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16 votes
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BYD overtakes Tesla as China reshapes the global electric vehicle race
35 votes -
Waymo: lessons from the PG&E outage in San Francisco
21 votes -
Congestion pricing = accessible transit
21 votes -
Kansas City Streetcar's Riverfront extension is on track to open next spring
8 votes -
Report shows bike lane initiative positively impacting traffic in Boston
14 votes -
Toll roads are spreading in America
31 votes -
Can a heavily modified Rivian take the electric vehicle Cannonball record? (Part 1)
25 votes -
Can I defeat telematics in a GM car?
Previously, I wondered what model car I should buy if I wanted to maintain my privacy. Thanks to everyone who chimed in, especially @kari, @qot, and @Narry. Although I astound myself to be typing...
Previously, I wondered what model car I should buy if I wanted to maintain my privacy. Thanks to everyone who chimed in, especially @kari, @qot, and @Narry. Although I astound myself to be typing this, I may just have found an option in a Cadillac Lyriq.
Earlier this year, the FTC banned GM from selling driver data to consumer reporting agencies and GM ended their egregious program. This and privacy laws in my state give me some small hope of avoiding the worst data collection practices. But, if I buy this car, I would want greater certainly that can only be had by physical intervention. Local audio/security aftermarket installers have nothing for me. Would anyone have a resource or ideas?
25 votes -
King Air autolands in Colorado
26 votes -
Why this long-range bomber will likely be the first jet aircraft to reach 100 years of continuous flying
19 votes -
2025 update on LA Metro projects
5 votes -
EU drops 2035 combustion engine ban as global electric vehicle shift faces reset
53 votes -
Spain to launch €60 monthly nationwide public transport pass, in January
25 votes -
Montreal’s new rail line is the future
16 votes -
Swiss government will not be able to subsidise the overnight train connection to Malmö planned from spring 2026
8 votes -
At dusk, fifty people went to San Francisco's longest dead-end street and all ordered a Waymo at the same time
38 votes -
Can I hope to defeat telematics in a new car?
Could you recommend a make of vehicle whose spy tech is easy to disable? This is the highest hurdle and single most important factor in my search for a car, so my other preferences and needs fall...
Could you recommend a make of vehicle whose spy tech is easy to disable? This is the highest hurdle and single most important factor in my search for a car, so my other preferences and needs fall far second. I would like an electric vehicle or hybrid model with no less cargo room than a Prius, and not larger than a mid-sized station wagon, with a track record of low repairs. Correct me if I'm misinformed, but applying those criteria seems premature until I can identify something I can make private.
I have only ever bought used cars, and have lived the same story many times: I will construct elaborate spreadsheets, research models until I could host a video walk-through of trouble spots to watch for, then will shop and cavil until I make a purchase I'm proud of. Sure, it ends up 25% over my initial budget, but I pat myself on the back for a full 18 months afterwards. Nice work, careful consumer. But it's then the repairs begin, and soon I'm spending $3-4,000 a year maintaining my certified reliable used car.
So, I am searching for a newer used car or a new car whose telematics can be disabled. I have read through discussion boards, but weary quickly at the comments defending the cozy convenience of the corporate surveillance net or chiding people like me for even trying. I don't care. If lacking or disabling spy features means I can't use my car as a phone, that sounds like a win to me. I know a little about cars and have alright technical know-how. Most importantly, I am resolute. I will not drive a car that listens to me or transmits video of my travels. Has anyone had success here?
47 votes -
Deinterlining: simpler subway service, fewer delays (New York City)
9 votes -
Four proposals to improve the design of fuel economy standards
17 votes -
Virginia's Long Bridge Project will improve rail capacity around Washington DC
15 votes -
California High Speed Rail Authority advances track and systems construction procurement
15 votes -
Uber and Lyft prices vary for the same rides
22 votes -
United Kingdom electric vehicle owners to face pay-per-mile tax
17 votes -
Tesla registrations were down in France, Sweden, Denmark, and Germany – Norway, however, is bucking the trend, thanks to a tax incentive system that will soon be rolled back
10 votes -
The turf war for Seattle
8 votes -
Airbus issues major A320 recall after flight-control incident
31 votes -
New electric-powered locomotive designed for harsh winters unveiled near Edmonton Canada
17 votes -
California Department of Motor Vehicles approves Waymo operation in many more cities
26 votes -
The final line in Los Angeles's holy trinity of future rail: Vermont corridor
11 votes -
A rare GM EV1 saved from the crusher is going to be driveable again
29 votes -
New Zealand supreme court ruled that Uber drivers are employees
40 votes -
Amtrak steadily continues upgrading Wisconsin stations for level boarding - improving access and travel time
36 votes -
Electric vehicle sales are booming in South America — without Tesla
24 votes -
Waymo robotaxis are now giving rides on freeways in LA, San Francisco, and Phoenix
10 votes -
11foot8.com: trucks + bridges
32 votes -
Pathfinder 1 airship overflies Golden Gate bridge: pictures
26 votes -
Automotive repair costs on modern vehicles. Any horror stories?
A friend of mine in Britain recently had to replace a headlight on her Honda. It was hit by a rock and there was no choice but to replace it. Her description of the headlight was "an LED Matrix"...
A friend of mine in Britain recently had to replace a headlight on her Honda. It was hit by a rock and there was no choice but to replace it. Her description of the headlight was "an LED Matrix" unit, and since I don't keep up with terminology in modern cars, this was something new to me. The cost of the light was £729.99 and to make matters worse, it had to be aligned and linked to the computer in the car, which could only be done at the Honda dealership. Their labor charge was £350. That comes to over $1400 US dollars to replace a damn headlight.
I want nothing to do with modern vehicles. I own an old Toyota Tacoma, and I can replace any part on it by myself. Shoot, if you've got 10 and 12mm wrenches, you can virtually disassemble the truck.
For those who like to tinker with their cars, I suspect there is a cut-off point in time, where it is no longer easily done, and it may be ten years past by now.
Anyone have any stories about absurd costs with their vehicles these days?
34 votes -
US Federal Aviation Administration reducing air traffic by 10% across forty ‘high-volume’ markets during government shutdown
51 votes -
Paris had a moving sidewalk in 1900, and a Edison film captured it in action
38 votes -
To understand life at the top of the world, you only need to meet the Norwegians who live along the E69, the world's northernmost highway
7 votes -
Norwegian public transport operator Ruter has shared the results of a comprehensive cybersecurity test of electric buses, conducted in an isolated mountain environment
10 votes -
In 1953, the Ford X-100 concept car had it all
14 votes -
Find your flight seat map
21 votes -
Strike at Tesla's Swedish service centres has now reached its second anniversary, and there is little prospect of a resolution
27 votes -
A 'death train' is haunting south Florida
44 votes -
Porsche pauses shift to electric vehicles as profits tank - profits plunged by nearly 96% in the first nine months of 2025
12 votes -
Why are so many pedestrians killed by cars in the US?
51 votes -
Spit on, sworn at, and undeterred: what it’s like to own a Cybertruck
37 votes -
Norway to phase out electric vehicle VAT exemption from 2027 – intends to increase the one-off registration tax for fossil-fuelled passenger cars
8 votes