tech

Honda develops automated valet parking service

2 Comments
By Casey Baseel

There’s no pleasure to be found in navigating through a crowded parking lot hunting for a space. That’s why Honda is looking to take this task off drivers’ hands with an automatic valet parking system.

Engineers at Honda are hard at work on a system that will let your car park itself, plus come pick you up when you’re ready to go home. Drivers simply pull up to a terminal, exit their vehicle, input the proper commands, and their car automatically slides into an empty spot in the lot.

The system is even able to park multiple cars at the same time, taking into account their relative positions in order to prevent collisions.

Honda’s self-parking cars can even detect and avoid objects that suddenly dart across their path, such as the rubber ball used in the demonstration.

The system, which Honda is hoping to have finished by 2020, works by combining data from the car’s rear-view camera with visuals from camera mounted in the parking lot, creating a map of the area and directing the car to empty spaces marked on the ground.

The system’s best feature, though, comes into play once you leave the store. By tapping the “call” button on the terminal’s screen, your car will dutifully pull up to the curb and pick you up, saving you the hassle of carrying your heavy bags without even asking for a tip.

The panel has also has a button marked “Emergency!” which the engineers in the video never talk about. While the most logical theory is that it immediately stops all cars controlled by the system, we’re keeping our fingers crossed that it actually sends your car back into the store to pick up the milk you forgot to buy.

Source: Diginfo

Read more stories from RocketNews24. -- Toyota’s new vehicle changes color, suggests destinations according to your mood -- The secret to creating world-class automobiles -- Nissan’s New Safety Technology Wrestles Control of the Wheel from Drivers Facing Doom

© RocketNews24

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.


2 Comments
Login to comment

The panel has also has a button marked “Emergency!” which the engineers in the video never talk about. While the most logical theory is that it immediately stops all cars controlled by the system, we’re keeping our fingers crossed that it actually sends your car back into the store to pick up the milk you forgot to buy.

I see the writer had an attempt at some humour.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

The panel has also has a button marked “Emergency!” which the engineers in the video never talk about. While the most logical theory is that it immediately stops all cars controlled by the system,

All it will take is one or two drivers like my mom, who slams her braking foot to the floor every time she perceives an apparent collision a half mile in the distance. These old biddies will pound that emergency button anytime another car is moving in the same lot as theirs. After repeated restarts of the system, either the "emergency" button will disappear or the lots will disappear as being to inefficient.

-1 ( +0 / -1 )

Login to leave a comment

Facebook users

Use your Facebook account to login or register with JapanToday. By doing so, you will also receive an email inviting you to receive our news alerts.

Facebook Connect

Login with your JapanToday account

User registration

Articles, Offers & Useful Resources

A mix of what's trending on our other sites