Self-driving cars are Action Archivesalmost too observant, taking in information from light-emitting LiDAR sensors, radar equipment, microphones, and cameras. But all the information a car gleans from the outside world still has to be wrangled to be useful.
Cruise's fleet of self-driving cars testing in San Francisco take in petabytes of data each month from its sensor suite on the road and in simulation, similar to other configurations other self-driving car companies have on autonomous vehicles. A petabyte is a million gigabytes, by the way.
So to corral all this information, Cruise -- through a hackathon event -- created an open-source data visualization platform called Webviz. Other autonomous vehicle companies offer different aspects of the self-driving process, like Baidu's Apollo open-source autonomous driving platform. Now Cruise is opening up its application for anyone who works with robotics.
With Webviz, engineers can understand the autonomous vehicle data and analyze what the cars are doing out in the streets and help decide how the cars should drive or approach different situations. Even though there are robo-car specific aspects, Cruise says anyone in the robotics community can use the program.
So someone who works with a delivery bot or a humanoid mimicking human movement can plug in data inputs from their cameras and sensors and lay it out and visualize it for further analysis and interpretation, just like autonomous vehicle teams do.
Cruise says it uses the platform to watch simulations live or to examine past rides from an older data set. Here's a live demo to see how the data is displayed.
Cruise previously opened up its 2D and 3D scene rendering library, Worldview, and Uber made its tool Autonomous Visualization System publicly available around the same time back in February to turn self-driving data into 3D scenes.
SEE ALSO: Waymo defends laser sensors after Elon Musk drags themAnyone who wants to start looking through their robotics data can now go to and use Webviz.
Topics Self-Driving Cars
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best power station deal: Save $170 on Anker 535 Portable Power Station
Mylan to pay $465 million over Medicaid pricing of EpiPen
It's [cyber] war: U.S. officially blames Russia for recent hacks
SNL will feature Emily Blunt, Tom Hanks, Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga
In the House of a Thousand Likes
Indian police arrest 70 conmen who scammed thousands of Americans posing as IRS officials
Resourceful stork hides from Hurricane Matthew in zoo bathroom
New York Comic Con is even stranger when 'Stranger Things' cosplay is involved
Crocheted 'E.T.' suit is a Halloween costume to phone home about
A Coalition Government of the Heart
Republicans condemn Trump comments because of their 'wives and daughters'
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。