General Motors' Cruise driverless-car unit plans to reintroduce its robotaxi service in one city, shelving plans for the Origin driverless taxi. The move follows safety mishaps, including a pedestrian accident. Meanwhile, a robotaxi operator has obtained a license in Guangzhou to test driverless trucks, moving closer to large-scale operations of autonomous freight services. Tesla is accelerating the launch of Full Self-Driving software in China, with reports of FSD v12 being released to employees.
Tesla starts releasing to employees FSD v12 - a critical update to self-driving effort https://t.co/VgAaZdIFZ9 by @fredericlambert
Tesla accelerates launch of Full Self-Driving software in China: report https://t.co/G2chPSsr90
Scoop: Robotaxi operator Cruise is plotting a slow return to service starting in one city as it works to regain credibility after a string of incidents — including a horrific pedestrian accident in San Francisco last month. https://t.co/hV8p12hoo6
Robotaxi operator https://t.co/0Ab3dNCPel has got a license from the Guangzhou government to test a fleet of driverless trucks on the city’s roads, moving the Toyota-backed startup closer to large-scale operations of its autonomous freight services. https://t.co/bdbhF940WS
General Motors' Cruise driverless-car unit plans to eventually reintroduce its robotaxi service following safety mishaps, but will narrow the focus to one city and shelve plans for the Origin, a GM-built driverless taxi https://t.co/PYXyqGOVJM https://t.co/PYXyqGOVJM