Qualcomm’s next AI frontier is… your car

Qualcomm has traditionally been quiet about its automotive ambitions, preferring to focus on its Snapdragon mobile and laptop processor offerings. That may be changing. The company flew me to the Qualcomm Snapdragon Summit on Maui to see its latest Snapdragon Elite chipsand this year it’s all about automotive. The Snapdragon digital chassis has been powering cars for a few years, but now Qualcomm is tooting its Elite horn with Snapdragon Ride Elite and Snapdragon Cockpit Elite systems on a chip. And when Qualcomm says “Elite,” it means power and AI. AI is coming to cars in a big way.

I don’t just mean self-driving AI, although that is certainly a big part of Qualcomm’s technology. The new Snapdragon Ride Elite chipset can manage up to 40 different sensors simultaneously. This includes radar, LiDAR, cameras, microphones and infrared. It will use AI to manage all that data and assist with driving. Qualcomm suggests that the Ride Elite can handle Level 3 and Level 4 auto-driving, which means you still have to keep your hands on the wheel, or at least close.

Qualcomm AI means much more than driving automation. There will be new features tailored for an in-car experience, although much of what Qualcomm is showing now sounds like smartphone AI ported to the car. You can use AI to set a reminder, or it can find the nearest Starbucks if it thinks you need some caffeine. Your children can ask for last-minute homework help on the way to school.

(Image credit: Philip Berne/Future)

Some of those sensors managed by Snapdragon will be pointed into the car. Qualcomm envisions automakers using infrared cameras to not only detect the number of occupants, but also read our body postures and even facial expressions. This technology is similar to Apple’s FaceID, which also uses infrared cameras to read the contours of your face.