Tuesday 13 March 2018

The Morning After: Larry Page's other flying car goes to New Zealand

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

Engadget Email Newsletter

eng-ces-newsletter

It's Tuesday, March 13, 2018.

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

We have more news from SXSW, including a quick recap of Elon Musk’s sold-out talk. Elsewhere, Larry Page showed off an autonomous flying machine that could be the backbone of Uber-in-the-sky and Philips is ready to take its Hue lighting system outdoors.

Take a break.

Tesla temporarily paused Model 3 production in February

Tesla temporarily paused Model 3 production in February

According to Bloomberg, Tesla shut down the Model 3 production line at its Fremont plant between February 20th and 24th. The company said its plans include pauses to “improve automation and systemically address bottlenecks.” Whatever, as long as it helps speed up manufacturing -- a goal to build 5,000 cars per week has been pushed back to June.

Larry Page’s other flying car.

Meet Cora, an electric, autonomous air taxi

Meet Cora, an electric, autonomous air taxi

Google co-founder Larry Page’s Kitty Hawk company is working on at least two aircraft projects, the Flyer and this one, Cora. It’s an all-electric vehicle capable of VTOL but flies with a single propellor like any other plane. It’s also autonomous. The plan is not to sell these, but to offer access, like a ridesharing service that picks up passengers on demand. The company is testing these in New Zealand now, but it didn’t announce when the service would be open for business.

Wait, you can do that?

FCC accuses startup of launching satellites without permission

The FCC accused startup Swarm Technologies of launching four of its tiny SpaceBEE (Basic Electronic Elements) communication cubesats without obtaining the necessary approvals.

The best business laptop in the… uh, business.

ThinkPad X1 Carbon review (2018)

ThinkPad X1 Carbon review (2018)

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon has everything you'd want in a business ultraportable. You'll just have to pay a bit extra to get the newest features like HDR.

But wait, there's more...

1. What's on TV: 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi,' 'Burnout Paradise'

2. Apple buys Texture, the 'Netflix of magazine plans'

3. SXSW 2018: Breaking down Elon Musk's surprise, sold-out talk

4. I built a vibrator at SXSW 2018

5. 'Slingshot' malware attacks via routers

6. Philips introduces its first outdoor Hue lights

7. SXSW 2018: Eddy Cue explains Apple's 'quality over quantity' video strategy

The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't subscribe.

Craving even more? Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.
engadget-twitter engadget-facebook engadget-youtube engadget-reddit engadget-instagram

Copyright © 2016 Aol Inc. All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
AOL
770 Broadway #4
New York, NY 10003

You are receiving this email because you opted in at engadget.com.

Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe from this newsletter.

No comments:

Post a Comment