For The First Time, Google Driverless Car At Fault In Crash

Google Autonomous Lexus

Mariordo, via Wikimedia Commons CC BY 2.0

Google Autonomous Lexus

Lexus RX450h retrofitted by Google for its driverless car fleet

This past Valentine’s Day, at the corner of El Camino Real and Castro Street in Mountain View, California, a Google autonomous car got into an altercation with a bus. Previously, human-driven cars have hit Google’s autonomous cars, but this appears to be the first incident in which an autonomous car is at fault for an accident.

The Google AV test driver saw the bus approaching in the left side mirror but believed the bus would stop or slow to allow the Google AV to continue. Approximately three seconds later, as the Google AV was reentering the center of the lane, it made contact with the side of the bus. The Google AV was operating in autonomous mode and traveling at less than 2 mph, and the bus was travelling at about 15 mph at the time of contact.

The Google AV sustained body damage to the left front fender, the left front wheel and one of its driver’s-side sensors. There were no injuries reported at the scene.

This is a familiar scenario for anyone who’s ever tried navigating around an obstacle in their lane, but couldn’t because of fast-flowing traffic in the lane next to them. The bus driver, like all cars in the lane adjacent to the Google car, likely had the right-of-way, though it’s reasonable to assume some courtesy would leave the lane open for a stuck car to pop in, get around an obstacle, and then get out.

According to a Google report set for release tomorrow obtained by The Verge human kindness is what the Google car was counting on, to let it merge into the lane. Instead, when the car attempted to drive around the obstacle it met commuter indifference, with a thud.

View the traffic report here.

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You Can Now Play Laser Tag With Your Smartphone

I can’t find a single person who hates laser tag. I’ve asked a bunch of people, and they all get excited about it. Whether it’s the fact that you get to point a fake gun at another human being with no remorse, or just an affinity for neon, laser tag is nearly universally regarded as awesome.

When I asked one coworker if there was any good laser tag around us, he said the closest place to play he knew was on Long Island. Others had no idea of venues near us in Manhattan, a place that undoubtedly has a laser tag course.

With Father.io, you can play laser tag anywhere. The park, around a neighborhood, indoors–the world is literally your game board.

The augmented reality smartphone game wants to bring laser tag into the 21st century. You look through your smartphone which uses the camera to show you the world overlaid with a floating arm with a gun, your health, ammo, and a map of players around you. There’s a little widget with infrared blasters that you have to attach to the front of your phone, which Father.io calls an Inceptor. It also uses GPS to locate your position in the world.

Dave Gershgorn/ Popular Science

Father.io is an augmented reality game that turns your world into a laser tag match.

There are two ways to play: either a typical game of laser tag with two predetermined teams, or a story mode where you can find and interact with 12 million points of interest around the world.

The basis of the story mode is standard dystopia–an A.I. gets a virus and now cybernetic humanoid machines are trying to exterminate humankind. Visiting real-life buildings like banks and hospitals can help your team gain points and influence, but there’s no evident shooting.

The Inceptor is the key to making the game work, and it may be Father.io’s fatal flaw. It’s both an infrared emitter that acts like your "gun", and a sensor that determines whether you’ve been shot. You connect it to your phone with Bluetooth, and it clips to your phone facing the direction you want to shoot. It fires about 50 feet, the upper limit for IR at this scale. The Inceptor is only needed to play standard laser tag games, and the story is mostly governed by GPS.

Dave Gershgorn/ Popular Science

Father.io’s Inceptors are tiny infrared modules needed to play the game.

However, its existence is a gamble that people are willing to pay $20-$25 on external hardware to essentially play an enhanced smartphone game. There’s a competitive aspect, and everyone loves laser tag, but this doesn’t turn your smartphone into anything that feels like a gun (nor should it if you’re running around in public), and part of the appeal of laser tag is the atmosphere.

Then again, it’s easy to see kids running around a neighborhood with these IR blasters and iPhones, shooting each other with the satisfying animation on screen.

Father.io launched its IndieGogo campaign today, and plans to ship Inceptors by summer 2016.

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A New Boeing Patent Describes Levitating 3D Printing

Via patent

Figure showing Boeing’s process for magnetically levitating a 3D printed object

Watching a 3D printer work can sometimes seem like magic–thin filaments slowly build up on top of a platform, turning into parts and figurines. Now, a patent published by aerospace company Boeing introduces an even more futuristic element: levitation.

With this method, the object prints while floating in midair thanks to magnets or acoustic waves. A "nugget" or base gets printed first out into space, and then a cadre of 3D printers add more and more of the printing material.

But why? Levitation is cool, yes, but it turns out there is also a practical purpose for a floating 3D printed object, at least according to Boeing’s patent. The levitating object can be manipulated and turned more so than an object stuck to a platform can be, and using many printheads at the same time would ostensibly speed up the process.

3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing is important to the aerospace industry and one estimate from 2015 suggests that Boeing itself is using 20,000 3D-printed parts. But that doesn’t necessarily mean that all the future factories will be filled with floating in-progress plane parts. As TechCrunch warns, the real-life version of this method may not exactly match what the patent lays out.

PatentYogi made a video to explain how it all works and you can watch it below:

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