Tag Archives: road

Visteon’s HABIT is a concept infotainment system that puts road trip copilots out of a job (video)

Visteon's incar HABIT concept infotainment system puts road trip copilots out of a job

A good acronym also hints at what it does, and Visteon‘s new intelligent in-car concept, HABIT, is a good example of that. The Human Bayesian Intelligence Technology system — to give it its full name — learns the behaviour of drivers so it can automatically change the temperature, heat the seats and drop that Biohazard album just when you need it most. Factors such as weather, time of day and real-time road conditions all play a part, plus, of course a log of all your typical in-car interactions. It promises to go above just warming your behind on a cold morning though, offering intelligence that would be able to divine local radio stations that play your kind of jam when you’re out of town. It could also seamlessly mix these with your local / tablet / smartphone library and internet sources. Sound a little too creepy? Wait until you see the computer-generated demo video presenter past the break.

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Via: Autoblog

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Intel kicks off ultrabook road trip in New York

The chipmaker is traveling the globe to show consumers some of the newest PCs and tablets. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Belizean government vows probe after road crew destroys Mayan pyramid

The Ministry of Tourism and Culture expressed outrage at the demolition of the Nohmul complex in northern Belize to extract crushed rock for a road project.


FOX News

Drug Site Silk Road Says It Will Survive Bitcoin’s Volatility

Sparrowvsrevolution writes “Bitcoin’s recent spike and then collapse in value has convinced many that it’s too unstable to use as a practical currency. But not the founder of Silk Road, the black market drug site that exclusively accepts Bitcoin in exchange for heroin, cocaine and practically every other drug imaginable. Silk Road’s creator, who calls himself the Dread Pirate Roberts, broke his usual media silence to issue a short statement that Silk Road will survive Bitcoin’s bubble and bust. The market’s prices are generally pegged to the dollar, with prices in Bitcoin fluctuating to account for movements in the exchange rate. And Roberts explained that vendors on the site have the option to also hedge the Bitcoins that buyers place in escrow for their products, so that they can’t lose money due to Bitcoin’s volatility while the drugs are in the mail. As a result, only about 1,000 of the site’s more than 11,000 product listings were taken down during the recent crash.”

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Slashdot

DarkSeas Games Developing Spiritual Successor To Road Rash

Feast Huggston writes “Indie Dev Darkseas Games has released an early gameplay trailer (video) of Road Redemption, a modern reimagining of the Sega Genesis (and later 3DO/N64/PSX/PC) motorcycle combat-racing classic Road Rash. The project has been in development since early 2012 and utilizes the Unity 4 engine. It is currently slated for release on PC, Mac, and Linux in 2014, with a stretch goal of eventually reaching the major game consoles. So far, it has raised over $ 24,000 of its $ 160,000 pledge goal on Kickstarter. While Road Rash creator Dan Geisler recently stated that he was interested in making another Road Rash, he is apparently not directly involved in this project, although he has given it his blessing. I grew up playing the heck out of this on Genesis and PC and it already appears that for many, a rebirth of this franchise was long overdue.”

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Slashdot

This is the Modem World: When tech can’t save us from road rage

Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.

DNP This is the Modem World When tech can't save us from road rage

So I’m driving home the other night after a decent day of work, looking forward to a little run, some dinner and maybe a movie. Taking my normal north-south route along Crescent Heights, I listen to Tame Impala to calm the nerves and enter another mental state.

I’m at one of those intersections in which two lanes become one because of a parked car in the right lane ahead. I, being in the right lane, gun it a bit at the start in order to get some distance from the guy on my left.

He’s having none of this, apparently.

Turns out my car is faster, though, and I edge him out. I see him wave his arms frantically, shaking them and then applauding.

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Students Tackle Road Trips, Online Distraction, And More At HackPrinceton

hackprincetonIt feels like college Hackathon season is in full swing, and that’s why I’ve been making it a point to drive around the Northeast and check out what all these undergrad hackers are capable of cobbling together in just 24 hours. Last Saturday I pulled over at Princeton University just in time to see 30-some sleep-deprived teams demo their projects at HackPrinceton — here’s a quick peek at some of the clever hacks that caught my eye.
TechCrunch

Leaked BlackBerry road map reveals two phablets, widescreen tablet in coming year

BlackBerry plans to release a larger tablet and two phone-tablets, or phablets, over the next year, according to a leaked road map presentation slide.
Computerworld News

Don’t Glass and drive — lawmakers seek to ban Google Glass on the road

West Virginia lawmakers are already pouncing on the existence of Google Glass and introducing a bill that would prohibit drivers from making a spectacle of themselves. [Read more]


CNET News

A Turn-of-the-Century Road Trip

In 1910, two intrepid MIT students drove a 1909 Oldsmobile across the country. Luckily, one kept a journal.

