Business World

General Motors to buy sensor-tech firm Strobe

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DETROIT — No. 1 US automaker General Motors Co. (GM) said on Monday it would buy Strobe, Inc., which uses LIDAR technology to help self-driving cars identify objects at a distance, to speed up developmen­t of autonomous vehicles and slash sensor costs.

LIDAR is one of the major sensor technologi­es used in autonomous, or self- driving vehicles, and there is fierce competitio­n between large automakers to bring the cars to market first.

Fully self-driving vehicles are expected to hit the market in a limited form by around 2020. GM and its US rival Ford Motor Co have both publicly stated that they aim to have fully selfdrivin­g cars on sale by 2021.

“This acquisitio­n is a game changer for GM and Cruise,” because of the cost savings it will bring,” Kyle Vogt, chief executive of GM’s Cruise Automation unit, said.

“We’ve made this acquisitio­n because we aim to speed our path to market,” he added.

Strobe’s new microchip LIDAR system would significan­tly enhance the capabiliti­es of the self-driving cars GM was developing, Mr. Vogt said in a blog post and on a conference call with reporters.

By reducing the entire sensor down to a single chip, Strobe’s system should reduce the cost of each LIDAR on its self-driving cars by 99%, he said.

The technology provided not just a distance measuremen­t for an object on the road — vehicles, people and objects — but also measured that object’s velocity.

“This is really important for selfdrivin­g cars, especially in challengin­g situations,” Mr. Vogt said.

Mr. Vogt did not disclose financial terms, but said 11 full-time Strobe employees would join Cruise as part of the deal.

He said last week that the unit was making “rapid progress” toward deploying self-driving cars in part through testing vehicles on the crowded streets of San Francisco. —

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