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Sunday, 2 January 2022

Future Technology: Driverless car software

Future Technology: Driverless car software

Future Technology Driverless car software
Future Technology: Driverless car software



Future technology in Google, one of the world's largest Internet technology companies, is now working on a driverless car.
 

They have already built a small car that can seat only two people.

When the car starts moving, its speed will be 25 miles per hour. Follow the road map created by Google.

This car will have only two buttons - one to start moving and the other to stop.

There will be nothing else. The rest of the work will be done by the car itself.

Competition has started among various organizations for making such driverless cars.

Most have been in the United States. Google and Tesla.

Such driverless cars have recently been involved in accidents in the United States. Then the question arises as to how much this technology can ensure on the road.

But a robotics research firm in Britain has developed software that does not go into making driverless cars, which, if installed on any car, would turn into driverless cars.

The name of the company is Oxbotica.

Officials say they will test the software in a car in London later this year.

"We're working on a software that will turn any car into an intelligent car," said Paul Newman, a professor at Oxbotica. You can call this software a kind of Android for driverless car technology. ”

He said, "We have created an operating system that will allow the car to run automatically. Installing this software on any type of vehicle will turn it into a driverless vehicle. ”

Listen to the driverless car technology at the University of Middlesex in the UK School of Science and Technology teacher. Interview with Shahid Rahman :

DNA tests on the bodies of those who first started farming in the world show that they came from different places.

Researchers have come to this conclusion by examining the genomes of some ancient Neolithic skeletons found in Iran.

There has been a debate for many years as to whether agriculture has spread from a specific area around the world or whether different groups of farmers have spread their technology to Eurasia.

That being said, the results of such a study in the science journal Science could answer some of the questions in that debate.

It is thought that people first began to focus on agriculture about 10,000 years ago, in southwest Asia, from hunting in the wild.

After the last ice age, this new way of life began to spread rapidly in Eurasia.

It is said that this change in human behaviour is a landmark event in the history of human civilization.

Researchers say that DNA analysis of ancient fossils in Europe has shown that agriculture has spread through the migration of people from one place to another. The DNA of the farmers who spread agriculture in Europe through Turkey is very different from the DNA of the early farmers living in the Zagros Mountains of Iran.

Both groups lived in the fertile crescent known as the fertile area.

This region extends from the Nile Valley to western Iran. The people who lived here were genetically separated from 46,000 to 6,000 years ago.

Mark Thomas was a professor and researcher at University College London.

Perhaps the most surprising news about this study, he says, is that farmers on the east and west sides of the Fertile Crescent area were genetically different.

"The DNA of farmers living in the Zagros Mountains is similar to that of people living in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran," he said. And today, the genes of Western farmers are most closely related to those of the Middle East and the inhabitants of Sardinia, an island in Italy. This shows how much genetic change has taken place in the Fertile Crescent area since the Neolithic age. "

Scientists say that earlier it was thought that those who started farming may have come from a certain population. But now this study shows that different communities in different areas have done agriculture at different times.


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