Porsche Invests in Road Visibility Advanced System
Israel's TriEye Unique Sensor Technology for Driving Visibility
Clearly Seeing the Road in the Worst Driving Conditions
Israeli startup TriEye has invented short wave, infrared sensing technology that enables unprecedented vision under the worst weather and night driving conditions. The company has expanded its funding round to $19 million with an investment from the German sports car manufacturer Porsche.
HD Cameras
TriEye's HD SWIR camera is smaller, has a higher resolution and costs "a fraction of the price", according to the company, of existing technologies. It has also been proven to work and is ready for mass production. The company says it will use the investment money for further product development and to build their team.
2020 Vision
The company's first cameras will launch in 2020. They will enable advanced driver assistance systems to achieve "unprecedented vision capabilities" under tough driving conditions like fog, bad weather and darkness. Porsche says it sees great potential in sensor technology for the next generation of driver assistance systems and autonomous driving systems. For a free borrow of my Kindle book "How to Travel in the Future", go to amazon.com/author/ekane
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07MY8C3HG/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i3
Source: TriEye |
Clearly Seeing the Road in the Worst Driving Conditions
Israeli startup TriEye has invented short wave, infrared sensing technology that enables unprecedented vision under the worst weather and night driving conditions. The company has expanded its funding round to $19 million with an investment from the German sports car manufacturer Porsche.
HD Cameras
TriEye's HD SWIR camera is smaller, has a higher resolution and costs "a fraction of the price", according to the company, of existing technologies. It has also been proven to work and is ready for mass production. The company says it will use the investment money for further product development and to build their team.
2020 Vision
The company's first cameras will launch in 2020. They will enable advanced driver assistance systems to achieve "unprecedented vision capabilities" under tough driving conditions like fog, bad weather and darkness. Porsche says it sees great potential in sensor technology for the next generation of driver assistance systems and autonomous driving systems. For a free borrow of my Kindle book "How to Travel in the Future", go to amazon.com/author/ekane
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07MY8C3HG/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i3
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