Mobileye to ship at least 46 million assisted driving chips to customers

Israeli automotive tech company Mobileye said on Wednesday it had secured orders to ship 46 million of its EyeQ6 Lite assisted-driving chips over the next few years as automakers race to make cars safer and easier to drive.

Mobileye is selling the EyeQ6 Lite in all major markets around the world, and cars with the technology will be launched in the middle of this year, according to Mobileye’s Nimrod Nehushtan, executive vice president of business strategy and development.

“The 46 million represents the amount of EyeQ6 Lite (business) that we have won to date,” Nehushtan said in an interview with Reuters. “So it will grow, and it will be rolled out over the course of the next few years.”

Mobileye did not disclose the names of the customers for EyeQ6 because it was bound by non-disclosure agreements. The company counts Volkswagen and Porsche among its customers.

The company’s shares rose more than 6% in early trading on Wednesday.

The EyeQ6 Lite system is Mobileye’s mass-market product for vehicles with some assisted driving features, such as automated cruise control and lane-changing, but not designed to power ones with higher levels of automation that allow drivers to take their hands off the wheel and eyes off the road.

Launching fully self-driving vehicles, such as robotaxis, or ones that require minimal human intervention, has been tougher than expected with steep investments, high safety risks and strict regulations.

But in an effort to differentiate themselves amid rising competition, automakers have been adding an array of more basic driver-assistance features.

The EyeQ6 Lite, for example, is capable of reading text phrases on road signage, like a speed limit that is only active on weekday mornings, or a city entrance sign that implies a lower speed limit.

The chip offers 4.5 times more computing horsepower compared with its prior generation and is manufactured with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co’s 7-nanometer process.

“It can support all five star ratings globally, but be extremely power efficient and cost efficient,” Nehushtan said. “That’s kind of the mission statement of this chip.”

The sensors on EyeQ6L include an 8-megapixel camera that is capable of a 120-degree lateral field of vision that can detect environmental conditions and objects at a greater distance.

The company said its more advanced assisted-driving chip, the EyeQ6 High, is set to enter volume production “early next year.”

Mobileye is set to report first-quarter results on April 25.

—Max A. Cherney and Abhirup Roy, Reuters

Yuvraj Malik contributed to this report.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91107966/mobileye-eyeq6-lite-assisted-driving-chips-ship-46-million?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvorené 1y | 17. 4. 2024, 23:20:04


Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa

Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine

How this Florida county is using new 911 technology to save lives

When an emergency happens in Collier County, Florida, the

15. 7. 2025, 16:30:05 | Fast company - tech
How a ‘Shark Tank’-winning neuroscientist invented the bionic hand that stole the show at Comic-Con

A gleaming Belle from Beauty and the Beast glided along the exhibition floor at last year’s San Diego Comic-Con adorned in a yellow corseted gown with cascading satin folds. She could bare

15. 7. 2025, 14:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Why 1995 was the year the internet grew up

The internet wasn’t born whole—it came together from parts. Most know of ARPANET, the internet’s most famous precursor, but it was always limited strictly to government use. It was NSFNET that bro

15. 7. 2025, 11:50:03 | Fast company - tech
What is quantum computing? Here’s everything you need to know right now

Computing revolutions are surprisingly rare. Despite the extraordinary technological progress that separates the first general-purpose digital computer—1945’s

15. 7. 2025, 9:30:04 | Fast company - tech
This IBM ThinkPad was astounding in 1995—and still is

Closed, it looks pretty much like any other laptop manufactured in 1995.

To be sure, it’s more compact than most—making it, in the parlance of the day, a subnotebook. But it’s still comi

15. 7. 2025, 7:20:02 | Fast company - tech
This IBM ThinkPad was astounding in 1995—and still is

Closed, it looks pretty much like any other laptop manufactured in 1995.

To be sure, it’s more compact than most—making it, in the parlance of the day, a subnotebook. But it’s still comi

15. 7. 2025, 4:50:04 | Fast company - tech