Reviews

Autonomy by Lawrence Burns

takealoadoff's review against another edition

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5.0

Thoroughly enjoyed this book. I saw Lawrence Burns speak on the concept of autonomy (the confluence of electric vehicles, self-driving technology, and transportation-as-a-service) and was intrigued enough to pick up the book.

Overall, it's an animated and engaging narrative of the major players who developed the world's first autonomous vehicles. I loved his stories about the DARPA 2004 challenge to build a vehicle that could cross the Mojave Desert without a human driver. He made a great point: that moment was a perfect example of how public funding can spur massive technological innovation, which ultimately led to private sector adoption and spurred economic growth.

All in all, recommended reading. And I'm looking forward to the near future where I can hop into my quiet, safe, autonomously driven vehicle. The future of transportation is looking bright, folks.

ncrabb's review

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4.0

This is a fascinating look at how autonomous vehicles got their start and a thought-provoking look at the future of such vehicles. I loved the human face the author puts on this story. His anecdotes about the early competitions to build a self-driving vehicle for DARPA gave the whole idea of autonomous vehicles a kind of life it wouldn't have had otherwise. He clearly has significant expertise in the area about which he wrote, and he left me with a lot to think about regarding the future. If he's right, my youngest grandson will never apply for or be tested to receive a driver's license. The same may be true for the child's older sister. What an incredibly changed world they will inherit.

barrysweezey's review against another edition

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I was at the Urban Challenge in 2007 (still have the T shirt). It was amazing standing next to the road watching cars and trucks go by with no one in them, including 32,000-pound TerraMax, which had to be deactivated before it took out a building. The MIT entry kept braking for shadows across the road.

One car was confused about something and came to a stop. Another car started going around it, and as soon as it started pulling in front, the stopped car decided to go, and there was a low speed collision. The race was paused and the cars were soon surrounded by an army of engineers who were relieved to find no damage. The cars were separated and allowed to continue.

I saw the cars handle four-way stops, driving in traffic with human drivers and parking in a lot. First and second place went to expected leaders Carnegie Mellon and Stanford, but third place went to Virginia Tech. Later I learned that elsewhere in the crowd were Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who soon started the Google self-driving car project.

barry_sweezey's review against another edition

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I was at the Urban Challenge in 2007 (still have the T shirt). It was amazing standing next to the road watching cars and trucks go by with no one in them, including 32,000-pound TerraMax, which had to be deactivated before it took out a building. The MIT entry kept braking for shadows across the road.

One car was confused about something and came to a stop. Another car started going around it, and as soon as it started pulling in front, the stopped car decided to go, and there was a low speed collision. The race was paused and the cars were soon surrounded by an army of engineers who were relieved to find no damage. The cars were separated and allowed to continue.

I saw the cars handle four-way stops, driving in traffic with human drivers and parking in a lot. First and second place went to expected leaders Carnegie Mellon and Stanford, but third place went to Virginia Tech. Later I learned that elsewhere in the crowd were Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who soon started the Google self-driving car project.

georgea_1234's review against another edition

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5.0

An insightful journey into the history of what will change daily travel in the coming decades. Less sci fi than an honest consideration of what the pros and cons of this technology are. Like technological disruption to music, shopping and movies, the changes will continue for some time. The author is someone with a background at GM and an advocate of the industry. The book will appeal to anyone wanting to learn more, although it is not trying to provide a skeptical perspective which I would have appreciated from time to time.
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