Rogers to launch 5G smart city pilot in Kelowna
Saturday, May 30, 2020 at 3:11PM 
Rogers partners with the University of British Columbia and the City of Kelowna to launch the country's "first 5G pilot of smart city transportation technology in a real-world setting." Sensors connected to Rogers 5G network will be placed in two intersections in downtown Kelowna to gather anonymous car and foot traffic patterns. UBC researchers will use the data they collect to improve automobile, pedestrian, and cyclist safety. At the same time, it will help develop tech to send emergency responders when collisions occur and are detected by the system.
This 5G smart city pilot is part of Rogers' roughly $20 million funds it uses to collaborate with Canadian institutions to help develop and commercialize 5G cases and applications. Kelowna seems like a good place for the test as UBC has an Okanagan campus in the city. Aside from its main campus in Vancouver, which is also a Rogers 5G hub.
Source: iPhone in Canada
OnePlus, McLaren partnership comes to an end
Saturday, May 30, 2020 at 8:14AM
Photo courtesy of Android Authority
Or in the words of a McLaren spokesperson, the partnership "came to its scheduled conclusion recently." There won't be any more McLaren-branded OnePlus phones in our immediate future. But it seems the automaker was satisfied with the partnership, calling it a "highly successful collaboration between two iconic and innovative brands." And it looks like they aren't saying there won't be possible collaborations in the future. According to their statement, "OnePlus has been a supportive, valued partner and we wish them well and hope to see them in the future."
The two companies started collaborating in 2018, and we've seen McLaren Edition models of the OnePlus 7T Pro and OnePlus 6T. And there was the OnePlus Concept One, which never got an official release beyond the prototype.
Source: Android Authority
Apple buys Waterloo-based Inductiv to improve Siri
Friday, May 29, 2020 at 8:53PM Apple's latest acquisition is seen as the company's attempt to improve its voice-activated assistant, Siri. The company bought Waterloo, Ontario-based Inductiv, but it won't elaborate on its plans, saying it "buys smaller technology companies from time to time." Inductiv specializes in using artificial intelligence to correct data and improve machine learning. According to Bloomberg, "clean data" is essential for machine learning because it allows the AI to enhance the software with "less human intervention." Apple also recently acquired Voysis, which reportedly will help develop Siri's natural language comprehension.
Inductiv was co-founded by machine-learning professors from the University of Waterloo, Stanford University, and the University of Wisconsin. But since the acquisition was recent, it might be a while to see what the effects will be on Siri.




















