3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Transportation Archive

Archives for May 2025

The pursuit of better drugs through orbital space crystals

No, not those sorts of drugs, the kinds that could save your life.

Tim Stevens
Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Tesla is being ‘extremely paranoid’ about robotaxi launch, Musk says

During an interview with CNBC, Elon Musk laid out some of the details for next month’s robotaxi launch in Austin, Texas, most of which was already known. It will be a small number of vehicles, only 10-20, in the first week, but will increase in size week by week. It will be geofenced to the parts of Austin “that we consider to be the safest,” Musk said. And the vehicles will be monitored by remote operators who can intervene in case of emergency. “We’re going to be extremely paranoid about the deployment as we should be,” he added. “It would be foolish not to be so we’ll be watching what the cars are doing very carefully.” The rest was the standard bluster about “over a million Teslas doing self-driving in the US” and why he thinks Waymo’s use of lidar is fundamentally flawed.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Zoox will test its robotaxis in Atlanta.

The Amazon-owned autonomous vehicle developer announced that it would soon start mapping and gathering data in Atlanta, where it hopes to eventually launch a robotaxi service. That means that Zoox will be testing in a total of seven cities, including Las Vegas, San Francisco, Miami, Seattle, LA, and Austin. The company said it would start accepting public riders in Las Vegas and SF later this year. The announcement came a day after Uber said it was preparing to launch its next partnership with Waymo in Atlanta.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Honda takes the EV out.

The company is walking back some of its long-term electrification plans, cutting 3 trillion yen (about $20.8 billion) from its investment in electric cars over the next six years. Instead, it’s shifting focus to hybrids, though still plans to be selling only EVs by 2040.

It’s not just them: Toyota is in the midst of a similar reassessment, while last year Volvo gave up on its plan to be fully electric by 2030.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Uber preps for Waymo’s robotaxi launch in Atlanta.

ATL will be the second city, after Austin, where Waymo’s driverless cars will be available exclusively on the Uber app. Ahead of the public launch this summer, Uber is opening up access to a group of riders selected from the company’s interest list for early test rides. Those riders will get $10 in Uber cash to use on their Waymo ride. And in exchange they’ll be asked to share feedback on the ride, as well as rate the experience after drop-offs. After a few week, Waymo’s driverless vehicles will be available to anyone with an Uber account who’s traveling within the 65-square mile service area that includes Downtown, Buckhead, and Capitol View.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Trump’s jet gift may actually be a curse.

Qatar offering Donald Trump a private jet was framed as an extravagant gift — but it may have also been an efficient way to get rid of a clunky, expensive, fuel guzzling aircraft the royal family has been trying to sell since 2020. Forbes reports the aircraft flew just 1,069 hours in the five years before it was put up for sale. Upgrading it to be used as a presidential plane would take years.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Andrew J. Hawkins
Archer is the ‘exclusive air taxi partner’ for the 2028 Olympics in LA.

Archer Aviation has said it plans on launching its first commercial air taxi service in 2026, but it doesn’t expect to be “at scale” until 2028, which lines up well with the next Summer Olympics.

In addition to serving as the exclusive partner for the Olympics and Team USA, Archer will set up “vertiports” at key venues, with its 12-propeller Midnight aircraft providing trips to “VIPs, fans, and athletes,” as well as support for emergency services. Pretty bold plan for a company that has yet to receive all the FAA certifications it will need to operate its eVTOL service!

Archer Midnight aircraft in front of the LA Coliseum
Image: Archer Aviation
A new cold war is brewing over rare earth minerals

China has implemented new export controls for rare earth minerals and magnets. The changes could upend the shift to electric vehicles.

Abigail Bassett
Andrew Liszewski
Andrew Liszewski
Watch highlights of the very first Formula 1 race, now in color.

It’s been 75 years since the first Formula 1 world championship race was held at the British Silverstone Circuit in 1950. To mark the anniversary, F1 has shared a rare highlight reel of the race (originally called the European Grand Prix) that has been colorized using a mix of AI and manual processes. There’s also an HD version available on YouTube.

Wes Davis
Wes Davis
Apple gave Monaco a custom F1-themed Maps treatment.

The update puts a focus on Formula 1 racing in promotion of both upcoming Apple movie F1 and the 2025 Monaco Grand Prix race happening later this month. The update is full of special Monaco Grand Prix-related things, including little renders of Formula 1 cars at the pits and road closure advisories.

Not that any of us will ever use it — this is basically an update for Apple exec and known sports fan Eddy Cue, right?

Apple Maps showing Monaco.
Three screenshots of Apple Maps on an iPhone.
More of the special Grand Prix race locations shown in the app.
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The update lets you see where the route is, so you can join in the fun (just kidding, don’t try to do that!).
Image: Apple