CES 2016 Robocar News

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I'm back from CES 2016 with a raft of news, starting with robocars. Some news was reported before the show but almost everybody had something to say -- even if it was only to have something to say!

I have many more photos with coverage in my CES 2016 Photo Gallery.

Ford makes strong commitment

Ford's CEO talks like he gets it. Ford did not have too much to show -- they announced they will be moving to Velodyne's new lower cost 32-laser puck-sized LIDAR for their research, and boosting their research fleet to 30 vehicles. They plan for full-auto operation in limited regions fairly soon.

Ford is also making its own efforts into one-way car share (similar to Daimler Car2Go and BMW DriveNow) called GoDrive, which pushes Ford more firmly into the idea of selling rides rather than cars. The car companies are clearly believing this sooner than I expected, and the reason is very clearly the success of Uber. (As I have said, it's a mistake to think of Uber as competition for the taxi companies. Uber is competition for the car companies.)

Ford is also doing an interesting "car swap" product. While details are scant, it seems what the service will do is let you swap your Ford for somebody else's different Ford. For example, if somebody has an F-150 or Transit Van that they know they won't use the cargo features on some day or weekend, you drive over with your ordinary sedan and swap temporarily for their truck -- presumably with a small amount of money flowing to the more popular vehicle. Useful idea.

The big announcement that didn't happen was the much-rumoured alliance between Ford and Google. Ford did not overtly refute it but suggested they had enough partners at present. The alliance would be a good idea, but either the rumours were wrong, or they are waiting for another event (such as the upcoming Detroit Auto Show) to talk about it.

Faraday Future, where art thou?

The big disappointment of the event was the silly concept racecar shown by Faraday Future. Oh, sure, it's a cool electric racecar, but it has absolutely nothing to do with everything we've heard about this company, namely that they are building a consumer electric car-on-demand service with autonomous delivery. Everybody wondered if they had booked the space and did not have their real demo ready on time. It stays secret for a while, it seems. Recent hires, such as Jan Becker, the former head of the autonomous lab for Bosch, suggest they are definitely going autonomous.

Mapping heats up

Google's car drives by having super-detailed maps of all the roads, and that's the correct approach. Google is unlikely to hand out its maps, so both Here/Navteq (now owned by a consortium of auto companies in Germany) and TomTom have efforts to produce similar maps to licence to non-Google robocar teams. They are taking fairly different approaches, which will be the subject of a future article.

One interesting edge is that these companies plan to partner with big automakers and not just give them map data but expect data in return. That means that each company will have a giant fleet of cars constantly scanning the road, and immediately reporting any differences between the map and the territory. With proper scale, they should get reports on changes to the road literally within minutes of them happening. The first car to encounter a change will still need to be able to handle it, possibly by pulling over and/or asking the human passenger to help, but this will be a very rare event.

MobilEye has announced a similar plan, and they are already the camera in a large fraction of advanced cars on the road today. MobilEye has a primary focus on vision, rather than Lidar, but will have lots of sources of data. Tesla has also been uploading data from their cars, though it does not (as far as I know) make as extensive use of detailed maps, though it does rely on general maps.

Google is the world's number one mapping company, and thanks to the hundreds of millions who drive with Android phones, it has tremendous access to data on the speed patterns of cars, but here is one area that Google might lose out on -- the partners of Here and TomTom may have a lot more cars scanning the road than Google will have for some time, even if the scans are not as advanced.

Of course, Apple also has a mapping division and plans to enter this space. And the "Navigation Data Standard" consortium is trying to build a standard format for advanced map data so robocar systems an easily switch between map vendors. Lots of competition is good for the public.

Nvida makes a huge push to be the platform

NVIDIA, which makes the graphics chips in most of your computers, has increased their large push in this area. GPUs are today's supercomputers, and NVIDIA is promoting their new Drive PX2 board, which features multiple GPS and other processors to effectively create a supercomputer for use in cars. All this computing power then gets applied to computer and machine vision, particularly systems trained with convolutional neural networks like Deep Learning, to try to do the many tasks needed in a self-driving car: Localization, sensor fusion, perception and motion planning. NVIDA's bet is that general purpose super-high-powered computing is more useful for this task than the specialized vision processing hardware that MobilEye makes, and that it can probably all be made to work from cameras, without LIDAR. (Though to be fair, NVIDIA is not as anti-LIDAR as Elon Musk or MobilEye, saying that their supercomputers and software will still be valuable combined with LIDAR.) One of the NVIDIA demos in pedestrian detection combined a Quanergy 8 plane LIDAR and their camera systems. In the demo, they had water jets able to simulate rain, in which case it was the vision that failed and the LIDAR which kept detecting the pedestrians. Quanergy's LIDAR looks at the returns from objects and is able to tell returns from raindrops (which are more dispersed) from returns off of solid objects.

