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Will Tech Leave Detroit In the Dust? (wsj.com) 102

As automotive companies shift their focus to software and services in the pursuit of self-driving cars, the impact to large manufacturing cities like Detroit could be drastic. The Wall Street Journal explores this "transformation without precedent" and poses the question: will tech leave Detroit in the dust? From the report: Auto makers point out that they have one advantage that newcomers to the industry don't: vehicles. "Ultimately, you can have the best services platform there is, but if you don't have the vehicles to operate on it, that won't do you much good," said Sam Abuelsamid, a senior analyst with Navigant research. "That's where the manufacturers have an ace in the hole." Many analysts believe businesses like Uber and Alphabet's self-driving tech subsidiary Waymo won't have the appetite to get into the low-margin, capital-intensive business of car manufacturing. Some auto executives say they can hold on to their roles as hardware providers while also tapping into the growth of more-profitable services. Mr. Stackmann said VW can earn millions more customers than it currently has by offering transportation as a service through a network of connected cars. "They talk about scalability, but where is the added value from Uber?" he said. "We have a technical foundation and will build connectivity into our vehicles to connect them and our customers to our ecosystem. In the long term, the question will be: Why do you need Uber?"

Auto industry executives have long seen tech-industry threats coming. The valuation of Elon Musk's Tesla has soared in recent years, pulling even with GM's, as it has shown it can create a fiercely loyal customer base for electric cars. Google began working on autonomous-vehicle technology in 2009 and its self-driving car unit Waymo is today considered a leader in the technology. While demand for new cars and trucks remains robust and selling them will remain a core part of the industry's business in the years to come, many executives believe the long-term profit growth is limited as new forms of transportation proliferate and more car owners ditch their vehicles for shared ones, hurting sales. Car companies are trying to diversify into new business models that, much like Uber, sell transportation as a service. Revenue is generated by usage as opposed to a one-time vehicle sale, and because the service isn't as capital-intensive as building and selling cars, executives believe it can ultimately command higher margins..."
The report goes on to mention the investments automobile companies are making to restructure their businesses. GM, Ford, and Toyota, for example, "are investing in new tech startups, purchasing artificial-intelligence and robotics firms, and hiring thousands of workers in tech hubs in California and Tel Aviv, Israel," reports the WSJ. "Several car companies have acquired or invested in makers of lidar, laser-based sensors that help driverless cars navigate. The auto makers are tapping the tech world for software-engineering talent, a skill traditionally in short supply in the car business."

"Over the last year, GM has taken journalists and investors through a factory in suburban Detroit, where workers plan to build self-driving Chevrolet Bolt electric cars that have no steering wheels or brake pedals," reports the WSJ. "The message: It has the manufacturing might to crank out thousands of robot cars, while tech rivals like Alphabet's Waymo unit must equip their autonomous systems onto vehicles they purchase from traditional car companies."
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Will Tech Leave Detroit In the Dust?

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  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Sunday October 21, 2018 @12:23PM (#57513186) Journal

    There's tons of software done in Detroit as almost every controllable component is a node on the network nowadays, and that's all embedded. Nav radios are fully functioning 32-bit computers with either some *nix clone or Microsoft's OS on it.

    And Detroit is right. It's easier to hire people to add the latest tech goodies than it is for the tech goodie inventors to create a whole car around it.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      That's cool if you want some mediocre system plugged into the same old stale platform from 5 or 10 or 20 years ago.

      Building a whole new car may be difficult, but you end up with a new car. There are pluses and minuses.

      • >Building a whole new car may be difficult, but you end up with a new car. There are pluses and minuses.

        This.

        Case in point - My 2015 Nissan Leaf is a traditional car by a traditional manufacturer, but with electric innards. This is a compromise. There's a lead-acid battery to drive all the standard 12V stuff in the car. That battery died last week because it never supplies cranking amps, which isn't good for lead acid batteries. A soup to nuts electric car (like current gen Teslas) wouldn't have this pr

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by JBMcB ( 73720 )

        Building a whole new car may be difficult...

