Top Automotive Industry News for Week of November 5 – November 11, 2018

Here is the most important news associated with the automotive industry
identified by the AEA for the week of November 5, 2018 -November 11, 2018.

We hope it helps you stay up to speed on the key developments in our
industry:

-Automotive Manufacturing News-

First ex-UAW official sentenced in FCA-related scandal; gets 1 year

(Detroit Free Press)

Ford plans construction on Michigan Central Depot by year's end

(Detroit Free Press)

Former Tesla employee charged with embezzling $9.3 million from Elon
Musk's company

(MarketWatch)

Is Toyota Next to Pare Back its Passenger Car Line?

(The Detroit Bureau)

Tesla picks an insider to be chairwoman, fueling doubt Elon Musk will
be reined in

(LA Times)

The gas engine still has a long life to live, Aston Martin CEO says

(CNBC)

VW planning $21K EV to challenge Tesla

(The Detroit News)

VW takes another shot at compact pickup market

(The Detroit News)

White House, California to discuss vehicle emissions rules next week

(autoblog)

Why GM is moving 3,000 workers from Pontiac to Warren

(Detroit Free Press)

-Automotive Evolution News-

8 concept cars that show how technology will dominate the drive of the
future

(CNBC)

Autonomous Cars Face Big Hurdles; They Will Succeed, But When?

(Forbes)

Daimler And Bosch Choose San Jose For Their Silicon Valley Robo-Taxi
Service

(Forbes)

GM's future lineup will run on electricity, drive itself — and fly

(Detroit Free Press)

Mercedes-Benz, Bosch to offer self-driving car rides in San Jose,
California

(USA Today)

Tesla Drivers Report Autopilot Disengaging While Driving Due To
Software Bug

(Forbes)

This Robot Truck Startup May Have An Edge Over Waymo In Bad-Weather
Driving

(Forbes)

Uber rival Taxify says it can grow 100 times bigger in the scooter and
ride-hailing market

(CNBC)

Uber ups its driver perks with 'Pro' program, including free college
education

(USA Today)

-Automotive Retail News-

Better inventory listings, lead management anchor more sales

(Auto Remarketing)

CarGurus Helps Dealerships Solve for Attribution with More Insight

(PR Newswire)

Dealertrack Looks to Speed Car Buying Process

(Auto Finance News)

Jumpstart: Car Buyers Want to Negotiate

(Auto Dealer Monthly)

Lithia and Shift to operate separately and share technology

(Auto Remarketing)

Luxury car owners trade up for American pickups as Ford, GM and Ram
trucks dominate market

(CNBC)

Millennials Spending Big on Cars — With Auto Loans to Match

(The Detroit Bureau)

Used car payments hit record $400 per month as prices top $20,000

(USA Today)

Used-Car Prices Reach 13-Year High in Third Quarter

(Vehicle Remarketing)

Used Vehicle Prices Rising, Pushing Buyers to Look at Leasing

(The Detroit Bureau)

-Automotive Wholesale News-

Compact Van Values Dip at Start of November

(Vehicle Remarketing)

-Automotive Ownership News-

Where your car is most likely to be stolen in every state

(USA Today)

-Automotive Enthusiast News-

Inside the World's Most Valuable Hot Wheels Collection

(Car and Driver)

With millions at stake, car collectors scour Earth for lost classics

(Detroit Free Press)

-Automotive Servicing News-

Mazda to recall 640,000 vehicles globally over diesel engine issue

(Reuters)

Subaru recalls nearly 400K vehicles to fix stalling problems

(Detroit Free Press)

U.S. agency probes 1.7 million GM SUVs over wiper failures

(Reuters)

-General Business & Executive News-

CDK Global Names Brian Krzanich President and Chief Executive Officer

(CDK)

Ford buys electric scooter startup Spin, joining competitors Bird and
Lime

(USA Today)

Harley-Davidson's electric motorcycle signals a big change for the
legendary, but troubled, company

(CNBC)

Tesla’s Booming Model 3 Sales and More This Week In The Future Of Cars

(Wired)

Time Dealer Of The Year

(Automotive News)

VW Considers Investing in Ford-Backed Autonomous Unit Argo

(Bloomberg)

-AEA Reminder-

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AEye Advisory Board Profile: Willie Gault

We sat down with each of our Advisory Board Members to ask them why they’re excited about working with AEye…
Willie Gault is a former NFL wide receiver and Olympic athlete. Gault was an All-American at the University of Tennessee from 1979 to 1982. He played in the National Football League for 11 seasons for the Chicago Bears and Los Angeles Raiders. Considered one of the fastest NFL players of all-time, Gault was a member of the Chicago Bears team that won Super Bowl XX, and was also a participant of both the summer and winter U.S. Olympic teams. Gault is currently an investor, remains active, and holds several world records in masters track and field.

