The Phnom Penh Post

Lyft steers toward open auto tech

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US RIDE-SHARE startup Lyft on Friday dedicated a new team focused on speeding up its effort to create a self-driving vehicle platform, which would be open to use by other companies.

The San Francisco based company earlier this year announced what it billed as the world’s first open self-driving platform, inviting car manufactur­ers and rival autonomous navigation systems to plug into the network.

“In the years ahead, we will continue to bring the world’s leading automotive and technology companies onto this single platform to serve a nationwide passenger network,” Lyft vice president of engineerin­g and former Google executive LucVincent said in an online post.

“We aren’t thinking of our self-driving division as a side project; it’s core to our business.”

Lyft is devoting an in-house division to selfdrivin­g technology, according to Vincent.

The team will be based in a Silicon Valley facility called “Level 5 Engineerin­g Center” and its ranks will grow in coming months, the company said.

Lyft operates in 350 cities in the US, and plans to run its own self-driving cars on the network, which partners will be free to use and learn from.

“Because we’re doing all of this on an open platform, it won’t just enhance Lyft’s selfdrivin­g system,” Vincent said.

“It will accelerate our partners’ efforts, too.”

Driverless future

Lyft announced last month that it would begin testing autonomous ridesharin­g in Boston under a partnershi­p with the technology startup nuTonomy.

The two companies will collaborat­e to research “all aspects of ensuring a passenger’s comfort and safety” in self-driving vehicles, a joint statement about the alliance said.

Lyft’s move follows a similar effort by Uber, which has been using autonomous vehicles in a test program in some US cities.

Earlier this year, Waymo, the self-driving car unit of Google parent Alphabet, reached an agreement with Lyft to test self-driving car technology, according to the companies.

Waymo and Lyft are allies against ridesharin­g giant Uber, which is racing to develop its own self-driving vehicles.

“We’re looking forward to working with Lyft to explore new self-driving products that will make our roads safer and transporta­tion more accessible,” a Waymo spokesman told AFP at the time.

Waymo and Uber are currently engaged in a bitter legal dispute.

In February Waymo filed a lawsuit claiming that a former manager took technical data when he left to launch a competing venture that was later acquired by Uber.

Most major automakers and several other technology firms have been investing in developing autonomous driving, contending these systems will eliminate the vast majority of road accidents. Apple is the latest to have obtained a testing permit in California.

 ?? AFP WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES JIM ?? A car from Waymo, one of several companies that are becoming partners in Lyft’s Open Platform Initiative on technology for self-driving cars, in Mountain View, California, March 21.
AFP WILSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES JIM A car from Waymo, one of several companies that are becoming partners in Lyft’s Open Platform Initiative on technology for self-driving cars, in Mountain View, California, March 21.

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