Free2Move launches its car sharing service in Paris

From Monday December 3rd, Free2Move Paris is providing access to a fleet of 550 electric Peugeot i0n and Citroën C-Zéro vehicles. The service is easy and convenient to use with the Free2Move Paris app. Users can choose between two options, with no minimum rental period: €0.32/minute with a monthly subscription of €9.90 (no commitment) for… Continue reading Free2Move launches its car sharing service in Paris

Go-Jek releases beta ride-sharing app to kick off Singapore launch

Indonesia’s Go-Jek has unleashed a beta version of its ride-sharing app in Singapore, marking the start of its anticipated entry into the market where it will be looking to challenge incumbent Grab. Available for download on Google Android and Apple iOS devices, the beta app was party of the company’s “staggered approach” to ensure its… Continue reading Go-Jek releases beta ride-sharing app to kick off Singapore launch

Phiar raises $3 million for an AR navigation app for drivers

Augmented reality is a very buzzy space, but the fundamental technologies underpinning it are pushing boundaries across a lot of other verticals. Tech like machine learning, object recognition and visual mapping tech are the pillars of plenty of new ventures, enabling there to be companies that thrive in the overlap. Phiar (pronounced fire) is building… Continue reading Phiar raises $3 million for an AR navigation app for drivers

15 Hurdles To The Industrialization Of Driverless Cars (Part 1 Of 3) – Forbes

Photocredit: GettyGetty Will the future of driverless cars rhyme with the history of the Segway? The Segway personal transporter was also predicted to revolutionize transportation. Steve Jobs gushed that cities would be redesigned around the device. John Doerr said it would be bigger than the Internet. The Segway worked technically but never lived up to its backers’ outsized hopes for market… Continue reading 15 Hurdles To The Industrialization Of Driverless Cars (Part 1 Of 3) – Forbes

Driverless cars will need cities covered in sensors, China’s Didi Chuxing says

Driverless cars will need cities covered in sensors, DiDi VP says
2 Hours Ago | 02:33

Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing wants to become one of the front-runners in developing self-driving cars, the company's chief scientist for smart transportation initiatives said on Tuesday.

Didi has been working to develop autonomous vehicle technologies for three years, and has teams based in the United States and China, Henry Liu told CNBC during a fireside chat at the East Tech West conference held in the Nansha district of Guangzhou, China.

“We already have autonomous vehicles being equipped with our sensors and we have licenses in both Mountain View, California, as well as in Beijing, China,” he said. “We'll be one of the front-runners in terms of the autonomous vehicle technology development.”

Automakers and internet companies around the world are investing millions of dollars and rolling out long-term plans for self-driving vehicles. Many analysts believe the widespread adoption of these vehicles will potentially start to pick up in 2021 or 2022.

“We can also predict in terms of what's going to happen in the next 15 to 30 minutes, in terms of traffic flows.”
-Henry Liu, chief scientist for smart transportation, Didi Chuxing

For its part, Didi is developing autonomous vehicles on two fronts, said Liu.

First, by installing sensors in vehicles that can sense the environment on the road, detect objects, plan travel routes and ultimately, control the cars. The second front is what he described as “cooperative vehicle-highway systems” that rely more on the environment — that means having sensors installed on roads, buildings, lamp posts and the surrounding areas to provide relevant information to self-driving cars.

“The main difference is that we not only have the vehicle sensing capability, we're also going to have a roadside sensing capability, so we will be able to provide the autonomous vehicles with environment information, from the infrastructure side,” he said.

But such a development will require the presence of very high-speed mobile internet connection readily available, Liu added. China is developing that technology very aggressively and hasoutspent the United States since 2015.

Didi's advantage: 550 million users

One of Didi's major advantages when it comes to developing self-driving, smart cars is that it has a massive transportation network, according to Liu.

Didi has about 550 million users taking an average of 30 million rides every day across more than 400 cities. That allows the Chinese firm to collect plenty of data about its users, from their travel habits to traffic conditions in various cities. Generally, artificial intelligence systems require large volumes of so-called training data to learn patterns and behaviors.

“We collect a hundred terabytes of vehicle trajectory data per day,” Liu said, adding that Didi processes nearly five times as much information daily to better estimate travel routes, prices and demand for vehicles at any given time. The data also helps cities plan their traffic networks better to avoid congestion.

Earlier this year, Didi launched a so-called “Smart Transportation Brain” service with Chinese traffic management authorities. Using vast amounts of data from Didi, local governments and other businesses, the service uses artificial intelligence to recommend improvements to existing transport systems that can reduce travel times for commuters.

“We can also predict in terms of what's going to happen in the next 15 to 30 minutes, in terms of traffic flows,” Liu added.

Didi remains one of China's most valuable start-ups, backed by major names including Apple, Alibaba and SoftBank, and it has a valuation of $56 billion, according to CB Insights. Two years ago, it acquired Uber's China business to establish its dominating position in the Chinese ride-hailing market.