Q: What in your past experience ultimately drew you to the autonomous vehicle arena?
As a professional athlete, I have always been fascinated and amazed by human perception and the role it plays in athletic performance. The brain’s ability to sense the details in the world around you and then accurately calculate where your body needs to be in space and time is remarkable. I have been curious about how these capabilities might be replicated with technology and artificial intelligence. Recently, I have been tracking the application of artificial intelligence in autonomous vehicles which led me to AEye.

Q: Why AEye?
What AEye is doing aligns with my interests in biomimicry, which uses knowledge of natural processes found in humans, plants, and animals to better inform technology and design. After I found out AEye was pursuing research in this field, I knew I had to be part of it.

Q: Where do you see ADAS solutions, autonomous vehicles, and/or artificial perception, heading within the next few years? The next decade? Beyond? How do you see AEye playing a pivotal role in this vision?
I live in Southern California where traffic has a major impact on quality of life. Autonomous vehicles will not only improve safety and efficiency on the roads, but will greatly improve quality of life around the world. I would like to see this technology adopted quickly and widely. However, one of the barriers to its adoption is cost. I believe that AEye’s iDAR system can be manufactured at tremendous scale, efficiently, and at a price point that encourages rapid adoption.

ALL PROFILES
Advisory Board Profile: Elliot Garbus — The Future of Autonomous Vehicles: Part I – Think Like a Robot, Perceive Like a HumanAEye Introduces Groundbreaking iDAR TechnologyThe Future of Autonomous Vehicles: Part II – Blind Technology without Compassion Is RuthlessCB Insights Unveils Second Annual AI 100 Companies at A-ha!Observe, Orient, Decide, Act: How AEye’s iDAR System Adopts Principles of the OODA Loop to Achieve Intelligent, Long-Range DetectionAEye Announces the AE100 Robotic Perception System for Autonomous VehiclesAEye Announces Addition of Aravind Ratnam as Vice President of Product ManagementAEye Introduces Next Generation of Artificial Perception: New Dynamic Vixels™Nate Ramanathan Joins AEye as Vice President of OperationsElon Musk Is Right: LiDAR Is a Crutch (Sort of.)

Elon Musk Is Right: LiDAR Is a Crutch (Sort of.)

By Luis Dussan

Tesla founder Elon Musk recently declared that LiDAR is a “crutch” for autonomous vehicle makers. The comment sparked headlines and raised eyebrows in the industry. Given that this vision technology is the core of many companies’ self-driving car strategies, his view strikes many as anathema or just plain nuts.

But for the moment, let’s ignore the fact that LiDAR is vital to self-driving cars from GM, Toyota and others. Forget that the most advanced autonomous vehicle projects have focused on developing laser-sensing systems.

Even disregard that the alleged theft of LiDAR secrets was at heart of the legal battle between Uber and Alphabet’s Waymo. Waymo claimed that LiDAR is essential technology for autonomous vehicles and won a settlement recently worth about $245 million.

The truth is: Mr. Musk is right. Relying solely on LiDAR can steer autonomous vehicle companies into innovation cul-de-sacs.

LiDAR is not enough. Autonomous vehicles require a rapid, accurate and complete perception system. It is a system-level problem that requires a system-level solution.

My agreement with Mr. Musk may seem surprising given that our company, AEye, sees LiDAR as playing a significant role in making driverless cars a commercial reality.

But we too have realized that if autonomous vehicles are ever going to be capable of avoiding accidents and saving lives, LiDAR is not the answer. At least not by itself.

Not THE answer, but part of the answer…
At Tesla, Mr. Musk is forsaking LiDAR for a 2D camera-based vision system. While Mr. Musk is known for disruptive thinking, it is hard to escape the fact that autonomous vehicles move through a 3D world and successful navigation of that world requires the seamless integration of both 2D and 3D data precisely mapped to both time and space.

At AEye, we believe LiDAR is the foundation of the solution when it seamlessly integrates with a multi-sensor perception system that is truly intelligent and dynamic. Our research has produced an elegant and multi-dimensional visual processing system modeled after the most effective in existence — the human visual cortex.

