A budding trust of autonomous cars
Nissan shifts towards wearable tech, again
The Japanese automaker teased enthusiasts with a rather curious piece of wearable technology. A promotional video depicts a man wearing Google Glass-like specs called 3E, a new technology that officially debuted at the 2013 Tokyo motor show.
The concept glasses are intended to demonstrate how augmented reality might be used to display vehicle information to a driver. Some reporters at the motor show were permitted to try the 3E glasses, which relayed performance and technology statistics over live footage of Nissan vehicles in motion. It is not the company's first foray into wearable tech; Nissan showed a “smart watch” for drivers in September at the Frankfurt motor show.
US says it will regulate mobile devices in vehicles
The new regulations, though technically still voluntary, could help automakers strike a balance between providing drivers with high-tech options, while maintaining safety standards and avoiding distraction-causing features.
A budding trust of autonomous cars?
But it's not all good news for would-be autonomous vehicle makers. Around 64% of respondents said self-driving cars cannot make decisions as well as humans and 75% said they can drive better than a computer ever could. Speaking of…
Mazda automated test drive goes awry
At MIT, viruses build a better battery
The Japanese automaker teased enthusiasts with a rather curious piece of wearable technology. A promotional video depicts a man wearing Google Glass-like specs called 3E, a new technology that officially debuted at the 2013 Tokyo motor show.
The concept glasses are intended to demonstrate how augmented reality might be used to display vehicle information to a driver. Some reporters at the motor show were permitted to try the 3E glasses, which relayed performance and technology statistics over live footage of Nissan vehicles in motion. It is not the company's first foray into wearable tech; Nissan showed a “smart watch” for drivers in September at the Frankfurt motor show.
US says it will regulate mobile devices in vehicles
The new regulations, though technically still voluntary, could help automakers strike a balance between providing drivers with high-tech options, while maintaining safety standards and avoiding distraction-causing features.
A budding trust of autonomous cars?
But it's not all good news for would-be autonomous vehicle makers. Around 64% of respondents said self-driving cars cannot make decisions as well as humans and 75% said they can drive better than a computer ever could. Speaking of…
Mazda automated test drive goes awry
At MIT, viruses build a better battery
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