Think Nvidia's AI self-driving tech might shake things up? According to recent remarks, their autonomous driving models could present real competitive pressure in the EV space within the next five to six years. The timeline matters here—it signals how seriously major players are watching the autonomous vehicle race. As AI capabilities advance and chip performance improves, traditional automakers face mounting pressure to accelerate their own autonomous solutions. The question isn't just about technology anymore; it's about who can scale first and execute at scale. Whether this translates to actual market disruption depends on regulatory approval, infrastructure readiness, and real-world performance metrics. Still, the competitive landscape in autonomous driving is heating up, and investors watching the EV sector should keep tabs on how these AI developments unfold over the coming years.
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ShitcoinConnoisseur
· 2h ago
Shaking up the market within five or six years? Haha, let's first get past the regulatory hurdle.
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TopBuyerBottomSeller
· 01-07 04:49
5-6 years? Nice way to put it. Everything will change by then.
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TheMemefather
· 01-06 20:53
5 to 6 years? Huang Renxun is overestimating, the regulatory hurdle alone is tough enough.
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AirdropHunter
· 01-06 20:43
Five or six years? How much money will have to be spent by then? The regulatory hurdle alone could shut out a bunch of people.
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BearMarketMonk
· 01-06 20:38
5-6 years? That's optimistic; regulation alone is enough to cause delays.
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Layer2Observer
· 01-06 20:29
Technically, a 5-6 year timeframe is a bit optimistic. From an engineering perspective, there are too many pitfalls between chip computing power, real-world testing, and mass production. Let's look at the data—currently, the actual accident rate of autonomous driving and sensor costs are the key factors determining who can survive until then.
Think Nvidia's AI self-driving tech might shake things up? According to recent remarks, their autonomous driving models could present real competitive pressure in the EV space within the next five to six years. The timeline matters here—it signals how seriously major players are watching the autonomous vehicle race. As AI capabilities advance and chip performance improves, traditional automakers face mounting pressure to accelerate their own autonomous solutions. The question isn't just about technology anymore; it's about who can scale first and execute at scale. Whether this translates to actual market disruption depends on regulatory approval, infrastructure readiness, and real-world performance metrics. Still, the competitive landscape in autonomous driving is heating up, and investors watching the EV sector should keep tabs on how these AI developments unfold over the coming years.