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57 votes
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Hank Green on the recent US drone sightings
16 votes -
US President Joe Biden administration grants California waiver to ban gas car sales in 2035
48 votes -
Chrysler only sells a minivan. The iconic American brand’s days could be numbered.
20 votes -
Kansas City receives new streetcars for Main Street extension
12 votes -
More riders than expected have used Oklahoma City's RAPID NW bus line
11 votes -
Honda confirms new Prelude hybrid coupe is coming to the US in late 2025
8 votes -
In the real world, existing EV batteries may last up to 40% longer than expected from lab tests
33 votes -
$10 billion in government loans announced for United States EV charging network, battery production
13 votes -
Waymo to begin testing in Tokyo, its first international destination
14 votes -
Melbourne's project to remove level rail/road crossings has many benefits
16 votes -
Will even the most advanced subs have nowhere to hide?
11 votes -
Mystery drones over New Jersey spark concerns as FBI investigates
20 votes -
Amtrak sets all-time ridership record in fiscal year 2024 (and other accomplishments)
23 votes -
GM exits robotaxi market, will bring Cruise operations in house
11 votes -
Is the Cybertruck really that bad?
These past few days I went through the rabbit hole of people complaining about the Cybertruck, main the subreddit /r/cyberstuck. From my standpoint it really seems like this car has no redeeming...
These past few days I went through the rabbit hole of people complaining about the Cybertruck, main the subreddit /r/cyberstuck. From my standpoint it really seems like this car has no redeeming qualities and is basically that car Homer Simpson designed once. That said, internet forums are not known for their restraint. This is just a curiosity, I couldn't buy this car even if I wanted to. Objectively speaking, is the Cybertruck a complete failure?
37 votes -
How Madrid built its metro cheaply
27 votes -
Inside the war against excessive headlight brightness
73 votes -
US Department of Justice suspends controversial airport search program after investigation
34 votes -
Portland Airport grows with expansive mass timber roof canopy
36 votes -
How China became the world’s largest car exporter
7 votes -
Waymo outsources fleet operations to African fintech Moove in Phoenix and, soon, Miami
14 votes -
Zipcar tech glitch strands US customers in random places for hours - prevents cancelling or ending ride booking
11 votes -
Porsche Macan gets recalled for exessively bright headlights in US
21 votes -
Panama is planning a new dam to secure water to operate the Canal
12 votes -
Why battery powered cargo ships are compelling
20 votes -
Car maintenance/replacement advice
I have a 2014 CRV, it loses oil horribly and I'm going to have to check it a couple times a week or risk my engine. The mechanic was hesitant to even help me limp it along and said basically...
I have a 2014 CRV, it loses oil horribly and I'm going to have to check it a couple times a week or risk my engine. The mechanic was hesitant to even help me limp it along and said basically there's no fix besides replacing the engine. He put 3 quarts in that day. I didn't have a warning it was low other than the loud start.
I'm trying to decide if it's worth continuing maintenance on this car or worth trading in now while the engine is still kicking (and switching to an electric used car probably) or nursing this along for another year or so. We have a car loan on a wheelchair van we're trying to refinance which means I'll be looking at cars that are about equivalent in value to the CRV.
Thoughts? Advice? Besides keeping oil in my car because I didn't know it was this bad. Ó╭╮Ò
19 votes -
In Northeast D.C., a rancorous post-election fight erupts — over bike lanes
15 votes -
What happened to passenger hovercraft?
14 votes -
Automatic braking systems save lives. Now they’ll need to work at 62 MPH.
29 votes -
Scrapped policy to charge London’s drivers by the mile
4 votes -
Reports claim Houthis make Red Sea vessel attacks a $2B business
8 votes -
Swedish battery cell maker Northvolt, which produces cells for electric vehicles, has announced that it has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the US
6 votes -
Railway travel in 19th century France
5 votes -
US awards $1.5 billion in grants to improve passenger rail along Northeast Corridor
18 votes -
Air France flight 736, December 31st 2020
13 votes -
Caltrain's electrification project is paying off
32 votes -
New York Governor Kathy Hochul to relaunch congestion pricing with $9 base toll, sources say
15 votes -
How self-driving cars will destroy cities
41 votes -
Waymo’s robotaxis are now available to everyone in Los Angeles
16 votes -
Tens of thousands of Chinese college students went cycling at night for soup dumplings in Kaifeng. That put the government on edge.
24 votes -
2024 update on LA Metro projects
8 votes -
Hanford Viaduct - California High-Speed Rail construction progress
15 votes -
US voters greenlight over $25 billion in public transportation ballot measures in 2024
47 votes -
Eastern Finland airports bring back radio navigation systems due to GPS interference – Finnish authorities believe Russia is jamming signals
25 votes -
California EV maker Aptera unveils solar car with 64 km of daily, charge-free range
18 votes -
Amtrak Wolverine (MI), Southwest Chief (AZ) services to see design advancements, right-of-way acquisition with $126 million in grants
12 votes -
Volkswagen plans major cutbacks in Germany: 'We cannot continue as before'
23 votes -
New deadline by which only zero-emission new vans may be sold in Norway will no longer be 2025, but 2027
9 votes -
US airlines now required to automatically refund you for canceled flight
71 votes