Transportation
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
More Stories
-
Fuel cell vehicles address the two main shortcomings of today's battery-powered cars: short driving range and long recharging times.
-
The 240-mile project, which could be the first high-speed rail line in America, is expected to get people between the two cities in 90 minutes. If funding is secured and federal approval granted, the train could be running by 2021.
-
An Audi RS 7 ran a lap at Germany's famed Hockenheimring racetrack, leaving little doubt just how far autonomous vehicle technology has come.
-
China CNR Corp and its unit Tangshan Railway are among those submitting an expression of interest for a contract to design, build and operate what would be the nation's first high-speed rail system.
-
Attendees at the first public meeting on a proposed high-speed rail line between Dallas and Houston told federal officials they're for the project — so long as the stations are conveniently located downtown.
-
The House created a study committee that is tasked with finding a way to regulate driverless technology without inhibiting its development or deterring potential auto industry investment in the state.
-
The report groups the reasons into three categories: socio-economic shifts, lifestyle preferences, and technological changes.
-
The California Supreme Court on Wednesday cleared the way for further construction of the state's $68-billion bullet train when it declined to hear an appeal filed by Central Valley opponents of the controversial project.
-
The proposed smartphone app is far from the universal fare plan envisioned for Chicago and the suburbs 15 years ago, but officials say it's a first step.
-
Automotive researchers said the electronic architecture of the sporty electric car is dramatically different from the approach of other automakers and their parts suppliers.
-
The city claims Uber was violating its taxi and vehicle-for-hire codes because the company refused to comply with such requirements as having vehicle inspections and cameras installed in all cars.
-
It's a given that autonomous cars are on the way, but the technology's early iterations will likely need a lot of improvement to handle busy environments.
-
More than $22 billion in infrastructure upgrades have built a metropolitan area that is far safer and far more resilient than before.
-
New Fraud-Detection-as-a-Service continues to “learn” over time, uncovering the latest and emerging methods of fraud.
-
The company's terms of service for passengers declare in all caps that they release the company from liability, claims or damages related to “the third-party transportation provider.”
-
As people become more wedded to mobile devices, the car industry is grappling to keep up with the latest gadgetry and hopes the technology isn’t obsolete soon after vehicles hit the showroom floor.
-
Tracks under the Hudson River are in serious need of repair as political inertia and budget pressures push transit systems to the limit. Via the Fiscal Times
-
Keith Parker took over one of the most beleaguered and least loved transit systems in America -- and almost instantly reversed its course.