In autonomous and self-driving vehicle news are GIBO, Waymo & Tesla.
GIBO Advances Unified AI
GIBO Holdings Ltd. announced the next phase of its AI mobility roadmap, advancing its GIBO.ai Calculation Engine into a unified, cross-domain intelligence stack designed to support progressively autonomous air and ground mobility systems. Building on strong partner response to its AI-powered aerial intelligence services, the company is extending its framework across EV motorbikes, eVTOL platforms, logistics networks, and future autonomous applications.
The GIBO.ai platform integrates perception, navigation, behavioral modeling, mission planning, and system optimization into a single AI stack shared across aerial and ground-based mobility assets. This approach enables interoperability, shared intelligence, and coordinated decision-making, supporting a staged evolution from assisted operation toward higher levels of autonomy rather than a single end state.
A key focus of the initiative is safety, efficiency, and sustainability. By embedding energy use, risk mitigation, and environmental impact metrics directly into AI decision loops, GIBO aims to align advanced autonomy with green-economy objectives. The company positions GIBO.ai as foundational infrastructure for next-generation smart mobility, logistics, and urban systems, enabling scalable, responsible, and environmentally aligned autonomous mobility networks.
Waymo Opens Autonomous Rides in Miami
Waymo has begun accepting passengers in Miami, marking a significant expansion of its fully autonomous ride-hailing service into one of the nation’s most complex urban driving environments. The launch brings Waymo’s driverless vehicles to public streets in South Florida, where dense traffic, frequent construction, and unpredictable weather present a rigorous real-world test for autonomous technology. By opening the service to riders, Waymo signals growing confidence in its self-driving system while advancing its strategy to scale commercial robotaxi operations beyond the U.S. West Coast and into major, high-demand metropolitan markets.
Here’s a summarized, augmented paragraph and title for the topic based on multiple reliable reports about Tesla’s robotaxi rollout in Austin, Texas:
Tesla Begins Unsupervised Robotaxi Rides in Austin
Tesla has started offering public robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas without requiring a human safety monitor inside the vehicle, a major step forward in its autonomous vehicle efforts. A limited number of Tesla Model Y robotaxis running the company’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) Unsupervised software are now operating on city streets and can be hailed by riders, with Tesla confirming the rollout and planning to gradually increase the ratio of unsupervised vehicles in the fleet. The move fulfills Elon Musk’s long-standing goal of removing onboard safety monitors, although the service remains limited in scope and continues alongside supervised robotaxi units. While this marks a significant advancement toward fully autonomous ride-hailing, Tesla’s progress continues to draw scrutiny due to safety concerns and comparisons with competitors that have broader autonomous service experience.
First Zero‑Intervention Tesla Autonomous Coast‑to‑Coast Drive
A 2024 Tesla Model S equipped with Full Self‑Driving (FSD) version 14.2.2.3 completed an autonomous journey from Los Angeles to New York without human intervention, covering about 3,081 miles and handling every mile of driving and charging stops on its own, according to reporting by The Drive. The trip, led by Tesla owner and autonomy enthusiast Alex Roy alongside a team of experts, took roughly 58 hours and 22 minutes at an average speed near 64 mph, with only one disengagement caused by accidental wheel contact. This milestone demonstrates significant progress in Tesla’s AI‑driven self‑driving capabilities and fulfills a long‑standing goal of a fully autonomous cross‑country drive.