SAN FRANCISCO/MUNICH: The chief executive of Intel Corp’s self-driving vehicle technology unit Mobileye said it plans an initial deployment of 50 autonomous taxis in Munich, Germany next year. It added that rival Tesla Inc’s driver assistant system is not “safe enough.”
Mobileye said it hopes to remove safety drivers from the robotaxis by the end of next year and scale up the technology across Germany and other European countries later this decade upon regulatory approval.
Mobileye on Tuesday unveiled vehicles equipped with its self-driving system that will be used for commercial, driverless ride-hailing services that it plans to provide with German mobility service provider SIXT.
The self-driving vehicles produced by Chinese carmaker NIO were certified to go up to 130km an hour (over 80 mph) in Munich, Mobileye’s vice president of autonomous vehicle standards Jack Weast said in an interview with Reuters.
Weast added that German regulation permitting autonomous driving contributed to the company’s choice of Munich as its deployment city.
The German law, passed in May, is the first federal law worldwide to permit autonomous driving in regular traffic, albeit only in set areas and with the requirement that the vehicle be overseen by a human.
Self-driving tech firms like Waymo have yet to successfully deploy autonomous vehicles beyond limited areas, hampered by cost and technical and regulatory challenges.
Mobileye, a former supplier of Tesla, develops a camera-centric self-driving system similar to Tesla’s, but plans to add sensors that cost more but enhance safety of self-driving vehicles, CEO Amnon Shashua said.
“Even though we can power a full self driving vehicle with only cameras, we feel that at this point in time, it’s not safe enough,” he said at an embargoed press briefing ahead of the IAA Mobility event in Munich.
He said additional sensors would provide robustness to its self-driving system to prove it is much better than human drivers when it comes to reducing accidents.
US regulators have been probing the safety of what Tesla calls “Full Self-driving” capability, which helps drivers stay in lanes and steer on highways, following a series of accidents including a fatal crash in Texas.
Mobileye broke ties with Tesla following a fatal accident in Florida in 2016.
Mobileye to launch robotaxis in Germany next year
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Mobileye to launch robotaxis in Germany next year
- Mobileye said it hopes to remove safety drivers from the robotaxis by the end of next year
- The self-driving vehicles produced by Chinese carmaker NIO were certified to go up to 130km an hour in Munich
Harry Styles announces 2026 global tour: See the dates
- e news arrives a week after Styles revealed his fourth studio album will arrive March 6. Titled “Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally”
NEW YORK: Harry Styles is getting back out on the road. The English musician announced his “Together, Together” tour on Thursday. It’s a 50-date run made up of residencies in Europe, the UK, Brazil, Mexico, the US and Australia.
Styles’ tour launches May 16 with six nights in Amsterdam, followed by six nights in London, two in São Paulo, two in Mexico City, 30 at New York City’s Madison Square Garden, two in Melbourne and two in Sydney, where it will conclude in December.
Openers include Robyn, Shania Twain, Jorja Smith, Jamie xx, Fousheé, and more.
There are a few pre-sale opportunities. The general sale for São Paulo begins Wednesday and the Mexico City sale begins Jan. 29.
The general sale for Amsterdam, London, Melbourne, Sydney, and many New York dates begins Jan. 30. The last New York dates, Oct. 10 to 31, will go on sale Feb. 4.
Styles is no stranger to residencies. During his “Love on Tour” in 2022, he did a 15-night stint at Madison Square Garden, which Ticketmaster labeled “the highest-grossing single engagement in the venue’s history.”
The “Together, Together” tour news arrives a week after Styles revealed his long-awaited, fourth studio album will arrive March 6.
Titled “Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally,” the album is Styles’ first full-length project in four years. It follows the 2022, critically acclaimed synth pop record “Harry’s House,” which earned the former One Direction star the top prize of album of the year at the 2023 Grammy Awards.
The cover for “Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally” features the 31-year-old artist in a T-shirt and jeans at night, standing underneath a shimmering disco ball hung outside.










