USA TODAY US Edition

Road for self-driving cars gets crowded

More than a dozen automakers now in the tech fast lane

- Mike Snider @mikesnider USA TODAY

Not that long ago, checking in on the state of selfdrivin­g car technology meant asking Google’s engineers how they were doing. The search company was virtually alone on the autonomous car highway.

But in the past four years, that road has gotten crowded.

The Consumer Electronic­s Show has served as a leading indicator of the growing interest in self-driving tech, eventually welcoming to what traditiona­lly was a gadget-fest for more than a dozen automakers. Two years ago, Ford CEO Mark Fields even delivered the keynote, a spotlight previously reserved for the likes of Bill Gates.

This year, CES, which wraps here Sunday, again puts a spotlight on the mounting competitio­n between not just the automakers but also the suppliers vying to provide the high-tech components that allow vehicles to navigate through a world of obstacles.

It’s clear now that engineers are able to make cars drive themselves. The bigger issue is how to scale this technology in a way that finds it both culturally embraced and scientific­ally sound — and is cost-effective.

As tech companies such as Nvidia, Intel and Harman join major auto brands such Audi, BMW and Volvo — 500 auto-tech companies large and small came to CES this year — in showing off their chips, sensors and smart cars, one has to wonder if this is a winnertake-all contest or if we’re creating competing standards that could delay the arrival of a selfdrivin­g future.

“There’s a lot of desire to be the ones who can get there first and monetize this market for self-driving cars, and it’s causing almost a frenetic activity across the automotive industry, both from automakers and from tech companies,” said Karl Brauer, executive publisher of Autotrader and Kelley Blue Book.

If the various self-driving car booths here had a singular mission, it was to showcase how much safer the driving world can be, thanks to technology.

Auto parts supplier Delphi Automotive gave reporters rides in a 2017 Audi Q5 SUV. Its selfdrivin­g system was developed with sensors made by Mobileye and chips from Intel that automatica­lly avoided a collision without input from its driver.

“I see the potential for zero accidents and mobility for all simply because drivers have been taken out of the transporta­tion equation,” said Doug Davis, who leads Intel’s automated driving group.

Many automakers have set an eventual goal of zero deaths in their vehicles, remarkable considerin­g that 30,000 die each year in the U.S. and more than a million worldwide.

The competitio­n to produce technology that can help car companies reach that milestone is intensifyi­ng quickly.

AT&T announced at CES that it was working with Delphi and Ford on improving vehicle communicat­ion with other cars and infrastruc­ture. AT&T is also building a self-driving test center in Michigan with the American Center for Mobility.

Intel and Mobileye are working with BMW to deploy 40 selfdrivin­g BMWs by the second half of 2017, the companies said here Wednesday. Intel, which announced that it plans to invest in high-definition mapping-firm Here, also is developing autonomous driving hardware and software platforms that could serve as a standard for other innovators to adopt.

Meanwhile, Intel competitor Nvidia announced at CES Wednesday that it had landed Germany’s ZF Group as its first customer for a car-computing platform powered by its chips that boasts both machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce capabiliti­es. Big names in the chip game such as Qualcomm and AMD are also in the hunt.

“We are going to see cars become the next major platform to battle over for the semiconduc­tor makers,” said Bob O’Donnell, president and chief analyst of TECHnalysi­s Research.

Samsung, too, became a major player in car connectivi­ty and autonomous driving with its November $8 billion acquisitio­n of Harman, which has its own auto tech expertise and relationsh­ips with automakers.

In Harman’s demonstrat­ion area at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, the company showed off all the various aspects of autonomous vehicles, including smart ride-sharing cars that adapt the car’s settings, display and personal audio zones based on riders’ profiles.

Another self-driving car Harman showcased offers riders a fully-immersive IMAX-style projection and sound system. Also on display was cybersecur­ity software to protect your car from hackers. Harman’s partners in its autonomous car-tech quest include Apple, Daimler Chrysler, Google, IBM and Microsoft.

“No one company can do everything,” said Dinesh Paliwal, Harman CEO and Chairman. Even though “the autonomous car is almost here, we are 10 to 15 years out from the day when you have the majority of the cars with smarts that interact with each other through the cloud.”

 ?? WALDEN KIRSCH, INTEL CORP. ?? Crowds gather to see a BMW prototype vehicle at the BMW Group news conference Wednesday at CES in Las Vegas.
WALDEN KIRSCH, INTEL CORP. Crowds gather to see a BMW prototype vehicle at the BMW Group news conference Wednesday at CES in Las Vegas.

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