When people talk about autonomous vehicles, we hear everything from “we’re much closer than you think” to “we’re much further than you think”. So where are we, really, in the widespread reality of autonomous vehicles today? It depends, of course, on how you define autonomy — which is where a handy recap and update of the SAE (Society of Automotive Engineers) levels of autonomy comes in. But still, given everything out there from self-driving shuttles to Teslas, it’s really hard to tell just where we are and where the nuances of, say, Level 2-plus vs. Level 3 might come in.
This episode of the a16z Podcast takes a quick pulse on where we are in the state of autonomy in 2019 when it comes to autonomous cars, shuttles, robots — basically any “autonomous” and/or “self-driving” vehicle out there — as well as the analogy of mobile for understanding the space: where it works, where it breaks down. But did even the mobile industry itself really have a clear iPhone “moment”? When did mobile devices that seemed so limited — or seemed like just “toys” — suddenly (or not so suddenly) go to an apps layer that we use every single day? How do we build “the rails” and “the trains” at the same time in this case?
And perhaps most importantly, where will the spoils of this new wave of innovation go — to Silicon Valley or Detroit? Or outside the U.S.? Who are the players? How do regulatory — and quite frankly, nationalistic — concerns come into play here? And finally, how does one balance the desire to embrace innovation in an open and fast, yet still very thoughtful and safe way? The answers, according to Applied Intuition co-founder and CEO Qasar Younis and CTO Peter Ludwig (in conversation with Sonal Chokshi), have to do with commodities and capitalism, with science and science fiction, with simulation and software as infrastructure, and more… And really, how we define autonomy now, and in the future.
The Autonomy Ecosystem: From Self-Driving Cars to Beyond! [8 videos] (with Frank Chen)
Steps to Autonomy (by Benedict Evans)
a16z Podcast: Adjusting to Trade… and Innovation (with Russ Roberts, Noah Smith, and Sonal Chokshi)
a16z Podcast: The Cool Stuff Only Happens at Scale (with Herman Narula, Vijay Pande, and Chris Dixon)
The End of Cloud Computing [The Edge Is Where It’s At] (with Peter Levine)
Peter Ludwig
Qasar Younis
Sonal Chokshi is Editor in Chief of Crypto at Andreessen Horowitz.
The a16z Podcast discusses the most important ideas within technology with the people building it. Each episode aims to put listeners ahead of the curve, covering topics like AI, energy, genomics, space, and more.