The Cohda Difference: Cohda Wireless is an advanced and experienced V2X provider. Focussed solely on the V2X market, Cohda now provides five generations of V2X radio modules. Cohda V2X products dominate field trails and deployments, with more than 60 percent of vehicles involved in V2X trials globally incorporating Cohda products, and have undergone one million vehicle-days of testing as a result. The portfolio of complete V2X solutions includes Road SIDE, On Board, and Radio Module hardware products, and software stacks from Access Layer to the Applications Layer. Customers include many carmakers, tier one suppliers, automotive chipmakers, road authorities and new market entrants.
Location: Australia, South Australia, Adelaide
Employees: 51-200
Founded date: 2004
Investors 1
| Date | Name | Website |
| - | Mooroolbar... | m-group.co... |
Mentions in press and media 4
| Date | Title | Description |
| 12.12.2015 | ‘Autonomous tech’ will surge in 2016 — keep an eye on these 8 players | We are excited to bring Transform 2022 back in-person July 19 and virtually July 20 - 28. Join AI and data leaders for insightful talks and exciting networking opportunities. Register today! We’re about to see a surge in “autonomous devices... |
| 12.12.2015 | ‘Autonomous tech’ will surge in 2016 — keep an eye on these 8 players | We’re about to see a surge in “autonomous devices” — devices that are aware of their environment, their state, and incoming data and that have the ability to learn and make decisions on their own. By 2020, an estimated 50 billion devices wi... |
| 04.01.2013 | Cisco and NXP encourage car communication to make driving safer | We are excited to bring Transform 2022 back in-person July 19 and virtually July 20 - 28. Join AI and data leaders for insightful talks and exciting networking opportunities. Register today! Auto fatalities are on the decline in America. Th... |
| 04.01.2013 | Cisco And NXP Throw Their Weight Behind Cohda Wireless To Bring The Internet Of Things To Your Car | Looking backwards, the automobile of today looks almost superintelligent. While some of us may have expected (read: hoped for) the flying car by 2013 and, sure, the internal combustion engine still reigns, the majority of vehicles today are... |