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Waymo is teaming up with Uber on autonomous trucking after a patent infringement standoff

Waymo and Uber, previous legal foes and harsh opponents in the autonomous vehicle space, are collaborating to accelerate the adoption of driverless trucks. Waymo is incorporating Uber Freight, the ride-hail organization’s truck business, into the innovation that powers its autonomous big rigs.

This “long-term strategic partnership” will enable fleet owners to more rapidly send trucks equipped with Waymo’s autonomous “driver” for on-demand delivery courses presented by Uber Freight, the organizations said.

The declaration addresses a union between two of the organizations’ significant side projects. Waymo separates its autonomous projects into two divisions: Waymo One, its consumer ride-hailing service, and Waymo Via, which is centered around goods delivery in both trucking and local delivery formats. Uber Freight, which was launched in 2017, connects drivers with shippers, much similar to the organization’s ride-hailing application that matches drivers with those searching for a ride.

Waymo depicts the collaboration as a “deep integration” of each organization’s products, including a mutually developed “product roadmap” to outline how autonomous trucks will get conveyed to Uber’s organization once they are commercially ready. Up to that point, Waymo says it will utilize Uber Freight with its test fleet to better comprehend how driverless trucks will receive and accept delivery orders.

Yet, the partnership goes past beta testing each other’s innovation. Waymo said it will save “billions of miles of its goods-only capacity for the Uber Freight network” in a capacity commitment intended to highlight the seriousness of this partnership.

In the not-so-distant past Waymo and Uber were in a grueling standoff over the eventual fate of autonomous vehicles. In February 2017, the Alphabet-owned organization sued Uber and its auxiliary, self-driving truck startup, Otto, over charges of trade secret theft and patent infringement. Waymo looked for $1.4 billion and a public apology from Uber, however, the ride-hail organization dismissed it as a non-starter.

The case went to trial for almost a year, however, finished quickly when the two sides reached an unexpected settlement agreement. Uber later conceded that it misappropriated a portion of Waymo’s tech and promised to permit it for future use. Anthony Levandowski, a previous Google engineer and the organizer behind Otto, was sentenced to 18 months in jail for taking Waymo’s trade secrets however was subsequently pardoned by former President Donald Trump.

There is no notice of past indiscretions in the declaration. Uber had been developing its self-driving truck as a feature of its bigger interest in autonomous innovation however later off-stacked it to Aurora, a startup established by the previous head of Waymo when it was only Google’s self-driving vehicle project. Expanding costs, in addition to the misfortune in Arizona when an Uber self-driving vehicle struck and killed a passerby, constrained Uber to take back its AV project.

Waymo has made a flurry of arrangements lately pointed toward developing its nascent trucking business. The Google spinoff has said it has no plans to possess or work its fleet of trucks and on second thought will work with truck manufacturers, carriers, and representatives to coordinate its innovation into the business of hauling freight.

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Automotive Mechanical

Airbus patent for backup battery during emergency landings

Airbus Helicopters has come up with a life-saving patent proposing an emergency battery framework for single-engine rotorcraft. Intended to keep up rotor power in case of a motor fail, the framework will help pilots in performing safe autorotation arrivals, as per a European Patent Office patent distributed in June.

Extensively containing a battery pack and electric engine associated with the gearbox, it likewise incorporates sensors to empower a quick identification of a drop in rotor speed characteristic of a motor failure and afterward actuation of the back-up framework. Noticing the overwhelming outstanding task at hand looked in the critical minutes following motor failure, the documenting says that without snappy activity the rotor speed will down and the helicopter will crash.

It says that notwithstanding wellbeing benefits, the back-up framework would ease certain operational confinements forced on single-engine helicopters, especially a European restriction on the overflight of bigger developed zones. Likewise, most extreme drop weight could be expanded, given the extra security edge gave, according to the patent application.

The framework would empower the identification of motor failure before it is past the point of no return, says the patent, in a split second furnishing back-up capacity to help with the autorotation and, at the purpose of arriving, to help the speed decrease required to stay away from an exceptionally substantial contact with the ground.

Sensors to empower quick identification of a motor fail could screen various boundaries, including rotor or motor RPM, close by temperature or weight. Be that as it may, the application takes note of that the location framework must be sufficiently complex to recognize a real motor failure and phases of the flight where rotor speed may normally fall at any rate, “restricting the danger of distinguishing a non-existent failure”.

Moreover, the helicopter pilot ought to have the option to either incapacitate the framework – to play out certain preparation missions. The patent calls attention to that the size of the framework is constrained by a necessity not to add critical load to the craft. Airbus Helicopters’ head of advancement Tomasz Krysinski as of late showed that the framework it proposing to also test an electric motor for their future crafts.

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Mechanical

ISRO patent for Artificial Moon Soil

ISRO Patent for Artificial Moon Soil:
ISRO aka Indian Space Research Organization has recently granted a patent for Artificial Moon Soil in India. The patent was applied way back in 2014 and after a long prosecution, the patent was approved on 18th May 2020. The organization was seeking this patent for a long time for research purposes.
The title of the patent is “method of manufacturing artificial moon”. The patent was acquired by ISRO to test their outer space rovers such as Vikram Lander and Pragyaan Rover as part of their mission Chandrayaan-2. Since there is a difference in the surface and soil properties, scientists need an environment similar to the moon for testing their machines to ensure a safe landing. After taking consideration from many geologists ISRO finally decided to pick rocks called “anorthosite” found in the Kunnamalai village of Tamil Nadu which said to have similar properties of moon soil.