Normal view
The Evolving (and Inexact) Science of Fleeing a Wildfire
Can Your Car Be Your Friend?
- Latest Tech News from WIRED
- Tesla's Annual Sales Dropped for the First Timeโbut the EV Industry Keeps Growing
Tesla's Annual Sales Dropped for the First Timeโbut the EV Industry Keeps Growing
Electric Vehicle Charging Is Going to Get Political
Audiโs Rebrand in China Points to Bigger Changes in the Auto Industry
General Motors Cuts Funding to Cruise, Nixing Its Robotaxi Plan
Emergency Vehicle Lights Can Screw Up a Car's Automated Driving System
- Latest Tech News from WIRED
- Parallel Parking Is Stressful. Most Drivers Still Wonโt Let the Robots Take Over
Parallel Parking Is Stressful. Most Drivers Still Wonโt Let the Robots Take Over
The EV Buyerโs Guide to an Uncertain Future
- Latest Tech News from Ars Technica
- Automatic braking systems save lives. Now theyโll need to work at 62 mph.
Automatic braking systems save lives. Now theyโll need to work at 62 mph.
The world is full of feel-bad news. Hereโs something to feel good about: Automatic emergency braking is one of the great car safety-tech success stories.
Auto-braking systems, called AEB for short, use sensors including cameras, radar, and lidar to sense when a crash is about to happen and warn driversโthen automatically apply the brakes if drivers donโt respond. Itโs a handy thing to have in those vital few moments before your car careens into the back of another. One industry group estimates that US automakers' move to install AEB on most carsโsomething they did voluntarily, in cooperation with road safety advocatesโwill prevent 42,000 crashes and 20,000 injuries by 2025.
A new report from AAA finds these emergency braking systems are getting even betterโand challenges automakers to perfect them at even higher speeds.