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Google started the ball rolling with the whole driverless-car concept, and now other companies are preparing their versions. A France based robotics company called Induct has announced its intelligent, electric and driverless vehicle will be available. In the U.S. for now.

Dubbed the Navia shuttle, it can carry up to eight passengers, and it launched at CES 2014. It is the world's first commercially available self driving vehicle.

You won't be seeing this on major roads for now. It will most likely be used at public places like airports, college campuses and other areas where traffic is manageable.

Navia costs about $250,000 which is about 40% less than the cost for operating a similar shuttle with a driver.

The vehicle is intelligent and self sufficient and can be summon via smartphones like an Uber for driverless cars.

The vehicle isn't fast, it travels no faster than 12.5 mph. It will use onboard lasers and sensors to detect obstacles in its path and it doesn't rely on GPS to get from one point to another. It uses different camera viewpoints to allow depth mapping and 3D perception to make sure it steers clear of pedestrians and other road obstacles.

It's currently deployed in beta version at a technical college in Switzerland (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne) and a high-security industry park run by the United Kingdom Atomic energy Authority.

Want to get one for yourself? Contact the company here.