Groupe PSA trials car-sharing service in Washington, DC
French car manufacturer Groupe PSA says its ‘free-floating’ car-share service provides members in Washington, DC with access to 600 vehicles.
The Free2Move service is available to drivers for a $10 membership fee and does not include late fees, per trip fees or insurance charges, the company adds.
Members can use the Free2Move app to locate, book and open/lock the vehicles.
This pilot coincides with Maven’s announcement to expand its peer-to-peer car-share service in Washington, DC – and other US
October 31, 2018
Read time: 2 mins
French car manufacturer Groupe PSA says its ‘free-floating’ car-share service provides members in Washington, DC with access to 600 vehicles.
The Free2Move service is available to drivers for a $10 membership fee and does not include late fees, per trip fees or insurance charges, the company adds.
Members can use the Free2Move app to locate, book and open/lock the vehicles.
This pilot coincides with Maven’s %$Linker: 2Internal<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />4373130link-external announcementfalse/sections/transmart/news/maven-expands-peer-to-peer-car-share-service/falsefalse%> to expand its peer-to-peer car-share service in Washington, DC – and other US cities - by the end of the year.
Free2Move app users can also connect to other mobility services offered by Bird, Capital Bikeshare, Car2go, Jump, Lime, Skip and Uber.
Bird is also taking steps to broaden its current offering by confirming its intention to %$Linker: 2Internal<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />4371820link-external launchfalse/sections/general/news/bird-to-deploy-electric-scooter-delivery-service/falsefalse%> an electric scooter delivery service.
More information on the delivery service - including how to join the waiting list and secure a priority placement - is available on the %$Linker: 2External<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />000link-external websitefalsehttps://www.bird.co/falsefalse%>.
Toyota has released an online map which provides information on road closures and natural disasters in Japan.
The company says users can check data from the past hour to 24 hours and carry out searches on areas of heavy traffic.
The real-time data is based on the T-Connect/G-Book telematics service information from communications systems in Toyota’s vehicles, and the map is accessible from a smartphone, computer or other devices.
Protesters in France have put more than half of the country’s speed cameras out of action, according to the country’s authorities.
Interior minister Christophe Castaner said that almost 60% of France’s 3,200 cameras have been affected, the BBC reports.
Castaner said that the cameras had been “neutralised, attacked, or destroyed” by ‘yellow vest’ protesters in a move which threatened road safety.
Motorists are required by law to keep high-visibility vests, or ‘gilets jaunes’ in their cars. These yel
Aptiv has opened a technical centre in Las Vegas, US, to gather insights on its fleet of autonomous vehicles (AVs) and to improve safety operator training.
Aptiv says its AVs are supporting more than 1,600 destinations across Clark County and the city, including entertainment venues such as the Las Vegas Convention Center and City Hall.
In May, Aptiv launched 30 AVs in the city to pick up riders using Lyft’s app and network.
The new, 130,000 square-foot technical centre will facilitate vehicle opera
More than 100 French rail companies will be exhibiting in the French pavilion at Innotrans, the international railway industry trade show, in Berlin, 23 to 26 September.
Sponsored by French export support agency UBIFrance in partnership with Fer de France and co-sponsored by CENTRALP, SCOMA, and Leroy Automation, the pavilion will display equipment and systems for all rail applications, including car layout, infrastructure, on-board embedded-electronics systems, technologies and solutions for passenger i