As Phoenix continues to grow its transportation system — from light rail and buses to scooters and electric bikes — the mayor recently recognized a company that has led to global attention for the city.
The self-driving taxi company Waymo launched in Los Angeles in November, bringing roughly 100 autonomous vehicles to neighborhoods from Santa Monica to West Hollywood.
Alphabet-owned Waymo plans to test its autonomous taxis in cities including Las Vegas and San Diego this year.
Waymo said it is launching fully driverless robotaxi rides for employees in Atlanta, an important step before the company opens the service up to members
A more favorable federal regulatory and legislative environment may help propel the growth of driverless ride-hailing vehicles in the United States.
Waymo robotaxis have become a common sight on Los Angeles surface streets. Now those driverless vehicles are heading to the city's network of freeways.
Phoenix and Austin. San Francisco alone is home to about 300 driverless Waymo vehicles, though they’re not all on the road at the same time. In California, there are more than 30 companies ...
Self-driving cars are another hallmark of the city's tech scene. Uber, Cruise and Alphabet's Waymo have all tested autonomous vehicles in the city. The infrastructure in Phoenix, with its gridded streets and consistent weather, made it an "optimal" place ...
The vehicles Waymo receives from Geely, it says, are “base vehicles,” stripped of telematics systems and any other technology that would allow the vehicle to communicate with, or send data back to, its manufacturer. Only “authorized personnel” install Waymo's self-driving technology into the cars after they’re delivered to the United States.
Waymo is a ride-hailing service that provides passengers with self-driving car rides. The company presently operates in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Phoenix. Iris Salem is a digital producer at ...
A man died and a woman was seriously hurt in a shooting late Wednesday night at an apartment complex near 7th Street and Bell Road. FOX 10's Dominique Newland reports.
The streak ended just one day shy of tying the current record of 160 days without measurable rain in Phoenix, a record set in 1972. And it's still dry. With the .01 of an inch recorded Wednesday, Phoenix is still 2.68 inches below average since Oct. 1, the start of the water year.