Invisible man: German startup bets on remote driver

Invisible man: German startup bets on remote driver

Thomas von der Ohe, CEO and Co-Founder of Vay Technology, stands for a portrait with a remote driving Kia. Over the last year, riders in Las Vegas have been able to test drive the vehicle
Thomas von der Ohe, CEO and Co-Founder of Vay Technology, stands for a portrait with a remote driving Kia. Over the last year, riders in Las Vegas have been able to test drive the vehicle. Photo: Patrick T. Fallon / AFP
Source: AFP

With no one in the driver seat, the SUV pulling up resembles an autonomous robotaxi like those becoming increasingly present in some cities -- but the car from German startup Vay is something else.

One of a number of emerging players aiming to disrupt road transportation, the seven-year-old company is built around remote driving, where a human is very much present, though sitting in an office using TV monitors to guide the car.

Over the last year, riders in Las Vegas have been able to test drive Vay, and the company was demonstrating its technology ahead of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), the world's most important tech show.

Thomas von der Ohe, chief executive and co-founder of Vay, said his was a lower-cost approach "that has nothing to do with autonomous driving."

Von der Ohe, who previously worked at Zoox, the Amazon-owned autonomous driving company, said that unlike autonomous driving companies, Vay doesn't have to "run massive amounts of simulations" to be safe.

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"Our core safety principle is that the (human driver) can make the decision," he said.

And unlike a Tesla or Waymo, there is no dream at Vay of one day shedding the steering wheel, which twists and turns during rides as if maneuvered by the Invisible Man.

The remote driving approach also employs fairly inexpensive camera technology, which costs a fraction of the envelope-pushing Lidar sensing systems favored by leading autonomous companies.

A demonstration of the remote driving technology showed someone watching three screens -- which included live imagery from front, side and rear-view cameras -- as they operated a system similar to at-home racing simulators, with a steering wheel and pedals.

Vay is offering rides for half the price of Uber or Lyft. Von der Ohe hopes to reach profitability in the next year or two, depending on how quickly the company can scale.

A remote driver steers a Vay vehicle during a live demonstration prior to the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) kickoff in Las Vegas, Nevada
A remote driver steers a Vay vehicle during a live demonstration prior to the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) kickoff in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo: Patrick T. Fallon / AFP
Source: AFP

Since launching 12 months ago, Vay's Las Vegas fleet has grown from two to 30 vehicles, completing 6,000 rides, von der Ohe said.

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But Von der Ohe believes the company's cash cow will not be ride-hailing, but the delivery of autos to consumers who then drive the vehicles.

In this way, Vay resembles a car rental company.

Since the launch in Las Vegas, some customers have ordered up Vay vehicles for home delivery and then driven them themselves.

That flexibility is one reason "we believe this can be a real alternative to private cars," von der Ohe said.

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Source: AFP

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