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4th Article: Uber-Owned Otto wants to retrofit big rigs with self-driving tech 

     The world is changing and every day we see new technologies and prototypes that intend to make our lives easier. Otto is striving to create the next generation of ground transportation on the trucking industry. The technology they have developed is so amazing that the company was bought by Uber.  Many people think it is a dramatic change and not secured, but innovation is all about development and step by step it will be perfected and ready for everyday use. Tesla is working on a similar technology but theirs is focused on personal driving. Otto, in the other hand is working for the truck transportation industry. It’s interesting to see how this gets developed, maybe one day the technology can be so secure that it won’t need a person inside assisting on the driving.

http://www.manufacturing.net/videos/2016/08/uber-owned-otto-wants-retrofit-big-rigs-self-driving-tech?et_cid=5484830&et_rid=576098541&location=top&et_cid=5484830&et_rid=576098541&linkid=http%3a%2f%2fwww.manufacturing.net%2fvideos%2f2016%2f08%2fuber-owned-otto-wants-retrofit-big-rigs-self-driving-tech%3fet_cid%3d5484830%26et_rid%3d%%subscriberid%%%26location%3dtop

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Ford made a mistake and now they’re paying for it. During their quality screening, they did an error by installing some faulty fuel pumps. Problems reported are that cars are not starting up or suddenly stalling. They managed to find the cause and are taking action by recalling them to correct the fault. This means they need to unexpectedly spend money, but this is the price they have to pay for committing an error. Like mentioned on the comments of the discussion, this may be a wake-up call for Ford’s quality management. This time it was a technically small error, but next time the story could be a different one.

Ford made a mistake and now they’re paying for it. During their quality screening, they did an error by installing some faulty fuel pumps. Problems reported are that cars are not starting up or suddenly stalling. They managed to find the cause and are taking action by recalling them to correct the fault. This means they need to unexpectedly spend money, but this is the price they have to pay for committing an error. Like mentioned on the comments of the discussion, this may be a wakeup call for Ford’s quality management. This time it was a technically small error, but next time the story could be a different one.

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