3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Transportation Archive

Archives for December 2025

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Roughly 1 in 3 cars with safety recalls don’t get fixed.

The Wall Street Journal found that the rate is the same for serious recalls, such as faulty brakes, engine fires, or defective air bags. The failure to address recalls has lead to a number of preventable deaths: the Journal found at least 12 people who were killed in crashes in which the air bag failed to deploy.

Robert Hart
Robert Hart
Optimus trip or teleop slip?

Footage of Tesla’s humanoid Optimus robot falling over at the company’s Autonomy Visualized event is raising questions over its, well, autonomy. We can’t be sure, but it certainly looks like a teleoperator removing a VR headset.

It wouldn’t be the first time Tesla disguised humans as robots.

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Marques Brownlee fawns over Xiaomi’s SU7 Max EV.

Continuing the trend of car influencers falling in love with Chinese EVs, MKBHD got behind the wheel of a Xiaomi SU7 and walked away wondering if US automakers were “cooked.” Well, not yet. The SU7 might cost roughly $42,000 and handle like $75,000 car, but it’s also not available in the US... At least not outside of video games.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
An update from Waymo.

To help address the issue of its robotaxis passing stopped school buses, Waymo plans to file a voluntary software recall with the NHTSA, Mauricio Peña, Waymo’s chief safety officer, says in a statement to The Verge.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Rivian pops in party colors.

The EV maker showcased a limited-run “Miami Edition” of the Rivian R1S at Miami Art Week, a white body with splashes of vibrant blue and pink that I’d love to see more of for standard models. Wallpaper also reports that Rivian is releasing a fragrance during the event that’s “inspired by diverse landscapes from alpine to canyon to forest.”

<em>There are only 10 R1S Quad Miami Edition models available, which is a shame for such a pretty color offering.</em>
<em>There are only 10 R1S Quad Miami Edition models available, which is a shame for such a pretty color offering.</em>
<em>There are only 10 R1S Quad Miami Edition models available, which is a shame for such a pretty color offering.</em>
<em>There are only 10 R1S Quad Miami Edition models available, which is a shame for such a pretty color offering.</em>
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There are only 10 R1S Quad Miami Edition models available, which is a shame for such a pretty color offering.
Image: Rivian
BMW iX3 first drive: a ‘New Class’ is in session

BMW’s latest electric crossover SUV is about to put the rest of the segment to shame.

Tim Stevens
Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Jaguar axes design chief responsible for controversial ‘00’ rebrand.

Jaguar Land Rover caught a lot of flack for its new design language, including the polarizingly pastel Type 00 concept. And while most of the rage was pure culture war nonsense, the British automaker is still struggling with the fallout from a recent cyberattack that took down its manufacturing plant. Now JLR has reportedly canned its head of design Gerry McGovern. Not only that, but according to Autocar India, McGovern had to be escorted from the building. Ouch.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Wing’s Walmart drone deliveries are taking off in Atlanta.

Starting today, Walmart will begin offering delivery via drone at six stores in the Atlanta area, allowing customers to receive groceries, household items, and over-the-counter medicine in “as fast as 30 minutes.” Wing already partners with Walmart in Dallas-Fort Worth, and plans on expanding drone deliveries to Charlotte, Houston, Orlando, and Tampa.

Anyone want to buy a car that drives itself?

The biggest names in autonomy, from Waymo to Tesla, want to sell privately owned autonomous taxis. Who asked for this?

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Waymo cities, part 3.

Waymo is going to start manually testing its vehicles in four new US cities: Baltimore, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis. Waymo plans to start by deploying manually driven vehicles, then fully autonomous ones, followed by select passenger trips, and finally, a public robotaxi service. (The company is already is driving autonomously with a safety driver in Philly.) Waymo has signaled it hopes to launch in over 20 cities in the coming years. Of course, not every city is welcoming the robotaxis with open arms.

Waymo taxis with a purple and orange filter.
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images