This is the continued blog on startups and innovations in V2V communications. In the last blog we get to know about the top three startups on V2V communication at the current market. Founded in 2008, Silicon Valley startup Savari aims to merge infrastructure communication and V2V communication to improve safety. Savari has raised $8 million through a single round of funding. In late 2016, Savari announced a lucrative partnership with China’s SAIC Motor . The Company has placed a lot of focus on efficiency and safety. Their goal is connect cars, traffic lights, smart phones and pedestrians to the same network using agnostic radio solutions. The Company offers a variety of solutions that include vehicle-to-vehicle, vehicle-to-infrastructure, vehicle-to-phone, and infrastructure-to-phone. Savari has their sights set higher than V2V, aiming to be a platform for smart cities as a whole. The Moscow-based startup develops autopilot systems for logistics and warehousing compa...
As soon the world Introduced with V2V communication, many of the company blinks in the lame light with their astonish ideas and innovations. Here some companies with their innovations. Headquartered in Redmond, (Washington) and founded in 2012, Kymeta aims to make connectivity for vehicles simple by using global satellite networks via the world’s first satellite antenna. The company has raised $217.58 Million through five rounds of funding to date, including backers like Bill Gates. The company recently raised $73.5 million in advance of their upcoming satellite antenna commercial trial. Historically, it’s been difficult to utilize satellite communications easily. We’ve all seen those big old radar dishes on people’s roofs that are used to communicate with satellites. Kymeta solved the problem by creating flat “satellite dishes” that they would prefer that you call antennas that attach to cars to connect to a global satellite network and relay informa...