Nvidia’s New AI Model For Autonomous Vehicles
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Nvidia has unveiled a new self-driving car platform, teaming up with Mercedes-Benz on a driverless vehicle set to launch in the US very soon.
CES continues to change and adapt, and that spells a solid future for companies with big investments in the technology.
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World’s first foldable steering wheel retracts when the car is in auto mode
Autoliv and Tensor have jointly developed what they call the world’s first foldable steering wheel designed for a production-ready autonomous vehicle. The system will debut in the Tensor Robocar, a Level 4-capable personal autonomous vehicle expected to be ready for volume production in the second half of 2026.
At the CES conference, Jensen Huang, the company’s chief executive, said the more efficient and powerful chip would begin shipping later this year.
Autoliv and Tensor just answered that dilemma with something straight out of a concept car: the world’s first foldable steering wheel for production autonomous vehicles. This breakthrough technology will debut in the Tensor Robocar, which is expected to begin production in the second half of 2026.
Mercedes’ software-defined vehicle strategy quietly changes how cars evolve, updating continuously instead of aging by model year. I don’t think software-defined vehicles are
Such messaging is of dubious relevance to Europe, however, where roadways are already much safer than those in the US. Furthermore, Europeans are more likely to bike and ride public transportation — travel modes that are vulnerable to a deluge of self-driving cars.
Absent a federal standard, states that allow autonomous vehicles, or AVs, to circulate have had to make up their own rules. But is that safe enough?
At CES 2026 in, Nvidia formally introduced its next-generation autonomous driving AI platform, Alpamayo, a move that industry observers say marks the transition of self-driving technology from perception-driven systems to reasoning-oriented intelligence.