The cars rolling off production lines right now are filled with old ideas. From beginning to end, the creation of a new vehicle can take five years or longer - which is plenty of time for a lot of tastes, politics, and gas prices to change. That's one reason car manufacturers are so enthusiastic about the potential for AI to help speed up certain parts of the process, from model-making to wind-tunneling. LLMs could be poised to change the way we get around. Verge subscribers, don't forget you get exclusive access to ad-free Vergecast wherever you get your podcasts. Head here. Not a subscriber? You can sign up here. On this episode of T … Read the full story at The Verge.
Tech
What an AI-designed car looks like
As car manufacturers seek to accelerate design and development, AI-powered Large Language Models (LLMs) are poised to revolutionize the creation of new vehicles, potentially slashing the five-year design-to-production timeline by streamlining model-making, aerodynamics testing, and other critical stages. By automating tedious tasks and enabling rapid iteration, AI could give the automotive industry a much-needed speed boost. The result: cars that are designed, engineered, and optimized with unprecedented speed and precision. AI-assisted, human-reviewed.