Oct 23, 2024
It turned a lot of heads when Elon Musk showed it off for the first time earlier this month. Now, Tesla’s new cybercab could soon turn heads on the streets of Palo Alto. The city recently met with Tesla about the possible plan. Palo Alto councilman Greg Lin Tanaka said he came up with the partnership idea with Tesla about six months ago. “The idea basically is that Tesla has this robotaxi and they need a place to test it,” he said. “And in Palo Alto, we have ‘Link.’ We’re trying to provide rides for our kids, we don’t have bussing for our kids. We use our link program and so, we need this and we’re out of money, and so, it seemed like a really good partnership.” Tesla Oct 11 Musk unveils Tesla's ‘Cybercab,' plans to bring autonomous driving tech to other models in 2025 news Oct 11 Tesla shares drop 9% after Cybercab robotaxi reveal ‘underwhelmed' investors Tanaka said that right now, there really isn’t another alternative. Its Palo Alto Link shuttle service is losing about $30 to $40 per ride. The popular program only has eight months of funding left. Tesla just unveiled it’s robotaxi less than two weeks ago, promising to start building fully autonomous Cybercabs by 2026. Tesla’s biggest hurdle to testing the vehicles in Palo Alto is that still needs a license to pick up passengers. The city’s looking into if the company can be added onto its own “link” license, to speed things up. Audrey Asistio has more in the video above.
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