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Transportation

Uber's Hiring Plans Show Outlines of Self-Driving Car Project 45

itwbennett writes The most interesting people that Uber is now hiring aren't drivers: they're engineers. The mobile ride-hailing app has listed a slew of jobs at its new Advanced Technologies Center in Pittsburgh. In particular, Uber is looking for engineers in the areas of robotics, machine learning, communications, traffic simulation, vehicle testing, and software and hardware development.
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Uber's Hiring Plans Show Outlines of Self-Driving Car Project

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Why on earth are they running it out of Pittsburgh of all places? I could see a tech area like Silicon Valley, RTP, etc. or near where other automakers work like Detroit. But Pittsburgh?

    • by Stormy Dragon ( 800799 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @05:36PM (#49418401)

      Yeah, why would a robotics company want to be near Carnegie Mellon University?

    • by plopez ( 54068 )

      1) Good wages. I mean really good wages.
      2) Low housing costs
      3) Some really good unis in the area
      4) Brew pubs
      5) Go Steelers!
      6) For all you straight single young male professionals out there, a MUCH better male to female ratio.
      and best of all......

      No Californians! (or Texans)

      But seriously I interviewed for a job there and the more I investigated it, the more I liked it.

  • by Stormy Dragon ( 800799 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @05:34PM (#49418393)

    Welcome to jonny cab. Please state your destination?

    • Once you get rid of the drivers, then you're not providing a taxi service, but a car rental service.
      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        Once you get rid of the drivers, then you're not providing a taxi service, but a car rental service.

        There's a difference between being a driver and being a passenger.

      • by plopez ( 54068 )

        robots are people too you know. If a corporation can be a person so can a robot.

  • I think Uber is doing it right. Kudos to them for thinking ahead. Meanwhile, they should hire more lawyers too, to ensure they company will still be around to make use of the newly-hired engineers.
    • I think Uber is doing it right.

      Are they? Wouldn't it make more sense for them to just buy self-driving cars, or team up with someone like Google, or an automaker, rather than doing their own R&D?

      • Whether or not they want to build their own cars, I don't know, but what the hiring indicates is that they want to have and develop skills and knowledge in dealing with self-driving cars (i.e. the future). It would make short-term financial sense for them to buy self-driving cars from other manufacturers and then Uberfy the interface, but the caveat is that they will be giving this key supplier a lot of negotiating power, which could be detrimental to their long-term business. If instead they partner with a
  • Google was initially interested in helping Uber develop a global robotic car service, but announced a short while back that they were dumping that partnership in favor of developing their own service. And so I say Goog Luck to Uber; they're gonna need it/
  • by DrYak ( 748999 ) on Monday April 06, 2015 @05:47PM (#49418483) Homepage

    Question: How do you jump start research into car robotics when you're not Google and thus don't have a huge mass of knowledge about all the roads gathered by your google cars and google maps program ?

    Answer: You get a ton of hipster to drive for you, record their trajectories/behaviours (remember "god mode" ?) and use their knowledge as a starting point to populate your initial database.

    • Or you simply buy a few hundred and later a few thousand self driving cars. No god mode needed.

      • Or you simply buy a few hundred and later a few thousand self driving cars.

        The problem is that currently you can go to the nearest dealer and buy them.
        They don't exist yet. There are just prototypes being developed here and there.
        They need to be developed (which requires having a huge database to learn from).

        Also, the problem of buying car from another company (say Google if their robo car is the first to be mass produced), it that Uber would become dependant on Google's whim. If their future business model rely on a service powered by robo cars, it would a bit risky to entirely d

        • We have self driving cars since a decade.

          Not on the market but as working cars.

          There is no AI or databases to learn from involved.

          Well, limited AI in the picture analysis algorithms ofc.

          The point of Uber, apparently, is to beat others in the development of autonomous cars. Not to depend on anyone else. Make their own robo car business.

          Unless they can steal some know how somewhere that is impossible. I mean the beating. Even by hiring all the experts that have worked the previous decade for other car manufa

  • and some one get's hurt they point to the fine print and say your own your own.

    Just think of Sofia Liu.

    • Just think of Sofia Liu.

      Look, I am sorry the kid was killed, but although the driver worked for Uber, he was not doing so at the time. People claiming that Uber is responsible are basically saying "Hey, they are a corporation, and they can afford it, so therefore they must be guilty."

      • but the drivers own insurance said he was working for Uber at the time and we are not covering this and Uber tried to use fine print to get out it as well.

        Just wait a for auto drive that has parts pushed out to many different contractors and sub-contractors that when something bad happens they all point to each other when you are sitting back with you bills racking up as the courts are fighting over who will pay up.

  • "ride-hailing", not 'ride-sharing'
    Paid (taxi) drivers, vs some guy who can give you a ride to the airport.

    But yes...no reason Uber would not be looking into this. Other than maybe a dubious cashflow situation...
    • Not to mention the bad publicity they've been getting from some high profile incidents involving their drivers (allegedly) robbing or raping passengers.
  • I thought Uber's business strategy was to blame the driver for anything that went wrong, eg legal or insurance issues. But how will they blame the driver when the driver is their own AI?

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