On the Tesla front, Musk said robotaxis with unsupervised Full Self Driving technology will begin picking up fares in Austin, Texas, beginning this June. “I’m confident we’ll release unsupervised FSD in California (this year), as well,” he said.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has revealed the U.S. city where the automaker is planning to launch its first robotaxi service for paying passengers in June.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox
The “Actually Smart Summon” feature enables drivers to remotely summon or move their vehicles to them or another location via a mobile phone app.
Elon Musk said today that Tesla will launch “unsupervised full self-driving in Austin as a paid service” in June.
The claim of the vehicles driving around, carrying passengers with no driver behind the wheel by June borders on ridiculous. The numbers just don't back it up
The robotaxi service Musk said will launch in June will likely be distinct from the purpose-built “Cybercab” vehicles that it touted at a splashy LA event in October. Tesla said at the time that it would aim to start manufacturing its Cybercab—which won’t have a steering wheel or pedals—sometime before 2027.
Tesla makes breakthrough in FSD technology, allowing vehicles to navigate to loading docks without human involvement.
Honda will recall 294,612 vehicles in the U.S. to fix an issue that may cause engines to stall or suffer a loss of power, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said on Wednesday.
NHTSA is opening a preliminary evaluation into ... The investigation is still ongoing. More:Elon Musk unveils Tesla's new Cybercab robotaxi. See expected rollout, how much it'll cost A week ...
An archeologist from over 150 years ago sent a message to the future which has just been uncovered during a more detailed dig. Vice President JD Vance was pressed on when grocery prices would come down during an interview on Sunday with CBS's Margaret Brennan.
CDK Global settled antitrust claims for $630 million amid data access disputes. The Trump administration seeks a Supreme Court review of California’s emissions standards. U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy moves to reconsider fuel economy standards.