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Building Tomorrow, Ep. 14: When Will We Get Fully Autonomous Cars? - Duration: 33:11.

00:04 Paul Matzko: Welcome back for the final episode of our three-part TechCrunch Disrupt

series about the latest trends out of Silicon Valley.

I'm your host, Paul Matzko.

Today, I want to talk to you about the way that venture capitalists and startup engineers

at TechCrunch Disrupt talked about the state and regulation.

The shortest possible summary is less than you might think, but in interesting ways.

Let me start by saying how refreshing it was to be surrounded by folks who are fixated

on what they can do, rather than what they should do.

Now, there is a conversation to be had about how blinkered tech culture can be, how they

can inadvertently or advertently, cause harm because they don't think through the social

ramifications of the tech they are developing.

00:47 Paul Matzko: For example, when social media engineers invented the "infinite scroll",

you know, how you can keep flicking up indefinitely on Twitter or Facebook or Insta, they didn't

think about how addictive it would be.

Indeed, now, the big social media companies are scrambling to undo some of that damage

by building in time use monitors and controls.

But even Silicon Valley types have to take heed of what regulators are doing.

The difference between a successful startup and a failure is as likely to be bureaucracy

as a flawed monetization plan.

So there was a panel at TechCrunch for instance, discussing the difference between how car

share companies like Uber and Lyft were received by regulators and scooter rental companies

like Lime and Bird more recently have been received.

Despite having essentially the same "It's better to ask forgiveness than permission"

approach to in this bold regulation, they've had very different outcomes.

Now, in this case, transportation regulators are coming down hard on scooters, because

they kinda got pantsed by the ride-hailing corporations.

01:51 Paul Matzko: But while that's kind of a libertarian friendly way of thinking about

regulation, let's break things and if we break enough things, we'll show how we can improve

society, none of the people I interviewed or met while at the conference was formally

libertarian.

There is a general ethos of annoyance there at regulators who won't let them do cool tech

stuff, but it's too inchoate to really be considered proto-libertarian and any kind

of systematic way.

But one thing is very clear from spending time at TechCrunch, and that's that the US

is being bypassed by other countries in part because of the difficulty and the increasing

difficulty of doing innovative work without falling afoul of local, state and federal

regulators.

02:38 Paul Matzko: One of the exhibitors on Startup Alley was a company named Wingly,

which is essentially applying the Airbnb business model to private planes.

So let's say you own a half a million dollar private plane, should we all be so lucky,

and regularly hop over the English Channel with it.

It might be faster than taking the train or flying commercial, or maybe you just like

flying.

You love seeing the cliffs of Dover, but it's expensive to own and operate a plane and jet

fuel ain't cheap.

So rather than flying alone, the idea of Wingly is that you would use their app to offer one

or two of your seats in your plane for passengers who would then help you defray the cost of

fuel.

It's a win-win.

Your maintenance cost, your operating cost is lower and the passenger gets the convenience

and luxury of a private plane ride.

That sounds great, right?

03:31 Paul Matzko: So what does regulation have to do with this story?

Wingly is a French company.

Aviation, despite the reputation of regulation on the continent versus the US, aviation is

actually significantly less regulated in much of Europe than in the US.

By contrast, a US company called Flytenow, that essentially wanted to do the same thing,

was just shut down this year by the FAA which ruled that defraying fuel cost made Flytenow

pilots commercial rather than private pilots.

And thus, they would be subject to all the training requirements, all the labor organization

rules that applied to commercial piloting.

Why did they do that?

Well, part of it's lobbying from pilot unions, they don't like the competition.

But also because if there's one thing that bureaucracies abhor, it's risk, risk of any

kind.

They don't want passengers taking the risks involved in flying on a private plane, which

are real.

You are more likely to die in a crash on a private plane than you are in a commercial

flight.

At the same time, that risk, while it's larger, it's not as large as dying in a car crash

one mile from your home.

So risk is always relative, but the FAA has essentially a zero tolerance policy towards

risk when it comes to new innovative business models.

04:47 Paul Matzko: Now, at the end of the day, flight sharing is a relatively niche

consumer audience.

We're essentially making access to private plane rides accessible to the upper middle

class and not just the upper class, and it's an incremental upgrade.

But on the other hand, there is a developing niche that falls under transportation regulation

that has the potential to transform the lives of everyone, regardless of income or ownership.

I'm talking here of autonomous vehicles and they're coming very, very soon.

In fact, depending on what you count, they're already here in the sense that most of us,

if we buy a new car or buying a car that parks itself, it does its own cruise control, it

has emergency braking if we can't stop quickly enough on our own.

And features like that are becoming the new standard for vehicles.

That's what's called level two automation on a level five scale.

They're all techs that assist a human driver who's still responsible to keep their hands

on the wheel and their eyes looking out the windows at all time.

But levels three to five all involve increasing levels of driver-free automation with level

five being a car that has no steering wheel at all.

06:01 Paul Matzko: Our next interview is with a autonomous car company called Byton which

is developing a level three car with hopes for a level four car in the near future.

Listen in.

[pause]

06:14 Paul Matzko: I'm here with Florian Baur who's the head of product management for a

car manufacturer called Byton.

They do some autonomous vehicles, it's an electric vehicle.

It's designed to be shared.

We're gonna talk a little bit about more of that together, but thanks for coming on with

me Florian, I appreciate it.

06:29 Florian Baur: Sure.

Thanks for having me.

06:31 Paul Matzko: To kick us off, I should mention that Byton is literally around the

neck of every attendee of TechCrunch Disrupt.

They're on our lanyards for our name tags.

I hadn't heard of Byton until this conference.

So tell me a little bit about the company.

When our listeners hear Byton they're thinking probably...

Or think of car companies sponsoring major tech conference.

They're probably not at this point thinking about Byton.

Tell me why they should be aware of Byton.

07:00 Florian Baur: Alright.