        That's the understatement of the century. It's beyond difficult. It's herculean. It's somewhat easier when you are building a luxury product and the market for your product is, maybe, a few hundred thousand. It's a whole 'nother ball of wax when you are churning out millions of cars a year. For instance, when you are at that volume at a low price, you need to hedge on raw materials so commodity price spikes don't eliminate your profit margin. Large car companies have entire divisions that just figure out ho

      • Detroit's problem has never been that they don't make new cars. They're absolutely obsessed with new cars. The Japanese have been making Accords and Camrys since before I was born, the only Detroit-mark that's been around the whole time is the Corvette.

        They have been quite slow on adopting electrics, but that's changing mighty fast.

  • is that they will never lose their crown and the central hub for all vehicle manufacturing. Nope. Never. Not gonna happen.
    • They will never stop believing that they lost their crown years ago, and that it was their own fault. It turns out MBA executive types aren't actually that good at much of anything except destroying anything they get their hands on, all in the name of shareholder value.

  • Detroit one of the top 10 booming tech places in the US last year [forbes.com]. Reminds me of the great Mark Knopfler line: "Two men say they're Jesus, one of them must be wrong"...
  • "workers plan to build self-driving Chevrolet Bolt electric cars that have no steering wheels or brake pedals" - I'm surprised and impressed by the level of workers' control in American factories.

    • Pff! British car manufacturers were turning out cars with no brakes or steering wheels in the 70s! I wouldn't be surprised if a few of them went out without their petrol engines too ;-)

  • "The message: It has the manufacturing might to crank out thousands of robot cars, while tech rivals like Alphabet's Waymo unit must equip their autonomous systems onto vehicles they purchase from traditional car companies."

    Unless the AV developers can come up with a mechanism for taking a standard model (human driver) car and installing all the necessary hardware and computers inside that.

    Given that an AV wouldn't need a driver, their seat could be ripped out and a "black box" put in its place. Wire up the sensors and engine interface and off you go. You lose a seat, but with average vehicle occupancy being well below an ordinary car's capacity, there would be few occasions where that would matter.

  • I thought Japan left Detroit in the dust about 25 years ago.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      I thought Japan left Detroit in the dust about 25 years ago.

      More like 45 years ago.

  • by berchca ( 414155 ) on Sunday October 21, 2018 @01:02PM (#57513408) Homepage

    The more competition, the merrier. It think the line about cars being a low-margin business (compared to tech endeavors) is telling. I personally hold great hope that all my future "driving" will be paid in micropayments, on a per-ride basis, rather than through a major investment every 5-8 years. For that to happen, the per-ride cost has to be comparable between the two.

  • Most of the effort goes into the driving experience, like how the car handles, the interface to operate it, driver assistance and so on. None of that will be relevant anymore, as long as the AI can get you from A to B. What's the magic in creating a passenger seat? If you take a cab, do you care what brand it is? At scale there's no reason for Waymo to tie themselves to any particular brand, they could have a million from each manufacturer. Heck, they could probably just hire a few car designers and create

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Sunday October 21, 2018 @01:28PM (#57513522)
    ... in a car. It is an entirely different problem to build reliable cars en masse. The recent tear-down video of a Tesla shows that they still appear to be grappling with the building of a car around their electronics.
    • The teardown I vaguely remember showed tesla being very intelligently designed and assembled. Where the cost per vehicle, once scaled, meant profit for tesla.

      What tear down and what conclusions were reached?

      I'm neither a fan nor tesla hater.

      You sound short TSLA

  • Car making is capital intensive. Capital markets are very conservative and they are quarterly number obsessive. They work slowly and methodically. They know the technology today and design cars based on that. For example, start with "how many HP?", "How much a power train of that power would weigh?", "How much would it cost?", "What would be its MPG rating?" "How much would it sell for?" , adjust numbers iterate and finish with specs. Then take two years to do prelim design, one more year for detailed desig
  • by doubledown00 ( 2767069 ) on Sunday October 21, 2018 @02:38PM (#57513844)
    Work in the industry long enough and what you see is that the automotive business does not innovate and downright sucks when it comes to developing and implementing their own tech.

