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TomTom augustus 2015

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NU even geen TKR, trotoirtegel Milt en noem ze maar op, de roeptoeteraars van 15 tot 240 euro.
pwijsneus
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quote:

moneymaker_BX schreef op 12 augustus 2015 10:15:

sorry mensen dit heeft niks meer met beleggen te maken
er zit niet 1% logica in deze koers
maar het ergste vind ik dat stijf op de kaken houden van Management
wat een slappe club daar
ze hadden de koers met een goed reagerend persbericht op de verkoop van HERE
allang boven de 11 kunnen praten
zit er soms toch een delisting aan te komen en hebben ze baat bij deze daling
nou dan is het hek van de dam

Zelf slap.
Heb je al naar de rest van de beurs gekeken?

Jij wilt het liefst een zeepbel creëren en de boel opkloppen. Zo werkt het in de echte wereld niet. Bij Imtech dachten ze ook dat het zo werkte, maar zie het resultaat. 4000 hard werkende mensen dreigen nu hun baan te verliezen door gasten die meende de zaak even "op te kloppen".
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[Modbreak IEX: Gelieve niet over de moderatie te discussiëren, bericht is bij dezen verwijderd.]
RESEARCH
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Imtech die in het voorportaal staat van faillissement stijgt 18%. Dit geeft wel aan hoeveel verstand sommige particuliere beleggers hebben. Daling bij TT komt volgens mij door sentiment en verdere uitbreiding van shortposities. Zolang Harold nog niets van zich laat horen is dit een ideaal shortaandeel. Hetzelfde zag je destijds bij de verkoop van Waze.
Fundamenteel is er niets aan de hand bij TT, alleen moet de communicatie beter.
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Hoofdletters en veel uitroeptekens, lekker joh.
quote:

Rabo schreef op 12 augustus 2015 10:27:

lijkt me niet zo verstandig om GRIEKEN te gaan qouten !!!!

[...]
san marco
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Delta Llloyd is het volgende bedrijf wat in koers flink gaat dalen. Waarom presteert DL zo veel slechter dan NN?
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Je lijkt wel een Amerikaanse tandarts...
quote:

san marco schreef op 12 augustus 2015 10:47:

tomtom plukje naast calls (gisteren) in port gejaagd
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Sla de krant open en je weet het.
quote:

san marco schreef op 12 augustus 2015 10:49:

Delta Llloyd is het volgende bedrijf wat in koers flink gaat dalen. Waarom presteert DL zo veel slechter dan NN?
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[Modbreak IEX: Gelieve elkaar niet persoonlijk aan te vallen, bericht is bij dezen verwijderd.]
san marco
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Die Justin toch :-)
Hebben mijn nieuwsberichten toch nut gehad.

Justin IEX @IexJustin
16 euro koersdoel ABN AMRO voor TomTom mede obv kijkje in de keuken door gpsbusinessnews? 3x efficienter dan HERE. xfru.it/D33qmY
mjmj
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san marco
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SHARE EN WIN!
www.shakethetucson.nl/

Vind de Hyundai Tucson op diverse locaties in Nederland. Deel jouw video van de Hyundai Tucson (#shakethetucson) en maak kans op een TomTom Bandit-actiecamera!

san marco
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Beyond safety: Why Congress needs to think of connected cars as a trillion-dollar market
Leland Key, NXP August 8, 2015 2:00 PM
Tags: connected cars, Leland Key, spectrum
connected cars
Image Credit: SP-Photo/Shutterstock

It’s one of the most important debates in Congress that the general public isn’t paying attention to: How much spectrum should the FCC set aside for connected cars?

At stake: a sweeping impact to hundreds of billions of dollars of government and private investment, the future of the trillion-dollar Internet of things (IoT) marketplace, and thousands of American lives.

In 1999, the Federal Communications Commission allocated 75 MHz of spectrum in the 5.9 GHz band to the automotive industry for the purpose of bolstering public safety through deployment of intelligent transportation systems. Senate legislation introduced last year by Senators Marco Rubio and Cory Booker could open up this spectrum to non-automotive companies and users. While automotive trade groups, including the Association of Global Automakers and the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, are not opposed to a safely shared spectrum, studies determining the feasibility of a shared band are far from complete. Until such studies are complete, should we prioritize these frequencies for connected cars using vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I) technology or for broadband access?
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Using V2V connected technology, cars broadcast short-range wireless signals to other cars with information about everything from traveling speed to location. This data gives other cars a better idea of situations that may arise on the road and can serve as an early warning. For example, if you’re driving on a crowded highway behind a truck and your view of other vehicles in front of this truck is obstructed, you may not be able to stop in time if one of these vehicles suddenly slams on its brakes. But with vehicle-to-vehicle communication technology, your car can warn you to brake the second one of the vehicles in front of you touches the brake, helping you avoid an accident.

