The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Intel drops $15B on Mobileye

Technology giant takes lead in race for a driverless future

- By Tom Krisher AP Autos Writer

DETROIT » 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 onestop 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.

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