How to Make Last Mile Autonomous Delivery Fleets Safe, Reliable and Profitable New Point One Navigation Case Study with Faction

Driverless delivery vehicles won’t go mainstream until they are safe, reliable, inexpensive, and most importantly, profitable. Faction is working with Point One Navigation to develop the tech that will make autonomous last-mile fleets meet those demands.

San Francisco, Feb 1, 2024 — Point One Navigation, a leading provider of high-precision location solutions, today announced a great new case study - Faction: Accelerating Autonomous Delivery with Point One. You can read this case study at https://pointonenav.com/news/faction-accelerating-autonomous-delivery-with-point-one



Driverless delivery vehicles won't go mainstream until they are safe, reliable, inexpensive, and most importantly, profitable. Faction is working with Point One Navigation to develop the tech that will make autonomous last-mile fleets meet those demands.

In this case study, Faction's CEO Ain McKendrick explains HOW and WHY they chose Point One for GPS location services and the company's plans for the future.

Faction develops driverless vehicle systems for vehicle manufacturers and uses a combination of computer-controlled autonomy and remote human (TeleAssist®) operators to create driverless last-mile curbside delivery and logistics fleets. The company works directly with OEM manufacturers to incorporate its autonomous systems into vehicles. Faction is currently testing its systems on small electric vehicles for last-mile deliveries within busy city centers and suburbs.

Challenge: Making Autonomy Affordable

Creating true self-driving vehicles has been an industry challenge for nearly a decade. Most manufacturers use complex systems with LIDAR, radar, computer vision, and GPS to help their vehicles discern the world around them and navigate safely. Unfortunately, these systems are often expensive and difficult to train.

Faction created a different model that incorporates computer vision with accurate GPS positioning and teleoperators. Vehicles using Faction technology will "see" using standard video cameras and navigate using precise real time GPS data. The challenge, however, was finding pinpoint GPS systems that were affordable and scalable.

"Some GPS systems can cost tens of thousands of dollars," said McKendrick. "They deliver the accuracy we need, but at that price point we can't integrate them into affordable driverless delivery vehicles. We needed something accurate, but affordable to deploy on a large scale. Point One is very comparable to some of the more expensive systems out there, but at a better price point with excellent accuracy and reliability."

More about Point One Navigation:
Point One Navigation, headquartered in San Francisco, specializes in building precise location services with accuracy down to a few centimeters at a cost 100x less than existing solutions. State of the art sensor fusion techniques and a proprietary network of sensors enable Point One to determine location with unrivaled precision and cost. To learn more about Point One Navigation and its products, visit: www.pointonenav.com.

Featured Product

Schmalz Technology Development - The Right Gripper for Every Task

Schmalz Technology Development - The Right Gripper for Every Task

In order to interact with their environment and perform the tasks, lightweight robots, like all industrial robots, depend on tools - and in many cases these are vacuum grippers. These form the interface to the workpiece and are therefore a decisive part of the overall system. With their help, the robots can pick up, move, position, process, sort, stack and deposit a wide variety of goods and components. Vacuum gripping systems allow particularly gentle handling of workpieces, a compact and space-saving system design and gripping from above. Precisely because the object does not have to be gripped, the vacuum suction cupenables gapless positioning next to each other.