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(1) Keysight Technologies, Inc. (NYSE: KEYS), a leading technology company that delivers advanced design and validation solutions to help accelerate innovation to connect and secure the world, and DEKRA, an international expert organization, announced that DEKRA used Keysight s SA8700A C-V2X test solution to be recognized as an OmniAir Authorized Test Laboratory (OATL) for certifying cellular vehicle-to-everything (C-V2X) devices.
Efforts between the two companies also enabled Keysight to be the first vendor to gain OmniAir Qualified Test Equipment (OQTE) status. DEKRA supported Keysight with validation expertise to verify that the test equipment fulfilled the OmniAir specifications and Keysight provided DEKRA with the test solutions that were required to launch the C-V2X program.
8 April 2021, 1:23 pm EDT By Honda and Verizon team up ( Pexels/JESHOOTS.com )
Honda and Verizon announced their partnership as both companies are now researching on how 5G and mobile edge computing might improve safety for today s internet-connected vehicles and autonomous cars in the future.
Honda and Verizon partnership
The partnership between the two companies was announced on Friday, Apr. 9, as they are piloting different safety scenarios at the University of Michigan s Mcity, a test bed for connected and autonomous vehicles.
The aim of the venture is to study how 5G connectivity, coupled with edge computing, could allow for faster and better communication between vehicles, pedestrians, and even infrastructures.
Verizon and Honda want to use 5G and edge computing to make driving safer
Honda and Verizon are researching how 5G and mobile edge computing might improve safety for today’s connected vehicles and the future’s autonomous ones.
The two companies, which announced the partnership Thursday, are piloting different safety scenarios at the University of Michigan’s Mcity, a test bed for connected and autonomous vehicles. The aim of the venture is to study how 5G connectivity coupled with edge computing could allow for faster communication between cars, pedestrians and infrastructure. The upshot: faster communication could allow cars to avoid collisions and hazards and find safer routes. [TechCrunch is owned by Verizon Media, which is itself owned by Verizon]