NVIDIA isn't the only chip company with an interest, but it is the most advanced. NXP and Qualcomm both had tech on display (mostly in "connected car") along with Intel and a few others, such as OS company QNX (a unit of Blackberry founded by classmates of mine in Canada.) Other chip companies have been making efforts towards the ADAS market (such as Intel, TI and CEVA) and the huge success of MobilEye there will draw in more, and create efforts to be the supplier for robocars.

New entrants -- VF and IAV

Just about every player out there has something in the space now. German Tier One VF was showing both existing parts (such as electric steering motors and ADAS tools) as well as complete systems for OEMs not wanting to do the work themselves.

The most silly demo in the parking lots came from a partnership of IAV, Microsoft and some others. In this demo, the car would drive a test course towards a light, where a pedestrian was waiting, hidden behind an SUV. The pedestrian's Microsoft wristband is sending her GPS coordinates up to a server, which then sends them down to a traffic light. The traffic light was then able to use DSRC (V2V/V2I) to tell the car about the pedestrian, as well as the green/red state of the light.

In the demo, the car, upon learning this, would slow down as it passed the parked SUV. Seems reasonable at first, but even the demonstrators agreed that it's not practical for cars to always slow every time a pedestrian is close to the street. In addition, the odds that people would be constantly uploading their location from wristbands or phones -- even if GPS were accurate enough for this -- are pretty low for years go come.

Here is an Engadget article on the demo

Toyota's billion dollar bet on AI

The strange concept cars seen here in the Toyota booth were not the real Toyota story at CES. Far more interesting is the creation of a new AI research lab inside Toyota with a $1 billion budget, run by Gill Pratt, who also ran the DARPA Robotics Challenge I reported on last year. That's a huge budget, and will fund some pure research as well as researched aimed at driving.

New Quanergy Lidar announced

For full disclosure, I am on the advisory board in Quanergy and own stock, but I was pleased to see the announcement, ahead of schedule of Quanergy's first solid state LIDAR, an 8 line phased-array LIDAR with a 120 degree field of view. While 8 planes is on the low end for self-driving, several of these LIDARS can be combined at this low price. The LIDAR will also help boost smaller robots indoors and out. Those who dismissed LIDAR as overly expensive have, as I have predicted made a mistake.

Quanergy has partnered with Delphi to market the LIDAR to automakers.

New Velodyne and Valeo Lidars

Quanergy wasn't the only LIDAR being promoted. Velodyne, which makes the expensive but powerful 64-laser LIDAR used in many research cars (including Google's before they built their own) has a new unit that is the size of a large puck with 32 lasers. It's going to be used in Ford's new research cars, among others. Cost was not named, but will be under $10,000 -- the current cost of Velodyne's 16-laser LIDAR. It is claimed to be solid state, but no details are available on how it works.

Valeo is now in production on the $250 4-laser LIDAR based on designs from IBEO. They have branded it SCALA and while it will primarily be used in the ADAS market they are hoping for even more.

While not related to robocars, Valeo also showed off their Sightstream product, which replaces side-view mirrors with cameras and screens. Today, the regulations demand side-view mirrors -- they are even on Google's steering-wheel-free 3rd generation car -- but they cause a lot of drag and get hit in accidents, so vendors have wanted to replace them with cameras for a while. Cameras are superior in a lot of ways, including not having any blindspots.

Nissan promises 10 models with autonomy

Nissan was not at CES, but their CEO held a press conference at Nissan's research lab in Sunnyvale to divert some attention. He promised Nissan will put autonomous drive features into 10 different Nissan models, without naming them. Around 2018 expect autopilot functions (like you see in Tesla and others) and by 2020 expect some greater level of autonomy -- possibly the standby supervision approach incorrectly called level 3 by NHTSA/SAE.

