Volvo, Baidu partner to develop self-driving carsVolvo Cars has reached an agreement with Baidu, a leading Chinese internet search provider, to jointly develop electric and fully autonomous drive-compatible cars with the aim of mass producing them for China. Volvo Cars has reach More… |
Volvo, Baidu partner to develop self-driving carsVolvo Cars has reached an agreement with Baidu, a leading Chinese internet search provider, to jointly develop electric and fully autonomous drive-compatible cars with the aim of mass producing them for China. Volvo Cars has reach More… |
Baidu partners with German firms on Autonomous drivingChinese artificial intelligence (AI) giant Baidu has partnered with German automotive suppliers Bosch and Continental AG on smart automobile research and development. Baidu will cooperate with the two firms on self-driving systems More… |
Baidu partners with German firms on Autonomous drivingChinese artificial intelligence (AI) giant Baidu has partnered with German automotive suppliers Bosch and Continental AG on smart automobile research and development. Baidu will cooperate with the two firms on self-driving systems More… |
Saudi Arabia ranks 3rd globally for smartphone useSaudi Arabia ranks third in the world, with 72.8 per cent of population using smart mobile devices, compared to 23 million smartphone users worldwide, according to leading China-based Internet search provider Baidu. With the growt More… |
China urges tighter Internet securityThe Chinese government is working with domestic Internet search engines like Baidu Inc and Sohu.com and financial institutions to prevent phishing attacks on unsuspecting Chinese web users. The Ministry of Public Security said on Friday i More… |
Baidu signs major music deal with studiosBaidu , China's largest search engine, said on Tuesday it has signed an agreement with major music studios for the licensed distribution of music through its mp3 search service. Baidu said in a statement it had signed the agreement with On More… |
Google reroutes China search, Beijing hits backGoogle closed its China-based search service and began redirecting Web searchers to an uncensored portal in Hong Kong, drawing harsh comments from Beijing that raised doubts about the company's future in the world's largest Internet market More… |