On June 25, 1910, two MIT students set off on an adventure. Joseph Cheever Fuller, Class of 1911, and Alfred Hague, Class of 1910, left Fuller’s home in West Newton, Massachusetts, in Hague’s 1909 Oldsmobile and headed for Portland, Oregon. Theirs was not the first cross-country auto trek, but most started or ended in San Francisco to take advantage of the best roads. Fuller and Hague were attempting a much more arduous and less-traveled northern route because they wanted to stop to visit Hague’s brother at his ranch in Meeteetse, Wyoming. Through sheer force of will—and frequent application of their engineering know-how—the students coaxed their vehicle across the country, over terrain better suited to horses than automobiles.







New on MIT Technology Review

Pwnie Express launches the Pwn Pad, takes hackproofing on the road

Pwnie Express launches the Pwn Pad, takes hackproofing on the road

Pwnie Express-made security tools like the Power Pwn have mostly been stationary creatures that aren’t much help when checking for network vulnerabilities on the move. There’s now a more mobile version, though, in the Pwn Pad. The kit combines a Nexus 7 with USB-based Bluetooth, Ethernet and WiFi to gauge the security of a network beyond what Google’s tablet can manage on its own. Ubuntu Linux is available in the Pwn Pad’s software loadout, but part of the appeal comes from running a suite of tools in Android that aren’t always available on the platform, such as Kismet. The $ 795 price will seem steep to those who bought the plain Nexus 7 at a quarter of the price, although it might end up being a discount for security gurus who want to leave bulkier tools — even their laptops — at home.

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Via: Wired

Source: Pwnie Express

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Oxford’s Self-Driving Car (on the Left Side of the Road)

Across the pond, Oxford swerves into Google’s self-driving lane.

Self-driving cars aren’t just the realm of corporate giants like Google. Academia plays a big role in this space too, as the BBC points out.  Oxford University’s department of engineering science is behind something called the Oxford RobotCar UK project.







New on MIT Technology Review

UPS puts 100 electric trucks on the road in California

In an effort to cut down on the amount of diesel used throughout the day, the United Parcel Service (UPS) is deploying 100 electric trucks in central California to continually test out its new initiative of going green. While the new trucks might not be able to last all day on a full charge, it’s

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SlashGear

The long road to a billion users

Windows got there, and Facebook did it faster. Asymco analyst Horace Dediu handicaps the high-tech aspirants to the truly high-volume threshold. [Read more]


CNET News

Renault Alpine on road by 2015 with Miata-style driving focus

Renault‘s first Alpine sports car will arrive before the end of 2015 the company says, as much as two years ahead of the initial schedule, and promising a driving experience roughly in line with a Mazda Miata. The project – a joint effort between Renault and Caterham announced back in November - will not “betray the DNA

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SlashGear

NASA Faces Rough Road In 2013

MarkWhittington writes “With the National Research Council report that concluded that President Obama’s plan for a mission to an asteroid has no support, either inside NASA or anywhere else, the space agency faces a decision point in 2013. The NRC suggested that the administration, Congress, NASA, and other stakeholders in space exploration come to a consensus behind a new goal. But the space agency’s problems run deep, caused by a lack of direction, a lack of leadership, and a lack of funding.”

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Slashdot

Road Tripping In The Digital Age

drivingI’m just wrapping up a week-long road trip, in which a travel companion and I visited some friends in Southern California. We only booked one night’s stay ahead of time, and decisions around where to sleep, eat, and visit were mostly spontaneous. Here are the apps and tools that we used, and what we think could be done better.
TechCrunch

While There Are Some Glimpses Of Progress, Mexico Faces A Long Road To Innovation

long roadEditor’s note: Maria Rocio Paniagua currently works as a project manager at Innku, one of the top mobile and web workshops in Mexico.

A few weeks ago, Vivek Wadhwa visited Mexico and wrote about the possible opportunities he saw for the Mexican IT sector, noting manufacturing plans. In his article, he suggested that the Mexican technology industry “leapfrog India” by moving away from IT services and into a different emerging market, grabbing the opportunity of re-automating the American manufacturing industry on markets like artificial intelligence, 3D printing and robotics.
TechCrunch

Road trip on tap for NASA’s Mars rover in new year

The original itinerary called for starting the drive before the Times Square ball drop, but Curiosity lingered longer than planned at a pit stop, delaying the trip.