So Byton is a company that was founded about a little bit more than two years ago, it was

founded in Hong Kong and one investor had an idea and started recruiting people for

about one or two years until he found the perfect team from different spaces to actually

pull this off.

So we're a bunch of ex-BMW people who worked on the BMW-I sub brand.

We have a lot of people who used to work at Tesla before.

We combined this knowledge with the tech knowledge from other companies from Apple or Google.

And you name the company we probably have an ex-employee in our company now.

07:42 Paul Matzko: It's good.

07:42 Florian Baur: So we started off very small with just an idea on a blank sheet of

paper.

We understood that the future is gonna be electric so it had to be an electric car,

right?

That was no question.

The future's gonna be connected, that's what we knew.

So we had to do something to leverage technology to actually connect things to things and also

develop a car as a device.

So, as one additional smart device in your ecosystems of devices that you just add to

your other devices.

And then, of course, we had to tackle the question of autonomous cars.

We all know the future is gonna be somewhat autonomous.

So, of course, we wanna play in that field, as well.

And we need to consider the changing customer habits of maybe not even owning a car in the

future anymore but using it on demand in a shared vehicle.

So we also tackled that space a little bit.

And the idea was from a blank sheet of paper to keep all these things in mind, and design

a vehicle architecture that is scalable to multiple products and future proof for the

next 10 years.

08:54 Paul Matzko: So you don't necessarily need to be at the kind of maximum future capability

in any of those regards, you just have to be...

But you need to build in the capacity to get there in the future.

So with the self-driving bit, my understanding is the prototype that's out on display, here

on the floor and the exhibition hall is like level three autonomous.

09:17 Florian Baur: Yeah.

So basically, these things come step by step.

The first car will be super focused on the user experience, on the new way to interact

with the car, we have a 49-inch screen built in to the dashboard.

09:31 Paul Matzko: It's quite impressive I'll say that as someone who's sat in the car.

It's...

It surrounds you in the front.

09:37 Florian Baur: It's probably gonna be the biggest screen you see on the market and

the difference is we're not just talking about it, we're actually doing and developing it

and we're adding a driver display that we call Driver Tablet that is a touch screen

right in the middle of the steering wheel to prepare for use cases that will be eventually

enabled by autonomous driving or by more and more situations in which you can give control

to the vehicle.

Right?

So the goal is to develop everything with the future in mind, so we're not dependent

on autonomous driving.

You can still drive the car yourself, it still has a steering wheel because the risk would

just be too high that...

And at some point, it's a legal issue and you can't offer the car because it doesn't

have a steering wheel.

The screen offers you endless opportunities for services based on your personal profile

that you bring to the car, it recognizes you with a facial recognition camera, it knows

exactly what seat you're taking to bring your content onto your screen or your area of the

screen that is most convenient to you.

10:43 Paul Matzko: Which is both of us as parents of young children will appreciate.

10:47 Florian Baur: Exactly.

You can just send something to the back, and make sure they're happy.

10:53 Paul Matzko: Yeah.

That's true.

Number one priority for every parent driving.

10:55 Florian Baur: Or quiet or one of the two or ideally both.

And yeah, so advanced levels of autonomous driving will enable more and more use cases

for the content on these screens.

And the goal is that the user interface will just grow with these use cases and not have

to be rethought after level four and level five will come.

So the first car as you mentioned will have level three capabilities.

11:22 Paul Matzko: Which means?

11:22 Florian Baur: Highway Pilot and other individual situations in which the car will

be able to take over.

So remote parking and all of these features that add convenience to your day to day life.

But it's not like this on and off switch that a level four is.

Let's say it's either completely autonomous or not, it's more situation-adequate, also

in line with the legal requirements that you have to fulfill in all the markets.

Then the second car we're developing on the same platform by the way is equipped with

level four technology.

We're partnering with a company called Aurora in this space.

12:01 Florian Baur: Aurora was founded by the head of Google's activities in the self-driving

space teaming up with the person at Tesla and the person at Uber, who developed autonomous

driving technology there, and they created their own company, and they provide the hardware,

and the algorithm and we act as the vehicle integration company for them to be able to

hand in hand, be quick to market because one thing is the system and another thing is the

application on each car that is different.

12:35 Paul Matzko: Right.

Right.

12:36 Florian Baur: Because every car has different geometries and just different...

Is engineered differently.

So the same system might work differently or needs to be adjusted for every car.

And we need to bring some of that integration knowledge to this partnership to get some

traction and speed to the development.

12:58 Paul Matzko: No, that makes sense.

So that there we have the user display, we have the software of the car, which I imagine

again, you can push updates remotely, wirelessly.

Which is something that other companies are doing as well.

Now, is there any concern with having a big dashboard display like that?

I know this again isn't unique to Byton, but is there a concern about viewer attention

that folks looking at their screens rather than...

Is there a system for discouraging that?

13:29 Florian Baur: The first thing I can say there is that the screen is not impacting

your field of vision.

That was the number one importance for us in the design of the car, so we moved the

dashboard as low as possible to move the screen down as low as possible.

So the top of the screen is actually the same height as your windshield wipers, so it's

not impacting your field of vision.

And then when it comes to driver distraction, of course, we will not be able to allow moving

images in a driving situation at first.

We're looking at different opportunities to put additional coding on the screen, for example,

to enable the passenger to enjoy some of the video content while a driver is still driving.

But again, the hardware setup is ready for autonomous driving.

Autonomous driving might not keep up the pace, but when it's there, the car is already perfectly

designed for that.

And you still have a lot of content that you can display on that 49-inch screen without

being too distracting.

The main goal should be to reduce the number of inputs you have to give to the system.

So the more you share with the vehicle, the more data.

14:49 Paul Matzko: Yeah.

14:50 Florian Baur: The more it knows about you and the more it can anticipate what you

wanna do next.

So we can prompt you messages, you just have to say yes or no.

