Aptiv has unveiled a mobility centre in Shanghai, China, to develop SAE Level 4 autonomous driving technology.
The company says the opening extends its autonomous driving operations beyond Singapore, Boston, Pittsburgh and Las Vegas.
Last December, Aptiv opened a technical centre in Las Vegas to gather insights on its fleet of autonomous vehicles (AV) and to improve safety operator training.
Aptiv is now holding discussions with potential partners for mapping and commercial deployment of its
April 29, 2019
Read time: 1 min
Aptiv has unveiled a mobility centre in Shanghai, China, to develop 567 SAE Level 4 autonomous driving technology.
The company says the opening extends its autonomous driving operations beyond Singapore, Boston, Pittsburgh and Las Vegas.
Last December, Aptiv opened a %$Linker: 2External<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />000link-external technical centrefalsehttp://www.itsinternational.com/sections/general/news/aptiv-opens-technical-centre-in-las-vegas/falsefalse%> in Las Vegas to gather insights on its fleet of autonomous vehicles (AV) and to improve safety operator training.
Aptiv is now holding discussions with potential partners for mapping and commercial deployment of its AVs in China.
Midlands Future Mobility consortium will turn 50 miles of roads in Coventry and Birmingham into a UK testing centre to develop connected and autonomous vehicles (C/AVs) and related technologies.
These networked roads will feature smart vehicle monitoring, data analytics and 5G wireless infrastructure. The consortium, consisting of industry and academic professionals, intends to enable industries to carry out tests using real-world environments.
The consortium is led by WMG, University of Warwick and
Thales and Australian mobile network provider Telstra are working together to enable the management of low altitude airspace for autonomous flying taxis, drones and helicopters.
The partnership is investigating how 4G and 5G technology and Internet of Things capabilities could enable robust navigation and monitoring of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) – more commonly called drones.
Chris Jenkins, chief executive of Thales Australia, says the partnership intends to help customers integrate unmanned aircra
Giesecke & Devrient and Infineon have joined forces to provide “contactless smartcards compliant with the CIPURSE Open Standard in Volume Quantities” and will be able to discuss here at CARTES 2013 how these new cards “are being used today in Brazil”.
Energy company Vector has partnered with Dutch start-up Chargetrip to launch an electric vehicle (EV) journey planning app in New Zealand aimed at reducing ‘range anxiety’ for drivers.
Range anxiety is a term used to describe the stress EV users experience when their destination could be further than their vehicle can travel without charging.
The project, supported by growth accelerator Elemental Excelarator, is seeking to help drivers switch to electric driving.
The app will offer information o