Charley Dehoney has written about the growth of digital freight brokerages and what they bring to the market and the industry.
The partnership between ride-sharing company Lyft (NYSE: LYFT) and Google-affiliated, self-driving car technology company Waymo is just one initiative in Lyft’s strategy to stake a claim in the emerging market […]
McKinsey has brought out a report that talks about how increasing passenger density in urban spaces is a strong indicator for an increase in ridesharing demand in the decade ahead.
Matilda is a smart transport hub that helps the elderly and the disabled people by providing real-time information on the schedules of their public transportation, mainly targeted at autonomous vehicles of the future.
Transportation-as-a-service will have a huge 2019, and Lyft is kicking it off.
35 companies are being spotlighted in Venture Atlanta 2018, double the number of last year. These companies are already successful and making strides in a variety of venture and tech-related firms. Here’s a brief look at 10 of these companies, each of whom had a mere 5 minutes to pitch.
As parking spaces take up most of the available land in the central districts of cities, it is time to rethink the way people transit in the cities of the future.
In times of mass disruption, it is often only after industry emerges out the other side that it realizes it’s been disrupted.
Tony Seba is an expert on industry and market disruptions. He recently spoke at the 2017 Nor-Shipping Conference, offering his unique take on Transportation as a Service, which incorporates autonomous technologies, and how it is poised to disrupt the shipping and transportation industries in the next few years.
TaaS seems like another in a long line of acronyms that have infiltrated the transportation industrypromising to disrupt the world as we know it. But what is TaaS, and why will this be an acronym that might deliver on its promise?