Either using a hand gesture, with the gesture control cameras or in your Driver Tablet,

just have a touch button to say yes or no, right?

15:06 Paul Matzko: Yeah, yeah.

15:06 Florian Baur: And the more you use the car, and the more the car learns about you,

the better these suggestions will get.

So actually, in terms of the usage of the car, we're already...

Let's say we're already quite certain that it will be more intuitive, and less distracting

than finding a button somewhere hidden in some menu or...

15:27 Paul Matzko: Right.

Oh yeah, yeah.

[chuckle]

15:28 Florian Baur: But then when it comes to content, of course, we're very careful

as to which functions and features and services and products we actually enable in a driving

situation and which ones do we actually disable when the car's driving and only allow in a

heavy traffic situation or when you're having a quick charging stop, right?

And you can charge the car up to 80% in about 30 minutes.

That's enough time to watch an episode of your favorite Netflix show for example, right?

And it's much more convenient than using your tiny little iPhone screen or a smart phone

screen.

Not to mention any brands.

16:06 Paul Matzko: It's smart enough to know that it's...

You're parked so you're not... [chuckle]

16:08 Florian Baur: Exactly.

16:09 Paul Matzko: There's no danger to the...

Right, right right, yeah.

Is there, I mean, if there's facial recognition software and driver cameras, can it tell if

you're falling asleep?

Can it track eye movement, eyelids...

16:23 Florian Baur: So that's called the Driver Monitoring System, we need that for certain

functions in autonomous driving that still require the driver's attention legally.

So we have to track your attention.

And we're further developing new functions and features around that topic to also contextually

be able to display some information on the screen or even get around today's legislation

in the future potentially.

For example, imagine you could have the passenger watch a movie and keep track of the driver's

attention, if the driver looks at the movie content, you just warn him to not do it anymore,

or you just turn it off.

So we're playing around a lot with these use cases that might enable more features without

being dangerous.

Safety is the number one concern.

And of course, we wanna comply with all the legal requirements in all markets, but we

also wanna help shape legislation in the future, to make sure that legislation will keep up

with all the technology development in this highly regulated automotive space that slows

down innovation a lot.

17:45 Paul Matzko: Yeah.

We'll get to the kind of regulatory angle here, I think, in a minute.

But first, so we've talked...

We've talked electric, we've talked AV, we've talked about the screens, we've talked about

the car a bit.

How are you looking to build car sharing into Byton now?

18:02 Florian Baur: So the car is potentially a preferred solution for an Uber driver or

a DiDi driver in China, or a Lyft driver.

Because you can make every Byton or you could turn every Byton into your Byton by just bringing

your face.

So it doesn't matter if it's my car or your car, you sit in your seat, whatever it is,

the driver's seat or the rear right seat and you bring all your content there.

18:31 Paul Matzko: Cool.

Yeah.

18:31 Florian Baur: So, it could potentially be a preferred choice for a user to take me

as an Uber driver with a Byton car because you can be more productive, you can be entertained,

you can continue whatever you are doing outside of the car, in the car...

18:47 Paul Matzko: It knows that you're in season two of whatever.

18:50 Florian Baur: Exactly.

18:50 Paul Matzko: The third episode kicks on for you while your Uber driver is tearing

you around there.

18:54 Florian Baur: Or we have the selfie camera there so you could record your important

presentation that you're about to have and play it back to you.

There's so many different use cases...

19:05 Paul Matzko: Yeah, it's cool.

19:06 Florian Baur: That make you be more productive or whatever you require in that

certain situation.

We treat every passenger as relevant as the driver.

So the experience in every seat is the same.

And this is also one aspect that prepares us for the shared bit of mobility is even

in a car with three strangers, you would still have your own zone and your own seat with

your content, and basically make it your car.

You're sharing it but you still have your own space, right?

19:44 Paul Matzko: Yeah.

Yeah.

19:45 Florian Baur: And we're already thinking about the second and the third car, and we

have a lot more to share in the next 12 months.

19:52 Paul Matzko: So what's the time frame for...

I see the prototype out here, from the website there's another model, another variant for

2022.

20:00 Florian Baur: Exactly.

Yeah.

20:02 Paul Matzko: But this one on the floor out here, when are you expecting that to be

in production?

20:05 Florian Baur: We're kicking off production end of next year for the China market first

and then six months later we'll bring it to the US.

So by mid-2020, you'll be able to get it here.

And another three, four months later we'll bring it to Europe as well.

And then 18 months after the start of production of the first car, we'll release our second

car, which is a sedan concept, we call it K-Byte and the SUV is M-Byte, also priced

very similarly and derived from the same platform.

20:34 Paul Matzko: Now, when you say priced similarly, where is this slotting in?

20:36 Florian Baur: Yeah, exactly.

Yeah.

It's still early stage.

We can't really share the details for the second car, but our aim is to be an approachable

brand, to not start high-end and then slowly move down the ladder.

We wanna go where the volume is, also to have an interesting business case for our investors

because it's such a heavy upfront investment to develop a car.

You would like it to be scalable and applicable to multiple different products and not just

one.

And that's what we're doing.

And then another, about one and a half, two years later, we'll bring the third car out

on the same platform again.

And we're already thinking about a second platform, which is very early stage right

now, but as you can see, the stuff that we're showing here is already old for us, right?

21:28 Paul Matzko: Yeah, yeah.

21:28 Florian Baur: There are very long development cycles in the automotive industry, so you

have to think ahead and you have to match it with a shorter and faster developing cycles

in tech companies.

We have the unique challenge to synchronize the mindset between the people with a tech

background and the people with an automotive background, both have their pros and cons

and we're only successful if we listen to all of them and take the best out of each

and everyone's experience.

21:58 Paul Matzko: Well, it's a reminder with a Byton competitor, with Tesla, they ran in

into some of that with their production line where there was that Elon Musk brought that

tech sector mindset which is, why can't we have a quick product cycle, why don't we just

disrupt new things, new ideas, layer them on?

