The Digital Source For China's Tech Innovation Since 2000

Aptiv VP Joined Didi Autopilot Company As CTO

September 17, 2019
Business

Didi recently announced that Wei Junqing, former global engineering vice president of Aptiv, has joined Didi's autopilot company as chief technology officer, report to Didi Chuxing's CTO and Didi autopilot CEO Zhang Bo.

Wei was graduated from Tsinghua University and Carnegie Mellon University. In December 2017, automobile parts supplier Delphi separated its unmanned driving business into an independent company named Aptiv and Wei was appointed vice president of global engineering. During his service at Aptiv, Wei led the autopilot strategic planning, technology development, product development and business realization. Since 2015, Wei led the establishment of Aptiv's Pittsburgh technology center and Las Vegas customer experience and unmanned driving team operating center.

In August 2019, Didi separated its autopilot business into an independent company. The company recently gained an autopilot road test license in Shanghai and announced plans to open autopilot manned test in Jiading soon.

At present, Didi's autopilot management team also includes COO Meng Xing who formally joined in August 2019 and reports to Zhang Bo; leader of American team Jia Zhaoyin who joined Didi at the beginning of 2017; and leader of Chinese team Zheng Jianqiang who joined Didi in 2016.

Tags: autopilot | Didi Chuxing

Other Related News:

Why this autonomous vehicle veteran joined a legged robotics startup

November 7, 2023

Didi To Leave US Stock Market, List In Hong Kong

December 4, 2021

China asks Didi to delist from US, SoftBank Group stock drop more than 2%

December 7, 2021

Chinese Used Car Platform Gains USD200 Million Investment From Didi Chuxing

September 29, 2017

Microsoft ships two builds to the Beta Channel

July 28, 2023

Don’t buy a Tesla. If you have one, sell it.

February 12, 2025

Tesla’s autopilot update stops short in China

February 25, 2025

Self-driving cars will eventually be safer than those driven by people, says Chinese search engine giant Baidu | South China Morning Post

November 7, 2021

Tesla Recalls 675,000 Cars in US, China

January 1, 2022
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Corrections and Disclosure
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Corrections and Disclosure
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 ChinaTechNews.com. A Service of Asia Media Network.
Twitter