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Self-drive yourself to coding with Amazon's latest gizmo

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Self-drive yourself to coding with Amazons latest gizmo

Amazon.com's AWS DeepRacer helps developers try out their own self-driving tech.

Las Vegas/San Francisco - $399 autonomous toy car aimed at helping developers try out some of their own self-driving tech

Published: Thu 29 Nov 2018, 7:28 PM

Updated: Thu 29 Nov 2018, 9:32 PM

  • By
  • Reuters

Self-driving cars, meet Amazon's self-driving toys.
Amazon.com's cloud unit announced a $399 autonomous toy car, aimed at helping Web developers try out some of their own self-driving technology. Customers can train and tweak machine learning models in an online simulator and then test drive them on vehicles one-eighteenth the size of a real race car.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is even creating a sports league and championship cup, borne out of races its employees had with each other using the model car, the AWS DeepRacer.
"It started getting pretty competitive," Andy Jassy, chief executive of AWS, said at the company's annual cloud conference in Las Vegas. "We had to remind people that we were actually trying to build this and launch this for customers. But it was actually kind of interesting, educational for us."
He added of the forthcoming competition: "This is the world's first global autonomous racing league open to everyone."
The news represents another opportunity for the world's No. 1 cloud computing company to lure people to try its machine learning services such as Amazon SageMaker, applying them to the car.
It also raises questions about Amazon's interest in autonomous vehicles, an exploding area that has drawn heavy investments from automakers and technology companies alike, notably rival Alphabet.
Simulations similar to the races Amazon is proposing are common in academic circles studying how traffic management would work in an era of self-driving cars. To be sure, autonomous vehicles rely on sensors, lidar and other components that are not the focus of AWS DeepRacer.
Amazon previously held what it called "Robocar Rallies" focused on behavioral cloning technology, which AWS DeepRacer events will now replace.
Machine learning chip out, too
Meanwhile, Amazon.com launched a microchip aimed at so-called machine learning, entering a market that both Intel and Nvidia are counting on to boost their earnings in the coming years.
The so-called "Inferentia" chip will help with what researchers call inference, which is the process of taking an AI algorithm and putting it to use, for example by scanning incoming audio and translating that into text-based requests.
It is not, however, a direct threat to Intel and Nvidia's business because it will not be selling the chips.



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