Automotive Engineering: February 2026
26AUTP02
To be published on 02/05/2026
- Content
- Qualcomm expands partnerships for more Snapdragons
- Bosch is ready to bring AI to your vehicle, likely to still be ICE-powered in 2035
- Etching for a greener future
How chemical etching is helping enable next-gen automotive technologies. - Rewriting the engineer's playbook: What OEMs must do to spin the AI flywheel
The automotive industry's future hinges on a new AI-native engineering workflow that accelerates iteration, strengthens system thinking, and preserves human judgment. - From redundancy to resilience: building smarter safety systems through sensor collaboration
ADAS sensor fusion can provide improved and required safety technologies by rethinking the best strategy for allowing a car to sense the world. - Open Safety is the shortcut to safer ADAS/AD
An open safety stack, shared scenarios, benchmarks, and core validation tools can speed certification, reduce duplicated V&V and build public trust while preserving vendor differentiation. - Editorial
Robots, physical AI shift the focus at CES - Supplier Eye
A re-regionalized industry - GM announces SAE Level 3 autonomy and SDV technology
- Survey: QNX finds challenges, openings in SDV work
- Engineering flexibility into EV powertrains
- Poland making moves to be larger automotive supplier
- Now playing: MUSiC, the first multi-user SiC fabrication facility in the U.S.
- Mercedes brings music production into the backseat
- 2026 Nissan Leaf is fun now. But more importantly, efficient.
- 2026 Nissan Sentra review: putting the pieces together
- Product Briefs
Spotlight: Inspection software, ADAS detection - Q&A
DarkSky One wants to make the world a darker place