With over 30,000 fatalities from motor vehicle crashes each year on U.S. roads, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates connected car technology — for which the 5.9 GHz spectrum is essential — could eliminate 80 percent of traffic accidents not involving an impaired driver. NHTSA has estimated that two technologies alone, Intersection Movement Assist and Left Turn Assist, could prevent 1,083 deaths and nearly 600,000 crashes each year. The vision of the future is even more dramatic for some companies: Volvo envisions that by 2020, no person will be killed or seriously injured while driving a new Volvo, and GM has already announced it will debut the industry’s first V2V technology in its 2017 Cadillac CTS. (Disclosure: GM is an indirect NXP customer).

All this shows how sharing the spectrum that has been allocated for V2V communication could negatively impact the ability of vehicles to deliver safety-critical messages in a timely manner.

Some view the spectrum debate as similar to the question of who can use an emergency lane on a freeway. Restricting the lane to emergency vehicles can improve safety, while opening it up to the public can improve commerce.

Advocates of spectrum sharing note that opening the 5.9 GHz range to commercial and other uses addresses congestion in Wi-Fi, particularly in crowded areas like transit hubs and event spaces. The White House, which in 2010 authorized a memorandum to incentivize the sharing of airwaves, reported that Internet access contributed an average of $34 billion annually to the U.S. economy between 2002 and 2013 — a number likely to rise. Clearly, there are major economic incentives for increasing broadband nationwide.

So, should broadband access come at the expense of connected vehicle technology? Spectrum sharing introduces complex, yet-to-be-understood economic and public safety variables. First and foremost, there is the potentially unquantifiable potential for vehicle-to-vehicle technology to save lives. Additionally, V2V and V2I technologies are forecasted to have wide implications to markets and government investments valued in the trillions — from the global Internet of things market to the upkeep of transportation infrastructure across America.

Consider the potential impact of connected vehicles on some of our most costly (and under-reported) domestic issues.

The trillion-dollar infrastructure investment challenge: In 2013, The American Society of Civil Engineers graded the nation’s roads and bridges at D and C+, respectively, citing a need to modernize our transit systems and address a growing backlog of overdue maintenance. The price tag? Potentially $1.6 trillion by 2020. Connected cars will surely shape the direction of this investment, whether overhauling how urban planners analyze traffic patterns or applying newly available data to infrastructure upgrades. Moreover, no matter where political winds blow with regards to funding road improvements — taxes, tolls, or “smart road pricing” — connected cars are likely to be a central component of any funding proposal.
The economic and societal inefficiencies of traffic congestion and human error: Putting aside the estimated $871 billion annual cost to society of highway crashes, traffic congestion alone costs the U.S. $121 billion each year. While connected cars may not completely eliminate traffic, emerging technologies can optimize the commuting habits that presently cost the average American 38 hours each year stuck in traffic. Connected vehicles’ impact on traffic could further address the excess 2.9 billion gallons of fuel and 56 billion pounds of carbon dioxide attributed every year to unnecessary traffic.

Connected car technology may be a bigger leap forward in transportation safety than seatbelts and airbags — both of which are credited with saving tens of thousands of lives over the past 30 years, especially when used together with other Advanced Driver Assistance Systems such as radar and camera based sensors. Safety technologies, traffic optimization algorithms, and the promise of self-driving vehicles make the broadband discussion a complex one.

With the rapid pace of technological advancement, a shared spectrum solution may well be feasible. The economic benefits of such a solution are without question. However, the burden of proof should be on the ability to share this spectrum without jeopardizing the safety benefits the 5.9 GHz spectrum was originally set aside to protect. Congress must allow for further research before re-allocating the connected car spectrum. With potentially trillions of dollars on the line and life-saving technologies in the balance, we need the debate — and more research into the issue.

For more information, please visit these sites: NHTSA, USDOT, FCC, ITS America, and Wireless Innovation Alliance.

Leland Key is senior director of automotive marketing and sales at NXP.
san marco
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NXP Announces Complete Automotive Ethernet Product Portfolio
August 06, 2015

High-bandwidth technology to accelerate development of autonomous driving and secure connected vehicles

Eindhoven, Netherlands, August 6, 2015 – NXP Semiconductors N.V. (NASDAQ:NXPI), technology leader in the secure connected car and global market leader in in-vehicle networking, today announced its new product portfolio for automotive Ethernet.

