Sebastian Thrun

Sebastian Thrun
Sebastian Thrunis an innovator, entrepreneur educator, and computer scientist from Germany. He was CEO and cofounder of Udacity. Before that, he was a Google VP and Fellow, and a Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University. At Google, he founded Google X. He is currently also an Adjunct Professor at Stanford University and at Georgia Tech...
NationalityGerman
ProfessionScientist
Date of Birth14 May 1967
CountryGermany
cannot cars location majority problem spend time vast wrong
The problem with cars now is that they spend the vast majority of their time parked in the wrong location so they cannot be used by other drivers,
adopt automated cars none society
None of us think about a world where all the cars are automated all the time. It could take society 20 years to adopt the technology.
cars drive
It's a no-brainer that 50 to 60 years from now, cars will drive themselves,
address cars driving vision
Any vision that we have for self-driving cars must address driving in traffic.
believe cars honestly impact invention mankind related turn
I honestly believe that the impact of this and other things related to self-driving cars could turn out to be more fundamental to mankind than the invention of the internet,
cars fan intelligence intelligence-and-intellectuals putting
I am a big fan of putting the intelligence in the cars.
becoming cars dream driving question themselves whether
The dream of cars driving themselves is becoming a reality. Before, the question was whether it was possible. Now we know it is.
carnegie grand invent professor saw took tried
Even as a college professor at Carnegie Mellon and Stanford, I saw myself as an entrepreneur, and I went out, took risks, and tried to invent new things, such as participating in the DARPA Grand Challenge and working on self-driving cars.
people
We have done the impossible. People said: 'Give up it's not possible', but we did it.
graduate hard job passionate pick picks rests students work worry
I used to tell my graduate students at Stanford, 'Don't worry about what job you have to pick because your job picks you. Let your job pick you. Find something you are passionate about. Then when you are passionate, be persistent. Just keep doing it for a while because progress is always hard work. It never rests in ideas.'
point turning
That was a turning point in the race.
business evolve global higher lower
I don't think we will put higher-ed out of business. I think we'll evolve it. More access, higher quality, lower costs, more global reach.
almost failed last problems software teams
Last year's teams failed almost exclusively because of software problems,
amazingly believe
I find it amazingly easy to take something, if you really believe in it, and turn it to reality.