Skip to main content

Cisco and Oxbotica team up to improve AV connectivity 

Autonomous vehicle (AV) provider Oxbotica is partnering with Cisco to improve the data connectivity which will be needed to make driverless cars a reality.
By Adam Hill March 4, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Oxbotica: 'Cisco offers us the chance to solve one of the greatest data challenges'

It is estimated that AVs generate 1.2 TB of data per day - the equivalent of 500 HD movies or 200,000 songs - and make 150 independent vehicle detections every second. Therefore the sheer amount of information – for example, from sensing systems such as Lidar, radar and cameras - required for transfer is a significant barrier to AV operation. 

It is too much to be shared efficiently and cost-effectively using existing 4G, or emerging 5G, networks, Oxbotica and Cisco insist.

Instead, Cisco’s OpenRoaming allows AVs to roam between Wi-Fi and cellular networks, using embedded credentials issued by the AV manufacturer – rather than usernames and passwords -  for authentication. The companies say this will allow the seamless and secure sharing of high-volume data on the move.

Under the new agreement, Oxbotica AVs are now able to connect to OpenRoaming-enabled hotspots - combined with Cisco’s Wi-Fi 6 and 5G - with communications secured using Cisco’s Umbrella cloud security platform and data uploaded to Oxbotica’s cloud.

Wi-Fi hotspots can be situated in gas stations, EV charging points, parking areas and vehicle service centres.
 
“We fully recognise that in an autonomous world, fleets will need to upload and download vast amounts of data and the partnership with Cisco offers us the chance to solve one of the greatest data challenges of the future, already today,” says Oxbotica CEO Ozgur Tohumcu.
 
“For industrial applications where devices, such as autonomous vehicles rather than people, are moving through areas that are covered by Wi-Fi, this technology is designed to enable that simple, automatic connection that users experience when using mobile networks,” says Matt MacPherson, Wireless CTO at Cisco.
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Key to EV roll-out is understanding drivers
    October 22, 2021
    Understanding EV technology and driver behaviour will be key to building out the world’s charging infrastructure. Andrew Stone finds out why from Bret Scott at Wejo
  • AT&T to deploy smart city technology in San José
    May 22, 2019
    Telecoms giant AT&T is to deploy smart city technology to help improve lighting in the city of San José, California. The company says the 670 smart lighting controls and 550 LEDs will also reduce energy costs and decrease environmental impacts. Additionally, AT&T will provide more than 100 Wi-Fi extenders to boost Wi-Fi connectivity and 15 digital infrastructure nodes to help improve public safety. As part of the agreement, AT&T is to pledge $200,000 to help local community organisations provide r
  • Vodafone to bring 5G to UK CAM testbed
    October 22, 2020
    Telecoms giant says this offers 'extremely low' latency to Midlands Future Mobility route
  • Demonstration of first German A9 motorway safety project
    November 10, 2015
    In the first project of the ‘digital A9 motorway test bed’ to show how vehicles on a motorway can share hazard information, Continental, Deutsche Telekom, Fraunhofer ESK and Nokia Networks have carried out a real-time demonstration of communication between vehicles via the Deutsche Telecom LTE cell network. The project, which aims to improve road safety and traffic management, involved upgrading Deutsche Telekom's existing LTE network at sections of the A9 motorway test bed with Nokia Networks’ mobile e