Human driver at fault for Apple’s first self-driving car crash

TwitterFacebook

The first car crash experienced by Apple’s fleet of self-driving vehicles happened just last week and it was apparently caused by a human driver — not Apple’s own technology.

According to a DMV report from the state of California obtained by The Verge, one of Apple’s self-driving Lexus SUVs was rear-ended by a human-operated Nissan Leaf on Aug. 24 in Sunnyvale. No injuries were reported, but both vehicles were damaged.

SEE ALSO: Don’t believe the naysayers: Self-driving cars are already here in many ways

Apple’s vehicle was merging onto the Lawrence Expressway and was moving at less than 1 mph, according to the report, and the Nissan was moving at 15 mph when it hit the self-driving car. The self-driving car’s speed seems quite slow for merging onto a high-speed expressway, but details are sparse in the report so we don’t know for sure if its speed was reasonable — the only information we get is that the vehicle was “waiting for a safe gap to complete the merge” when it was struck. Read more…

More about Apple, Autonomous Vehicles, Tech, Transportation, and Big Tech Companies

Comments are closed.

Post Navigation