ClearMotion founder here! Wanted to share some insights that might answer questions from other commenters and clarify what we've developed.<p>The ClearMotion1 system is a major leap above all tech currently on the market, with transmitted vibration reduced about 80% versus top market technologies. Here's a video comparing it on production NIO cars against luxury vehicles using semi-active (or slow active) systems others mentioned - sort of like comparing a microcontroller to a NVIDIA H100. <a href="http://bit.ly/44TDtgl" rel="nofollow">http://bit.ly/44TDtgl</a><p>This matters especially for autonomous vehicles, where the whole point is to give people back time, and preventing motion sickness while working/reading is essential.<p>Our tech stack:<p>- Electro-hydraulic actuators that both push/pull actuate and dampen within a few milliseconds, using electric motors (not solenoid valves or special fluids). We use integrated hydraulics as a mechanical gain lever<p>- Predictive control software that anticipates vehicle, driver, and road dynamics<p>- "Infinite preview" control using crowdsourced road data with <3cm localization precision<p>- Software-enabled features including pre-crash posture mitigation and tire grip technology<p>The combination creates a "software-defined" chassis, similar to how electric power steering enabled today's driver assist features.<p>Our Bose acquisition was to acquire specific control software and engineering talent, but most of our IP and our production hardware/software was developed in house.<p>There were a few questions about durability— our system has passed 5 years of testing across millions of miles - a requirement from all of our customers like NIO and Porsche. It’s also a reason why it’s so difficult to succeed as a startup in automotive, but once you’re in, you’re locked in long-term.