Lyft aims to become in 2026 in its first Mobileye Robotaxis
Lyft fights to compete like Uber Autonomous Vehicle Partners (AV)S On Monday, Lift said it partnered with the Japanese conglomerate lettuce to bring robotaxis to the roads in Dallas the next year before expanding to “thousands of vehicles” in other cities.
This is the first fruit of Lyft’s Mobileye Partnershipdeclared in November. Techcrunch notes That Intel Mobile’s ownership technology is already available in models from (by the way) Audi, Ford, GM, Nissan and Volkswagen. Lyft has not yet said which car manufacturer (s) has partnered with Dallas Rollout. But Lyft’s Executive Vice President of Driver Direct Jeremy Bird said Techcrunch that he is in conversation with “every major autonomous carmaker”.
Marubeni, who owns subsidiaries in industries ranging from cereals to fossil fuels (fortunately, not in the same product), owns and operates fleets with over 900,000 vehicles worldwide. The robotaxis, equipped with Mobileye Mobileye, will be available to people in Dallas to welcome the Lyft app after launching the program.
Although Dallas launching as a Lyft pilot program for Mobileye AVS, it may not be the next deployment of the company’s robotaxes. Last year she also partnered with AV Company May Mobility and aims to Bring Robotaxis with your Atlanta technology Somewhere in 2025
The pressure is on Lyft to be up -to -date as Uber has made deals with a long list of companies in AV Space, including AvrideAurora Innovation, SimplyWaabi and Wayve. Waymo on Uber and Alphabet Plan to start the fleets in Austin and Atlanta earlier this year. (Thehe The waiting list is already open.) Tesla also said he plans to Enter your first autonomous vehicle service In Austin this June.
This article originally appeared at Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/lyft-aims- For- 2026-dallas-launch-of-ss-lirst-bileye-robotaxis-190137968.htm.h RSSS