Waymo’s self-driving vans will return to Bay Area streets on June 8th

Waymo’s plan to resume self-driving operations will soon extend to San Francisco. A spokesperson has confirmed a report in The Verge that Waymo’s autonomous minivans will return to San Francisco Bay Area streets on June 8th. The company isn’t carryin...

Intel is reportedly close to buying transit app creator Moovit

Intel’s autonomous driving ambitions may soon get a boost from a well-known app developer. Calcalist, The Marker and TechCrunch sources claim Intel is close to acquiring transit app developer Moovit in a deal that would be worth around $1 billion. Th...

Uber AI plays any Atari 2600 game with ‘superhuman’ skill

DeepMind isn’t the only one with an Atari-savvy AI. A team of Uber AI researchers has developed a set of algorithms, Go-Explore, that reportedly beats any Atari 2600 game with “superhuman” scores, including ones where AI previously had trouble bestin...

Self-driving startup Zoox settles with Tesla over trade secret theft

Tesla has prevailed in a key lawsuit over trade secret theft. Self-driving car startup Zoox has settled with Tesla and acknowledged that some of its new logistics recruits “were in possession of Tesla documents” that covered shipping and warehouse pr...

Elon Musk explains why Tesla’s Model 3 has an in-cabin camera

Tesla’s Model 3 has shipped from the start with a camera pointing at the cabin, but it has gone unused ever since. What’s it for? You won’t have to wonder much longer. Elon Musk has confirmed that the camera is there to support Tesla’s eventual robo-...

Nuro’s driverless delivery cars are cleared for testing in California

Nuro’s driverless delivery vehicles just got another important approval. California’s DMV has given Nuro a permit to test completely self-driving couriers in specific parts of Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, including Silicon Valley mainstays lik...

The Canoo is a car-membership you can use when you need and pause when you don’t

The Canoo is a culmination of a lot of good ideas and technologies, combined into something that creates a futuristic system around car ownership. With the Canoo, you don’t own a car, you own the right to a car. It’s as simple as not owning a tennis court but owning a membership pass that gets you access to one.

Announcing a strategic partnership with Hyundai, EV Startup Canoo is looking at revolutionizing the future with a car membership service that lets you own a car when you need one, and ‘pause’ your ownership when you don’t need one. Designed as a self-driving EV that can be summoned on command, Canoo’s membership service gives car manufacturers the ability to allow a small number of cars serve a wide variety of masters, while giving consumers the ability to own a car only when it’s convenient, and surrender it when it isn’t needed. This offsets a consumer’s need to pay a hefty lump sum of money for ownership and worry about things like maintenance, insurance, garage space, etc. The EV comes with a partner app that lets you own a car for a few months, conveniently giving it up if you’re shifting towns, going on a holiday, or say if you’re under a government-mandated lockdown and you don’t need your car for a month. Think of it as an Uber, but A. it’s a monthly membership, not a trip-based rental, and B. It’s YOUR car, but just under a more consumer-friendly business model.

Speaking of model (and this really isn’t my best segue), the Canoo’s design resembles a modern take on the VW Microbus, with the company’s branding manifesting itself in the design of the headlamps and taillamps. The Canoo is even fitted with seven cameras, five radars, and 12 ultrasonic sensors that help it autonomously drive, although there’s a driver’s seat and steering wheel on the inside should you choose to commandeer the vehicle. Aside from its novel business model, the Canoo’s most interesting feature is its interiors, which features a C-shaped bench at the back, that turns the car into less of a bus/coach and more of a social space. “All seating is designed to feel more like furniture”, says Richard Kim, Design Head at Canoo. “The rear seats are more like a sofa to lounge on than a cramped and segmented backseat, and the front takes inspiration from mid-century modern chairs.” Its autonomous nature and roomy interiors reinforce a steady direction that most electric cars have been taking over the past few years, of turning the car itself into an extension of a living room. Canoo’s interesting subscription-based ownership business model definitely brings a fair bit of disruption to the car industry, giving customers the freedom to own the car only when they really need it, and pause their ownership when they don’t. It’s a little like an exclusive club… except this one drives on four wheels and can transport you as far as 250 miles on a full battery!

Designers: Richard Kim & Canoo Design Team

Self-driving shuttles are ferrying COVID-19 tests at a Florida clinic

Drive-thru COVID-19 tests are only as safe and quick as the systems used to put those tests in the hands of clinics, and a new initiative in Jacksonville, Florida might just improve that weak link. The Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville Transportation Authori...