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A protest is planned against Waymo outside Boston's City Hall today as lawmakers consider the impacts of driverless cars.
Waymo, a subsidiary of Alphabet, Google's parent company, has introduced a groundbreaking service in Phoenix, Arizona, allowing teenagers as young as 14 to ride in robotaxis without adult supervision.
Beyond the headlines, Alphabet's business looked very strong. Google Cloud remains the strong point, with 32% year-over-year revenue growth, which represents an acceleration over last quarter's growth ...
Waymo’s robotaxis are fully driverless and expanding fast, while Tesla’s service is still limited and invite-only. The gap is ...
A Waymo passenger describes his experience of his self-driving car ride taking him on an unexpected detour. A Waymo passenger describes his experience of his self-driving car ride taking him on an ...
Instead of selecting individual autonomous vehicle winners, KARS fund encompasses the complete supply chain supporting ...
Waymo now lets Phoenix teens ride solo in driverless taxis, just as Tesla gears up to expand its own robotaxi program.
Uber plans to deploy 20,000 or more Lucid electric SUVs equipped with the Nuro Driver autonomous system in over a dozen ...
While Tesla and Waymo continue to dominate the robotaxi conversation, Lucid enters the fray with a $300 million joint venture with Uber and Nuro.
Per the terms of the deal, Uber will invest $300 million into Lucid to help the company build a reported 20,000 (or more) ...
Alphabet's Waymo countered Tesla CEO Elon Musk's schlong joke robotaxi expansion by unveiling its own, even bigger map.
Tesla's robotaxi encountered three disengagements or human interventions during Business Insider's test of the service.