Taipei, Sunday, Sep 29, 2024, 01:17

News

Audi and NVIDIA to Give Cars Superhuman Capabilities

By Korbin Lan
Published: Jan 08,2016

NVIDIA is working on bringing artificial intelligence(A.I.) into cars. Not only introduced its new computing engine but also teamed with car makers to deliver the highest A.I experience in their cars.

More on This

NVIDIA Expands Cooperation with NCKU – Re-Deploys Five DGX-1 Supercomputers

TAIPEI, Taiwan - Nvidia Corporation (NVIDIA) and National Cheng Kung University (NCKU) are continuing their cooperation on the NVIDIA DGX-1 platform...

Samsung’s 7-inch OLED Display Selected for the Audi e-tron

Samsung Display announced today that the company will be supplying a 7-inch OLED display for Audi’s all-new electric Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV), the Audi e-tron®...

Audi, one of NVIDIA’s partners, said on CES 2016 that machine learning will give cars the ability to analyze and learn from hundreds of thousands, even millions, of driving situations to learn better than any human being can.

“In one year a 16-year-old driver might encounter 1,000 situations with a four-way stop,” said Peter Steiner, managing director of Audi Electronics Venture.

“But our systems will learn from hundreds of thousands, even millions, of such situations that can be stored, analyzed and improved from, so these cars can learn even better than a human being can.”

Audi continues to work closely with NVIDIA, incorporating NVIDIA’s Tegra processors into its zFAS driver assistance control unit and MIB infotainment system.

“Due to our close collaboration with NVIDIA, Audi has the ability to integrate technology quickly and move at the same innovation cycle as the consumer electronics industry,” said Ricky Hudi, the carmaker’s head of Electrics/Electronics.

Audi is working toward connecting advanced automotive sensors and the high-definition, cloud-connected mapping capabilities of HERE — which it co-owns with BMW and Daimler-Benz — to create a wealth of data its deep-learning systems can use to create ever smarter driver-assistance systems.

“We will push the technology of artificial intelligence, of machine learning, to get the same recognition rate — or even better than a human being,” Hudi said.

“For me this is the most disruptive technology — machine learning — in what you can discover now, and not just in the automotive industry,” he added.

CTIMES loves to interact with the global technology related companies and individuals, you can deliver your products information or share industrial intelligence. Please email us to en@ctimes.com.tw

1034 viewed

comments powered by Disqus