What's up everybody? Koiwire here with a special edition of CNN 10. Today we're taking a deep dive into the world of artificial intelligence and self-driving cars. Today we're going to Curiosity Lab in Peach Tree Corners, Georgia to experience this tech firsthand. This is my first time in a Whimo. Let's go. You could call this one of the most advanced smart cities in the world. Tomorrow's technologies being tested and created today. The color printer was invented here in Technology Park. The Haze modem, too. Now, autonomous or self-driving vehicles are being steered to new frontiers. Air package delivery systems via drones. Mobile delivery robots tested and perfected. Where are we? What is this place? I feel like I stepped into the future. >> This is Curiosity Lab. We are a nonprofit just inside the city of Peach Tree Corners. And what we do is we help companies test and deploy their technology on public infrastructure. So that meant always sounds super cool, but it is. I mean, think about all the stuff that public infrastructure entails, right? Roadways, intersections, even airspace. Um, a lot of different technologies work on those things. >> And that's very important because we're living at a time where we're seeing more and more of it, hearing more and more about it. They might be taxi cabs that are flying through this city. So how well all do you help companies prepare us for that type of future? >> Sure. So when it comes to an environment like what is the ideal environment for testing? So you always start in a closed environment, right? There's there's no things coming in in terms of variables. You want to make sure the product works. So in the case of a vehicle on a roadway, that would be like a closed track. But we also know that from there, how do you get into an urban environment? How do you get into a real city? And you've got to have that middle ground. We have a closed three mile loop inside a 500 acre ecosystem so that cars, technology, drones, whatever it is, can test in a real environment where there's real pedestrians, real cars, real people, real intersections. So you can start to get the data and learn how these technologies work in real time with real elements so that you know, hey, we're ready to get into the city. >> I just saw a robot fly by. I don't know what it was, but >> oh my gosh, I think it might have been Cheetah. She's a cute little thing. Basically, she's a helping hand essentially. She is a a robot that follows a subject in front of it. So, it's not a self-driving one. It's not like it's doing delivery, but it's more like, you know, a robotic dog that follows you everywhere. >> You don't need to carry a backpack anymore. >> It's exactly what it is. It's a rolling robotic backpack. You open up the uh vat inside of it, and you know, they have different inserts. I mean, you can make it follow you like a tailgate. Um, but, you know, it also increases accessibility for things like disabled folk or even elderly and, you know, walkable communities if you're at the airport and you need help carrying stuff. Um, so it's cool. The fun fact there is that its design was based off of the droids in Star Wars. So they're they're quite cute, I think. >> Now you're speaking my language. Where's my lightsaber? I feel cars whizzing behind me. So tell me what's happening here. What are we seeing? What are we learning from what we're seeing? >> Yeah, absolutely. So we talk about, you know, the roadway. Um that is a very loaded thing to think about. There's so many things going on at all different times on the roadway. And as drivers, you know, we learn to get used to these things. You learn when someone's going to cut in front of you. You learn how to interact with different lights and different signals and different signs. You know, what we're doing here is we're using uh cameras and we're putting analytics over those cameras to show you what's happening in here. So, um this can be a forum of AI, right? So, it could be doing things like object detection. As you can see here, it's looking at vehicle vehicle. It could clock a, you know, a bicyclist or a pedestrian, which we're seeing a couple pedestrians come right there. So, it says unknown and that's a part of testing, right? Is that, you know, it's still learning. It says person now as it's getting closer to the camera. >> Um, but that's part of it, right? Is there are times where a truck comes through and it and you know, it might say person and you're like, well, that's definitely not a person. But that's why you need the testing environment so they can train their AI models to do better. >> Okay. So, we've spoken about the cities, the roadways, the intersections of tomorrow. Also, there will be the cars of tomorrow that work better with that. And I understand there's a garage where we can maybe check out one of these cars. Put me to work. >> All right, let's do it. Let's go. >> The company testing out their fleet of autonomous vehicles at Curiosity Lab during our visit is called May Mobility. These cars use similar technology to the brands we may be familiar with like Whimo. But this company is particularly interested in making AVs