Whereas, the traditional car production line is, whoa, you need precision, you need a level

of...

Everything has to be carefully thought through in advance because if anything in the product

supply chain or on the production line goes just a little bit off, everything can just...

22:38 Florian Baur: Fall apart, yeah.

22:39 Paul Matzko: Fall apart really quickly.

22:39 Florian Baur: Exactly.

22:39 Paul Matzko: And so they had issues putting those two pieces together.

22:42 Florian Baur: Exactly.

You have to find the right balance and this is key.

What other players in the industry have done is remarkable in this short time and it opened

up a lot of opportunities for the new players.

But I think there's a strong debate about strong leaders who are very influential, as

opposed to maybe listening to the experts to make the best possible product.

And we're trying to really set a freeze date to a certain hardware component that needs

a freeze date, and then we don't talk about it anymore.

We don't walk in a week later and say, "Oh, I changed my mind."

And this is one thing.

And the second thing is, we don't do innovation for the innovation's sake.

We don't do crazy door concepts or anything that might potentially give you problems with

water leakage and things like that.

We use all of that knowledge from the more boring automotive world and then we focus

our attention on where the faster cycles actually allow us to be innovative and to keep the

product fresh.

And this is connectivity, and this is the user experience that is much more valued by

the consumer than an incremental 10th of a second acceleration improvement or a unique

door concept that only you have lamented for.

[overlapping conversation]

24:11 Paul Matzko: [24:11] ____ doing, yeah.

24:12 Florian Baur: So we're taking a lot of off-the-shelf components that have proven

to be safe...

24:16 Paul Matzko: Smart, yeah.

24:17 Florian Baur: And also accepted in the market.

And then we innovate...

24:21 Paul Matzko: There's a supplying chain for it, it's all right, yup, yup.

24:23 Florian Baur: Exactly, it's all there, and it's all optimized in terms of cost so

that we can position the car at an accessible price point too.

24:31 Paul Matzko: Nice, yeah.

24:31 Florian Baur: We can't go too crazy, but we wanna go crazy where the customer expects

us to.

And I think you can see a lot of this here in our first M-Byte concept.

24:41 Paul Matzko: Yeah.

No, it's an impressive prototype.

I look forward to seeing it on the roads or on the lots come 2020.

One more thing I was gonna ask about, during a panel yesterday, I think it was a robotics

panel on the main stage, they ended the session by asking...

And make sure I get the criteria right here.

At what point do you think level five vehicles, so level five automation, full no hands-on...

25:14 Florian Baur: No steering wheel.

25:14 Paul Matzko: No steering wheel, nothing...

Will be at least 10% of the vehicles, consumer vehicles on the road?

And the panelists ranged anywhere from 10 years at the lower limit to 30 years at the

upper limit, but notably two of them mentioned 10-15 years but in China first.

Now Byton has some China roots.

You're coming out with the first car in China first.

From your perspective, why does coming out in China first make a lot of sense?

What role does China play in the AV space more generally?

What would your estimate be?

Your answer to that question.

25:52 Florian Baur: Okay, there's a lot of...

25:55 Paul Matzko: Yeah, lots and lots going on there.

25:55 Florian Baur: Different elements on this question.

So first of all, the electric vehicle market in China is twice the size of the electric

vehicle market in the US and Europe combined.

26:05 Paul Matzko: Wow.

26:05 Florian Baur: This is why we have to absolutely be quick to market there to capture

some of that market share before it takes off without us.

Of course, the US is a very important market too, so we don't wanna have too much time

in between.

But then shifting to autonomous driving, I think when China and the Chinese government

is committed to something, they actually do everything to achieve that target.

They did it with electric vehicles.

They took it very seriously, they started subsidizing a lot of companies, and in the

beginning, there were only very cheap players popping out, but now we have more and more

technology-focused companies as our competitors out of China already that will first hit the

Chinese market and some of them are also planning to go global.

I think China has understood that you can only survive as a global company, so you have

to go where the talent is.

27:05 Florian Baur: We're going to Germany for our vehicle design because the design

infrastructure is best in Central Europe.

We're going for tech development and serial development of our first car to the Bay Area

because that's where you find the best people for that space.

And we're going to China for manufacturing, because that's where you get the best opportunities

and the talent to actually get the best quality in production.

My previous company BMW has the most advanced factory in China and not in Germany.

So, you have to go where the talent is.

And China is very open to the collaboration and appreciative of the global talent that

comes in.

And I think this is a major difference to my home country, Germany, but also to what

I see here in the US, is that other areas in the world are getting more and more protective

of what they have, while China is opening up more and at the same time, gaining speed.

28:04 Florian Baur: And I think if you have that mentality of not being able to do the

stuff alone, you have to partner with the best, and it doesn't matter whether they're

in Scandinavia, whether they're in Antarctica or in the Bay Area or in China, you just have

to go there and convince the best people to work with you and collaborate on the best

possible solution for the consumer.

So with consumer relevance, not just for the technology's sake.

And I think that's best understood in China right now.

And of course, you have 1.3-1.4 billion customers potentially.

28:39 Paul Matzko: It's a big market.

Yeah.

28:39 Florian Baur: So it's a huge market in itself, so there's a lot of money for subsidizing

and incentivizing companies to build up their R&D or production facilities in cities that

have been super small in the past 100 years, and now are growing at a rapid pace, overtaking

major European cities already in two, three years' time.

And they already start building cities with full connectivity of...

Everything is connected, like Internet of Things and stuff.

29:13 Paul Matzko: Right.

They're building cities from scratch with that capability in there.

29:17 Florian Baur: They're building the infrastructure, it's ready for autonomous driving.

And this is why you'll see the autonomous driving space will grow in these areas with

these cities.

And I think that's the unique bit about China.

China is still very hungry.

You walk around in the Bay Area, everyone has already collected enough stock options.

