at Computex 2026
I walked into Taipei expecting spec bumps and walked away convinced four entire categories had levelled up.
Biggest Glowups at Computex 2026

Every year, Computex promises the next big thing. Sometimes that means another processor with a few extra cores, a laptop that's 200 grams lighter, or a monitor that's somehow even faster than the one before it. But every now and then, a trade show surprises you not with a single product, but with an entire category that suddenly feels new again. That's exactly how Computex 2026 felt to me.

After spending days walking the show floor, trying products, talking to engineers, and inevitably getting lost between booths more times than I'd like to admit, one thing became crystal clear. The biggest stories weren't about incremental upgrades. They were about categories, finally shedding old compromises. Monitors became smarter, handhelds became more mature, creator laptops became more versatile, and ARM processors started looking like genuine powerhouses instead of niche alternatives.

Read more
Apple Intelligence 2.0: What the New AI Features Actually Mean
The new Apple Intelligence features point to one goal: fewer app-hops, fewer tiny chores, and a Siri that finally earns the spotlight.
Light, Lighting, Flare

“Apple Intelligence 2.0” isn’t Apple’s official name, but it’s a useful shorthand for where the company is going. Apple calls it the next generation of Apple Intelligence, with Siri AI as the most visible piece.

That’s a risky place to put the spotlight because Siri has baggage. For years, it's been the assistant people use for timers, weather, and arguments with a glowing orb that somehow heard every word except the important one.

Read more
I saw Nvidia RTX Spark in action, and Windows PCs may finally have their Apple Silicon Moment
Nvidia RTX Spark could kick start a new Windows PC era
NVIDIA RTX Spark Chipset Computex 2026

Windows laptops have been chasing the gold that Apple struck years ago with its M-series chips. Back in 2020, Apple revealed a new lineup of MacBooks powered by silicon that seemed generations ahead in efficiency, integration, and even performance. It was a system that was built around the hardware instead of merely running on top of it.

At Computex 2026, Nvidia RTX Spark looked like one of the most convincing responses that Windows has had in years. I got a tour of Nvidia’s showcase at the show, and Spark was easily one of the most interesting things I saw. During the demo, the company gave me a close-up look at the RTX Spark as it ran video edits, local AI agents, games, and other hefty workflows. And in each of these tests, it became apparent that this isn't just another laptop chip reveal.

Read more