https://www.pcmag.com/news/369021/sorry-truckers-volvos-autonomous-vehicles-can-handle-it-fr
Autonomous Vehicles Can Handle it From Here
June 14, 2019  Jake Leary

[image  
https://assets.pcmag.com/media/images/651497-volvo-vera.jpg?thumb=y&width=810&height=456
Volvo Vera

video
https://youtu.be/CMREUiQZSIs
Volvo Trucks - Autonomous vehicle Vera’s first assignment
]

To start, Volvo's Vera will ferry goods from a logistics center to a port in
Gothenburg, Sweden. But more Veras will eventually mean fewer trucking jobs.

Volvo is ready to put its first autonomous, fully electric truck to the
test. With the assistance of shipping company DFDS, the vehicle, known as
Vera, will ferry goods from a logistics center to a port in Gothenburg,
Sweden.

The car maker has been experimenting with fuel-efficient, driverless
vehicles for the last several years, and first teased Vera in September.
It's optimal for short-range heavy-load jobs. The truck follows a
predetermined route and is connected to a control center and cloud network.
Vera pinpoints its position down to the centimeter, enabling it to detect
sudden and minute changes in its environment—a good thing since part of
Vera's route takes it on public roads.

"The transport system we are developing can be an important complement to
today's solutions and can help meet many of the challenges faced by society,
transport companies, and transport buyers," Claes Nilsson, President of
Volvo Trucks, said in a statement.

Volvo eventually wants to expand and include multiple autonomous trucks in
its operation. It made Vera compatible with most existing trailers and load
carriers to take advantage of existing infrastructure. A fleet of Veras
would ideally increase predictability and minimize unnecessary downtime,
Volvo says.

More Veras would also mean fewer truckers, which Volvo positions as
positive, citing the widespread belief that the industry is dying. But
according to a report by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, that's a
misconception, especially for short-distance drivers, who would be most
affected by Volvo's new technology.

Fortunately for currently employed drivers, it'll likely be a while before
Vera becomes ubiquitous. Volvo's statement concludes with a vague promise to
extend the vehicle's availability and functionality in "the near future."
[© pcmag.com]


http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/Keolis-2remotely-5G-control-supervise-auton-e-fleets-shuttles-tp4693845.html
Keolis 2remotely 5G control &supervise auton e-fleets &shuttles


+
https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/10/workhorse-gets-25-million-needed-to-finish-electric-delivery-van/
Workhorse gets $25 million needed to finish electric delivery van
2019/06/10  Workhorse Group, the electric vehicle company that grabbed
headlines last month over a proposed deal to buy General Motors' Lordstown,
Ohio factory, has ...
https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/workhorse-ngen.jpg




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