Archive for the ‘transportation’ category: Page 596
Dec 5, 2015
Fastest Charging Electric Bus Charges In 10 Seconds In
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: transportation
The world’s fastest charging electric bus is now operating in the eastern Chinese port city of Ningbo.
According to local transportation authorities, the public bus — which was manufactured in Ningbo and runs along a 24-stop, 11 kilometre route — takes as little as 10 seconds to charge up and be ready for the next leg of its journey.
Dec 4, 2015
20 Million Driverless Cars May Be On The Road By 2025
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
Nov 30, 2015
See The Amazon Drone That Will Deliver In 30 Minutes Or Less
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: drones, transportation
Amazon says drones can deliver packages weighing up to 5 pounds within 30 minutes.
“In time, there will be a whole family of Amazon drones,” says narrator Jeremy Clarkson, the former BBC “Top Gear” cohost who is working on a similar show for Amazon. “Different designs for different environments.”
Continue reading “See The Amazon Drone That Will Deliver In 30 Minutes Or Less” »
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Nov 29, 2015
LG pumps $8.7bn into OLED for your car, TV and wrist
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: electronics, energy, transportation
LG really, really wants your next TV, smartwatch, and car to use an OLED panel and, preferably, one that’s come off its new $8.71bn production line. The company’s panel arm, LG Display, has announced a whopping 1.84 trillion South Korean Won investment into a brand new facility dubbed P10, which will cater for what LG predicts will be blockbuster demand for OLED in a range of sizes.
That $8.71bn is only the tip of the iceberg, mind, and the plant — to be constructed in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, Korea — is expected to eventually cost more than five times that amount.
Continue reading “LG pumps $8.7bn into OLED for your car, TV and wrist” »
Nov 29, 2015
Tesla wants to make fully self-driving cars happen way ahead of schedule
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
A week and a half ago, we learned that Tesla is on a quest to hire more engineers to accelerate the development of its self-driving car technologies.
Tesla was already no slouch in the autonomous-vehicle world, having released its Autopilot feature into the wild just over a month ago.
We sampled Autopilot as soon as it hit the streets and were quite impressed, to put it mildly.
Nov 29, 2015
Amazon Shows Off New Prime Air Drone With Hybrid Design
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: humor, transportation
Amazon delivered a lovely update on its ‘Prime Air’ project today — almost exactly two years after it showed the first iteration of its drone. You know, the flying delivery drone that some thought was a massive joke meant for April 1st. Included are some high-res shots and two new videos.
Amazon releases a vid with a new Prime Air drone design https://t.co/HCIjXZQkWN
Nov 27, 2015
RoboRace: Formula E announces 300kph autonomous car championship (Wired UK)
Posted by Julius Garcia in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
The first global autonomous car racing championship will start in 2016, the creators of Formula E have announced.
Known as RoboRace, the series will see completely autonomous electric cars compete in one-hour races designed to test artificial intelligence.
Races, which will take place on the same day and circuits as the Formula E championship, will have 10 teams and 20 cars competing.
Nov 27, 2015
Airbus Patents Way to Board Planes That’s Straight out of Sci-Fi
Posted by Sean Brazell in categories: security, transportation
If the Airbus patent ever becomes reality, this boarding style would be a thing of the past. (Photo: Thinkstock)
Unless you’re deathly afraid of planes, one of the worst things about flying is the sheer tedium of it. It’s nothing but indeterminate waiting — waiting for security, waiting to board, waiting to reach your destination.
Airbus has just been granted a patent for a wild new way to try to speed up boarding on planes — and as Ars Technica points out, it’s just like something out of the classic kids TV show Thunderbirds.