I mean, I'm exaggerating a little bit, but it's the general vibe that you feel in the

Bay Area.

29:41 Paul Matzko: It's contentment in a sense.

29:41 Florian Baur: Exactly.

And people are more focused on their work/life balance here and then you go to China and

people might not have the skill in every discipline yet, but they're hungry, and they're hardworking,

and they're committed, and they're listening.

And they're appreciative of, as I said, the expert knowledge that you bring.

They're no longer here to copy, they're now here to really think about solving real problems

and how to bring an existing product or an existing service to the next level, and I

think it's super enjoyable to work in this global setup with the best people from anywhere

in the world.

I hope I answered some of...

[overlapping conversation]

30:26 Paul Matzko: No, yeah, I think all three of them, I threw a bunch at you all at the

same time.

Well, I think one of your fellow Byton representatives mentioned that there were some 400 plus AV

companies or AV adjacent companies operating in China right now.

It's the single biggest locus of AV development.

So it's truly remarkable what's going on over there.

There was actually a really good...

We did an episode for Building Tomorrow for this podcast about the transformation of China

and the ways in which the country is leapfrogging the US, the tech adoption rates on everything

from digital payment systems to drone deliveries, you name it.

31:05 Florian Baur: Exactly.

They didn't have PCs for a long time, but now they do mobile payments in every, let's

say, segment of the society, right?

31:18 Paul Matzko: Yeah, yeah.

It's truly remarkable.

Well, Florian, thank you so much for taking the time to talk to me and I think our listeners

will understand a lot more about what Byton's doing and a little more about the AV space.

So thanks for your time.

31:29 Florian Baur: And please tell your user or listeners to download the Byton app.

It's free and they can bring our M-Byte concept into their living room if they have a dual

camera phone because we have an augmented reality feature on our app.

And if you want, you can already sign up and get more information, get invitations for

our upcoming events in your area and stay tuned.

31:53 Paul Matzko: Great, thank you so much.

[pause]

31:55 Paul Matzko: As you listen to this interview, you might have been thinking of Episode 9

of Building Tomorrow.

Is China beating the US innovation?

We recorded the episode prior to TechCrunch, but everything I saw at this conference confirm

that yes, indeed, China is in pole position to be the site of the next autonomous vehicle

style Silicon Valley.

Now, even though there's always the chance that the authoritarian central government

could shoot itself in its economic foot, tech startups that do have the favor of the Communist

Party on their side can innovate mostly free from regulation, and they don't have to deal

with the welter of regulatory bodies that a startup has to in the United States, from

the San Francisco City Council deciding they don't like scooters, or the Federal Aeronautics

Administration deciding they don't like flight sharing.

And that's it for this week.

And in fact, that's it for our TechCrunch Disrupt series of episodes.

Thank you for listening and until next week, be well.

[music]

32:52 Paul Matzko: Building Tomorrow is produced by Tess Terrible.

If you enjoy our show, please rate, review and subscribe to us on iTunes, or wherever

you get your podcasts.

To learn about Building Tomorrow or to discover other great podcasts, visit us on the web

at libertarianism.org.

For more infomation >> Building Tomorrow, Ep. 14: When Will We Get Fully Autonomous Cars? - Duration: 33:11.

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Pretend Play with Car + Power Wheels Ride On Car!!! - Duration: 14:26.

Pretend Play with Car + Power Wheels Ride On Car!!!

For more infomation >> Pretend Play with Car + Power Wheels Ride On Car!!! - Duration: 14:26.

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Mountain Car Drive Android Gameplay - Duration: 10:16.

For more infomation >> Mountain Car Drive Android Gameplay - Duration: 10:16.

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Two dead after car crashes into apartment - Duration: 1:05.

For more infomation >> Two dead after car crashes into apartment - Duration: 1:05.

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Mom Arrested For Leaving Child Dies In Hot Car - Duration: 0:28.

For more infomation >> Mom Arrested For Leaving Child Dies In Hot Car - Duration: 0:28.

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Mumbai To Goa By Car - Part 3 (Vagator) - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Mumbai To Goa By Car - Part 3 (Vagator) - Duration: 0:59.

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Car break-ins and theft investigation in Childersburg - Duration: 0:25.

For more infomation >> Car break-ins and theft investigation in Childersburg - Duration: 0:25.

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[ASPHALT 9] REVIEW NEW CAR UPDATE "Lotus Elise Sprint 220" - Duration: 15:11.

ASPHALT 9: LEGENDS

NEW CAR UPDATE

LUTUS ELISE SPRINT 220

SUBSCRIBE MY CHANNEL

For more infomation >> [ASPHALT 9] REVIEW NEW CAR UPDATE "Lotus Elise Sprint 220" - Duration: 15:11.

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The Ignis - TVC | Maruti Nexa Car - Duration: 0:46.

You choose not to choose become everything you can be there's a spring

in your step as you hop down the city

living every nook loving every corner you are the seeker of new

we create to inspire the Ignace next i'll create inspire LexA

For more infomation >> The Ignis - TVC | Maruti Nexa Car - Duration: 0:46.

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Allentown Street Remains Closed After Saturday's Car Explosion Killed 3 - Duration: 0:20.

For more infomation >> Allentown Street Remains Closed After Saturday's Car Explosion Killed 3 - Duration: 0:20.

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Vet who got car and dog stolen receives new car - Duration: 0:55.

For more infomation >> Vet who got car and dog stolen receives new car - Duration: 0:55.

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Avalance Car Crash ~Closed Captions~ - Duration: 0:16.

Caity: That was fun.

Jes to caity: That was fun

Jes to the man:She is going to drive.*normal voice*

Jes:*mumbles* until it totals.

Caity:Hey!*in the background trying to make Jes stop talking*

Man:*giving them decoration to get out of the car*

Caity:Yes! *nicely but louder than normal*

You can have the car.

