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(UPDATE 29MAR2018, 14H34): It has been confirmed that the UBER vehicle that suffered the crash in Arizona, mentioned in this news piece, was indeed running NVIDIA hardware. However, this hardware capability was apparently acquired via of-the-shelf acquisitions by UBER, and didn't employ NVIDIA's DRIVE platform. The autonomous driving capabilities of the UBER vehicle were instead handled by NVIDIA hardware, handled fully via UBER's own, proprietary software stack. NVIDIA, thus, is looking to distance itself from the even as much as possible when it comes to its DRIVE platform, so as to avoid any unwarranted bad press upon the system on which they pin such high hopes for the market.
Even though NVIDIA's CEO Jensen Huang has been delivering keynotes at this year's GDC that mainly focus on AI-driven workloads and system training, the company has decided to put a temporary stop to self-driving tests using its technology. This decision comes in the wake of the UBER crash, which killed a woman in Arizona just last week. To add some more heat to the mixture, it has just been announced that the NTSB is opening an investigation towards the accident involving a Tesla motor vehicle (although at the time, it isn't known whether the car was in self-driving mode or not).
As a result of these events, which saw Tesla and Uber's stock valuation decline, NVIDIA has decided to halt all self-driving tests using its integrated NVIDIA DRIVE platform. Some 370 interested parties - from developers to companies - are currently exploring self-driving solutions, and this decision is sure to put a stop to their work. However, it does have to be said that if anything, these events contribute to the notion that these systems aren't as of yet ready for deployment - should the fault lie completely with the automated driving mechanisms, of course. Let's not forget that human drivers make mistakes - and sometimes do exactly as intended - that also kill human beings in a much, much more expressive way.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site
Even though NVIDIA's CEO Jensen Huang has been delivering keynotes at this year's GDC that mainly focus on AI-driven workloads and system training, the company has decided to put a temporary stop to self-driving tests using its technology. This decision comes in the wake of the UBER crash, which killed a woman in Arizona just last week. To add some more heat to the mixture, it has just been announced that the NTSB is opening an investigation towards the accident involving a Tesla motor vehicle (although at the time, it isn't known whether the car was in self-driving mode or not).
As a result of these events, which saw Tesla and Uber's stock valuation decline, NVIDIA has decided to halt all self-driving tests using its integrated NVIDIA DRIVE platform. Some 370 interested parties - from developers to companies - are currently exploring self-driving solutions, and this decision is sure to put a stop to their work. However, it does have to be said that if anything, these events contribute to the notion that these systems aren't as of yet ready for deployment - should the fault lie completely with the automated driving mechanisms, of course. Let's not forget that human drivers make mistakes - and sometimes do exactly as intended - that also kill human beings in a much, much more expressive way.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site