{"componentChunkName":"component---src-templates-blog-list-js","path":"/735","result":{"data":{"site":{"siteMetadata":{"title":"No Frills News"}},"allContentfulNfnPost":{"edges":[{"node":{"postTitle":"Researchers Say Fourth Traffic Light Needed for Autonomous Vehicles","slug":"researchers-say-fourth-traffic-light-needed-for-autonomous-vehicles","publishDate":"None","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:54.703337","feedName":"Autonomous Vehicle News","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Researchers are proposing that a fourth, white light for autonomous vehicles (AVs) should be added to the traditional red, amber and green at traffic lights.\nThe recommendation has come from transportation engineers at North Carolina State University, who say the measure could improve traffic flow.\nThe suggestion is that when this is happening, the white light would be activated.\n“First, AVs improve traffic flow, regardless of the presence of the white phase.\nThird, the higher the percentage of traffic at a white phase intersection that is made up of AVs, the faster the traffic moves through the intersection.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Targa Telematics enhances connected mobility work with BMW and Mini integration","slug":"targa-telematics-enhances-connected-mobility-work-with-bmw-and-mini-integration","publishDate":"2023-02-14 13:12:56","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:54.473341","feedName":"Connected Car","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Targa Telematics is now able to integrate connected car data from BMW and Mini vehicles directly into its platform.\nThe partnership enables the company to provide its customers with an advanced suite of GDPR-compliant telematics solutions, without the cost and hassle of installing aftermarket hardware into the vehicles.\nThe new agreement follows similar deals with other OEMs as Targa pushes ahead with plans to integrate the data streams of all manufacturers.\nAlberto Falcione, VP sales at Targa Telematics, said: “Car manufacturers are looking to embrace the future and are increasingly opening their connected vehicle data to third-party specialists, where expertise in data capture can then turn vehicle data into meaningful performance insights.\n“We constantly work to innovate our smart mobility services and solutions to increase the value for our customers and concretely build the mobility of the future.”For more of the latest industry news, click here.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Automotive News Video: Relying on EV infrastructure Video from Automotive News","slug":"automotive-news-video-relying-on-ev-infrastructure-video-from-automotive-news","publishDate":"2023-02-14 14:27:41-05:00","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:53.493257","feedName":"Connected Car","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":""}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Hyundai and Kia issue software upgrades to thwart theft hack","slug":"hyundai-and-kia-issue-software-upgrades-to-thwart-theft-hack","publishDate":"2023-02-15 00:00:00","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:52.293347","feedName":"Connected Car","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Korean car-makers Hyundai and Kia will issue software updates to some of their models after a method of stealing them circulated on TikTok, leading to many thefts and even some deaths.\nThe \"Kia Challenge\" started circulating in mid-2022 and explained that it's possible to remove the steering column covering on some Hyundai and Kia models by force, exposing a slot that fits a USB-A plug.\nVideos depicting the hack went viral, leading to huge spikes in thefts of the vulnerable models around the world.\n\"The software upgrade modifies certain vehicle control modules on Hyundai vehicles equipped with standard 'turn-key-to-start' ignition systems,\" The car-maker explained.\nThe NHTSA's announcement states that \"Kia is also rolling out its FREE software updates in a phased approach.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"FDA has approved over 520 AI algorithms to date","slug":"fda-has-approved-over-520-ai-algorithms-to-date","publishDate":"None","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:52.150800","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Ad Statistics Times Displayed: 59402Times Visited: 793 Optimize Imaging Workflow With X-ray Solutions from Carestream Health!\nCarestream Health is a leading provider of quality X-ray systems and detectors that are designed to maximize diagnostic confidence, workflow and patient satisfaction.\n1 (current)While the number of algorithms in other specialties are not even in the triple digits, the FDA recorded 396 in radiology, according to Health Exec .\nThe first was cleared by the FDA in 1995, with fewer than 50 more approved over the next 18 years.\n\"Even though all these FDA-approved algorithms are using AI, it is not at all what most people think of, where it is making a diagnosis or finding a lesion.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Amazon's self-driving car successfully carries passengers on public roads, launch 'in sight'","slug":"amazon-s-self-driving-car-successfully-carries-passengers-on-public-roads-launch-in-sight","publishDate":"2023-02-14 22:34:32+00:00","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:51.965770","feedName":"Autonomous Vehicle News","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Amazon’s autonomous car division, Zoox, recently completed a milestone of a fully autonomous public road drive, with passengers, on its ‘Robotaxi’.\nAmazon self-driving car: everything you need to knowThe Robotaxi is an electric car which was unveiled in December 2020.\nThe feat also underlined the work on autonomous vehicle safety, since the Uber fatality from March 2018.\nTo be sure, this is not the very first attempt around the world by an autonomous vehicle maker to conduct a trial on public road.\nIn October 2019, Google-backed Waymo conducted a public road trial of its self-driving cars, with a limited set of riders who had signed up for its autonomous vehicle trial service.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Deploying a multidisciplinary strategy with embedded responsible AI","slug":"deploying-a-multidisciplinary-strategy-with-embedded-responsible-ai","publishDate":"2023-02-14 00:00:00","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:51.049043","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Financial companies applying data-driven AI tools at scale could create market instability or incidents such as flash crashes through automated herd behavior if algorithms implicitly follow similar trading strategies.\nAI systems could even functionally collude with each other across organizations, such as by bidding to achieve the highest or lowest price for a stock, creating new forms of anticompetitive behavior.\nToward responsible AIMost AI risks are not, however, unique to financial services.\nEnter responsible AI (sometimes called ethical or trustworthy AI).\nResponsible AI refers to principles, policies, tools, and processes to ensure AI systems are developed and operated in the service of good for individuals and society, while—in the business context—still achieving positive impact.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"MarioGPT hints at a glorious AI-generated future where we will all play Nintendo forever","slug":"mariogpt-hints-at-a-glorious-ai-generated-future-where-we-will-all-play-nintendo-forever","publishDate":"2023-02-14 00:00:00","createdLocal":"2023-02-15 14:30:50.427236","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Sure, it’s probably been a while since you played one of the original NES games, but probably because they’re so familiar.\nWhat if I told you researchers had created a way to generate infinite Mario levels so you can play a brand new one every day until the sun burns out?\nA team at IT University of Copenhagen just released a (pre-pub) paper and GitHub page showing a new method for encoding and generating Super Mario Bros levels, which they call MarioGPT.\nIts output includes a “path” represented as lowercase x’s, essentially showing that the level is technically playable.\n😄 pic.twitter.com/mZJdp2WV83 — Sebastian Risi (@risi1979) February 14, 2023Coincidentally, Julian Togelius at NYU GameLab and his group just wrote a paper showing a similar process for “sokoban” or block-pushing puzzle games.</p>"}}}}]}},"pageContext":{"limit":8,"skip":5872,"homeNumPages":1077,"currentPage":735}}}