For more infomation >> Avalance Car Crash ~Closed Captions~ - Duration: 0:16.

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MI HANNO TAMPONATO! - PREDATORS RACE VLOG GP2 - Duration: 10:07.

RACE 2

There's just one thing to say: if I were to start

like also onboard the bikes

I would almost be world champion (I'm ironic!)

As you have seen from the previous videos my tires are

really suffering, so my #1 aim

is to drive as clean as possible, stressing them the least necessary

and try to follow

the trail of the first two

Thank you Critelli for hitting my gopro with a stone

I'll send you my bank details afterwards

I'm doing something wrong. They keep surpassing me

because by trying to drive as clean as possible

I'm too gentle when braking and entering

truth is my strategy has got to change.

Now I'm going all in

and I'll think about the tires later

Atzori surpassed DeAmicis, his driving is really good

I can't waste anymore time, I have to attack now

It's crazy. The moment I steer the wheel too much

the rear just goes off

and I'm really having a hard time in these turns

when stretching and accelerating

I have to be millimetric to not lose all these meters when exiting

I let De Amicis go because he had a good pace

we're going to get Max Colombo who seems to be having

some issues 'cause he's losing too much time

in just a few laps, so head down and let's go get the podium

Palummieri has been right behind me this whole time and it's making me nervous

I keep seeing him from the mirrors

now it's time to put a car between us because otherwise

in a few turns he'll definitely try to attack

perfect attack, now let's go get Max Colombo

wow. what a lap! I'm really

and literally flying

Palummieri is still right behind me

I have to take advantage of this moment to take care of my problems

I'm there, I'm there.... nor not

I'll try again later

why? why? why?

I was already trying to surpass Max over there

what's the point of throwing yourself into the grass

unfortunately as you have seen the category podium

was within reach

I can't feel the car as before

I have to go back to the box. Allow me to

get a bit angry

and while I go back to the box, guys, don't forget to

subscribe, and activate the bell to get notifications

what's wrong?

I can't see what the fuck is going on

what happened?

I felt something behind after the crash

calm down. You have to bring the car at the parc fermé

you can't leave it here

so just go back and

it's not worth it

can I give you some good news?

you were going at 26 7

you were going so fast

the yellow guy got you?

calm down

I tried to surpass Max

I was right next to the grass

unfortunately as you have seen

due to a guy, whom I really don't know where he wanted to go,

because I was already doing the surpass

he got my tire, I turned

I'm really disappointed because despite the tires, we set up the car

I did 26.7, almost a second faster than in the qualifications

pole was almost 26.5

so I'm pretty annoyed

because were at the top 3 of the general ranking, at the first race

I'll take this as a test

and I'm ready for the challenge with Alberto

in a month

subscribe to the channel

For more infomation >> MI HANNO TAMPONATO! - PREDATORS RACE VLOG GP2 - Duration: 10:07.

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5 of The Fastest MODERN Cars For The Money - Duration: 8:09.

Hey guys Cristian here, Today I'll be showing you 5 of best bang for the buck modern fast

cars you can buy. And by bang for the buck I'm referring to the best dollar to performance

ratio. If this video manages to get 2K likes I'll create a part 2. Real quick before

I begin a lot of you guys always ask me either via the comment section or social media messages,

where do I find the cars I include in most of my car buying guides. Well that website

is Auto Tempest. And they were nice enough to sponsor this video. Instead of wasting

time looking through numerous car buying websites you can go on autotempest.com and search all

top car sales sites like cars.com ebay motors and cargurus all in one place. You're also

able to to compare results from craigslist nationwide. Since autoTempest searches everywhere

for you not only will you saves lots of time when shopping for a car but you'll also

be able to find the best dea. I encourage you all to give autotempest a try and if you

find it as useful as I do, make sure to share it with anybody you might know that is currently

looking to buy a car. Link will be in the description. Now let's begin

First fast car is the Chevy Corvette Stingray. I'm sure most of you aren't surprised

that I included this car on the list. The Stingray is the the entry level model Corvette

under both the grand sport and the z06. Don't let the words entry model fool you though,

the stingray is one hell of a performance car. In fact any Corvette is an outright performance

bargain. For around $55K the Stingray is far more affordable than many of the cars it competes

with for performance, like the Porsche 911, Audi R8, and Nissan GTR. Just shows you that

you don't have to be filthy rich to own a very capable track car with arguably supercar

like performance. The Stingray carries a 6.2L V8 engine that produces 455HP and 460lb-ft

of torque. It can run from 0-60mph in around 3.8 sec when equipped with the 7 speed manual

transmission and 3.7 sec when equipped with the 8 speed automatic transmission. Unlike

many high end sports cars the stingray is not only terrific on the track but also comfortable

enough for daily driving according to user reviews primarily thanks to its magnetic ride

control system. This is a sports car that won't beat you up during long rides or imperfect

pavement. The interior is not as flashy as the exterior, but honestly if you think about

it Chevy had to cut some corners somewhere to keep the price of the Stingray down. This

is an American sports car with a big V8 under the hood that doesn't disappoint. 65 years

of production, this might be best corvette platform yet.

Next car is the Ford Mustang GT. When comes to bang for buck performance it's hard to

find a car that can match the value you get with the Mustang GT. I mean It's quicker

than sports cars that costs twice as much. Other than it's updated look which in my

opinion doesn't look as good as it used to look, It has everything a car guy could

possibly want. It offers a naturally aspirated V8 engine, RWD, two doors, and a 6 speed manual

transmission All at an affordable starting price of around $36K. You get a 5L V8 engine

that produces 460HP and 420lb-ft of torque. It runs from 0-60mph in 3.9 seconds and completes

a ¼ mile run in around 12 seconds. Quick right? Just know that in order to achieve

those numbers you'll need to opt in for the all new 10 speed transmission and the

stage 1 performance package. The performance package includes brembo front brakes, a limited

slip differential, unique suspension tuning and michelin pilot sport 4S tires. Even with

the performance package you're looking at around 40K new, and just to put it into perspective

it carries similar performance as A BMW M4 which starts at just under $70K. You even

have the option to get the more affordable 4 cylinder ecoboost mustang which also comes

with the 10 speed transmission and produces over 300HP. But let's be honest, if you're

a car enthusiast, you'll probably opt in for the coyote V8 with the 6 speed manual

transmission.

