Blog
Driver Technologies: innovators of automotive safety pt 1
Meet Driver Technologies, the pioneering AI-based mobility tech company dedicated to revolutionising automotive safety.
Driver Technologies: innovators of automotive safety pt 2
Meet Driver Technologies, the pioneering AI-based mobility tech company dedicated to revolutionising automotive safety.
Don’t forget commercial vehicles
Research by the RAC has revealed that the government is unlikely to meet its target of having six or more rapid or ultra-rapid electric vehicle chargers at every motorway service area in England by the end of 2023.
Rechargeable LED flashlight: step by step guide
Rechargeable flashlights are popular devices among consumers as they are portable and convenient to use. They have high energy efficiency as they use the same battery many times.
Is self-service saving businesses?
There’s no denying that self-service devices are taking over. Whether at the bank, the doctors, or the supermarket, you will usually have the option to use technology rather than speak to a real person.
UK AI regulation and what this means for UK innovation and growth
UK AI Regulation VS. EU AI Act OpenAI's CEO, the central figure behind the groundbreaking invention of ChatGPT, Sam Altman, has recently made a rather surprising statement: the possibility of ceasing operations in the EU.
SCADA is dead, or is it?
Data plays a vital role in the digitalisation of industrial facilities. But, as industry’s digitalisation goals become more ambitious, and our expectations of facility data increases, how is technology for data capture and analysis changing?
Diisocyanate in polyurethane adhesives
New legislation requiring training for the handling of materials containing diisocyanates, which is coming in on 24 August 2023, has brought attention to polyurethane adhesives (PUs).
Keeping industrial control with ASICs
More than two thirds of engineers within the UK’s manufacturing sector report that business has returned to or even surpassed pre-pandemic levels, in a report published by Essentra Components in early 2023.
Are EVs too heavy?
In June 2023, the Institution of Structural Engineers published a report suggesting that the weight of our cars is too much for many multi-storeys built in the 60s and 70s.