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Explore the innovations and technical expertise shaping the future of power.
This year marks the ninth Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD), an annual observance dedicated to encouraging the world to talk, think and learn about digital access, inclusion and people with different disabilities.
Hospitals cannot lose power, semi-trucks cannot break down and first-responder vehicles need to be ready for any call.
Dempsey Becker, a five-year-old boy living in Minneapolis, MN (USA), relies on toys for more than just entertainment.
Cummins employees across the country, however, continued to seek and secure ways to help their communities.
“We feel this is one of the simplest things we can do to honor someone who gave their time in service to our country during such a trying time in history,” said Greg Nalley, Owner of Northside Power.
When he read a news article in early March about COVID-19 cases in the U.
Energy systems across the globe are undergoing a fundamental transformation.
The company has implemented health screenings and temperature checks for those entering plants, increased cleaning protocols and established a response center supported by medical personnel to answer employee questions 24 hours per day, seven days per week, Linebarger said.
Utter chaos. Hundreds of boats slam into each other.
Cummins Commercial Mobile OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturer) Frazer, Ltd.
Cummins employee Staci Selking jumped in to help her community answer these critical childcare questions and offered solutions that are now being considered for implementation around the state of Indiana.
Energy is the cornerstone of our lives. We often use six different forms of energy within the first hour of our day.
Healthcare services, water plants, data centers, greenhouses, food manufacturing and textile facilities all play a key role in our modern, everyday lives.
In addition to servicing the Cummins engines powering the local firetrucks, public transportation and trash trucks so vital during the COVID-19 crisis, the branch at Indiana's capital and largest city has also recently worked on trucks carrying essential material across the country.
Trusted because it’s tested. What do sand bags, mountains, a drone and a film crew all have in common? Well, not much, except that they were all an important part of GILLIG and Cummins’ effort to illustrate the extent of the testing and validation process for the Cummins-powered GILLIG battery electric bus.
The labor-intensive test requires a driver and technician sit side by side to test an engine under “real life” circumstances to prove to regulators its onboard diagnostics are capable of detecting a misfire due to a component failure that produces excessive emissions.
COVID-19 has forced the world to define who an essential worker is during this pandemic.
200 billion. That's the number of internet of things (IoT) objects humankind has today 1.