WATCH: Didi Chuxing's chief scientist for smart transportation talks about self-driving cars

We use the data to help passengers and cities, says DiDi VP
3 Hours Ago | 03:45

UK gov’t seizes documents Facebook wanted to keep private in Cambridge Analytica battle

The UK parliament has exercised little-used powers in order to seize confidential documents relating to the Cambridge Analytica scandal. More security news It was in May this year that the UK government requested Mark Zuckerberg’s presence at a hearing in order to answer questions relating to the scandal, in which the data of up to… Continue reading UK gov’t seizes documents Facebook wanted to keep private in Cambridge Analytica battle

German car CEOs invited for White House talks

German car CEOs invited for White House talksThe Trump administration has invited the CEOs of three German automakers for talks at the White House as European and U.S. government officials try to negotiate a new trade agreement, according to people familiar with the matter.
President Donald Trump is tentatively planning to meet with the chief executives of BMW AG, Daimler AG and Volkswagen AG after the Nov. 22 Thanksgiving holiday, one of the people said on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations. The executives are consulting with Berlin before their meeting with Trump administration officials, according to the people.
The White House didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
For Trump the talks could be a way to push the European Union toward a broader trade deal. Discussions between Washington and Brussels have bogged down recently as the U.S. threatens tariffs on auto imports and the EU warns of imposing a digital services tax that could hit technology companies from Apple Inc. to Amazon.com Inc.
EU Trade Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom was in Washington last week to discuss a limited free-trade agreement with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer. Those talks are mainly focused on regulatory cooperation and do not deal with tariffs on autos.
Trump decided last week to hold off on imposing auto tariffs but U.S. officials made clear to their European counterparts that the truce might not hold much longer if they fail to deliver in the trade talks with the White House, two of the people said.
Germany’s trade surplus with the U.S. has been a target of Trump’s complaints about global economic imbalances. Volkswagen makes the Passat Sedan and Atlas SUV in Tennessee, BMW builds its X line of SUVs in South Carolina, and Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz produces the C-Class Sedan and GLS and GLE SUVs in Alabama.
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Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak: ‘I do not believe in auto driving cars’ — it’s not possible yet

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak: Tesla makes so many mistakes
12:30 PM ET Tue, 13 Nov 2018 | 03:35

Technologist Steve Wozniak told CNBC on Tuesday he had once hoped that Apple would build the first self-driving car.

But the Apple co-founder said, “I do not believe in auto driving cars” at this point. “I don't really believe it's quite possible yet” that cars will be able to drive themselves without a steering wheel, he added.

Wozniak said on “Fast Money Halftime Report” that roads are not prepared for autonomous vehicles because they are built by imperfect humans who are “not as good as nature and mathematics and even evolution.”

However, Wozniak does support of advancements in “assistive driving” technology that can allow cars to “spot red lights, and stop signs and avoid some of the accidents today.”

But he warned that people should “not to lose sight of the fact you're not going to get a car that drives itself.”

Wozniak — who owns a Tesla and said he enjoys driving it — warned that the so-called Autopilot feature does not actually self-drive the car.

“Tesla makes so many mistakes,” he said, but didn't elaborate. “It really convinces me that auto piloting and auto steering car driving itself is not going to happen.”

Wozniak said he kept upgrading his Tesla and then “gave up” on the idea of autonomous driving. “I said, 'It's really not going to happen,'” he recalled.

Tesla was not immediately available to respond to CNBC's request for comment on Wozniak's interview.

Apple’s Mysterious Car Project

Apple's been busy working on an autonomous driving system.

Rumors have been circulating for the past several years about a secret car project that Apple is working on. The project is called Project Titan. Apple hopes this could launch the company into the autonomous vehicle market, reports The Motley Fool. Reports show that the company has pivoted from developing its own Apple branded cars to developing an autonomous driving system.

Some rumors state that Apple will be scaling back and perhaps has even scrapped its car ambitions. What does that leave for the latest news about Apple’s Project Titan? According to MacReports, this past July, Apple had permits to drive 66 autonomous vehicles on California’s roads. Records from the California Department of Motor Vehicles show that Apple has also been approved for 111 “safety drivers.” For those who are unaware what a safety driver is, a safety driver is the individual behind the wheel of these autonomous cars as they are being tested in order to take over if something does go wrong. Apple has thus far tested 27 autonomous vehicles.

John Gruber of technology blog Daring Fireball recently confirmed for followers that Apple’s former VP of Mac hardware engineering is returning to the company. Allegedly this return is due to his work on Apple’s Project Titan. Gruber was previously in charge of Tesla’s Model 3 production since 2013. Because of this, rumors have been going around that Apple is striving to develop its own vehicle to compete with Tesla. It seems as though they are, however, focusing on the autonomous driving system despite major setbacks in the past, as cited by The Motley Fool.

Apple’s management has spoken up about the Titan Project recently, breaking their reigning silence on the secretive work. Apple CEO Tim Cook told Bloomberg in 2017 that even though the initial purpose of autonomous systems is self driving vehicles, there are in fact other uses.

“Clearly, one purpose of autonomous systems is self-driving cars, there are others. And we sort of see it as the mother of all AI projects. It’s probably one of the most difficult AI projects to work on. So autonomy is something that is incredibly exciting for us. But we’ll see where it takes us. We’re not really saying from a product point of view what we’ll do. It’s a core technology that we view as very important.”

Cook did not precisely say what Apple has in store for its autonomous technology use. Besides the fact that it confirmed Apple was working on self-driving car hardware, a document filed by Apple also said that 5,000 employees know about the car project and that 2,700 of those are “core employees.”

Hyundai and Kia partner with Vodafone for connected services

Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors have entered a new pan-European strategic partnership with Vodafone to provide customers with fully connected in-car infotainment and connected car service. The partnership will enable both car manufacturers to tap into Vodafone’s technical expertise, and offer connected in-car infotainment services to their European drivers. Hyundai and Kia will use Vodafone’s… Continue reading Hyundai and Kia partner with Vodafone for connected services