The Manila Times

Simple technology

- TNS

TuSimple’s technology employs cameras and radar sensors with the company’s proprietar­y software and other data to allow trucks to “see” the road in real time, like the human eye.

The system uses “deep learning” artificial intelligen­ce to make decisions to avoid obstacles and navigate safely.

The technology also can allow operators to form “platoons” of autonomous trucks that can draft on each other like racecars for optimum fuel economy.

In July, TuSimple made a successful 200-mile test run from San Diego to Yuma.

Hou said the company’s goal by the end of this year is to pilot its technology by sending a platoon of five fully loaded trucks from Tucson to Phoenix.

In five years, Hou said, TuSimple hopes to have a fleet of 25 trucks with a Level 5 system — requiring no human interventi­on — in commercial operation.

“In the US, Tucson will be our first station and I think will be the primary site for road testing for the next few years,” said Hou, who earned a doctorate in computatio­n and neural systems from the California Institute of Technology in 2014.

TuSimple isn’t alone in its quest to perfect a self- driving truck.

Diesel truckmaker Freightlin­er has tested an autonomous truck with a safety driver, and rideshare giant Uber delivered a truckload of beer in 2016 on a 120- mile route in Colorado, using technology from a startup partner it later acquired.

Backers said autonomous trucking systems could make fleets more efficient and save lives by avoiding human error and safety issues.

Hou said the company has talked with truck manufactur­ers and has had initial talks with one leading truck maker, but the company eventually wants to develop and operate autonomous trucking fleets.

“We’re not trying to develop one black box that can perform Level 4 [driverless] autonomous driving, but we’re thinking about building an autonomous fleet of trucks,” he said.

“You can think of us more as an operations company, instead of a software company.”

TuSimple recently raised $20 million in capital investment­s from a group led by Chinese telecom giant Sina Corp. and including Silicon Valley-based computer graphics Nvidia, which provided powerful graphical processing units for TuSimple’s prototype systems.

Economic impact

Sun Corridor Inc. worked with local and state officials to provide TuSimple executives with workforce, real- estate, incentive and demographi­c informatio­n to show the region’s ability to support the company’s expansion.

TuSimple is expected to invest $ 15 million in capital expenditur­es, with the expected new jobs bringing its potential economic impact to $ 81.7 million over five years, Sun Corridor said.

Joe Snell, president and chief executive officer of Sun Corridor, said local officials were “tenacious” in their pursuit of TuSimple, com- paring it to the recent solar eclipse when the “sun, moon and Earth came into alignment.”

Snell said TuSimple was lured to Tucson by its high-tech workforce, friendly regulation and infrastruc­ture.

“We get the opportunit­y to be on the ground floor of a new and future industry,” Snell said. “Tomorrow’s world will include everything autonomous, from aircraft to cars and in this case, commercial delivery.

“In the very near future, as we position ourselves as a distributi­on center, we can see goods being offloaded in Nogales, coming up from the port of Guaymas, and those products being delivered to Tucson and beyond by delivery trucks without a driver,” he added.

Mayor Jonathan Rothschild noted that TuSimple decided on Tucson without any upfront financial incentives, since the company moved into an existing building that is not in any special economic zone.

Rothschild said the Tucson area’s high-tech workforce and the UA and its potential pipeline of engineers helped convince the company to move here, noting that company executives already have met with leaders of the UA’s Transporta­tion Research Institute.

The institute is a successor to the Advanced Traffic and Logistics Algorithms and Systems Center, an engineerin­gfocused research center UA launched in 1998 to advance transporta­tion.

Larry Head, a UA professor of systems and industrial engineerin­g who is involved in research at the UA’s Transporta­tion Research Institute, said he’s excited to have the startup company in town to show students the cutting edge of the science and give them new career paths.

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