The End of the Camera as We Know It?
Ouster, the lidar company that swallowed rival Velodyne during the great sensor consolidation, is making a bold play. Its new Rev8 line of sensors integrates color imaging and depth perception on a single chip, using SPAD detectors. CEO Angus Pacala claims this so called ‘native color lidar’ produces 48 bit color and 116 dB dynamic range, effectively matching or beating dedicated cameras. Pacala’s message to the industry is blunt: ‘The goal is to obviate cameras.’ He argues that traditional approaches waste time and money on calibration and fusion, calling Rev8 the holy grail for roboticists.
Why This Matters for Robotics and Robotaxis
This isn’t just a tech demo. Ouster has already shipped Rev8 samples to customers and is taking orders. The OS1 Max sensor, billed as the industry’s best long range lidar, can see 500 meters in all directions. Pacala expects it to dominate in high speed trucking, robotaxis, and drones. Competitors like Hesai are also pushing color lidar, but Ouster insists its digital architecture gives it a real edge. As Waymo scales robotaxis and humanoid robotics explodes, a single sensor that does the work of two could be a game changer. But skepticism remains: will customers really ditch cameras entirely, or is this marketing hype wrapped in SPAD technology?
A Market in Flux
The Rev8 launch comes at a turbulent time for lidar. Ouster absorbed Velodyne, Luminar was bought out of bankruptcy, and new entrants like Teradar are experimenting with terahertz imaging. Ouster’s move to fuse color and depth on one chip is a clear attempt to leapfrog the competition. Pacala claims the sensor is ‘improving in many ways on a modern camera’ and that it will be cheaper and smaller than previous tech. If he’s right, this could reshape the perception stack for autonomous systems. But the industry has heard big promises before. The real test is whether Ouster can deliver at scale while competitors race to match its claims.
Source: Techcrunch
