Stephen Lowry, with Harris Lowry Manton, LLP, spoke to us about the wave of the future - self-driving cars. When will all of this newfangled craziness happen, you ask? The answer is...before you know it. By 2020, it's estimated that there will be 10 million vehicles with self-driving capabilities. Some of this is already happening (looking at you with your auto parallel-parking cars).  Our streets won't be completely taken over by autonomous vehicles by 2020, but it's going to happen sooner than we think.  Some say they will be commonplace by 2025.
 
Stephen discussed the ups and downs of Tesla's driverless Autopilot system and the Google Car prototype - the Waymo.  Google has installed LIDAR equipment, in addition to cameras, to help sense nearby hazards like pedestrians, cyclists, other motorists, as well as road signs and traffic signals. It's still not perfect and has experienced some fatal accidents. Tesla has been receiving quite the backlash since Elon Musk isn't a fan of LIDAR - the laser sensor that most car and tech companies sees as a vital component for self-driving cars.
 
Stephen also talked about the ethical dilemma with Self-driving Car and the Three Laws of Robotics:
  1. A robot must not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey the order given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.
The ethical dilemma the autonomous vehicles face include the Trolley Problem, Tunnel Problem, and the Infinite Trolley Problem. It's really interesting - check the diagram here.  For example, are you gonna push a large man onto a trolley to help save five people? Hmmm, questioning all your moral principles or whether or not you're a jerk...the struggle
 
6 THINGS I LEARNED FROM RIDING IN A GOOGLE SELF-DRIVING CAR by The Oatmeal.  READ THIS!!! DO IT!!! ALL THE COOL KIDS WHO WILL ONE DAY BE RIDIN' OUT IN A SELF-DRIVING CAR NAMED BARRY ARE READING IT.