November 15, 2024

Month: August 2016

OH MY: Uber to Begin Real-World use of Self-Driving Cars in Pittsburgh this month

UberLogoMarking a small but significant step towards bringing self-driving technology to the public, Uber will later this month begin offering some Pittsburgh customers rides in specially-modified Volvo XC90s, a report revealed on Thursday.

An Uber engineer will still sit in the driver's seat, and occasionally be prompted to take over in riskier situations like bridges, according to Bloomberg. A copilot in the passenger seat will take notes, and cameras inside and outside of the vehicle will record each trip.

Riders may not know they're getting into self-driving vehicles until they actually appear, but those trips will be free, and a tablet in the rear seat will explain what's going on. Uber is in fact hoping to discourage riders from talking to the XC90 drivers, in a bid to get people used to the idea of a driverless car.

While still a test in many senses, Uber's rollout is effectively the first public launch of fully self-driving car technology. Companies like Google have conducted road tests, but not as part of a commercial service.

Uber has expressed a strong desire to adopt self-driving vehicles as soon as possible. Doing so will allow it to dramatically cut its biggest expense — human workers, who need to be paid a reasonable wage.

Ford is also planning to enter fully-automated ridesharing and ride-hailing, but only in 2021. Tesla has suggested that once it achieves the same level of technology, owners of its cars may be able to offer them up for ridesharing, making their money back.

Apple could potentially go down a similar route when its own car arrives in 2021. While it's unlikely to launch its own service, the company recently invested $1 billion into Chinese ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing, and it might be easier to sell high-priced first-generation vehicles to other businesses than a general audience.

Apple Drops the world ‘Store’ from its Retail Locations

AppleStoreLVM“Apple appears to be making a slight branding change to its retail business, dropping the ‘Store’ moniker when referring to its Apple Store locations,” Juli Clover reports for MacRumors. “Apple has already made the change online, and all of its store pages now refer to stores by names like ‘Apple Union Square’ or ‘Apple Valley Fair’ or ‘Apple The Grove,’ instead of ‘Apple Store, Valley Fair’ or ‘Apple Store, The Grove.'”

“It’s a change that appears to have started rolling out with the launch of the newer Apple Stores, like the Union Square location in San Francisco,” Clover reports. “Apple has always referred to that store as just Apple Union Square, and over the course of the last few days, the company has updated all of its retail store webpages to remove the ‘Store’ branding.”

Read more in the full article here.

Intel turns to light for faster data transfers

IntelInside“Intel believes the days of using copper wires for data transfers, both between computers and inside of them, are numbered because optical communications are on the horizon,” Agam Shah reports for IDG News Service.

“The chipmaker has started shipping silicon photonics modules, which use light and lasers to speed up data transfers between computers,” Shah reports. “The silicon photonics components will initially allow for optical communications between servers and data centers, stretching over long distances, said Diane Bryant, executive vice president and general manager of Intel’s Data Center Group.”

“Over time, Intel will put optical communications at the chip level, Bryant said during a keynote at Intel Developer Forum on Wednesday,” Shah reports. “That means light will drive communications inside computers… The first silicon photonics modules will allow for data transfers at up to 100Gbps.”

Read more in the full article here.

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