Archive for the ‘transportation’ category: Page 558
Mar 20, 2016
6 Freeway Removals That Changed Their Cities Forever
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: health, transportation
It seems counterintuitive, right? Rip out eight lanes of freeway through the middle of your metropolis and you’ll be rewarded with not only less traffic, but safer, more efficient cities? But it’s true, and it’s happening in places all over the world.
Many freeway systems were overbuilt in an auto-obsessed era, only to realize later that cities are actually healthier, greener, and safer without them. Like freeway cap parks, which hope to bridge the chasms through severed neighborhoods—Boston’s Big Dig is a great example—freeway removal projects try to eradicate and undo the damage wrought from highways, while creating new, multifunctional shared streets that can be utilized by transit, bikes, walkers and yes, even cars.
http://gizmodo.com/five-cities-turning-ugly-overpasses-into-…1259568561
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Mar 20, 2016
Self-driving Cars and an Underappreciated Impact They Will Bring
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: business, law, robotics/AI, transportation
The momentum of self-driving cars on the road is accelerating with the question clearly becoming “when” not “if” the widespread use of self-driving cars will be allowed. A 2015 Business Intelligence Report forecasts a compounded annual growth rate of 134% from 2015 to 2020 with at least 10 million cars on the road by 2020.
This should not come as a surprise, the descriptors for a car are heavily technology based with the importance of the car’s brains (software) rivaling its brawn (styling). Cars are already equipped with the ability to conduct specific tasks with varying degrees of driver interaction such as fully autonomous emergency breaking and semi-autonomous driver assisted parallel parking that are performed more adroitly — and safely — then the vehicle is operated by the driver. But the narrative of the self-driving car isn’t evolutionary but thought of as leapfrogging breakthroughs. Perhaps what has painted the imagery with futuristic color is the vocabulary of artificial intelligence. Fully autonomous driverless cars such as Google’s use an artificial intelligence system to pilot the car. In February the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration posted on its website that it informed Google that the artificial intelligence system pilot in a self-driving Google car could be considered the driver under federal law.
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Mar 20, 2016
The Self Driving WePod
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Mar 20, 2016
Apellix drone can paint homes and de-ice airplanes
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: drones, energy, habitats, materials, transportation
Mar 20, 2016
Automakers agree to make auto braking a standard
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: government, transportation
20 automakers that sell vehicles in the US made a pact to make automatic emergency braking system a standard feature in new cars in less than a decade.
Mar 19, 2016
Watch out for these malware attacks on your vehicle — Federal Bureau of Investigation to drivers
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: cybercrime/malcode, transportation
FBI — You have a connected car/ self driving car in the US; be careful because the hackers are coming.
That’s why the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and Federal Bureau of Investigation issued a bulletin warning about the increasing vulnerability of motor vehicles to hacking.
The FBI warns drivers to ensure their car’s software is up to date, to be careful making unauthorized modifications to their car’s software and when connecting to third-party devices, and be wary of who has physical access to their vehicle. Instead it’s meant to educate the public after a series of publicly known hacks of cars in 2015, including a Jeep intentionally hijacked by researchers while driving down the highway.
Mar 19, 2016
Pretty Certain This Tarp-Covered Object Isn’t A UFO But It Is Very Intriguing
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: law enforcement, transportation
The image above has been splashed all over the net over the last week. It looks like a scene out of The Flight Of The Navigator, but really, that tarp could be hiding the future of American air power.
The image was taken by Arizona resident Charlene Yazzie on Arizona Route 77, with the convoy of trucks and black SUVs from the Department of Public Safety heading south toward the town of Holbrook, Ariz.
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Mar 18, 2016
China’s electric cars sales to double in 2016: minister
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: transportation
BEIJING China’s production and sale of electric cars will more than double this year, the industry minister said on Sunday.
More than 300,000 electric cars were sold in China last year, Miao Wei, the head of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology told reporters on the sidelines of the annual meeting of parliament on Sunday.
The reliability, mileage and lifespan of electric batteries needs improvement and China needs to speed up the installation of electric car charging stations, Miao said.
Mar 18, 2016
U.S. Army Begins Testing Tech to Enable Self-Driving Convoys This Summer
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: military, robotics/AI, transportation
Beginning in June, the Army will road-test communications technology that could lead the way to autonomous big-rig convoys.