Transportation
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The CEO of CHAMP Titles — which recently raised $55 million — talks about where the industry is headed. His optimism about upcoming significant growth is matched by another executive from this field.
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The city’s tourist-heavy Oceanfront neighborhood is using a digital parking solution from eleven-x to improve parking management and grow revenue in its “resort area.” Area residents will get parking credits.
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The Hawaii Department of Transportation has launched its Eyes on the Road project, which leverages dashcams in private and state-owned vehicles to gather vast amounts of information on roadway conditions.
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Since 2014, the city has been using smart meters with positive outcomes, and now has its eye on sensors that can be programmed to zero out a meter when a car pulls away, for instance.
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The department continues to build out its QuickMap application for real-time traffic information. An iOS version of QuickMap was released in February, after an Android version was made available in 2016.
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The FAA decided to let the Pullman-Moscow Regional Airport install a new Instrument Landing System as part of its runway realignment project after ordering the airport to use a GPS-based system in July.
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From finding criminals or rioters in a crowd to metering toll traffic on busy bridges, the minds behind the technology say it won’t be long before a medium created by humans for humans is all machine.
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In an address to the National Governors Association, the transportation secretary also discussed the role that industry plays in the future of the nation’s infrastructure.
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Lidar uses 40 sensors strapped to a vehicle to collect 2,000 points of data per second, creating a visual representation of the streets.
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The Ultimate Urban Circulator would deploy autonomous vehicles onto the current Skyway route and expand into other neighborhoods and developments.
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The artificial intelligence startup developing the brain of Ford's self-driving vehicle will settle in what it sees as Pittsburgh's tech hub.
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Privately owned Texas Central Partners plans to build a 240-mile bullet train line between downtown Dallas and northwest Houston within the next several years.
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Turning Columbus, Ohio, into the epicenter of intelligent-transportation testing comes with a hefty price tag.
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Information will be continuously updated throughout every day of the year, and the DOT says users can count on one thing above all else: accuracy.
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A new report on the Department of Transportation's Smart City Challenge finds that transit projects are managing not only commuting and congestion, but also broader social issues like job access and even infant mortality.
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The Connect Transit Card was soft launched regionwide on last week, after the Sacramento Regional Transit District became the first adopter in November.
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Uber CEO Travis Kalanick has been chastised for agreeing to sit on an advisory panel for the President.
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Pittsburgh Company Commits to Identifying, Fixing Bugs and Weaknesses in Autonomous Vehicle SoftwareIt only takes only one bug or bad line of code in autonomous vehicle software to potentially make the entire system go haywire.
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The project is working to replacing 558 bridges in three years, and has strict guidelines for design reviews and specific types of required responsiveness.
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Waymo's self-driving Lexus SUV recently provided a gloriously uneventful drive for an Arizona reporter.
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On the final day of the Obama administration, the U.S. Department of Transportation released a set of documents setting guidelines for how vehicles communicate with infrastructure.
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