FOX News

Apple’s iMac on the road to irrelevance

Sales of Apple’s iMac, the computer often credited with saving the company, have peaked and by the end of 2014 will account for approximately 2% of the firm’s revenues, analysts now say.
Computerworld News

The Long and Winding Road to Wireless Charging

We’re getting there. Slowly. Could Apple weigh in?

I’ve written about wireless charging before, but not with great enthusiasm. There was an Apple patent application that surfaced, but a patent application is just that (see “Apple Is Interested in Wireless Charging”). Intel made some advances last summer (see “Will Wireless Charging Ever Take Off?”). But for a while, I had yet to see anything out there suggesting a new era of charging to make Nikola Tesla proud was imminent.







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Tesla’s Supercharger network goes live in six California towns, encourages EV road trips

DNP Tesla's Supercharger network goes live in six California towns, EV road trips get easier

Time to go on that great California road trip, Tesla owners; the EV maker has just launched new Superchargers in six Golden State locations: Folsom Premium Outlets, Harris Ranch in Coalinga, Gilroy Premium Outlets, Barstow, Tejon Ranch in Lebec and Hawthorne. They appear to be strategically placed to ease journeys between San Francisco, Los Angeles, Lake Tahoe and Las Vegas, NV. The solar powered stations from SolarCity are designed just for Tesla vehicles, with Model S sedans being able to charge for free. According to Tesla, a Model S can be charged in about 30 minutes if you want to get around three hours of 60mph driving out of it, so you’ll have plenty of time to grab an In-N-Out Double Double on your way to Sin City.

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Tesla’s Supercharger network goes live in six California towns, encourages EV road trips originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Oct 2012 22:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Signposts on Apple’s road to map app mishap

week in review Developers say they warned Apple how bad its in-house app was, while lawmakers tee off on two Chinese communications companies. Also: Windows 8 and iPad Mini on the horizon. [Read more]


CNET News

iPhone 5 so far: One road warrior’s two-week test

The iPhone 5 doesn’t exactly have busy CNET reporter Brooke Crothers pining away for his 4S. But there have been one or two issues. [Read more]


CNET News

Here’s Why Twitter’s Road To An IPO Won’t Be As Rocky As Some Might Think

4008827814_7675dbe68a_zToday, Nick Bilton of the New York Times published a pretty extensive piece on Twitter, specifically its CEO, Dick Costolo. As I read it, one paragraph concerning the potential IPO of the company struck me.
TechCrunch

635,392 U.S. Road Miles Lack 3G or 4G

FCC takes a stab at closing parts of the nation’s wireless divide

Amid the recent release of new ultrafast smartphone models, two interactive maps provide a reminder of the United States’ wireless divide and the incremental progress in closing it. 







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Loic Le Meur Tells All About Seesmic’s Long And Winding Road To An Exit [TCTV]

Screen shot 2012-09-07 at 2.08.37 PMLoic Le Meur, the French entrepreneur who moved to Silicon Valley to found Seesmic back in 2007 and led it through to its sale to Hootsuite this week, has taken a long and winding road to this most recent success. Over the past five years Le Meur has changed the business direction of Seesmic more times than he can remember, moves that have led him to be pegged by some as the “king of the pivot.”
TechCrunch

BlackBerry 10 road show: Can it revive RIM?

RIM is planning to show off BlackBerry 10 devices to telecom execs and developers as it tries to stoke demand for a new smartphone lineup that will make or break the company.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 8/12: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest. And please come back for next year’s contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 8/11: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road safety project simTD connects cars, infrastructure. Hopes to save lives, time

Road safety project simTD connects cars, infrastructure Hopes to save lives, time

Live traffic info likely prevents many a clenched fist meeting steering wheel every single day. A new trial scheme in Frankfurt Germany, however, could prevent even more unnecessary road-rage. The project involves 120 vehicles from a range of manufacturers, loaded with “car-to-x” technology. Cars will communicate with each other, and with general infrastructure, in an attempt to make roads safe and less congested. As well as basic location data, other tools include a brake light that advises the car behind it once activated, and an obstacle warning system to share information on the presence and location of hazards — as well as what those blockages are. The project is a collaboration between Universities, research institutes, telecom providers — and of course — the auto industry. We’re keen to see how the trial turns out. Even if it’s just to lower our next taxi fare.

