Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AI Transportation Apple

Apple Shifts Leadership of Self-Driving Car Unit To AI Chief (bloomberg.com) 11

Apple has moved its self-driving car unit under the leadership of top artificial intelligence executive John Giannandrea, who will oversee the company's continued work on an autonomous system that could eventually be used in its own car, Bloomberg reports. From the report: The project, known as Titan, is run day-to-day by Doug Field. His team of hundreds of engineers have moved to Giannandrea's artificial intelligence and machine-learning group, according to people familiar with the change. Previously, Field reported to Bob Mansfield, Apple's former senior vice president of hardware engineering. Mansfield has now fully retired from Apple, leading to Giannandrea taking over.

Giannandrea joined Apple in 2018 as its vice president of AI Strategy and Machine Learning before being promoted to Apple's executive team as a senior vice president later that year. He ran Google's machine-learning and search teams before that. At Apple, in addition to the car project, he is in charge of Siri and machine-learning technologies across Apple's products. Mansfield initially retired from Apple in 2012, only to return for less than a year as its senior vice president in charge of chip technology. Mansfield stepped down from that role in 2013 and then remained as a part-time consultant.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Shifts Leadership of Self-Driving Car Unit To AI Chief

Comments Filter:
  • For how long have they been pursuing this effort? This whole "self driving car" enterprise is such a prime example of Apple not knowing what to do with all that money, lol.
    • I think it's great that Apple is spending [some of] their money. Sitting on cash benefits no one. Apple can only do that for so long before someone else comes up with the Next Big Thing(tm) and they find themselves holding a lot of nothing.

      Autonomous vehicles are an important step in getting rid of cars. Once people are used to letting the vehicle drive, they'll be primed to use vehicles with steel wheels riding on steel rails. That reduces pollution, maintenance costs, energy consumption...

  • by Jodka ( 520060 ) on Thursday December 10, 2020 @06:07PM (#60817284)

    John Giannandrea, who will oversee the company's continued work on an autonomous system... is in charge of Siri

    I have Alexa, Google and Siri smart assistants and Siri stands out among those three as conspicuously stupid. If past performance is any indication, then with that guy in charge the Apple car will locate the nearest tree and accelerate into it at maximum speed.

    I would be out driving around town on errands and want to know the way back to work. Ask Google on my $250 Motorola Android phone, totally works 100% of the time. Ask Siri on my $1,000+ Apple iPhone and she would always give me driving instructions to some place in Pakistan. From Indiana. And almost always screw up every other destination. And when the destination is correct, the routes are often crazy. It's not just maps, Siri is just generally much worse with everything, including voice dialing.

    • Every time I ask anything: "Here's something I found on the web" Siri is basically just a google proxy.
      • The technology for smarter voice assistant has existed for years in academic papers. Chat bots rival humans at extracting textual information, sumarisation, even doing complex reasoning queries over tables of facts. There are also retrieval based dialogue engines that rely on a searchable index at query time, expanding its capacity by not having to memorize trivia in the neural net. The question is why aren't they being deployed?
  • If you see an AppleCar headed your way, remember that all its sensors were designed to look cool rather than be functional, if the rest of their products are anything to go by.

The biggest difference between time and space is that you can't reuse time. -- Merrick Furst

Working...