Intel’s Mobileye wants to dominate driverless cars—but there’s a problem
In Summary : Mobileye, the Israeli self-driving technology company Intel acquired last year, announced on Thursday that it would begin te...
https://updatesinfosec.blogspot.com/2018/05/intels-mobileye-wants-to-dominate.html
In Summary :
Mobileye, the Israeli self-driving technology company Intel acquired last year, announced on Thursday that it would begin testing up to 100 cars on the roads of Jerusalem. But in a demonstration with Israeli television journalists, the company's demonstration car blew through a red light.
Mobileye is a global leader in selling driver-assistance technology to automakers. With this week's announcement, Mobileye hoped to signal that it wasn't going to be left behind as the world shifts to fully self-driving vehicles. But the red-light blunder suggests that the company's technology may be significantly behind industry leaders like Waymo. [...]
kindly refer the following link as follow up :
https://arstechnica.com/?p=1310863
Mobileye, the Israeli self-driving technology company Intel acquired last year, announced on Thursday that it would begin testing up to 100 cars on the roads of Jerusalem. But in a demonstration with Israeli television journalists, the company's demonstration car blew through a red light.
Mobileye is a global leader in selling driver-assistance technology to automakers. With this week's announcement, Mobileye hoped to signal that it wasn't going to be left behind as the world shifts to fully self-driving vehicles. But the red-light blunder suggests that the company's technology may be significantly behind industry leaders like Waymo. [...]
kindly refer the following link as follow up :
https://arstechnica.com/?p=1310863