Continue reading Road safety project simTD connects cars, infrastructure. Hopes to save lives, time

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Road safety project simTD connects cars, infrastructure. Hopes to save lives, time originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Aug 2012 20:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Ford, GE and University of Michigan team on sensor to track EV battery life, keep us on the road

Ford Focus Electric hands-on

Believe it or not, EV battery life is still something of a Pandora’s Box, even for automakers: they can tell you the battery pack’s current and voltage, but not how it’s really performing under pressure. Ford, GE and the University of Michigan are uniting to unlock that mystery through a new ARPA-E project. In its role, GE is developing a minuscule sensor array that will track the nuances of battery cells that existing technology misses; it will promptly hand the baton to researchers at the University of Michigan, who plan to both prove that GE’s data is on the mark as well as develop tricks for predicting behavior. Ford handles the last mile, almost literally: it’s planning to fit the GE sensor technology to one of its cars and test in a more realistic environment. Before you fantasize about knowing the lifespan of your Focus Electric’s battery down to the minute, however, the new alliance is stressing that it’s only just getting started — there’s another three years and $ 3.1 million to go before the project wraps up. If all goes according to plan, though, we’ll have electric cars and plug-in hybrids that can not only tell when they’ve seen better days but can eke out extra miles through smarter battery designs.

Continue reading Ford, GE and University of Michigan team on sensor to track EV battery life, keep us on the road

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Ford, GE and University of Michigan team on sensor to track EV battery life, keep us on the road originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Aug 2012 12:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 8/5: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 8/4: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/28: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/21: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/18: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/15: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Exclusively for CNET Members: Get ready for your summer road trip with great savings from Accessory Genie

This week, CNET Exclusives is pairing with our friends from Accessory Genie to bring the CNET audience excellent deals on everything you need to tech out your summer road trip. Join CNET Exclusives today to grab these awesome deals while supplies last!
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CNET News

DC City Council Shelves “Uber Amendment” Against Discounted Private Cars, Road Clears For UberX (For Now)

uber-dcAn explosive day of online and traditional campaigning appears to have worked — at least for the present. The Washington DC city council was set to approve an amendment to its far-reaching taxi legislation that would have set a floor price for private cars. But now councilwoman Mary Cheh, who had proposed the so-called “Uber Amendment,” says this morning that she is shelving it.

However, some reports are indicating that it could return this fall as a separate bill.

No, TechCrunch has not turned into a DC politics blog (you should check out the DCist for all the gritty local details on the story, actually). This is a big issue for Uber and a wide range of other private car startups.
TechCrunch

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/9: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/7: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 7/4: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 6/30: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Subway work unearths 2,000-year-old road in Greece

Archaeologists in Greece’s second-largest city have uncovered a 230-foot section of an ancient road built by the Romans that was the city’s main travel artery nearly 2,000 years ago.




FOXNews.com

Tesla Motors Model S electric cars now a road reality

Tesla Motors has begun pushing out its latest model from the plant – the Model S sedan, one of the most luxurious electric cars to date. The launch is also bringing hope to the company’s facility in California, where high-end manufacturing jobs are being created as a result of this newest creation. The first customer?

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SlashGear

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 6/23: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Road Trip Pic of the Day, 6/19: What is this?

If you know what today’s picture is, you could be eligible to win a prize in the CNET Road Trip Picture of the Day contest.
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CNET News

Ask Slashdot: Syncing Files With Remote Server While On the Road?



An anonymous reader writes “Here’s a scenario: you are on a vacation trip for a couple of weeks — on the road. Lots of pictures — 2-300 per day. Maybe some text files with short notes etc. You have a camera with Eye-Fi, a PC, and a phone with WiFi and 3G. Files ends up on the PC (mobile storage), phone provides Internet connectivity. Now, if you wanted to upload all files pretty much as you go — given spotty access to Internet over G3 and WiFi — what would be the best way to do that automatically; set-it-and-forget-it style? I would like them to end up on my own server. rsync script? ownCloud? Some BitTorrent setup? Other? I’m thinking of interrupted file transfers due to no network, re-starts etc. And I would not want to lose any files; including scenarios where files gets deleted locally — that should not result in files getting automatically deleted on the server as well. Sure; I could perhaps use something like Dropbox but that would take the fun out of it.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Privacy group wants Google’s driverless cars kept off the road

Consumer Watchdog, a privacy group, wants the California Assembly to keep Google’s self-driving cars off the road until privacy protection for the cars’ users is in place.
Computerworld News