Google is teaching its self-driving cars to honk their horns. Can teaching the cars to flip the bird be far behind? In its monthly report on its self-driving car program, Google says it has started to ...
James Titcomb is The Telegraph's Technology Editor and has covered the tech industry for a decade from Silicon Valley and London. He can be reached at james.titcomb@telegraph.co.uk and on X at ...
When some people drive, laying on the horn is second nature. They honk for every possible perceived infraction even if there is no need. Those people are jerks and we all know it. There are those ...
Cars are Andrew's jam, as is strawberry. After spending years as a regular ol' car fanatic, he started working his way through the echelons of the automotive industry, starting out as social-media ...
Part of being a safe driver is knowing when to use a car horn and to what degree. It's a skill that's lost on many drivers, who instead use the horn as an outlet for their frustration at other ...
For some time Google's self-driving vehicles have been honking discreetly to their occupants in risky situations. But now that Google is satisfied with its "honking algorithms", the cars will honk out ...
Google is teaching its self driving cars to use the horn, but fortunately, they'll be better at it than most humans. Rather than using it to vent its frustrations at terrible drivers the company says ...