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Added on the 10/04/2023 07:52:54 - Copyright : Auto Moto EN
Tokyo, July 15 (EFE/EPA).- Toyota Motor announced Thursday that it acquired America-based Carmera that provides the next-gen navigation system for driverless vehicles.The Japanese carmaker acquired the artificial intelligence and maps firm through the newly created subsidiary Woven Planet dedicated to automated mobility. (Camera: archive). ARCHIVE B-ROLL OF LOGO OF TOYOTA MOTOR AT A DEALER IN TOKYO, TOYOTA CARS AT THE TOKYO HEADQUARTERS OF TOYOTA MOTOR CORP. IN TOKYO, JAPAN; AND TOYOTA CARS AT BANGKOK MOTOR SHOW IN BANGKOK, THAILAND.
Mercedes-Benz rolled out its new A-Class to the 2018 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona and showed off its new Mercedes-Benz User Experience, or MBUX, smart multimedia system. The MBUX combines a futuristic display, Optical Finger Navigation, and voice controls with a high-level computing package, including 8GB of RAM, two different Nvidia graphics cards, and an AI recommendation system.
Toyota has developed a safety system that can automatically stop a car in the moments before a collision with a pedestrian. The system uses a millimeter wave radar and stereo camera to constantly monitor what's in front of the vehicle.
EU spokesperson Eric Mamer seems to pour cold water over a potential Dutch opt-out of the bloc's asylum system, saying "you cannot opt out of EU legislation... We are working on the basis of existing treaties and existing legislation". Speaking to AFP earlier on Thursday, Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders vowed to enact the country's strictest asylum policy ever. SOUNDBITE
US House Speaker Mike Johnson says the justice system has been "weaponized" against Donald Trump as he addresses reporters outside the New York court where the former US president is standing trial over hush money payments to an adult film actress. "The system is using all the tools at its disposal right now to punish one president and provide cover for another," Johnson says. SOUNDBITE
Images of tourists and inspectors near a ticket office as Venice launches a new scheme to charge day-trippers looking to enter the historic Italian city, a world first intended to ease the pressure of mass tourism. IMAGES