Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Alphabet subsidiary operating 500K+ paid robotaxi rides/week across 10 US cities; raised $16B at $126B valuation in Feb 2026; expanding to 20+ new cities and London
Waymo is Alphabet's autonomous vehicle subsidiary and the world's most operationally advanced robotaxi company, with roots in Google's self-driving car project that began in 2009. Spun out as an independent Alphabet subsidiary, Waymo has spent over 15 years accumulating real-world driving data, refining its sensor suite (combining lidar, radar, and cameras), and developing the Waymo Driver — the AI stack that enables fully driverless operation across diverse urban environments.\n\nWaymo One, its commercial robotaxi service, operates in San Francisco, Phoenix, Los Angeles, Austin, and additional US cities, completing over 500,000 paid rides per week as of early 2026. Unlike competitors that rely on remote safety operators, Waymo vehicles operate fully autonomously on public roads. The company is also developing Waymo Via for autonomous trucking and expanding its geographic footprint through partnerships with ride-hailing platforms and automotive OEMs.\n\nWaymo raised $16B at a $126B valuation in February 2026, reflecting investor confidence in its lead position in a winner-take-most autonomous mobility market. With expansion to 20+ new cities planned, the company is transitioning from proving the technology works to demonstrating unit economics at scale. As the robotaxi market accelerates, Waymo's decade-plus operational head start, unmatched safety record, and Alphabet's resources give it a structural advantage that rivals are struggling to close.
Dominant global ADAS supplier with $1.9B revenue in 2025 (+15% YoY); $24.5B future revenue pipeline; 2026 is transition year toward full autonomy
Mobileye is the global leader in advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous vehicle technology, founded in Jerusalem in 1999 and acquired by Intel in 2017 before re-listing as an independent public company in 2022. Built on proprietary computer vision and sensing technology, Mobileye's EyeQ chips and software power the ADAS features — lane keeping, automatic emergency braking, adaptive cruise control — in hundreds of millions of vehicles from dozens of automakers worldwide, making it the invisible safety layer in the modern automotive industry.\n\nMobileye's product portfolio spans entry-level ADAS for high-volume vehicles, SuperVision hands-free highway driving systems, and Chauffeur, its full self-driving stack targeting robotaxi and consumer autonomous vehicles. The company also operates Mobileye Drive, its autonomous vehicle deployment platform. Its technology serves virtually every major global automaker, with integration depth that creates substantial switching costs and a moat built on the largest real-world driving dataset in the industry through its Road Experience Management (REM) mapping system.\n\nMobileye reported $1.9B in revenue in 2025, a 15% year-over-year increase, with a $24.5B future revenue pipeline from committed automaker programs. The company has described 2026 as a transition year as SuperVision deployments ramp and its next-generation EyeQ Ultra chip enters production. Despite near-term market volatility in EV and autonomous adoption timelines, Mobileye's dominant ADAS market share and long-term pipeline position it as the essential technology partner for the automotive industry's multi-decade transition to autonomous vehicles.
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