A start-up born out of Stanford just entered the driverless car race with a radical approach

A rendering of a car with the Drive.ai roof kit. Drive.ai Drive.ai, a start-up born out of Stanford’s artificial intelligence lab, has officially entered the driverless car arms race. But Drive.ai has no interest in building an actual, self-driving car. Rather, as co-founder and president Carol Reiley told Business Insider, the start-up plans to sell “the brains of the car.” That car brain comes in the form of sensors, LiDAR, and Radar like many other companies are using, but with one important addition many aren’t using: deep learning software. “We definitely think the car is a computer on wheels, and would love to really build the brains behind it and figure out what the sensory inputs are,” Reiley said. Drive.ai’s product is a roof kit with “the brains of the car” that…


Link to Full Article: A start-up born out of Stanford just entered the driverless car race with a radical approach

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