Nissan has been a leader in the Japanese market, but Toyota's new AI efforts may push it ahead. Honda, Mazda and Subaru continue to show very little in the way of effort.

Nissan has made the statement that it does not want to embrace car-sharing like Uber, Lyft and robotaxis, but instead wants to focus on cars aimed at single owners. I judge that an error, but we'll see.

Tesla car summon

You have to hand it to Elon Musk for bravado, claiming that in 2 years he will have fully capable unmanned-level autonomy. Yesterday he said:

“Within two years you’ll be able to summon your car from across the country, ” Musk said on Sunday in a teleconference with the media, adding that “ I might be slightly optimistic on that.”

He went to to say you might be in New York and summon your Tesla from Los Angeles.

I'm a big fan of this concept, which I have called the "whistlecar" but he is indeed a bit optimistic, if for no other reason that it almost surely won't be legal to cross the country unmanned in 2 years.

Reaching the safety levels for unmanned operation on a wide array of streets in 2018 is also a big challenge, especially without a LIDAR. More on that, later.

Audi says little

Audi's self-driving efforts have been quite significant, but all they said at CES was a reaffirmation of their commitment to self-driving systems without much concrete. Audi, which is part of VW, is reeling from the emissions scandal. Will customers trust them and their software?

BMW shows a concept

BMW has long been one of the leaders among big car companies, in spite of the irony of them building the "ultimate non-driving machine." This year they mostly went the imaginary concept route, displaying a futuristic car and claiming it had "3 modes" -- manual, assisted and self-driving. But the car didn't actually do those things and the only real demo was some self-parking outside. (Last year they had the BMW i3 cars available for test drive, and the cars rolled up for your test drive empty through a special course.)

Concept cars like this, meant only to express possible future ideas, are common at car shows, but at CES they seem bizarrely out of place. To the electronics crowd, they make no sense -- they are vapourware at best, and pointless at the worst. Why show a product you never have any intention of building? The CES audience accepts (and likes) seeing pre-release products, but wants to know what BMW is actually doing.


For more coverage and non-car coverage check out the CES 2016 Photo Gallery.

CES 2016

Comments

Hey Brad- great update!

Curious if you had any more information or links to content further explaining Ford's work on swapping. IMO massive opportunity exists in currently just restructuring and modifying the ownership experience as a bridge to the autonomous future.

Thanks!
Kevin

The Ford CEO noted the plan in his talk. Here is a report of an early experiment they did on it: https://media.ford.com/content/fordmedia/fna/us/en/news/2015/01/06/mobility-experiment-car-swap-dearborn.html

However, what he talked about is a more consumer service. Of course, any company could make an app to do that, and somebody should. There are various P2P carshare companies (including Getaround.com which was built by our Singularity U students) but generally they are aimed at somebody who doesn't have a car looking to get one from somebody who has a spare car.

Swapping happens ad-hoc all the time. You call your "friend with a truck" and you swap primarily because that's the easiest thing to do, you drive to her house and of course you leave your car (and keys) behind. And return the borrowed car full as "payment." A more formal swap requires both vehicles be in good condition and not cluttered, and probably some modest money flow from the one who wanted the swap more, ie. probably the car owner pays the truck owner, though quite possibly the truck owner pays the luxury sedan owner.

There is a good synergy, though. People who need to "borrow a truck" usually would like it on the weekend, while people who work with a truck all week might enjoy having a nice sedan or convertible or etc. on many weekends.

hey Brad,
I heard that GM is paying ~145$ per kilowatt hour for batteries for the new Bolt.
Does that surprise you as much as it does me?
It makes me think that 100$ per kilowatt hour batteries are doable within the next 10 years.
And that we really can replace fossil fuels.

$145/kwh is a remarkably low number for today. I have seen various forecasts for $200/kwh but those were a couple of years out, GM has to be buying batteries today as the factory is now in production, or so they said.

Now, the wholesale price GM pays will be one of the best in the world, and that will be for raw cells which then take work of being put into battery packs. I have heard Tesla gets as low as about $250 on raw cells which would make it possible for GM to do better.

If so, it's good news for electrics.

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