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Education startup Udacity will teach you how to build a self-driving car

Just takes one year.

Consumer Electronics Show Previews Latest Products
Consumer Electronics Show Previews Latest Products
David Paul Morris / Getty

Udacity, the startup that offers online courses for careers in tech, is adding a new speciality curriculum: A training program for becoming a self-driving car engineer.

Thus far, Udacity’s offerings (called “nanodegrees”) have largely focused on fundamental coding, like writing Android apps. This one is a bit more advanced: The listing notes it takes twelve months to finish.

But it’s not out of left field. Udacity CEO Sebastian Thrun was a founding member of Google’s self-driving car team (and, per Bloomberg, is now running one of Larry Page’s self-flying car companies on the side).

“There is an enormous market for self-driving car engineers,” Thrun says in a short video. “Lots and lots of companies that you wouldn’t expect are entering the field and are massively hiring.”

This is true. Although the ones you would expect — car companies — will be doing the hiring too, spurred along, perhaps, by the declaration last night from Tesla’s Elon Musk, which was chock-full of self-driving car talk.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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