Saturday, October 08, 2022
SmartDrivingCar.com/10.36-TheFuture-100822
36th edition of the 10th year of SmartDrivingCars eLetter
The Present and Future of Autonomous Vehicle Technology, Economics, and Policy
Media briefing and discussion examining where autonomous vehicle technology stands and is headed, the socioeconomic implications of those technologies, and the role public policy and journalism play in shaping the future.
Who
- Clifford Winston, Senior Fellow in Economic Studies, Brookings Institution
- Marc Scribner, Senior Transportation Policy Analyst, Reason Foundation
- Alain Kornhauser, Professor and PAVE Faculty Chair, Princeton University Moderated by: Fred Fishkin, Producer, Techstination
What
You’re invited to join the Brookings Institution, Princeton Autonomous Vehicle Engineering, and Reason Foundation for a conversation examining autonomous vehicle technology—where it stands and is headed, the socioeconomic implications of those technologies, and the role public policy and regulation should play in the future….
Following their presentations, the panelists will answer questions from reporters.
Where
Zoom. RSVP required. If you cannot attend this briefing, you can register and watch the recording at your convenience.
Contact
Chris Mitchell
Director of Communications
Reason Foundation
(310) 367-6109
SmartDrivingCars ZoomCast 286 /PodCast 286
F. Fishkin, Oct. 9, “The biggest take-away from Tesla’s 2022 AI Day? Princeton’s Alain Kornhauser says it’s the massive compute power. Why? Join Alain and co-host Fred Fishkin for episode 286 of Smart Driving Cars. Plus Kodiak Robotics, Mobileye, Uber, Motional and an upcoming webinar on The Present and Future of Autonomous Vehicle Technology. “
Techstination
fishkin@techstination.com
732-928-4691
Technical support provided by:
The SmartDrivingCars eLetter, Pod-Casts, Zoom-Casts and Zoom-inars are made possible in part by support from the Smart Transportation and Technology ETF, symbol MOTO. For more information: www.motoetf.com. Most funding is supplied by Princeton University’s Department of Operations Research & Financial Engineering and Princeton Autonomous Vehicle Engineering (PAVE) research laboratory as part of its research dissemination initiative
Tesla AI Day 2022
Tesla Staff, Sept. 30, “Streamed live…” Read more Hmmmm… I’m not much of a fan of humanoids so you may skip the first hour; however, starting @ 0:58:00 – FSD Intro, the next hour and a half is substantive and a must watch. My takeaway remains driverless “everywhere” is so enormously challenging that the near-term opportunity (next 10 years) to sell such a vehicle to a consumer is simply unthinkable. The terms & conditions would need to be so onerous making the total addressable market essentially null.
That said, I suspect that there exist some, possibly many, societally beneficial Operational Design Domains (ODD), where “FSD 69.2.2” or near term releases can deliver safe driverless mobility. This deployment strategy is what I with the technical support of CARTS, Inc. have decided to focus on. Alain
The Long Road to Driverless Trucks
C. Metz, Sept. 28, In March, a self-driving eighteen-wheeler spent more than five straight days hauling goods between Dallas and Atlanta. Running around the clock, it traveled more than 6,300 miles, making four round trips and delivering eight loads of freight.
The result of a partnership between Kodiak Robotics, a self-driving start-up, and U.S. Xpress, a traditional trucking company, this five-day drive demonstrated the enormous potential of autonomous trucks. A traditional truck, whose lone driver must stop and rest each day, would need more than 10 days to deliver the same freight.
But the drive also showed that the technology is not yet ready to realize its potential. Each day, Kodiak rotated a new team of specialists into the cab of its truck, so that someone could take control of the vehicle if anything went wrong. These “safety drivers” grabbed the wheel multiple times…..” Read more Hmmmm… These “safety drivers” grabbed the wheel multiple times. Not to be a nay sayer, but for this technology to pay for itself (and more, if someone s going to buy it and use it) it can’t “ever” need a safety driver to grab the wheel (or hit the brakes). This is an enormous hurdle which is what makes this technology so challenging. It has to really work. The challenge to those working on this is that they are going to need to be at least as good as the FSD that Tesla will likely put on Tesla Trucks. That is an enormous competitor. Alain
Tesla now has 160,000 customers running its Full Self Driving beta
A. Hawkins, Oct. 1, “Tesla’s Optimus robot prototype was not the only thing the company shared on Friday evening during its AI Day presentation. Autopilot director Ashok Elluswamy took the stage during Tesla’s AI day to talk about how the company’s Full Self Driving software has improved. He revealed that there are now 160,000 customers running the beta software, compared to 2,000 from this time last year.