3rd fast car on the list is the Chevy Camaro SS 1LE. Unlike what we all perceived a camaro

to be back in the day as a straight line performer, things have changed. The Camaro SS with the

1LE package is quite the track car. This car is all about handling. According to sources

like Motor Trend the Camaro SS 1LE runs pretty close to elite performance cars like the Porsche

918 spyder and the Lamborghini Huracan Performante when placed on a track. The 1LE package includes

things like a magnetic ride control suspension, an electronic limited slip differential, brembo

brakes, 20 inch forged wheels, goodyear eagle F1 supercar 3 tires, well bolstered Recaro

sport seats, a matte black hood, front splitter and rear spoiler. You also get active rev

matching which produces perfect downshifts all the time, making the heel toe technique

irrelevant. But no worries, if you rather rev match yourself auto rev matching can easily

be turned off with a pull of a steering wheel paddle. And of course the Camaro SS 1LE shines

with it comes to power. It comes equipped with a 6.2L V8 engine that produces 455HP

and 455lb-ft of torque. For around 46K the Camaro ss 1le punches so far above it's

weight you can't help but wonder, what's the catch? Well some things that aren't

so hot with camaros in general are the massive blind spots and tight back seats. Interesting

how Chevy still hasn't addressed the poor visibility issue which gets talked about almost

in every automotive review. Now for the age old question. I want to know what you guys

think. Mustang or Camaro?

4th fast car is the Audi RS3. Most of us have have been waiting eagerly for this car to

make its wayto the United states for some time now and in late 2017 our prayers were

heard. Well kind of. We ended getting the sedan version not the sport back one. Looking

at the massive front air intakes, the 19 inch 5 arm blade wheels and massive tail pipes

you know this car is ready to rock. Everything the turbo 4 cylinder S3 isn't, the RS3 is.

Audi managed to cram lots of power into a small form factor sedan. How much power you

ask? Well I'm glad you asked. The Audi RS3 carries a 2.5L inline 5 turbocharged engine

that produces 400HP and 354lb-ft of torque. Combine that power with Audi's Quattro drive

system and it can run from 0-60mph in just 3.5 seconds. Compare that to it's main competitor

the BMW M2 which does a 0-60 run in around 4 seconds. Not only is the RS3 faster in a

straight line but it also cost around 4k cheaper at 54K. And I know quicker in a straight line

shouldn't always be the determining factor when buying a car. The BMW 2 is probably much

more fun to drive because unlike the RS3 it's RWD and offers a manual gearbox. The RS3 only

offers 7 speed dual clutch transmission. Oh and how can i forget about the audi rs3's

interior. It features quality and style very few automakers can compete with. Audi in general

carries some of the best cabin tech in the industry. This is a car that has the perfect

blend of daily drivable, best in class tech and race ready performance. Let me know in

the comment section below, which car would you rather own, the BMW M2 or the Audi RS3.

5th and final car is the Dodge Challenger Demon. I'm sure many of you are familiar

this car right here. For those of you that are not familiar let me tell you, this is

the ultimate ¼ mile specialist. It has one purpose and one purpose only and that is straight

line performance. It's essentially an evolution to the challenger HellCat, with 25 major component

changes. This is the first street legal production car that can lift it's front wheels off

the ground under hard acceleration. Just by looking at it's exterior you'll know the

Demon means business. It's widebody design, it's large functional hood scoop, and a

set of super skinny front runner wheels give it a very serious look. The Dodge Challenger

Demon comes equipped with a supercharged 6.2L V8 that produces 808HP and 770lb-ft of torque.

And if 808HP isn't enough you can opt in for the crate package and it'll bump the HP

to 840HP. According to Dodge it can run from 0-60MPH in 2.3 seconds with some testers being

able to accomplish it in 2.1 seconds. It can complete a ¼ mile run in just 9.65 seconds,

making the Dodge Challenger Demon the fastest production car . But I'll tell you this,

it's been very hard for many auto journalists to replicate those numbers. Apparently you

would have to have near perfect conditions in order to achieve those numbers. Putting

the power to the payment due to wheel spin has been one of the biggest issues. At a starting

price of 86K, this is by far the best dollar for dollar performing car you can get, that

is if you can get your hands on one. Apprently the US only gets 3k units. And let's be honest,you'll

probably never see this car on the road even though it is street legal. Most people that

buy this car will either trailer it to the drag strip or keep it hidden away as a collectable.

Remember guys if this video gets 2K likes i'll create a part 2. So make sure and like

this video, and don't forget to subscribe to the channel that way you don't miss out

on my next video. What was you favorite car from the list, comment below and let me know.

As always thanks for watching, till next time.

For more infomation >> 5 of The Fastest MODERN Cars For The Money - Duration: 8:09.

