Skip to main content

Self-driving freighter out of the picture as Uber dumps truck to focus on cars

Uber is walking away from self-driving trucks, Reuters reports. After taking a high-visibility leadership role in autonomous over-the-road cargo hauling with its 2016 purchase of self-driving truck startup Otto, the ridesharing company decided to tend to its roots, focusing on developing autonomous cars.

“We believe having our entire team’s energy and expertise focused on (self-driving cars) is the best path forward,” Eric Meyhofer, head of Uber’s Advanced Technologies Group, said in a statement.

More on big rig autonomy

Uber employees working on the self-driving trucks in San Francisco won’t lose their jobs because the company will switch them to other roles developing self-driving technology. If employees don’t choose to relocate to Pittsburgh, where the self-driving car work is centered, Uber will offer a separation package.

Uber Freight, a smartphone app-driven business that connects shippers with available truck drivers will continue. According to Uber, its truck-sharing business is growing rapidly. In the past 15 months, Uber Freight, which has offices in San Francisco and Chicago, has tripled its business and is available nationwide except for Hawaii and Alaska.

After Uber purchased Otto, which was founded by ex-Google employees, the self-driving rig carried a load of Budweiser 120 miles on Colorado highways. The successful strategic delivery gained all involved plenty of attention, but the acquisition began to turn sour later in the year when Waymo accused one of Otto’s founders and Uber of “patent infringement and stealing trade secrets,” Techcrunch reports. In an eventual settlement, Uber gave Waymo almost a quarter billion dollars worth of Uber equity and agreed not to use Waymo’s proprietary information in its self-driving development.

Uber appeared to be making progress with self-driving Volvo XC90s in Arizona, Pittsburgh, and Toronto when a test vehicle fatally struck a pedestrian in Tempe, Arizona in March. Tempe police suspect the Uber driving attendant in the Volvo may have been streaming a reality show when the accident occurred.

With resources previously allocated to developing self-driving trucks now added to the autonomous car program, Uber is about to restart the car testing in Pittsburgh, this time with human drivers in control and with increased monitoring, according to Techcrunch.

Editors' Recommendations

Bruce Brown
Digital Trends Contributing Editor Bruce Brown is a member of the Smart Homes and Commerce teams. Bruce uses smart devices…
We now know what the self-driving Apple Car might look like
A render that shows what the Apple Car might look like.

Thanks to several 3D concept renders, we now know what the future self-driving Apple Car might look like.

Vanarama, a British car-leasing company, took inspiration from other Apple products, as well as Apple patents, in order to accurately picture the rumored Apple car.

Read more
Tesla pulls latest Full Self-Driving beta less than a day after release
The view from a Tesla vehicle.

False collision warnings and other issues have prompted Tesla to pull the latest version of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) beta less than a day after rolling it out for some vehicle owners.

Tesla decided to temporarily roll back to version 10.2 of FSD on Sunday following reports from some drivers of false collision warnings, sudden braking without any apparent reason, and the disappearance of the Autosteer option, among other issues.

Read more
Waymo’s self-driving cars can’t get enough of one dead-end street
waymo

Waymo has been testing its self-driving cars in San Francisco for the last decade. But an apparent change to the vehicles’ routing has caused many of them to make a beeline for a dead-end street in a quiet part of the city, causing residents there to wonder what on earth is going on.

At CBS news crew recently visited the site -- 15th Avenue north of Lake Street in Richmond -- to see if it could work out why so many of Waymo’s autonomous cars are showing up, turning around, and then driving right out again.

Read more