Three powerhouse chipmakers—AMD, Arm, and Qualcomm—poured $60 million into U.K. startup Wayve this week. The cash extends Wayve’s massive $1.2 billion Series D round from February, pushing total funding past $1.5 billion at an $8.6 billion valuation. Rivals in the cutthroat semiconductor world, united here. Why? Wayve’s software runs on any hardware, dodging the sensor-heavy, map-dependent traps that have stalled autonomous driving for years. Wayve’s end-to-end neural network learns from raw sensor data alone. No high-definition maps. No fixed chip requirements. It powers two products: an “eyes on” assisted system where drivers stay alert, and an “eyes off” full automation for robotaxis or defined zones. Nissan plans integration into its ADAS starting 2027. Mercedes-Benz and Stellantis signed on too, eyeing future models. Uber pledged another $300 million if Wayve deploys London robotaxis.…