In fact, AEye’s initial perception system, called iDAR (Intelligent Detection and Ranging), offers a robotic perception system that is more reliable than human vision. LiDAR integrates with a low-light camera, embedded artificial intelligence and at-the-edge processing to enable a car’s vision system to replicate how the human visual cortex quickly interprets a scene.
In short, iDAR enables cars to see like people.

Why this is the superior approach?
In his skepticism of LiDAR, Mr. Musk has curiously bet on a “camera-mostly” strategy when building a vision system for autonomous Tesla vehicles. He has previously made bold (many say unrealistic) predictions that Tesla would achieve full Level 5 autonomous driving with camera-mostly vision in 2019. Navigant Research, in their annual ranking of self-driving vehicle makers, says this is “unlikely to ever be achievable” and rates Tesla at the back of the pack.

The company’s Autopilot system relies on cameras, some radar, and GPS. It has suffered setbacks due to a split with its camera supplier in 2016 after a fatal accident that investigators have blamed partly on Autopilot. Last month, a Tesla smashed into a firetruck in Culver City, California, and the driver said it was “on autopilot.”

The evidence strongly argues against Mr. Musk’s decision to bet on passive optical image processing systems. Existing 2D image processors and 2D to 3D image conversion concepts have serious flaws that can only be addressed with massive computing power and more importantly — algorithms that have not been invented, and are many years away from becoming a reality. This makes this approach too costly, inefficient and cumbersome to achieve Level 5 autonomous driving at commercial scale.

At AEye we know that integrating cameras, agile LiDAR, and AI equals a perception system that is better than the sum of its parts. It surpasses both the human eye and camera alone, which is required if you don’t have the sophistication of the human brain yet replicated.

In his “crutch” comments, Mr. Musk predicted that LiDAR-based systems will make cars “expensive, ugly and unnecessary,” adding: “I think they will find themselves at a competitive disadvantage.” The truth is that size, weight, power, and cost are decreasing for vehicle navigation grade LiDAR. And they will fall further. AEye, and maybe others, will see to that.

We respect Musk’s innovations and are grateful to him shedding light on where LiDAR needs to go to reach full autonomy. But in the end, as we see LiDAR as a lever, rather than a crutch, we can only give him partial credit for his understanding of the way forward.

ALL NEWS & VIEWS
Elon Musk Is Right: LiDAR Is a Crutch (Sort of.) — AEye Introduces Groundbreaking iDAR TechnologyObserve, Orient, Decide, Act: How AEye’s iDAR System Adopts Principles of the OODA Loop to Achieve Intelligent, Long-Range DetectionAEye Introduces Next Generation of Artificial Perception: New Dynamic Vixels™AEye Announces the AE100 Robotic Perception System for Autonomous VehiclesThe Future of Autonomous Vehicles: Part I – Think Like a Robot, Perceive Like a HumanAEye Announces Addition of Aravind Ratnam as Vice President of Product ManagementCB Insights Unveils Second Annual AI 100 Companies at A-ha!AEye Granted Foundational Patents For Core Solid-State MEMs-Based Agile LiDAR And Embedded AI TechnologyGartner Names AEye Cool Vendor in AI for Computer VisionAEye Welcomes James Robnett to Executive Team as Vice President of Automotive Business Development

15 Hurdles To The Industrialization Of Driverless Cars (Part 1 Of 3) – Forbes

Photocredit: GettyGetty Will the future of driverless cars rhyme with the history of the Segway? The Segway personal transporter was also predicted to revolutionize transportation. Steve Jobs gushed that cities would be redesigned around the device. John Doerr said it would be bigger than the Internet. The Segway worked technically but never lived up to its backers’ outsized hopes for market… Continue reading 15 Hurdles To The Industrialization Of Driverless Cars (Part 1 Of 3) – Forbes

The building blocks for the future of the BMW Group. The BMW Vision iNEXT celebrates its world premiere in Los Angeles.

Munich. The BMW Vision iNEXT provides an insight into the future of personal mobility. The latest Vision Vehicle from the BMW Group symbolises the dawn of a new era in driving pleasure – and is celebrating its world premiere at the Los Angeles Auto Show. Far more than a vehicle alone, the BMW Vision iNEXT… Continue reading The building blocks for the future of the BMW Group. The BMW Vision iNEXT celebrates its world premiere in Los Angeles.

