<p>Crowds of techies will descend on Las Vegas this week for the annual CES technology mega-show, but one innovation may again fall short of long-held hopes: driverless cars.</p>.<p>Autonomous vehicles have long been pitched as the new dawn of transportation and the world's biggest tech companies have poured billions of dollars into being ready.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/ces-gadgets-take-aim-at-snoring-pee-and-even-surgery-1177794.html" target="_blank">CES gadgets take aim at snoring, pee and even surgery</a></strong></p>.<p>Despite steady advances, however, robo-travel has yet to take over the open roads, with even Elon Musk's best-selling Teslas requiring "a fully attentive driver", despite the billionaire's assurances his cars will soon be autonomous.</p>.<p>Waymo, a subsidiary of Google-parent Alphabet, has been offering driverless rides to the general public in Phoenix, Arizona, since 2020, but on very defined roads.</p>.<p>Cruise, a unit of General Motors, in June was the first to get approval to carry paying passengers in robo-taxis in San Francisco, a hilly city with more complicated traffic patterns, but initially only at night and within a limited zone.</p>.<p>In Las Vegas - where close to 100,000 convention goers were expected for the CES expo - unmanned Ubers began hitting the streets last month in a venture with the company Motional, but always with a human on board, just in case.</p>.<p>"Any company that removes its safety drivers, that is a big deal," said Bryant Walker Smith, a law professor who specializes in autonomous vehicles at the University of South Carolina.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/ces-2023-samsung-shows-off-flex-hybrid-oled-mobile-display-1177760.html" target="_blank">CES 2023: Samsung shows off Flex Hybrid OLED mobile display</a></strong></p>.<p>Several incidents with Cruise's vehicles have been reported and the US road safety agency (NHTSA) has opened an investigation.</p>.<p>For experts, the software will be perfected over time and the ubiquity of driverless cars is only a matter of time.</p>.<p>"The real big question going forward is scalability. How fast does it take for a company to replicate in another city like Los Angeles, like Minneapolis where it snows a lot. Are you reinventing the wheel every time or does it get easier?" said Smith.</p>.<p>While many automakers are working on autonomous driving, others have scaled back their ambitions and focused on assistance tools such as speed control, lane changing or parking assistance.</p>.<p>US auto giant Ford decided in October to sell its stakes in the autonomous driving company Argo AI, saying it preferred to prioritize less ambitious technologies.</p>.<p>Tesla CEO Musk has regularly promised that a fully autonomous vehicle is just around the corner, but his cars still only feature "driving assistance" and not full autonomy that would allow drivers to look away from the road.</p>
<p>Crowds of techies will descend on Las Vegas this week for the annual CES technology mega-show, but one innovation may again fall short of long-held hopes: driverless cars.</p>.<p>Autonomous vehicles have long been pitched as the new dawn of transportation and the world's biggest tech companies have poured billions of dollars into being ready.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/ces-gadgets-take-aim-at-snoring-pee-and-even-surgery-1177794.html" target="_blank">CES gadgets take aim at snoring, pee and even surgery</a></strong></p>.<p>Despite steady advances, however, robo-travel has yet to take over the open roads, with even Elon Musk's best-selling Teslas requiring "a fully attentive driver", despite the billionaire's assurances his cars will soon be autonomous.</p>.<p>Waymo, a subsidiary of Google-parent Alphabet, has been offering driverless rides to the general public in Phoenix, Arizona, since 2020, but on very defined roads.</p>.<p>Cruise, a unit of General Motors, in June was the first to get approval to carry paying passengers in robo-taxis in San Francisco, a hilly city with more complicated traffic patterns, but initially only at night and within a limited zone.</p>.<p>In Las Vegas - where close to 100,000 convention goers were expected for the CES expo - unmanned Ubers began hitting the streets last month in a venture with the company Motional, but always with a human on board, just in case.</p>.<p>"Any company that removes its safety drivers, that is a big deal," said Bryant Walker Smith, a law professor who specializes in autonomous vehicles at the University of South Carolina.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/technology/ces-2023-samsung-shows-off-flex-hybrid-oled-mobile-display-1177760.html" target="_blank">CES 2023: Samsung shows off Flex Hybrid OLED mobile display</a></strong></p>.<p>Several incidents with Cruise's vehicles have been reported and the US road safety agency (NHTSA) has opened an investigation.</p>.<p>For experts, the software will be perfected over time and the ubiquity of driverless cars is only a matter of time.</p>.<p>"The real big question going forward is scalability. How fast does it take for a company to replicate in another city like Los Angeles, like Minneapolis where it snows a lot. Are you reinventing the wheel every time or does it get easier?" said Smith.</p>.<p>While many automakers are working on autonomous driving, others have scaled back their ambitions and focused on assistance tools such as speed control, lane changing or parking assistance.</p>.<p>US auto giant Ford decided in October to sell its stakes in the autonomous driving company Argo AI, saying it preferred to prioritize less ambitious technologies.</p>.<p>Tesla CEO Musk has regularly promised that a fully autonomous vehicle is just around the corner, but his cars still only feature "driving assistance" and not full autonomy that would allow drivers to look away from the road.</p>