The long awaited trackless train has debuted in Yibin, China. The autonomous train uses sensors and GPS to guide it along the road.
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The long awaited trackless train has debuted in Yibin, China. The autonomous train uses sensors and GPS to guide it along the road.
Self-driving cars will be nice at some point, but self-driving trains are great now
Traveling to Copenhagen has further radicalized me about cycling as transportation--but also about the virtues of driverless subways.
COPENHAGEN Returning here a year after my overdue introduction to this delightful corner of Europe allowed me to remedy the most egregious oversight of last September’s trip: I remembered to rent a bike to get across town. But the TechBBQ conference once again having me here as a speaker also let me enjoy a less obvious transportation attraction of Copenhagen: the city’s driverless Metro…
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Autonomous train comes with exclusive energy-efficient properties and the better renewal of energy during braking makes it more sustainable than that of its conventional counterparts. Also, right from air conditioning systems to LED lighting, each coach comes with high-end features that don’t let the train fall short in any aspect. The size of the LCD screens tends to vary from eighteen to twenty inches, displaying important commercials on a continuous note. Also, fiber seats have newly been introduced to add more color to the trains.