Skip to main content

Qualcomm Ride platform aims to make self-driving cars simpler

Image used with permission by copyright holder

From a tech perspective, modern cars have become Frankensteinish monstrosities, as carmakers pile on sensors and cameras and features to support the conveniences today’s drivers have come to expect. Things like adaptive cruise control, backup and parking cameras, lane assistance, and more – collectively called ADAS systems, short for advanced driver-assistance systems, they are key differentiators for carmakers. Then there are modern infotainment systems such as Android Auto and CarPlay, and remote controls, and wireless connectivity … each one requires a separate control chip, and separate networking cables, not to mention software to power and use the thing and a way to connect it to everything else in your car.

“The complexity is increasing multifold,” explained Anshuman Saxena, director of product management at Qualcomm Technologies, who works on the Automotive Driver Assistance Solutions team. As carmakers race ever faster toward an autonomous future, he explained, cars resemble not a seamless grid of technologies but a mudslide, with everything in their paths picked up, smashed together, and pushed forward in a discordant, expensive mess.

At CES 2020 on Monday, Qualcomm unveiled a solution. They call it Snapdragon Ride. I call it mudslide protection.

Snapdragon Ride is a platform for autonomous vehicles, a handful of chips and a software stack that can fit into box no bigger than your backpack and can tie all of those systems together: Radar of all ranges (and maybe even high-resolution radar) unblinking LIDAR eyes, CV2X communication system, and front and rear cameras, connected via software that knows where the car is, where it should turn, and what’s happening on the roadway ahead.

“Qualcomm has been working on autonomous driving for many years,” Saxena told Digital Trends. “We’ve spent years to understand the whole problem, attack it, and put it all together into an autonomous solution.”

The platform scales, allowing carmakers to pick and choose the tech they want to support in their vehicles. That means today’s level 1 and 2 autonomous cars, which embrace driver assistance technologies to ensure the safety of passengers, can use the basics of the platform to add features, allowing a path forward for the platform. It makes it easier to embrace the features seen in today’s more advanced vehicles, like the Tesla Model 3 or vehicles featuring GM’s Supercruise tech. And in theory, it offers a path to tomorrow’s level 4 and level 5 autonomous vehicles, which should be able to drive themselves while you sit back and sip that latte.

Why Qualcomm, if you’re a car maker? Why not continue the billions currently being spent in-house to develop these systems? Saxena cites the company’s years of experience building powerhouse chips that sip power, such as the Snapdragon chips that power nearly every modern cell phone. Power consumption has been shrugged off by carmakers to date, leading to liquid-cooled systems, massive power supplies, and processing bricks that fill the trunks of modern test platforms.

“You can’t put those big powerhouses in cars. They’ll cost more than the car itself,” he told me.

Will car makers bite, trading the cobbled-together mishmash for a seamless platform? Only time will tell. But after four years spent road-testing its platform, Qualcomm feels the time is right to roll it out. Let’s see what’s the road ahead holds. Qualcomm expects Snapdragon Ride-enabled vehicles to be in production in 2023.

Follow our live blog for more CES news and announcements.
 

Editors' Recommendations

Jeremy Kaplan
As Editor in Chief, Jeremy Kaplan transformed Digital Trends from a niche publisher into one of the fastest growing…
Ex-Apple employee pleads guilty to nabbing Apple Car secrets
The Apple logo is displayed at the Apple Store June 17, 2015 on Fifth Avenue in New York City

A former Apple employee on Monday pled guilty to the theft of trade secrets from the tech firm.

The material stolen by Xiaolang Zhang was linked to Apple’s work on its first-ever automobile, a project that’s been in and out of the headlines for years though never officially confirmed by the company.

Read more
A weird thing just happened with a fleet of autonomous cars
A passenger getting into a Cruise robotaxi.

In what must be one of the weirder stories linked to the development of autonomous vehicles, a fleet of Cruise self-driving cars gathered together at an intersection in San Francisco earlier this week, parked up, and blocked traffic for several hours. And to be clear: No, they weren't supposed to do that.

Some observers may have thought they were witnessing the start of the robot uprising, but the real reason for the mishap was more prosaic: An issue with the platform's software.

Read more
Officers confused as they pull over an empty self-driving car
Cruise

In what appears to be the first incident of its kind, police officers recently pulled over a self-driving car with no one inside it.

The incident, which took place on a street in San Francisco earlier this month, was caught on video by a passing pedestrian. It shows several traffic cops pondering about how to handle the incident after stopping the vehicle for failing to have its front lights on while driving at night.

Read more