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Before Self-Driving Cars: Four Tech Challenges the Auto Industry Faces Today

2015-01-28 01:50:05| AutomotiveDigest.com - Automotive Industry News

According to Dykema Automotive Practice, as the industry continues to evolve toward vehicles without drivers, there are four main challenges to watch including: The Culture Combination: If vehicles are going to integrate the most advanced technologies, car companies need to work with the brightest tech minds. But so far, it hasn't always been a comfortable collaboration. . Silicon Valley and Detroit are two very different places.  But while the stalwarts of Silicon Valley might not want to move to Detroit, many see the auto industrys potential. Apple has partnered with Ferrari, Volvo and Mercedes on CarPlay, which will deploy the iOS operating system to let drivers control navigation and entertainment from their iPhones. Intel is working with Ford on things like an interior camera that will recognize the driver and a system that unlocks cars with smartphones. The Long Lead Time: On average, it takes three years to design and build a new car and that car will stay on the road for roughly 11 years. The industry needs to find a way to bring new car technology more quickly to market -- as consumers have come to expect all technology to move as fast as the updates we get for the devices we carry in our pockets  and as reliable as a car itself. Keeping Data Private: In the not-too-distant future, we'll be able to take road trips and depend on our cars to tell us when we are near our favorite chain restaurants, how much gas costs at the approaching stations and whether the sprinkler system has turned on at home. According to Steve Tupper, the leader of Dykemas Privacy, Security and E-Commerce practice, "Carmakers can give drivers a very rich experience if drivers allow the use of their data. The critical thing is to help drivers understand and control that data access. The carmaker that does this better than any other will win lots of hearts and minds. Keeping Data Secure: As technology improves auto safety, the industry must find ways to keep those systems secure. According to the McKinsey study, 43 percent of new car buyers say they are worried that hackers will tamper with their brakes or safety systems.  You can't have vehicles communicating reliably with one another if you don't have a secure network, says Paul Laurenza, a Dykema attorney who focuses on transportation safety. MORE >> WHITE PAPER -- To drill down and gain more assessment and insight on driverless cars  from the Dykema Law Firm. ____________________________________________________________ The Article Before Self-Driving Cars: Four Tech Challenges the Auto Industry Faces Today appeared first on Automotive Digest.

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US north-east cost faces historic blizzard

2015-01-27 15:54:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed

Blue and Green: A potentially historic blizzard could see as much as 3ft of snow hit the US north-east coast, the National Weather Service has warned. The warning comes as a study suggests that extreme weather events could double due to climate change. The US forecast led to travel bans, public transport being reduced and schools closing early. New York governor Andrew Cuomo said with a potentially historic blizzard the state was preparing for the worst. The weather comes as a new study warns that climate...

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Pa. man faces charges after loaded gun falls from fanny pack at grocery store, injuring 2

2015-01-26 18:10:56| Grocery - Topix.net

Gerry Good, 58, of Gibsonia, Pa., was wearing a fanny pack at the local Giant Eagle when he leaned over inside the store and his gun dropped out and discharged, injuring two shoppers. Instead, two grocery store bystanders were injured and a third is facing charges after a loaded gun fell from a man's fanny pack and discharged.

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Siemens Chief Faces Heat on Deal

2015-01-26 05:17:09| Industrial Machines - Topix.net

At Siemens AG's annual general meeting in Munich on Tuesday, shareholders likely will grill Chief Executive Joe Kaeser over the price he agreed in September to pay for U.S. oil equipment maker Dresser-Rand Group Inc. Since Siemens announced the deal, valued at $7.6 billion including debt, many investors and analysts have argued Mr. Kaeser overpaid. The deal values Dresser at roughly 58 times the past year's per-share earnings.

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Siemens Chief Faces Heat on Deal

2015-01-26 04:37:11| Telecom - Topix.net

At Siemens AG's annual general meeting in Munich on Tuesday, shareholders likely will grill Chief Executive Joe Kaeser over the price he agreed in September to pay for U.S. oil equipment maker Dresser-Rand Group Inc. Since Siemens announced the deal, valued at $7.6 billion including debt, many investors and analysts have argued Mr. Kaeser overpaid. The deal values Dresser at roughly 58 times the past year's per-share earnings.

Tags: deal chief heat siemens

 

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