Enel supports V2G start-up
Faced with the rise of the electric vehicle (EV), giant Italian energy company Enel and Japanese carmaker Nissan have partnered with Nuvve, a start-up based in San Diego, to develop a new business model based on Vehicle-to-Grid (V2G) technology.
Q&A: MasterCard
Raja Rajamannar, Chief Marketing & Communications Officer, MasterCard: "We are trying to create marketing platforms that will deliver extraordinary experiences in real time to consumers."
Automakers go back to the future
The need for action is urgent: in 2016 the average speed of a car in London hit a new low of under 8 mph—less than the speed of a horse-drawn carriage in the same streets in the Victorian era
It’s all about design
When Kia unveiled a GT sports sedan at the Frankfurt Motor Show back in 2011, the Korean manufacturer soon realized it had something very special on its hands.
Tomorrow’s World
For decades, the worlds largest and most successful corporations jealously guarded the secrets of their research and development departments, fine-tuning their innovations far from outside eyes until launching them into the marketplace.
Concept car sets new standards for hydrogen power
By 2020, Hyundai expects to launch 14 or more environmentally-focused models, including hybrids, plug-in hybrids and electric vehicles.
SEAT in the city
As automakers around the world race to reinvent the car for the 21st century city, Spanish brand SEAT has one major competitive advantage that has put it firmly in pole position.
Is our future secure?
Electricity companies around the world are facing an alarming spike in cyber-attacks, sometimes with dramatic consequences. Nozomi Networks is deploying machine learning to identify any anomalies in a network that could indicate a cyberattack.
Digital innovation reshapes healthcare technology
Connected health devices synchronize information with apps in real time, empowering consumers to take care of their own health and manage any existing conditions.
When more equals less
Employees are forced to give up their interests, spend less time with their families and end up intellectually under-stimulated when businesses believe that quantity matters more than quality time.