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If You Want to Repair Rust on Your Car, Don't Do This - Duration: 5:28.

rev up your engines, Jack see says Scotty

I got an 05 Nissan Altima runs great but the underside has bad rust

there's even a hole in the passenger side floor panel, is there any way to

control the rust what can I do, okay unfortunately like Neil Young sand rust

never sleeps and it doesn't once, rust starts, the metal actually rusts from

the inside out, it's rotting away, now where the hole is you could cut out the

hole, and have a guy weld in a piece of steel or aluminum pan so you don't have a hole

there and if you want you could try having somebody sand it all down the

underside the rusty parts and then spray it all with rust preventatives and under

coating and stuff and it'll slow it down but really the undercoating stuff is

best on a brand new vehicle when it's made like most new cars are made with

special paint that's electrostatically put in when the frame and the body goes

into a giant little lake of paint and the electrostatic charge of ones

negative once positive and it sticks even goes inside the frame, so then you

don't worry about rusting, but on older cars once they start rusting it's pretty

much you can't do that much to stop it, because it started, like I said you sand

it down get it coated but it'll still keep falling apart, once it rusts starts it's

pretty much the end of a vehicle, south-korean says hey Scotty I got a

2007 Chrysler 300 SRT what do you think about that, they are fun to drive they're

stinking fast cars I got customers with them and I love it when I work on them

to road-test them because they are screamers, but that said they're

extremely expensive to repair when they break, it's not automatic that's one of

the weakest points of those things and as for the engine it's a very strong

engine but you do want to take care of it, don't listen to the garbage that people

tell you that you can change your oil every 10,000 miles, I would change the oil on

that every 5,000 miles religiously with synthetic oil make it last as long as it

can because when an engine or transmission does break, it's more money than

the car is worth to fix it in most cases if you have an automatic, sky high says

is a turbo cooldown necessary on a diesel engine, they always used to tell

you to cool them down because they wanted things to last a long time and

that was a good idea, see here's the thing, you're driving your car the turbo

spins faster than anything the exhaust gas spins it then it Rams air into the

engine, most modern cars have turbos that are either oil cooled or oil and water

cooled, so they run at a pretty decent temperature that you're

not gonna really have any problems with it just shutting off when you're done

driving, unless you're racing around like a

lunatic and if you are driving as hard as you can, then I'd let it cool down for

a minute or two before I'd shut it down, now the reason they told the really old

cars like in a 60s and 70s to let the turbo cool down was because a lot of

those were naked turbos, they didn't have water cooling and a lot of them didn't

have engine oil cooling, and so they would get really hot and if you didn't

let them idle and cool down a little bit, they would warp and they would wear out

faster, but on most really modern ones that are oil or water cooled you really

don't need to cool it down when you shut them off, unless like I said you're

racing around like a maniac, minty Channel says Scotty I'm thinking about

buying a 90s Ford f150 5-speed 4 wheel drive what's your opinion what

should I look out for, okay if it's in good shape they can be an excellent truck

because it's the 5-speed the 5-speed makes the big deal of difference the

things that wear out on those are the automatic transmission you get a

standard and you want a four-wheel-drive truck, hey, now it's a ninety so you know it's

pushing 30 years old, you want to always pay a mechanic like me to check it out

before you buy it, so they can check the transfer case they

can check the engine, they can see it depends on what 90s, if it was pre 95 the

scan tools don't do much but if it's 96 up, the scan tools can tell you an awful

lot, so you'd want it checked out with a scan tool it was 95 or newer, but they

can be excellent trucks you know it will have a little bit of wear but you can always

fix them because parts are available for them and they were pretty well built

especially with a standard transmission, ghost 88 says Scotty my 07 Corolla got

mechanically stopped at two hundred ninety nine thousand nine hundred ninety

nine miles on speedometer the dealer wants 580 to replace it, should I go to my

local or mechanic replace it one from another, yes I mean we mechanics do the

time, go to a junkyard buy used one and put it in, those things are so

expensive if you want to buy a new one they cost a ton of money and in my case

the ones that I normally fix for my customers, I go to a junkyard I can get a

whole dash for older ones for like 70-80 bucks I just popped the dash out takes 20 minutes

and pop the new dash in and away you go, George says Scotty greeting

from Moldova by Audi a3 makes a grinding noise when steering and sharp corners

left and right, even when stationary I turn it all the way what could

be the problem, first thing you want to do is have a mechanic look at your power

steering pump, make sure it's full fluid we actually have gauges we can hook up

to it and we can see if the pumps going out and when it gets to all the way to

the edge you turn hard, if it has to work hard and it's wearing out it can make

noises so have that checked too, the other thing is you want to check since you

said it'll do it sometimes even if it's sitting on the ground you turn it all

the way, you want to have a mechanic check the power steering rack because if

the racks going out, when you go the whole way to the edge it strains and if

the racks wearing a lot of times it'll make horrible noises either way it's an

expensive endeavor to fix on an Audi I mean if it's drives okay otherwise and

you have steering that doesn't bind it go smooth, as long as the fluid is full I

probably live with that particular problem, because the racks and the power

steering pumps on those Audis cost a small fortune, so if you never want to

miss another one of my new car repair videos, remember to ring that Bell,!

For more infomation >> If You Want to Repair Rust on Your Car, Don't Do This - Duration: 5:28.

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Power Rangers Super Ninja Steel Episode 16 "Car Trouble" Preview - Duration: 1:19.

He's sucking power out of car batteries

and it's making him super strong.

Okay, we'll be there as fast as we can.

Bring some fire power, this guy's really strong.

Okay.

(intense music)

So you wanna play hide and seek eh, ah ha!

Too bad the mirror gave you away!

I win!

Hua!

Not yet you haven't!

(weapons clashing)

Hi-yah

Ahhh!

Ya Hi-ya ha!

Ahhhhh

Ahhhhh!

Whoa!

Ahhhhh!

Ha!

Hi-ya hi-ya ha ha hiiii-yaa!

Hua ha hi-ya

Ahhhhh!

Aw yeah!

The big guns are here!

(intense music)

Heads up bug breath!

(laser gun shooting)

Ah ah ahhhh!

Ah ahhhh!

Huahhh

Ha ha ha! Yeah!

Yes!

A direct hit!

Great shot, Brody!

That'll teach 'em!

Yahh I'll get you for that!

(laser gun shooting)

Yahhh!

Whoa oh oh no, the sword's been damaged!

It's going down.

I gotta abandon ship!

It's gonna crash!

(zapping)

Brody!

You're okay!

Yeah, but the Lion Fire Zord isn't!

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