In total, Tesla says there have been 35 software releases of FSD. In a Q&A at the end of the presentation, Musk made another prediction — he’s made a few before — that the technology would be ready for a worldwide rollout by the end of this year but acknowledged the regulatory and testing hurdles that remained before that happens…..” Read more Hmmmm… What has impressed me is the infrastructure that Tesla has amassed in the last year to “solve” this problem is, to me, very impressive. More importantly, it may well be that the infrastructure is actually necessary in order to “solve” this problem. If so, many of the competitors may have a lot of catching up to do. And only MobilEye may have “160,000” customers crowd sourcing data for them.
Again, if solving this problem requires this amount of effort, then we may be down to only a handful of potential winners. Alain
5x Speed – ZERO Intervention Dirt Road, Night, Light Rain Drive FSD Beta 10.69.2.3
Dirty Tesla, Oct. 8, “…” Read more Hmmmm…Watch also… FSD Beta Dominates Downtown with Tesla Update 10.69.2.3… My view is FSD Beta 10.69.2.3 exhibits substantially better driver capability and manners than Dirty Tesla. Alain
Mobileye IPO warns of potential potholes in the road to autonomous driving
J. Trop, Oct 5, “Mobileye, Intel’s automated driving division, filed Friday for what is expected to be the year’s largest IPO, but its success is far from guaranteed.
The Israeli company, acquired by Intel five years ago for $15.3 billion, touts a broad vision: An autonomous future “where congestion is seen only in history books.” But its S-1 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission underscores its precarious position in the ever-evolving self-driving vehicle industry.
Founded in 1999, Mobileye has benefited from its first-mover advantage, supplying automakers with computer vision technology to power their advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS). Now, as Mobileye expands its business model, it faces a proliferating number of rivals — from every side — in the wild and woolly world of automated vehicle technology.
The company’s list of competitors in its S-1 extends beyond the “Tier 1” suppliers in its core business to now include robotaxi developers like Argo AI, Aurora, Auto X, Baidu, Cruise, Momenta, Motional, Waymo and Zoox, as well as what it describes as “consumer AV” competitors Apple, Sony and former customer Tesla.
TechCrunch pored through the S-1 to identify the speed bumps and bright spots in its pursuit to dominate autonomous driving….” Read more Hmmmm…I encourage you to read the S-1 yourself. Alain
Sept 30, “…We believe that our industry-leading technology platform, built upon over 20 years of research, development, data collection and validation, and purpose-built software and hardware design, gives us a differentiated ability to not only deliver excellent safety ratings and maintain a leadership position with our ADAS solutions, but also to make the mass deployment of autonomous driving solutions a reality. We also believe that the breadth of our solutions, combined with our global customer base, represents a significant market opportunity for us. Our platform is modular by design, and it is highly customizable, which allows our customers to benefit from our cutting-edge, verified, and validated core ADAS capabilities, while enabling our customers to augment and differentiate their offerings. We estimate the current total addressable market (“TAM”) to be approximately $16 billion, composed entirely of selected ADAS market opportunities. We expect the near-term TAM to be approximately $40 billion and the long-term TAM to be approximately $480 billion, as the value of ADAS functionality increases and as Autonomous Vehicle (“AV”) deployment, both in consumer-owned vehicles and fleet-owned vehicle networks, accelerates. We define the near-term TAM as the market size in or about 2026 and the long-term TAM as the market size in or about 2030. The TAM combines market opportunities in ADAS and AV, including Autonomous Mobility as a Service (“AMaaS”).
We have experienced significant growth since our founding. For 2021, 2020, and 2019, our revenue was $1.4 billion, $967 million, and $879 million, respectively, representing year-over-year growth of 43% in 2021. For the six months ended July 2, 2022 and June 26, 2021, our revenue was $854 million and $704 million, respectively, representing period-over-period growth of 21%. We currently derive substantially all of our revenue from our commercially deployed ADAS solutions. …” Read more Hmmmm… MobilEye has used ADAS as the foundation for driverless. Who else has done that? Those that haven’t are still pre-revenue. Alain
Uber and Motional to launch robotaxis across US over 10 years
R. Bellan, Oct. 6, “Uber is getting back into the robotaxi game, only this time it’s tapping a third party to handle the self-driving tech.
Motional, the Aptiv-Hyundai joint venture commercializing self-driving vehicle tech, will put its robotaxis on the Uber network later this year as part of a 10-year operating agreement that will eventually roll out to major cities across North America. The deal comes a year after the two companies struck a partnership to test autonomous delivery in Santa Monica, California using Motional’s autonomous vehicles.