The portfolio builds on BroadR-ReachTM – an automotive standard defined by the OPEN Alliance industry group, with the aim to make consumer-level Ethernet capable of meeting the automotive industry’s stringent requirements. NXP is a founding member of OPEN Alliance and the first to offer a truly automotive portfolio consisting of two product families, Ethernet transceivers (TJA1100) and Ethernet switches (SJA1105). Product samples are immediately available, and Ethernet transceivers will begin production in Q4 (Ethernet on nxp.com).

Ethernet is expected to provide the network backbone for autonomous driving and connected vehicles, as it is capable of the high data bandwidth, communications speed, weight reduction, and cost efficiency that future connected cars require. NXP’s modular approach with switch and transceiver allows for flexible and cost efficient combinations, enabling automakers to build optimal solutions for a wide range of networking architectures — from entry-level cars to high-end luxury vehicles. This will also pave the way for new, distributed networking architectures (video) in the future.

The adoption of Ethernet is quickly accelerating with the rise of secure connected cars and the subsequent high demands for data transport.

Automakers plan to use in-vehicle Ethernet broadly to enable a variety of applications and functions,” said Thilo Koslowski, vice president and automotive practice leader at Gartner. “These include safety, driver information systems, advanced driver assistance systems (ADASs) and entertainment. By 2023, 162 million Ethernet nodes containing 242 million ports will be included in produced consumer vehicles, worldwide.”

Jens Hinrichsen, senior vice president Secure Car Access & Networking at NXP added: “NXP has been a main driver in bringing Ethernet to cars and a founding member of the OPEN Alliance standardizing organization. It is inspiring to see the first ‘true’ automotive Ethernet transceivers and switches coming to market – ready to meet the stringent automotive requirements for EMC, quality, reliability, and volume production. The Ethernet portfolio rounds off our leading in-vehicle networking offering and will open up a variety of new features for future connected cars.”

To date, NXP has shipped six billion CAN, LIN, and FlexRay transceivers to the global automotive industry and two million transceivers are supplied every day. Ethernet will complement these existing standards.
Technical Highlights

By developing technology purpose-built for automotive applications, NXP’s Ethernet PHY TJA1100 supports automotive low power modes. When the engine is off, the systems sleep. Meanwhile, the Ethernet PHY stays partially powered, waking up the system only upon activity on the network. Contrary to conventional solutions, the NXP Ethernet PHY does not require additional components like voltage regulators to stay on while the engine is off, which greatly improves power consumption and battery lifetime.

Transceivers – TJA1100

Compliant to OPEN Alliance BroadR-Reach™ (OABR) standard (IEEE: 100BASE-T1)
Designed following an automotive development flow
Form factor: 6x6mm² HVQFN package with minimal external component count
Supports low-power modes to save battery life
Automotive grade ESD and EMC

NXP has developed the Automotive Ethernet Switch SJA1105 in close cooperation with TTTech, a global leader in the field of robust networking and safety controls. The switch uses Deterministic Ethernet technology to guarantee message latency in applications such as autonomous driving, where deterministic communication is vital for reasons of operational efficiency or functional safety. Deterministic Ethernet supports the trend toward increasing bandwidth requirements of up to one gigabit, while ensuring high reliability in networked control systems and high availability in fail-operational applications. It comprises several standards including Ethernet (IEEE 802.3), Time-Triggered Ethernet (SAE AS6802) as well as Audio Video Bridging (AVB) and Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN).

Digital Switch – SJA1105

5 Port automotive Ethernet Switch supporting network speed up to one gigabit
Layer 2 Store and Forward Switch
MII / RMII / RGMII Interface
Port Mirroring and VLAN support (IEEE 802.1Q and IEEE 802.1P)
AVB and TSN support
Enables Deterministic Ethernet solutions
Compliant to SAE AS6802 TTEthernet fault-tolerant clock synchronization
Virtual Link
Scalable, flexible and cost optimized configuration based on single and dual Port PHYs

Availability

NXP Ethernet transceivers TJA1100 are available in prototype samples starting today and will enter mass production before the end of the year. The first samples of the NXP Ethernet Switches SJA1105 have already been successfully tested by car makers and are available upon request.
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grappiger moet het niet worden LOL.

quote alias=Girakian1 id=8706069 date=201508121113]
Koers blijft prima liggen wat mij betreft...
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TomTom zakt gewoon mee met het hele sentiment op dit moment.
Gewoon omdat er geen (goed) nieuws naar buiten wordt gebracht zakt het met de rest mee.
Niets meer en niets minder.
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