  Luminar and Volvo Show Off High-Res, Long-Range Lidar 27 Nov

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Ford Statement on Business Transformation

About Ford Motor Company Ford Motor Company is a global company based in Dearborn, Michigan. The company designs, manufactures, markets and services a full line of Ford cars, trucks, SUVs, electrified vehicles and Lincoln luxury vehicles, provides financial services through Ford Motor Credit Company and is pursuing leadership positions in electrification, autonomous vehicles and mobility solutions.… Continue reading Ford Statement on Business Transformation

VW turned its electric cargo van concept into a race support vehicle

VW Group has put a new spin on its all-electric I.D. Buzz Cargo van concept. This time, the German automaker has reimagined the concept as a support vehicle for the Volkswagen I.D R, the electric vehicle prototype that had a record-breaking run this year in the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb competition. VW Group’s commercial vehicles… Continue reading VW turned its electric cargo van concept into a race support vehicle

Profitability of auto companies: Toyota ahead of BMW, Daimler and VW – but German carmakers invest more in the future

Global car sales decline for the first time since the financial crisis. The profit margin of the 16 leading auto companies has fallen to its lowest level since the financial crisis. Toyota and Suzuki work more profitably than the German carmaker: But that the profit margin of VW, Daimler and BMW is shrinking, is mainly… Continue reading Profitability of auto companies: Toyota ahead of BMW, Daimler and VW – but German carmakers invest more in the future

Driverless cars will need cities covered in sensors, China’s Didi Chuxing says

Driverless cars will need cities covered in sensors, DiDi VP says
2 Hours Ago | 02:33

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing wants to become one of the front-runners in developing self-driving cars, the company's chief scientist for smart transportation initiatives said on Tuesday.

Didi has been working to develop autonomous vehicle technologies for three years, and has teams based in the United States and China, Henry Liu told CNBC during a fireside chat at the East Tech West conference held in the Nansha district of Guangzhou, China.

“We already have autonomous vehicles being equipped with our sensors and we have licenses in both Mountain View, California, as well as in Beijing, China,” he said. “We'll be one of the front-runners in terms of the autonomous vehicle technology development.”

Automakers and internet companies around the world are investing millions of dollars and rolling out long-term plans for self-driving vehicles. Many analysts believe the widespread adoption of these vehicles will potentially start to pick up in 2021 or 2022.

“We can also predict in terms of what's going to happen in the next 15 to 30 minutes, in terms of traffic flows.”
-Henry Liu, chief scientist for smart transportation, Didi Chuxing

For its part, Didi is developing autonomous vehicles on two fronts, said Liu.

First, by installing sensors in vehicles that can sense the environment on the road, detect objects, plan travel routes and ultimately, control the cars. The second front is what he described as “cooperative vehicle-highway systems” that rely more on the environment — that means having sensors installed on roads, buildings, lamp posts and the surrounding areas to provide relevant information to self-driving cars.

“The main difference is that we not only have the vehicle sensing capability, we're also going to have a roadside sensing capability, so we will be able to provide the autonomous vehicles with environment information, from the infrastructure side,” he said.

But such a development will require the presence of very high-speed mobile internet connection readily available, Liu added. China is developing that technology very aggressively and hasoutspent the United States since 2015.

Didi's advantage: 550 million users

One of Didi's major advantages when it comes to developing self-driving, smart cars is that it has a massive transportation network, according to Liu.

Didi has about 550 million users taking an average of 30 million rides every day across more than 400 cities. That allows the Chinese firm to collect plenty of data about its users, from their travel habits to traffic conditions in various cities. Generally, artificial intelligence systems require large volumes of so-called training data to learn patterns and behaviors.

“We collect a hundred terabytes of vehicle trajectory data per day,” Liu said, adding that Didi processes nearly five times as much information daily to better estimate travel routes, prices and demand for vehicles at any given time. The data also helps cities plan their traffic networks better to avoid congestion.

Earlier this year, Didi launched a so-called “Smart Transportation Brain” service with Chinese traffic management authorities. Using vast amounts of data from Didi, local governments and other businesses, the service uses artificial intelligence to recommend improvements to existing transport systems that can reduce travel times for commuters.

“We can also predict in terms of what's going to happen in the next 15 to 30 minutes, in terms of traffic flows,” Liu added.

Didi remains one of China's most valuable start-ups, backed by major names including Apple, Alibaba and SoftBank, and it has a valuation of $56 billion, according to CB Insights. Two years ago, it acquired Uber's China business to establish its dominating position in the Chinese ride-hailing market.

WATCH: Didi Chuxing's chief scientist for smart transportation talks about self-driving cars

We use the data to help passengers and cities, says DiDi VP
3 Hours Ago | 03:45