The world's biggest EV seller just unveiled charging stations that can take a battery from nearly flat to full in the time it takes to drink a coffee. And 300 of them are heading to Britain this year.
Musk Has Trashed the Night Sky. And He's Only Getting Started.
The dessert topping that belongs on your strawberries just became one of the most interesting influences in automotive safety engineering.
The Internet Broke Car Culture. We Built an App to Fix It.
Iran built one of the most extensive traffic camera networks in the Middle East to watch its own people. Israel hacked it and watched him.
The smugglers went to considerable effort. It still did not work.
A driving instructor was found in a ditch, four times over the limit, on his way to collect his first pupil of the day. Passing drivers filmed him through the window.
Charges dropped. Investigation ongoing. The dashcam footage shows the Jeep slowing down, moving to the slow lane, and turning on its hazard lights. The PIT maneuver came anyway.
A father and son from Norfolk survived the Silk Road, Vietnam's scooter chaos, and the Alps. Seventeen days on New Zealand roads was harder than all of it.
Barry Sheene's 1977 world championship-winning Suzuki RG500 goes under the hammer in April. No reserve. No second chances. The sister bike is still with the Sheene family. This is the one that is for sale.
New Zealand gave a $100 million contract to a private Australian AI company to film its drivers, process the footage through algorithms, and issue fines. Nobody voted on it. Nobody was asked. Now the pushback has started.
Kiwis Are Furious. And They Have Every Right To Be.
Google is laying cables. Data centres are going up. AI is being wired into New Zealand's roads right now. This is not a future tin hat concern. It is a present fact.
The Department for Transport commissioned O2 to trawl the web browsing habits and movement data of 25 million devices, including children's, to identify electric vehicle owners. The study cost £602,000, ran for two years, and was quietly published this we...
1.6 million drivers. Five manufacturers. £6 billion potentially at stake. Closing submissions began today in the High Court. A verdict is expected this summer. Here is everything you need to know.