My career in ADAS and Autonomous Vehicles taught me something important. The machines that drive themselves are not magic. They are just highly structured, evidence gathering systems.
Sensors collect data, algorithms weigh them, probabilities are computed, and decisions are made accordingly.
When I started diving deeper into the broader AI space, I realized the underlying framework is exactly the same. Building a reliable LLM application isn't that different from teaching an ADAS system to distinguish between a real obstacle and a shadow.
The domain changed but thinking framework didn't.
I spent years in ADAS working on scenario validation, simulation testing, and analyzing how ADAS systems fail in edge cases. Now, I’m bringing that same thinking into AI engineering. I find myself asking the same questions that When does this break? What data is it missing? How does the system behave when it's wrong?
I'm excited about where this leads and I plan on sharing what I learn along the way. If you made a similar pivot from hardware, robotics, or safety critical engineering into AI, I’d love to connect.