Skip to main content

Ford’s driverless delivery vehicle actually has a driver

Miami: Postmates Teams Up With Ford Self-Driving Research Service | Sustainable Innovations | Ford

While we’re starting to here much talk about how the taxi industry could be one of the first to feel the impact of self-driving technology, it seems the food-delivery business could also be transformed by autonomous vehicles.

Ford is already at it, teaming up with on-demand delivery platform Postmates to test a meal-delivery system for folks in Miami.

But while the automaker continues to work with artificial intelligence company Argo A.I. to perfect the performance of its driverless vehicles, Ford is currently sending out self-driving research vans that are made to look like driverless cars. In other words, there’s a driver sitting behind the vehicle’s tinted windows, though the customers don’t necessarily know it.

It’s doing this because it wants to spend time getting to know how businesses and people interact with autonomous vehicles when they deliver goods, a process that it says will help it to hone the method of dispatch and collection.

For its own platform, the process begins after a customer orders a meal via an app. Once the food has been prepared, a restaurant worker places it inside the van. This is done by tapping a numerical code into a keypad fixed to the outside of the vehicle, which opens one of its lockers.

The driverless car then makes its way to the customer’s address. When it gets close, the customer receives a notification and code on their smartphone. Upon arrival, spoken instructions from speakers on the van offer guidance on what to do, and once the code is recognized, the appropriate locker lights up and slides open, enabling the customer to collect their order.

“Our Postmates pilot is currently underway in Miami and Miami Beach with more than 70 businesses participating, including local favorites like Coyo Taco,” the automaker’s Alexandra Ford English wrote in a blog post.

Commenting on the van being used in the pilot scheme, she added: “This is our first self-driving research vehicle modified specifically to test a variety of interfaces — the touch screen, the locker system, the external audio system — to inform the design of our purpose-built self-driving vehicle that’s scheduled to arrive in 2021.”

Ford has said before that it’s keen to launch an autonomous delivery service “at scale” in the same year, using a vehicle that it said could be modified to “carry people and cargo interchangeably,” suggesting it has ridesharing services in its sights, too.

That would put it up against the likes of Volvo and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, who have inked deals to sell their vehicles to Uber and Waymo, respectively. Other automakers, General Motors and Renault-Nissan among them, have also been forging partnerships as they develop their own self-driving cars.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Robotaxi firm Cruise ordered to halve fleet following incidents
A Cruise autonomous car.

Autonomous car company Cruise has been told by regulators to halve its robotaxi fleet in San Francisco following a crash with a fire truck on Thursday in which the driverless car's passenger suffered minor injuries.

The regulator -- the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) -- said that it’s looking into “recent concerning incidents” involving self-driving Cruise cars operating on the city’s public roads.

Read more
An autonomous car in San Francisco got stuck in wet concrete
A Cruise autonomous car.

A self-driving car operated by General Motors-backed Cruise got stuck on Tuesday when it drove into a patch of wet concrete.

The incident happened in San Francisco and occurred just days after California's Public Utilities Commission made a landmark decision when it voted to allow autonomous-car companies Cruise and Waymo to expand their paid ridesharing services in the city to all hours of the day instead of just quieter periods.

Read more
Waymo taps the brakes on its autonomous-trucking project
A Waymo autonomous trick undergoing testing on a highway.

Six years after launching its autonomous-truck program, Waymo has said it’s decided to focus more on developing its ridesharing ambitions using its self-driving cars and minivans.

The California-based, Alphabet-owned company said its decision to effectively put autonomous trucking on the back burner is down to the “tremendous momentum and substantial commercial opportunity” that it’s seeing with the pilot ridesharing service it launched in Arizona in 2018 before taking it to several other states. Customers involved in the program can use an app to call a Waymo driverless car in the same way they would book an Uber.

Read more