Anthony Levandowski buys Elon Musk’s vision for the future

Date:

Share post:


Anthony Levandowski, the engineer who co-founded Google’s self-driving car program (now known as Waymo) and has gone on to start an off-road AV startup, hopped on the phone with me after Tesla’s big robotaxi reveal to share his thoughts. And he is bullish on Elon Musk’s vision for Tesla’s and the world’s future, but he’s not without his, albeit small, reservations.

“I think the issue isn’t building the car without a steering wheel, it’s making the software work,” Levandowski told TechCrunch. “There’s a lot of gap between driving around on a track at an amusement park and driving around in Los Angeles traffic. The optimism is there. The realism is what’s coming next, and that will be where the hard part is.”

The engineer agreed with Musk’s vision-only approach to self-driving, rather than using “expensive sensors,” and said full self-driving appears to be in reach. He noted that while Waymo already has fully operational driverless robotaxis in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Phoenix, it’s a “much more engineer-heavy and sensory-heavy approach.”

“But to scale that out to the masses, you need something that’s affordable,” he said. Levandowski noted that he was really looking for Tesla to announce breakthroughs in its FSD software, which it will need if it wants to get to unsupervised FSD by next year. 

When it comes to the business model, Levandowski said he loved the idea of the Cybercabs being available for sale eventually. 

“You’re putting the power back into the people’s hands, where a small business owner could have, you know, a fleet of 10 cars or 20 cars that they run themselves as their business. It’s a great model for the future where it’s lots of mom and pops, rather than one mega corp that does that.”

The engineer said he agrees with Tesla’s vision of the future overall, but doesn’t expect it to come anytime soon, and certainly not within the timelines Musk sets. 

“If you can’t start a webcast on time, maybe your prediction for 2026 is a little ambitious,” Levandowski said, referencing Musk’s stated timeline that the Cybercab would start production in 2026. (Also, the event apparently started late because a guest had a medical emergency, but Musk’s timelines are famously too optimistic.)

Levandowski also said he was bullish on the Optimus robots, which were mingling with guests at the event Thursday. 

“But it’s a longer term bullish,” he said. “It’s not bullish this year. It’s a bullish over time…Robots in general are going to be the biggest product. They’re gonna be way bigger than Tesla cars, but they’re much further away than full self-driving cars.”

Wall Street investors did not seem to share Levandowski’s optimism. Tesla shares dropped more than 7% in early trading.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

ThredUp fashion marketplace offloads its European business, Remix

Fashion resale marketplace ThredUp has divested its European business to focus on its core domestic U.S. market....

Spotify Wrapped 2024 is almost here, but first let’s explore all the copycats 

Spotify’s annual Wrapped feature — which is coming out soon — provides listeners with a fun, personalized...

Google’s video generator comes to more customers

Google’s video generator is coming to a few more customers — Google Cloud customers, to be precise. On...

Intel’s ex-CEO Pat Gelsinger set to net more than $10M in severance pay

Intel’s newly departed CEO Pat Gelsinger could be walking away with more than $10 million in severance...

Delivery app Glovo bends to Spain’s Riders Law, will hire thousands of couriers

Glovo, a Spanish delivery app owned by Germany’s Delivery Hero, has bowed to pressure over labor rights...

UK antitrust suit hits Microsoft with claim for $1.25B in cloud fees damages

Microsoft is in the crosshairs of a U.K. competition class-action style lawsuit that’s seeking £1 billion (around...

US agency proposes new rule blocking data brokers from selling Americans’ sensitive personal data

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has proposed a new rule that would block data brokers from selling...

Orakl Oncology combines data and biology to bring new drugs to cancer patients

Cancer incidence is on the rise, particularly among younger adults, but most new drug compounds fail to...