Alphabet's Waymo just explained how it can make money: selling its self-driving car sensors to partners
Alphabet's autonomous driving unit, Waymo, announced on Wednesday that it will begin to sell its self-driving car sensors to third-parties interested in using the technology for other purposes outside of self-driving cars.
Waymo isn't licensing this technology to businesses that could cannibalize its own attempts in the self-driving industry. It sees LIDAR, which is an acronym for light detection and ranging, as a means to"spur the growth of applications outside of self-driving cars," while also serving as a revenue source.
Last year, Morgan Stanley said Waymo could be worth as much as $70 billion, a staggering figure for a unit that's still included in Alphabet's"other bets" category and which hasn't yet disclosed any revenue figures. "Our custom LIDARs have been instrumental in making Waymo the first company in the world to put fully self-driving cars on public roads," head of Waymo's LIDAR team Simon Verghese wrote in a company blog post on Wednesday."Now, we are making these sensors available to companies outside of self-driving — beginning with robotics, security, agricultural technology, and more — so they can achieve their own technological breakthroughs.
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