Cruise will not be relaunching its robotaxi service, according to a Feb. 4 letter to users. General Motors announced it has completed its full acquisition of Cruise and said in December it would ...
Discover how Waymo, Alphabet's self-driving subsidiary, is revolutionizing autonomous ride-hailing with unmatched tech ...
Waymo, the industry-leading robotaxi company, currently operates in Phoenix, San Francisco, and Los Angeles, and is coming to Atlanta and Austin via an Uber partnership later this year. Waymo has also ...
Tesla claims it will have a two-door robotaxi due "before 2027," but that seems highly unlikely. In December 2024, GM killed its Cruise robotaxi project after dumping $10 billion in the startup it ...
By February 2025, the service has expanded to nearly 80 square miles, and Waymo began testing its driverless operations on ...
Automakers will be faced with obstacles around safety concerns, affordability and a patchwork of state regulations ...
With Cruise’s commercial business now dead, Waymo is racing ahead as the leading U.S. robotaxi company. Sean O’Kane is a reporter who has spent a decade covering the rapidly-evolving business ...
Whitten confirmed his new role in a message to GeekWire. Whitten was previously CEO of Cruise, the GM-backed self-driving company that recently halted its robotaxi program. Whitten was also CTO at ...
Aspects such as better safety, smaller size, reduced congestion and convenience give robotaxis a promising outlook.
Waymo’s current operations and future growth plans put it far ahead of other AV competitors — at least in terms of its commercial robotaxi footprint. Cruise has ended its robotaxi program ...
After a series of operational setbacks, GM pulled the plug on its Cruise robotaxi business late in 2024. The company had invested $10 billion since acquiring Cruise in 2016.