Arab Times

Intel to acquire Mobileye for $15 bln

Foray into autonomous vehicle sector

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DETROIT, March 13, (AP): Intel will buy Israel’s Mobileye in a deal valued at about $15 billion, instantly propelling the computer chip and technology giant to the forefront of autonomous vehicle technology.

The deal announced Monday combines Mobileye’s market-leading software that processes informatio­n from cameras and other sensors with Intel’s hardware, data centers and its own software, giving automakers a one-stop place to shop for fully autonomous systems.

“This acquisitio­n essentiall­y merges the intelligen­t eyes of the autonomous car with the intelligen­t brain that actually drives the car,” Intel CEO Brian Krzanich wrote in a note to employees about the acquisitio­n.

The combinatio­n, expected to close by year’s end, will allow the companies to bring components to market faster at a lower cost, solidifyin­g Mobileye’s leadership position, officials from the companies said.

Automakers and some technology companies are testing autonomous vehicles in California, Michigan and a few other states. Nearly all use Mobileye’s software, which reads inputs from cameras, radar, and laser sensors and makes decisions on what an autonomous car should do.

Jerusalem-based Mobileye says it has contracts with 27 different automakers. It also controls about 70 percent of the market for software that runs automatic emergency braking and semi-autonomous cruise control systems that are in cars and trucks on the road today.

Intel’s involvemen­t and the big price tag show that autonomous cars are coming in large numbers, signifying a sea change in the way we all get around, said Timothy Carone, a Notre Dame University professor who has written about the future of automation. “Major players are finding ways finding ways to position themselves for a change as seminal as the personal computer revolution,” he said.

Autonomous cars will need higher levels of connectivi­ty to the Internet and access to bigger data centers, which Intel can provide, Krzanich said. The two companies also will combine highly detailed mapping efforts. Automakers, Krzanich said, want lower costs, faster times to market and the ability to get an autonomous driving system in one place.

“If you put all of that together, you really get an end-do-end solution for autonomous driving,” said Mobileye Chairman and co-founder Amnon Shashua, who will continue to lead the combined autonomous car unit.

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