As with the delivery pilot, the new agreement will feature Motional’s all-electric Hyundai Ioniq 5-based autonomous vehicles. Uber and Motional have not disclosed where it will launch first..” Read more Hmmmm… The only way this is anything other that just click-bait is if Aptiv-Hyundai can deliver driverless vehicles whose Operational Design Domains overlap sufficiently with the vast diffusivity and specificity of Uber’s ridehailers. My guess it that’s not going to be anytime soon to have a significant impact of either Uber or Aptiv-Hyundai.
The beauty about ride-hailing is that in most urban areas, if you can get one, it will take you from essentially anywhere to anywhere. Price is the only variable. Chances Aptiv-Hyundai is going to be able to deliver driverless vehicle that can do that anytime soon is ????
Ride-hailing may well be the most challenging market opportunity for this technology because its expectations are essentially unconstrained. Alain
MIT Mobility Forum Roads, Transit, and the Denseness of São Paulo’s Urban Development
Oct. 14 @ noon EDT ,Chris Zegras, Adriano Borges Costa, Siqi Zheng, Professor of Mobility and Urban Planning, Department Head DUSP & Post-doctoral Researcher & STL Champion Professor of Urban and Real Estate Sustainability. Please register at Zoom beforehand. ” Read more Hmmmm… An absolutely excellent lineup, every Friday, which started on Friday, Sept. 16th with Prof. Susan Handy’84, UC Davis. Alain
Mobileye IPO warns of potential potholes in the road to autonomous driving
J. Trop, Oct 5, “Mobileye, Intel’s automated driving division, filed Friday for what is expected to be the year’s largest IPO, but its success is far from guaranteed.
The Israeli company, acquired by Intel five years ago for $15.3 billion, touts a broad vision: An autonomous future “where congestion is seen only in history books.” But its S-1 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission underscores its precarious position in the ever-evolving self-driving vehicle industry.
Founded in 1999, Mobileye has benefited from its first-mover advantage, supplying automakers with computer vision technology to power their advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS). Now, as Mobileye expands its business model, it faces a proliferating number of rivals — from every side — in the wild and woolly world of automated vehicle technology.
The company’s list of competitors in its S-1 extends beyond the “Tier 1” suppliers in its core business to now include robotaxi developers like Argo AI, Aurora, Auto X, Baidu, Cruise, Momenta, Motional, Waymo and Zoox, as well as what it describes as “consumer AV” competitors Apple, Sony and former customer Tesla.
TechCrunch pored through the S-1 to identify the speed bumps and bright spots in its pursuit to dominate autonomous driving….” Read more Hmmmm…I encourage you to read the S-1 yourself. Alain
When Will AVs Actually Start to Smooth Traffic Flows?
Sept. 28, “A study by Carnegie Mellon University found that if at least 20 percent of cars are autonomous vehicles, traffic systems may start to see the operational improvements these vehicles are expected to bring….” Read more Hmmmm… What??? Operational improvements?? I can’t imagine that any of the private sector’s >$300B investment in this technology has been to capture operational improvements out of this technology. I doubt that any consumer purchasing this technology is doing it to contribute to operational improvements. Finally, I doubt that any traffic manager is seriously looking at harmonizing these systems to smooth traffic flows. I have yet to see a fixed or variable message, sign or heard a public advisory campaign, encouraging me to use my intelligent cruise control to smooth out traffic flow, an option that’s existed for years. What is this all about??? Alain
Tesla Semi production starts; Pepsi to get first electric trucks
F. Lambert, Oct 6, “Elon Musk announced that Tesla is starting Tesla Semi production and that Pepsi is going to get the first electric trucks starting December 1.
Tesla Semi, an all-electric class 8 truck, was unveiled back in 2017. At the time, it was supposed to come as soon as 2019. The vehicle program was delayed for years, and until recently, it wasn’t expected to go into production until 2023. However, Elon Musk surprisingly announced in August that the Tesla Semi would actually start shipping later this year.
Today, the CEO confirmed that Tesla has started production of the electric truck:… ” Read more Hmmmm… If these trucks also have FSD also wins that race. … Alain
Tesla announces it’s moving away from ultrasonic sensors in favor of ‘Tesla Vision’
F. Lambert, Oct 4, “Tesla announced today that it is moving away from using ultrasonic sensors in its suite of Autopilot sensors in favor of its camera-only “Tesla Vision” system.
Last year, Tesla announced it would transition to its “Tesla Vision” Autopilot without radar and start producing vehicles without a front-facing radar.
Originally, the suite of Autopilot sensors – which Tesla claimed would include everything needed to achieve full self-driving capability eventually – included eight cameras, a front-facing radar, and several ultrasonic sensors all around its vehicles. ” Read more Hmmmm… Not at all surprising … Alain