February 21, 2025

Rivian Gears Up for a Hands-Free Highway Experience with Upcoming Driving Assist

hands-off highway driver assist
This image shows Rivian’s upcoming Hands-Off Highway Driver Assist system, a groundbreaking step toward autonomous driving.

Autonomous driving is not just about who comes first to the market, it is about further defining success as those who can best ensure that everything goes according to plan. Rivian, with a spirit for outdoor adventures, is now changing its gear into the hands-off highway driver assist. Major updates in coming weeks would see Rivian taking on Ford and Tesla. Let’s keep it real though, as full autonomy is still some years out, we are still at the phase of self-driving technology called “trust but verify.”

On Thursday, Rivian announced that it would soon incorporate a hands-free version of its driver assistance system specifically for highway driving. This will be the last step before the company aims for an advanced version of “eyes-off” by 2026, which significantly strengthens the company’s current proposition in autonomous driving.

Autonomous Driving Arena:

One lands up Rivian in a race against Ford and General Motors as both carmakers have, in the past few years, ventured into launching comparable driver assistance systems. Ford’s BlueCruise and GM’s SuperCruise became selling features of their respective brands right away and of course, the full self-driving (monitored) system of Tesla still requires users to keep their hands on the wheel despite its own name.

Much of it is attributed to the expected changes under Trump’s rule in policies affecting the regulatory ground. Rivian, despite that, declared its first positive profit in Q4 2024, driven by cost cuts and a boost in its software and services.

Early Ambitions and End-To-End AI Training Strategy:

When it first broke out of its secrecy mode in 2018,CEO RJ Scaringe narrated some very futuristic scenarios, where a Rivian owner would go hiking while their vehicle would meet them at the end by itself. However, talking about autonomy for the time being in public had to take backstage as Rivian put all its energy into completing its IPO and scaling production of its three vehicles. Now, with Rivian in constant delivery mode of about 50,000 vehicles a year and a deep partnership with Volkswagen that took place last year in 2024, the flexibility exists to go back into advancing its driver assistance technology.

Rivian is going for the “end to end” training strategy in line with the driver assistance path, just like what is being used on Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software. It architects the whole system for a data-driven model. Rivian’s method of doing things does not rely on rules set up, instead, it trains machine learning models using data from its cameras and radar sensors to power all autonomous capabilities. Hands-free operation will initially be confined to highways, just like at Ford and GM. However, once the eyes-off version gets rolled out in 2026, Rivian intends to gradually broaden its scope to include more roads.

Creative Alternatives:

Instead of heavy capital investments to support the self-driving program, Rivian is looking at creative alternatives to tap large-scale GPU resource buildings. Scaringe said that, “Ultimately, the end state, we think hands-free, eyes-off needs to be available essentially everywhere”. (source Techcrunch) By going along this route, Rivian can efficiently train its self-driving models on a budget and can get the computational power to do so.

It is a great achievement of Rivian as it moves ahead toward hands-free and eventually eyes-off driving facilities. This is an exciting thing because the company is almost approaching complete autonomy with the development of its AI assistance, in competition with established players in the industry. There is great excitement over this but also a lot of apprehension. Maybe, just maybe, innovation along with Rivian’s impressive safety will eventually redefine what driving looks like. For now, it’s still the right thing to do, keeping at least one hand (and both eyes) ready, just in case our adventurous electric truck gets any wild ideas of its own.

Read More: Self-Driving Cars Take Center Stage at CES 2025

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Fatimah Misbah Hussain

https://www.staging.techi.com/

Fatimah Misbah Hussain is a tech writer at TECHi.com who transforms complex topics into accessible, compelling content for a global audience. She covers emerging trends, offers insightful updates, and explores technology’s evolving impact on society with clarity and depth.

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