Myrna Peterson predicts self-driving vehicles will be a ticket out of isolation and loneliness for people like her, who live outside big cities and have disabilities that prevent them from driving.

Peterson, who has quadriplegia, is an enthusiastic participant in an unusual test of autonomous vehicles in this corner of northern Minnesota. She helped attract government funding to bring five self-driving vans to Grand Rapids, a city of 11,000 people in a region of pine and birch forests along the Mississippi River.

The project’s self-driving vans always have a human operator in the driver’s seat, poised to take over in complicated situations. But the computers are in control about 90% of the time, and they’ve given 5,000 rides since 2022 without any accidents, organizers say.

    • Drusas
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      711 months ago
      1. The all caps is obnoxious.
      2. That doesn’t help a quadriplegic who can’t get to the train station.
      • Adub
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        -111 months ago

        My brother in transit have you not heard Transit-oriented housing development?

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      … Or literally any other form of accessible public transportation. Anything. Something (other than ‘pods’).

      It seems like they almost work it out but at the last minute pivot straight back to cars again.