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Mercedes-Benz is the first automaker to gain approval to sell a Level 3 automated driving system in the United States; the first customer-owned S-Class and EQS sedans in California and Nevada ...
Mercedes-Benz is the first to bring Level 3 automated driving to the US The company’s Drive Pilot system is approved for use in Nevada, but only at speeds up to 40 mph. You can play Tetris while ...
But wait, you’re saying, how can this new Mercedes-Benz system really be the first legally approved autonomous driving system? What about Tesla’s Full Self-Driving feature?
Mercedes-Benz announced that Drive Pilot, its SAE Level-3 automated driving system, will support speeds of up to 95 kph (59 mph) on German highways instead of 65 kph (40 mph) currently.
Mercedes-Benz said its cars equipped with its automated driving system will be upgraded to drive autonomously at up to 95 kilometres per hour on German motorways in certain conditions.
Drive Pilot, the world’s first legally approved Level 3 autonomous driving system, made its debut in 2022. But the U.S. can't have it yet.
Mercedes-Benz is increasing the top speed allowed while using it conditionally automated Drive Pilot system. The system will now support speeds up to 95km/h.
Nuro is shifting its efforts away from developing an automated delivery vehicle to licensing its automated driving system software ...
Drive Pilot, the world’s first legally approved Level 3 autonomous driving system, made its debut in 2022. Its operating parameters were tightly controlled, limited to traffic traveling at no more ...