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Cars that can drive themselves, like the fictional supercar Kitt in television show Knight Rider, will be commonplace in less than 20 years.
US researchers say vehicles equipped with GPS positioning and artifical intelligence will be safer on the roads than those driven by humans.
It means the days of yelling at the idiot roadhog in front of you are numbered.
Driverless cars will be able to predict the actions of other vehicles and negotiate busy city centre traffic.
Researchers from Stanford University in California have already developed a vehicle they called "Stanley".
It used sensors, lasers, cameras and on-board computers to navigate a 132-mile course through the Nevada desert.
Now they are designing "Junior", a modified VW Passat that will be able to steer itself through a busy city.
Modern cars are already stuffed full of robot-like gadgets to help deal with hazards.
Cruise control, lane-departure warnings, GPS, blind-spot sensors and cameras to help you parallel park are commonplace.
Boffins believe it is a relatively small step to link all the technology and hand control of your car over to the computer.
"By 2030 we should be able to deploy this technology on the open highway, and reliability will exceed that of humans by orders of magnitude," said Professor Sebastien Thrun.
http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,91059-1252186,00.html