How Self-Driving Has Changed Since Uber's Crash and More Car News

Plus: Tesla sues Zoox over trade secrets, riding with Peloton's truck train, and more.
view of self driving uber car on the street
One year after a self-driving Uber struck and killed an Arizona woman, the industry is taking a more circumspect approach to the tech—including tamping down its predictions about when and where it will show up.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Thinking about the fantastic pie-in-the-sky future is always a fun exercise. I, too, want a self-driving car. But some weeks, it’s clear everyone needs to come down to earth. This was one of them.

Tesla sued two other electric vehicle companies focusing on self-driving for trade secret theft, proving that building this tech will be a grind. Peloton Technology let me hang out on its not-at-all-driverless truck, and explained how its approach could save lives and beat the robo-focused competition to market. What's more, we reflected on the one-year anniversary of the fatal Uber self-driving crash, which forced the industry to become more introspective and realistic about the limitations of its tech.

OK, but that said: Plenty of others are making fancy transpo tech happen today. One of our reporters flew a helicopter with zero experience; another took to a mountain bike to explore the latest, greatest, and yes, superexpensive-est in bicycle technology. It’s been a week: Let’s get you caught up.

Headlines

Stories you might have missed from WIRED this week

  • The SEC said Elon Musk did not comply with the terms of its settlement by not getting his tweets approved by an official Tesla Twitter babysitter. The SEC wants a federal court to hold Musk in contempt. (Musk’s lawyers have plenty to say) about the matter, most recently in a reply filed on Friday.)

  • Tesla went to (legal) war over intellectual property issues, suing rivals Zoox and XMotors.ai (plus some former Tesla employees) for trade secret theft.

  • It’s over for you, drunk drivers: Volvo announces it will build inward-facing cameras into its new cars in the next decade to monitor driver alertness and attention. And it will cap all its cars at 112 mph.

  • Welcome to the age of the smart bicycle, which might one day spot road hazards or adjust your suspension faster than you ever could.

  • One year after a self-driving Uber struck and killed an Arizona woman, the industry is taking a more circumspect approach to the tech—including tamping down its predictions about when and where it will show up.

  • Peloton Technology, the startup behind not-quite-autonomous truck tech, explained its approach to testing and safety—and why it’s not bullish on driverless trucks after all.

  • Our reporter piloted a 12,000-pound Sikorsky S-76 helicopter, an especially fun and low-key thing to do with no experience. Good thing he was aboard the company’s Autonomy Research Aircraft, which it uses to study futuristic automated flying tech.

Driving PSA of the Week

Just in case you need a reminder: Jaguar has put together this less-than-two-minute reminder of how to you should sit while driving a car. Get used to adjusting, kiddos.

Stat of the Week

83,000

That's the number of written driver's permit tests taken through Arizona’s one-year-old “Permit @ Home” program, which now allows, yes, learning teen drivers to avoid the DMV and take their permit exams at home. A licensed driver has to sign teens up for the program and promise to proctor. What’s to prevent people from cheating? “Your personal safety and your love for the child, of course,” an Arizona Motor Vehicle Department spokesperson said last year. “But your financial responsibility is going to make you think very hard about making sure the test is taken appropriately."

Required Reading

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In the Rearview

Essential stories from WIRED’s canon
Speaking of top-of-the-line cycling: Ride along with one cyclist and his bullet-shaped, carbon-fiber and Kevlar steed as he competes in the Hour Prize, a competition to cycle at least 56 miles in one hour.