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Automotive

Elektrobit and Canonical announce EB corbos Linux - built on Ubuntu

ERLANGEN, Germany, and DOUGLAS, Isle of Man, February 21, 2023 – Elektrobit and Canonical today announced EB corbos Linux – built on Ubuntu, an industry first bringing the largest open-source Linux community to automotive software. Available immediately from Elektrobit, the new solution provides OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers with the benefits and flexibility of an open-source operating system for developing electronic control units (ECUs) in software-defined vehicles.

Ways New Telematics Technology Can Drive Innovation

Vehicle telematics technology is a relatively new technology, and it can help fleet managers track vehicles in their fleets. Telematics solutions are changing every day, and they are more robust than ever in the past. But this technology can be used for much more than just tracking where your vehicle is, and this is driving innovation in order to set up the business for long-term success.

How digital twins enable data-driven automotive supply chains

The automotive industry is facing one of its biggest revolutions since the advent of automation. In this post, we will go through the Industry 4.0 aspects and how OEMs can turn these challenges into opportunities. To put it simply, the first Industrial Revolution relied on steam power, the second one on electricity and the third one on computers. What about the fourth Industrial Revolution everyone is talking about? I would describe it as a data-driven revolution.

Splunk - The Data Platform for the Automotive World | Driving Transformation with Data

Tackling the mobility revolution from visibility to action, fast and at scale. The automotive industry is transforming. From being led by engineering to competing through software. From internal combustion to electrification. From a driver-focus to autonomous driving. From personal ownership to shared mobility. Automakers need to master more of their value chain and establish greater dependencies with key technology partners.

Security and real-time Linux in a shifting automotive world

Software is completely changing the automotive industry - from vehicle design to use and maintenance. The whole lifecycle now relies on software and vehicles resembling “computers on wheels”. But vehicles aren’t regular devices like smartphones. They move humans at hundreds of kilometers per hour and need to be safe and secure at all times. When there is software involved, there are always security vulnerabilities. No cybersecurity expert can say the opposite. How can the automotive industry navigate the shift towards software-defined vehicles while ensuring the best level of security?