Mobility & Transportation
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December 22, 2017
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Hi! Time for the weekly Mobility & Transportation Reading List. This is the last issue for this year. We hope you liked the content we shared. Have a good holiday season and a great start into 2018! Enjoy reading!
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Check out the Startup Digest blog for news and resources!
Follow the Startup Digest blog for curated news, resources, and stories from the global network. Gather tips from fellow entrepreneurs, meet our curators and keep up to date on the latest Startup Weekend and Startup Week events happening around the world. You will find everything you need on the Startup Digest blog.
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Stefan Heck, Reid Hoffman
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Greylock
In this podcast, Nauto CEO Stefan Heck and Greylock partner Reid Hoffman discuss a blended environment with humans and machines, the evolution of road infrastructure, and the impact of AI on human jobs. The two visionaries also share advice on how startups can successfully partner with large companies and enterprises.
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Nora Naughton
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The Detroit News
The American Center for Mobility, a 500-acre driverless car proving ground at Ypsilanti’s Willow Run, is open for business.
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South China Morning Post
The electric car scheme is being launched in partnership with the government, and the company hopes to eventually provide Singapore with the second-biggest electric car-sharing service in the world, after Paris.
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Alistair Charlton
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Gearbrain
Barely a day went by in 2017 without autonomous car technology making headlines. GearBrain gathered the biggest autonomous car stories of 2017 — to reminisce on a year in which driverless tech took us for a bumpy ride in the fast lane to the future.
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Deep Patel
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TechCrunch
UPS announced they were going to join the Blockchain in Transport Alliance (BiTA), a forum for the development of blockchain technology standards and education for the freight industry. The alliance hopes to spur standards development for the shipping industry as a whole by implementing a secure blockchain system.
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Linknovate
According to this 2017 self-driving car business overview, Google, Toyota, and GM are the main self-driving car leaders worldwide. The United States, China, and Germany are the top countries behind the innovations.
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