connected car

Featured Video

  • Vehicles are increasingly home to advanced connectivity technologies, compute power and sensors enabling the next wave of vehicular innovations. How will these vehicles connect to networks and the world around them to provide new services and increase safety? Durga Malladi, SVP of Engineering at Qualcomm, speaks about cellular V2X and connectivity solutions in the future.

All connected car Videos:

  • The Transportation Research Board's 2018 annual meeting in Washington, D.C., may have long-term implications for CAV deployment throughout the United States. David Pickeral discusses the TRB's position on connected and autonomous vehicle safety, changes in city planning, the increasing role of state and local governments, and the impact it could have on the ICT industry.

  • Vehicles are increasingly home to advanced connectivity technologies, compute power and sensors enabling the next wave of vehicular innovations. How will these vehicles connect to networks and the world around them to provide new services and increase safety? Durga Malladi, SVP of Engineering at Qualcomm, speaks about cellular V2X and connectivity solutions in the future.

  • Kevin Koppenhaver, Senior Program Director at Belcan, spoke from the TIA Connectivity Jam in Dallas, TX about cybersecurity in avionics and automotive. Koppenhaver stressed the issue of vulnerabilities that are created when adding nodes to devices, and whether industry is reviewing the process of adding network nodes.

  • Mark Norman, Director of Development & Strategic Initiatives at the Transportation Research Board, spoke with TIA NOW about the challenging dynamics between the public and private sectors for the enablement of a robust connected and autonomous vehicle.

  • Shailen Bhatt, Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Transportation, talks about vehicle connectivity research areas like vehicle to infrastructure, vehicle to vehicle, security, privacy and standards in the CV/AV space.

  • TIA’s Connected Vehicle Workshop invited the top technology and policy experts in the connected vehicle space. They discussed the policy, technology and business challenges for the connected car as providers, enterprises and consumers will see more IoT devices and services in their vehicles. Panelists included AT&T, Cisco, the State Dept. and the Association for Global Automakers.

  • Senator Gary Peters (D-MI) talked with TIA NOW’s Abe Nejad about the recently signed highway bill that will infuse $305 billion into the transportation sector over the next five years. Senator Peters also talked about the importance of the 5.9 GHz spectrum band for the Intelligent Transportation Systems sector.

  • Spectrum scarcity is not only a concern in our businesses, but now also in our cars. Harry Lightsey, Executive Director, Global Connected Customer, Public Policy at General Motors tells TIA NOW that emerging Wi-Fi technologies could cause interference in radio spectrum used for mission critical services that reduce vehicle collisions.

  • Connecting data is what the Internet of Everything is all about. Andreas Mai, Cisco’s Director of Smart Connected Vehicles, spoke to TIA NOW about hyper-connectivity and what that means to the Internet of Cars space.

  • The burgeoning industry of connected vehicles relies heavily on the reliability of the communications network. Tim Nixon, a keynote presenter at the TIA 2015 Network of the Future conference, talked about the growing number of data transactions in all General Motors vehicles and why a high bandwidth and low latency network is integral for connected cars.

  • Tim Nixon, Executive Director and Chief Technology Officer of Applications Delivery and Global Connected Customer Experience at General Motors, spoke to TIA NOW about GM’s move towards in vehicle Wi-Fi and 4G LTE, to enhance vehicular communications services.

  • As people spend as much time in their cars as they do on the internet, the connected car space is transitioning very quickly. At the TIA 2015 Network of the Future conference, Russ Shields, the Chair of the ITU organized Collaboration on ITS Communications Standards explained why drivers are holding connected vehicle manufacturers to a higher standard.

  • Leaders from General Motors, Ericsson and the Texas A&M Transportation Institute discuss the evolving Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) market and how automotive OEMs are partnering with networking OEMs to take advantage of the growing business opportunities in the ITS space.

  • The Contra Costa Transportation Authority’s GoMentum Station Summit will co-locate with TIA’s Connected and Autonomous Vehicle workshop in Silicon Valley on March 30th and 31st. Randell H. Iwasaki of the Contra Costa Transportation Authority and Scott Belcher, CEO of TIA, tell TIA NOW why these events are a can't miss.

  • Cisco takes a leap into the Internet of Everything space with new alliances and partnerships in verticals such as the connected car. Watch TIA NOW’s interview with Doug Webster, VP of Service Provider Marketing at Cisco.

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