    Examples: Dealerships are locked into hopelessly obsolete systems through UCS (now Reynolds), CDK, ADP automotive, etc. They still actively push solutions that use 10 year old cisco routers, dot matrix printers, and etc. I even saw SCO Unix still being used around 2012. When one vendor dipped their toe in the water and made a (shitty) web based system, everyone panicked.

    In car entertainment systems: They suck too. At first the companies tried to develop their own (Ford Link, Lincoln in car entertainment, I forget what GM called their abortion entry). After they figured out they couldn't do systems worth a damn, they tried to partner with others. And somehow managed to screw that up (Microsoft's Sync implementations come to mind ).

    On the other hand you have the tech companies. They may make a better software product, but they don't have 80 years of car building and engineering experience. Tesla makes a hell of a car, but they can't scale and right now they are crafting parts in fucking *tents* attached to their factories. They are going to have quality control issues out the wazoo.

    Add all of this up and the advantage still goes to the auto makers because:
    1) They have the manufacturing capacity and partner relationships. The big 3 can integrate self driving software. Self driving people have to buy / design the car and retrofit it.; and
    2) People are already use to driving their own cars. It is the tech companies that are trying to change the paradigm. They will have the pressure to make a perfect product. If they have a flaw we'll all be taking about how they fucked up the self driving aspect. On the other hand all the auto makers have to do is make car that drives with a drive assist feature that is passable. If they have a problem, we'll roll our eyes and say the car is ok but the self driving needs improvement.

    In order for self driving cars to really become successful and enter the mainstream, the tech guys are going to have to go automotive.
    • by rapjr ( 732628 )
      Self driving cars, especially electric, are simpler mechanically, so automotive companies may not have as much of an advantage. Cars are going to get smaller and be electric (requires less resources, global warming, costs less); the current car companies still want to sell us $35,000+ multi-ton behemoths. Buy two small autonomous electric vehicles and have the second one tag along when you need extra space for transporting items or people; otherwise the second vehicle stays home (or it could be hired in t
  • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Sunday October 21, 2018 @04:45PM (#57514324)

    If the average car is used 3% today, and self driving taxis take over, the real challenge will be the number of cars required will shrink by an order of magnitude or more. That leaves the legacy automakers with huge infrastructure that will be grossly under-utilized.

    Even if they can make everything else work including vehicle electrification and autonomous driving, this will limit their ability to compete.

  • No, not at all.
    If anything, tech will SAVE Detroit, as soon cybernetics get good enough and a good police officer get shot by a gang.

  • And they're all multinational companies, still. But the future of automobiles is very much still up in the air. Will they need to build ten times as many cars, or one-tenth as many, for a given market? And who will own those vehicles? The split of personally-owned versus fleet-owned vehicles will, to a large extent, determine the answers to most of these questions.

    Consumers aren't by and large cancelling their Uber rides because they don't like the brand of vehicle that's coming for them. If people don't ow

  • They sealed their fate when they laughed W. E. Deming out of town and country for having the temerity to suggest that maybe they should build cars that don't suck. Deming, however, found an audience for his theories on statistical quality analysis and management in... you guessed it... Japan. Not only did the Japanese accept Deming's notion that building quality products is a good thing. They took it to heart and built on it and applied it not just to their automotive industry, but their industrial base

  • Tech doesn't have a hard climb to leave Detroit in the dust, since the city is already falling apart :D

  • Disclaimer: Didn't RTFA, going straight to comment. My observation is young people are not rushing out to get a car like I did when I turned 18. Cars last longer, more expensive unlike my first car was a $300 junker. These days there may be old cars but not junkers, i.e. smog requirements tighter and if car doesn't pass smog can't get it registered. Then there are tighter insurance requirements, don't have insurance can't get a license. Back then you could still get a license and register the car if don't h

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