that are more accessible for passengers who use wheelchairs, scooters, or need other accommodations. >> In order for an autonomous vehicle to work, you have to have a bunch of different technology, right? So, you've got to have the hardware, and I'll walk through that in a minute. And you have to have the software, which is pretty much the brains of the technology. So the AI component, you're using human-like reasoning, which is basically the software component, and combining it with all the things you're gathering from the hardware so that the technology can make thousands and thousands and thousands of scenarios and decisions in real time. >> Mhm. >> So you'll see here different technologies. A lot of people say this looks like a cup holder. It is not. It's actually technology. And you'll see cameras here and LAR sensors. We have a total of nine cameras all around the vehicle. And then we have five LARs and radars. The other big guy here, the top hat, is basically um our largest LAR. And that is able to look out further away so that we can see what's happening in real time. >> While autonomous vehicles are relatively new, lidar has actually been around for quite some time. It was developed in the 1960s and it was actually used on the Apollo space missions to map out the surface of the moon. It uses lasers, shoots them out everywhere to measure distances and create an incredibly accurate picture of an environment. Here's how it works. The system fires millions of laser pulses every second in every direction. They bounce off surrounding objects to create a detailed 3D picture of its surroundings. That includes everything from buildings to other cars, people, and animals. It's similar in a way to echolocation, the system used by bats, whales, and dolphins to navigate and to hunt prey. But this system swaps the sound waves for light. You may have seen the rapidly spinning mechanisms on some of these autonomous cars. Well, that allows them to have a 360° field of view to help eliminate blind spots and safely navigate the world around them. Pop quiz hot shot. Self-driving cars often use lidar to scan surroundings. What does lidar stand for? Light detection and ranging. Laser identification and radar. Light identification and response. Looking into dangers around the route. Answer is light detection and ranging. Lidar is a remote sensing method used to examine the surface of the earth. So what you want to do is you want to use a combination of historical data, right, which it's accumulated over time based on different locations. So for example, let's say you're in Georgia, hot weather, right? You're in Phoenix, Arizona, hot but dry weather, and you're in Michigan where you have snow. So, you want to be able to take all of those elements and have the vehicle learn from all the different weather conditions so that when it's a location, if we happen to get snow in Georgia this year, the vehicle will know what to do. >> But I think about, you know, my daughters when they're old enough to be going places, I think that I would feel comfortable with them being in a vehicle all to themselves. The tech is only going to get better, right? And you would think as there are more and more autonomous vehicles on the roadways that are now communicating with each other, they're like computer brains communicating with other drivers. And so you would think that would be even safer than kind of guessing and wondering what a human might do. >> There's a lot of um transparency and visibility into a vehicle. you have cameras everywhere and um so you you can see what's happening and so for them in a lot of ways they're probably a lot safer you know in the vehicle we all know that you know last year I think there were over 40,000 deaths in the US from um accidents road accidents it's things like you know falling asleep texting and driving intoxication so all of those things can happen you know with with your right for the future. So, and I would argue that for the future and maybe even today that these vehicles are for, you know, safe and hopefully that's their future. And then you've got to think too, there's others as well. I mean, you have kids, right? But there's um people with disabilities, great for them. And then, you know, people who are elderly, right? They can come in and use those vehicles. In um Minnesota, we have um one of our biggest groups of riders are seniors and the middle school kids because they >> not seniors in high school. >> No, senior citizens. Yes, that's senior middle schoolers and middle schoolers because you know a lot of times they don't have a way to get home um you know after after school activities and so this is a way for them to do it safely. >> What do you think? I want you to press pause for a moment. Discuss with your friends if a self-driving car service was widely available in your city or town. Maybe they already are. Would you use them? Would you trust AI over getting your own driver's license? What are the risks? What are the benefits? Thanks for taking a ride with me today on this special edition of CNN 10. I learned a lot today. I hope you did, too. Be kind, stay curious, and rise up.