Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Cars
  4. News

Nvidia begins shipping machine learning hardware to Tesla, Bentley and others

Add as a preferred source on Google

When you think of a self-driving car, you might have a space age, egg-looking vehicle with small wheels pictured in your mind (thanks to Google). However, executives at Nvidia claim that they may not end up being so futuristic-looking after all, according to the Wall Street Journal.

As of May 2015, the graphics cards maker has begun shipping hardware and software to manufacturers, such as Bentley and Tesla. One of the items includes a graphics processor that helps automobiles “see” the world around them.

Recommended Videos

The hardware isn’t particularly large, though, which means future autonomous cars should look somewhat similar to other models we see on the road today.

Danny Shapiro, the director of automotive operations at Nvidia, says the company’s technology can help cars detect objects around them. It also can give an automobile the ability to decipher between other cars, such as ambulances and police cars.

Shapiro acknowledged the competition to get the first self-driving car on the market. However, he noted that cars need to be sufficiently trained before they are sent out on the market for consumers to buy.

In January 2015, Nvidia debuted its Tegra X1 mobile super chip designed for deep learning. At the time, the company specified that it would be featured in Nvidia Drive car computers. Tegra X1 has a 256-core Maxwell GPU, eight CPU cores and is built on a 20nm process. The chip itself is the size of a thumbnail.

“This impressive technical achievement benefits both 3D graphics, particularly on devices with high-resolution screens, as well as GPGPU software that is becoming more prevalent, particularly in automotive applications,” said Linley Gwennap, principal analyst of the Linley Group.

Krystle Vermes
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Krystle Vermes is a professional writer, blogger and podcaster with a background in both online and print journalism. Her…
Turns out, teaching games like Battleship can make small AI models a whole lot smarter
By turning Battleship into an AI training ground, researchers helped smaller models reason more efficiently.
AI Apps installed on iPhone Gemini DeepSeek Claude ChatGPT Auren

Small AI models just got a surprising boost from a very old game.

MIT researchers used a Battleship-style setup to test whether AI agents can improve how they gather information before making a move. The result was a sharp jump in performance for smaller systems, including one model that went from rarely beating humans to winning most of its games after researchers changed how it searched the board.

Read more
This AI can tell a real online review from a fake one, and it’s surprisingly accurate
AI is getting really good at spotting the reviews you shouldn't trust.
hand holding a card asking for review

Fake reviews are a real menace for online shoppers. If you have ever bought something online based on glowing reviews only to receive a disappointingly subpar product, you know what I mean. A new study published in the International Journal of Information and Communication Technology proposes an AI-powered system that can not only detect fake reviews, but also trace how they spread.

Why existing tools keep falling short

Read more
Steam Machine confirmed to land this summer, but we’re still in the dark about its price
Steam Machine is getting closer to launch, with broader game verification arriving before Valve reveals what it’ll cost.
Steam Machine with Steam Controller

Valve has confirmed that Steam Machine is shipping this summer, giving PC gamers a real launch window for its SteamOS living room PC. The missing piece is still price, and that’s the detail many buyers need before they can decide whether it fits their setup.

The update came as Valve expanded its Verified program to cover Steam Machine and Steam Frame. For Steam Machine, games will be checked for default controller support, default graphics settings, and how well they run without manual setup. Valve says the hardware is roughly six times as powerful as Steam Deck, while still using SteamOS, the Steam interface, and Proton.

Read more