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Transportation Software Apple Hardware Technology

Ex-Apple Engineers Unveil a Next-Generation Sensor For Self-Driving Cars (theverge.com) 32

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Aeva, a Mountain View, California-based startup founded only just last year, has built what its two-cofounders claim is a next-generation version of LIDAR, the 3D mapping technology that has become instrumental for how self-driving cars measure the distance of objects and effectively see the road in front of them. And today, the company is officially unveiling its product, a tiny box that can more directly measure objects in a given scene and the distance and velocity of those objects relative to one another.

Aeva's technology is able to separate objects based on distance and whether the object is moving away from or toward it. It's also able to measure the velocity of the object, which enables the software to predict where cars and pedestrians are going. The company even says its sensing system is capable of completely shutting out interference from other, similar sensors -- including those from other companies -- and operating in all weather conditions and in the dark, thanks to a reflectivity sensor. Not only is Aeva's version of LIDAR superior to the variety found in most self-driving test vehicles on the road today, the company says, but the lightweight, low-power box it's housed in also contains all the other types of sensors and cameras necessary for an autonomous vehicle to see and make sense of every component within its field of vision.
Aeva's new system sounds a lot more promising when you consider the company's co-founders, Soroush Salehian and his business partner Mina Rezk, are former Apple engineers who both worked on Apple's "Special Projects" team. Although they will not say so, they likely helped progress the company's secretive autonomous car division. The Verge notes that Salehian also "worked on developing the first Apple Watch and the iPhone 6, while Rezk is a veteran of Nikon where he worked on optical hardware."
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Ex-Apple Engineers Unveil a Next-Generation Sensor For Self-Driving Cars

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  • What are we supposed to make of this credential? Ex Apple engineer makes new sweatshirt, Ex Google engineer makes new ice cream scoop.

    If you're fired from Silicon Valley, is the next move to make anything, advertise it online and describe as having been invented by an ex big-tech engineer?

    • I have to agree.
      Working for a popular company, even one with rigorous hiring standards, doesn't make you actually qualified or actually good at your job.

      I have had people applying for a job where I worked, only to stop the process when we press every employee to take a test to evaluate their skill sets. Some of them actually tried to pull off a bluff like "I worked for such and such a company, I am insulted that I should take such a test!" After that statement that is the end of such person prospects at t

    • LIDAR is not a new invention. What would differentiate this device from other LIDAR devices already on the market would be cost. If this is substantially cheaper than other LIDAR implementations, it is relevant. If it is the same price, then nobody cares. There are two LIDAR arrays promised under $50 [ieee.org] and one under $100 [spar3d.com].

      What is the cost per device anticipated to be? That is literally the only relevant factor.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Aeva is an interesting company, but one of 50+ new entrants in the automotive LiDAR in recent years.

    Fusing camera with LiDAR? Aeye has been doing this for a long time.
    Coherent LiDAR detection that measures velocity as well as distance? Blackmore and Strobe (and others) do this too.

    Marketing departments need to do what marketing departments do, I guess.

  • Seems like any optical system will stop working the first time a bug, leaf, rain drop or snow hits it's lens and sticks. You can coat the lens to make it easier for the wind to blow them off, but in general the optics could be instantly obscured at any time, which basically means the car would have to stop immediately.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    http://www.pitt.edu/~drn16/conferencePaper.pdf

    This is the theory paper on the tech. and as further proof, here is AEVA's hiring site looking for an FPGA engineer.

    https://jobs.lever.co/aeva/84cdf11c-0f55-4181-be5d-3e682cb4b314

    your welcome all.

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