logo
Waymo expands coverage in Austin, Texas, as robotaxi competition heats up

Waymo expands coverage in Austin, Texas, as robotaxi competition heats up

Reuters17-07-2025
July 17 (Reuters) - Alphabet's (GOOGL.O), opens new tab Waymo is expanding its service in Austin, Texas, to 90 square miles from 37 square miles earlier, the software giant's self-driving unit said on Thursday, seeking to protect its top position in the city from rivals such as Tesla.
Waymo, which has over 100 vehicles on the Uber (UBER.N), opens new tab platform in Austin, will now cover new neighborhoods such as Crestview, Windsor Park, Sunset Valley and Franklin Park, the company said.
After cautiously expanding its self-driving taxi services across the U.S. for years, Waymo is now largely seen as the frontrunner in the space. It has about 1,500 vehicles across San Francisco and other Bay Area cities, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Atlanta and others.
Rival Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab is looking to catch up, having conducted a small trial last month of about a dozen of its Model Y SUVs in a limited area of Austin.
But Tesla still faces a steep challenge to commercialize this technology on a large scale and clear regulatory hurdles.
The automaker also does not use sensors such as radar and lidar like Waymo and most rivals; instead, it depends solely on cameras and artificial intelligence.
"Austin remains one of the fastest growing cities in the country, and we are doing our part to grow with it," Shweta Shrivastava, the senior director of product management at Waymo, said.
Earlier this week, Waymo's vehicles logged a milestone of 100 million miles driven without a human behind the wheel, doubling its mileage in about six months.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

He was married to one of the world's most notorious sex traffickers. But the CEO rebounded spectacularly... and is living like a king
He was married to one of the world's most notorious sex traffickers. But the CEO rebounded spectacularly... and is living like a king

Daily Mail​

time15 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

He was married to one of the world's most notorious sex traffickers. But the CEO rebounded spectacularly... and is living like a king

As Ghislaine Maxwell moved to a Texas federal prison hoping that will give her a presidential pardon, her one-time husband is living large with his girlfriend in a new $1.8million home, Daily Mail can reveal. Scott Borgerson, 49, a former tech company CEO, is now shacked up with current girlfriend Kris McGinn, 52, at a four-bedroom property in Essex, just five miles up Cape Ann from the $7.3million mansion he once shared with Jeffrey Epstein 's infamous enabler as husband and wife.

US appeals court agrees to pause Google app store reform order for now
US appeals court agrees to pause Google app store reform order for now

Reuters

time15 minutes ago

  • Reuters

US appeals court agrees to pause Google app store reform order for now

Aug 1 (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court on Friday agreed to delay a sweeping overhaul of Google's app store Play, as the technology giant continues to challenge a judge's order requiring the reforms in a lawsuit brought by 'Fortnite' video game maker Epic Games. The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals granted Google's request for a temporary pause of the order. Google said earlier on Friday, opens new tab that it planned to further appeal the judge's October injunction, which a 9th Circuit panel upheld on Thursday in a unanimous decision. The injunction, which had already been paused while the 9th Circuit considered Google's appeal, required Google to restore competition by allowing users to download rival app stores within its Play store and by making Play's app catalog available to those competitors, among other reforms. Google said the lower court's injunction was expected to take effect in 14 days absent a court order blocking it. In granting Google's request for an administrative stay on Friday, the appeals court gave the company until Aug. 8 to ask the court to put the injunction on hold for the duration of its appeal. Google said it plans to ask the full 9th Circuit to take up its appeal, and if necessary will seek review by the U.S. Supreme Court. Google and Epic did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Epic in its 2020 lawsuit accused Google of monopolizing how consumers access apps on Android devices and pay for transactions within apps. The Cary, North Carolina-based company convinced a San Francisco jury in 2023 that Google illegally stifled competition. U.S. District Judge James Donato in San Francisco issued his Play store injunction against Google in October after a jury earlier ruled for Epic. Google has denied any wrongdoing. In upholding the injunction on Thursday, a 9th Circuit panel said the record in Epic's lawsuit was 'replete with evidence that Google's anticompetitive conduct entrenched its dominance." The case is Epic Games v. Google, 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 24-6256. For Epic: Gary Bornstein of Cravath, Swaine & Moore For Google: Jessica Ellsworth of Hogan Lovells Read more: Google loses US appeal over app store reforms in Epic Games case Apple cites Supreme Court's birthright ruling in fight over Epic Games injunction US judge delays Texas antitrust trial over Google digital ads Epic Games settles lawsuit against Samsung over app controls

Corporation for Public Broadcasting to close after US funding cut
Corporation for Public Broadcasting to close after US funding cut

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Corporation for Public Broadcasting to close after US funding cut

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting announced on Friday it will shut down operations after losing federal funding, delivering a blow to America's public media system and the more than 1,500 local stations that have relied on its support for nearly six decades. The closure follows the Republican-controlled House's decision last month to eliminate $1.1bn in CPB funding over two years, part of a $9bn reduction to public media and foreign aid programs. 'Despite the extraordinary efforts of millions of Americans who called, wrote, and petitioned Congress to preserve federal funding for CPB, we now face the difficult reality of closing our operations,' said Patricia Harrison, the corporation's president and chief executive. The 57-year-old corporation distributed more than $500m annually to PBS, NPR and 1,500 local stations nationwide. Despite the federal support, stations mostly rely on viewer donations, corporate sponsorships and local government support for the remainder. Rural communities face the biggest impact, as 245 of the 544 grantee organizations are considered rural and many may close without federal support which could impact educational programming, children's shows and local news coverage. These rural stations also employ nearly 6,000 people, according to the CPB. Public broadcasting has historically served areas underserved by commercial media, providing emergency information during disasters and cultural programming not available elsewhere. Rural communities are already hard hit by a lack of community journalism, as one in three US counties don't have a full-time local journalist, according to a July report from Muck Rack and Rebuild Local News. Most CPB staff will be terminated by September's end, with a small transition team remaining through January 2026 to wind down operations. Donald Trump and Republican allies have long argued that taxpayer funding for public media represents unnecessary government spending, while claiming that PBS and NPR programming exhibits anti-conservative bias. The Trump administration has also filed a lawsuit against three CPB board members who refused to leave their positions despite the president's attempts to remove them. The closure ends nearly six decades of federal commitment to public broadcasting. The corporation was established by Congress in 1967 to ensure educational and cultural programming remained accessible to all Americans.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store