Skip to main content

New Apple self-driving car patent could turn Siri into your personal chauffeur

Apple wants to patent a new technology that would allow you to use voice commands to tell your self-driving car where you want to go, with the car doing the navigation, driving, and parking for you. The end result would be a Siri-like system for controlling your self-driving car.

Recommended Videos

The patent application, titled “Guidance of Autonomous Vehicles in Destination Vicinities Using Intent Signals,” was initially filed on August 2 of last year, and made public on Thursday, January 23. The technology described in the patent is meant to direct self-driving vehicles to a destination by using voice commands, gestures, or touchscreens. 

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The voice command technology is particularly impressive. You would be able to tell your car where you want to go and it would be able to take you there. The instructions don’t even have to be that specific — if you tell the car you want Indian food, it would find the nearest Indian restaurant, drive you there, and park. 

The proposed Apple tech can even figure out the optimal place to park based on the product you’re looking to buy.

“For example, if the individual states, ‘I’d like to buy some plants for my garden,’ in the vicinity of a large retail store, the navigation manager [as the technology is described] may determine that the vehicle should preferably be parked near an entrance marked ‘gardening’ or ‘gardening supplies,’” the patent reads. 

An example of Apple's navigation manager in action.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

In another scenario, the patent describes a situation where you simply say, “I would like some coffee,” and the “navigation manager” would select a coffee shop based on proximity, coffee prices, or the individual’s history of coffee shops.

Aside from voice-control, the patent says the technology could also read gestures, gazes, or touch-based intent signals using sensor devices.

An example of the gesture-based technology is where the vehicle’s occupant could use their phone to point to a specific parking spot, which the car would read and then park in that exact spot. 

Apple's patent for self-driving car technology.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Whether Apple plans on carrying out this self-driving technology itself in an Apple-designed car or merely selling the patent to someone else isn’t made clear in the patent’s documents. The tools could possibly be integrated into Apple’s CarPlay, which already has Siri integration and is built into many different vehicles, though they’d need advanced self-driving capabilities for it to work. We reached out to Apple for comment on this patent and will update this story when we hear back.

This isn’t Apple’s first self-driving patent. In November, Apple was granted a patent that is meant to eliminate a car’s blind spots within both human-controlled and autonomous driving modes. 

There’s also some facial-recognition technology involved, with a camera mounted on the windshield facing toward the driver that would be able to detect the driver’s face and facial features. By reading the driver’s face, the side mirrors would be able to retract or extend. 

Rumors have previously swirled around that Apple is interested in building a car. With more automotive patents, it looks like Apple could indeed be inching its way into the automotive market. 

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Apple’s car-building division reportedly focusing on autonomous driving
apple car release date price specs interior news 3 970x647 c 720x720

Apple's on-again, off-again entry into the automotive industry is the subject of a great many rumors. Nothing is official yet, Cupertino is famously secretive, but a recent report suggests that the tech giant's Project Titan division is now hoping to master autonomous driving.

Citing anonymous insiders, Bloomberg reported that Apple has shifted its car-building project into high gear. We mean that metaphorically: the vehicle will allegedly be entirely electric, meaning it likely won't have gears to shift, and the development team hopes to integrate a high degree of automated technology into the platform. While numerous companies from the car and tech industries are rushing to make autonomous driving a reality, nearly all agree that a long list of legal and technological hurdles stand in the way of a widespread release.

Read more
Tesla pulls latest Full Self-Driving beta less than a day after release
The view from a Tesla vehicle.

False collision warnings and other issues have prompted Tesla to pull the latest version of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) beta less than a day after rolling it out for some vehicle owners.

Tesla decided to temporarily roll back to version 10.2 of FSD on Sunday following reports from some drivers of false collision warnings, sudden braking without any apparent reason, and the disappearance of the Autosteer option, among other issues.

Read more
Waymo’s self-driving cars can’t get enough of one dead-end street
waymo

Waymo has been testing its self-driving cars in San Francisco for the last decade. But an apparent change to the vehicles’ routing has caused many of them to make a beeline for a dead-end street in a quiet part of the city, causing residents there to wonder what on earth is going on.

At CBS news crew recently visited the site -- 15th Avenue north of Lake Street in Richmond -- to see if it could work out why so many of Waymo’s autonomous cars are showing up, turning around, and then driving right out again.

Read more