GM Energy introduces V2G support and new energy storage battery chemistry
There are more than a quarter of a million V2G-capable GM EVs on the roads already.
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There are more than a quarter of a million V2G-capable GM EVs on the roads already.
Decart is launching Oasis 3, a real-time world model that generates photorealistic driving environments for autonomous vehicle testing, now available via API for developers to build on.
Chinese EV colossus BYD has announced plans to speed up its conquest of the European auto market with the rollout of superfast Flash Chargers across the continent. BYD has already installed the first new chargers in Germany and the UK, and plans to roll out 3,000 across Europe by the end of next year. At […]
Waymo has a lot of experience building virtual systems to help its autonomous vehicles better understand the real world. It built realistic 3D worlds to better anticipate natural disasters and unpredictable edge cases. It created a virtual representation of a hyperattentive driver to test against its own autonomous vehicles in a series of simulated scenarios […]
This is a story about a company that rolled out an AI interview system — and the lunch break I spent...
At an event in San Francisco today, General Motors made a series of announcements around EV batteries, energy storage, and grid resiliency in the face of growing electricity demand from AI data centers. The automaker announced that it would be activating new vehicle-to-grid capabilities for its current EV and home energy customers. It's releasing a […]
At night, the car projects its turn signals onto the road to alert other road users.
Rivian's second EV is the sub-$60,000 R2, and it was worth the wait.
With a competitive price, winning design, and better performance than the R1, Rivian could be set to break into the big leagues. Just make sure you get the right model with the right tech.
Rivian may be all in on robotaxis and autonomy, but it's still got human drivers - and EV buyers - to win over. The pricey R1S SUV and R1T pickup brought Rivian A-list media attention and cult-hit status, but the company faces a critical next step. The 2027 R2 is Rivian's bid for mainstream success, […]
The state’s outbreak means adapting to America’s new reality, in which vaccine-preventable diseases become common again.
TL;DR As an international student in the United States, I joined tech communities hoping to find...
A few months ago I was trying to prepare for a cloud certification exam. I went looking for practice questions - good ones. Not just answer lists, but questions that actually trained the reasoning the exam tests. I found some scattered GitHub repos, a few YouTube playlists, sites with outdated question dumps. Nothing that felt structured. Nothing that explained why an answer was right, not just what it was. So I started building my own study tool. Mock questions, practice sets, AI-generated explanations. The kind of thing I wished existed. Six weeks later that became ArchReady - a certification prep platform for AWS, GCP, and PSM1. It's live now. What it does Practice questions across AWS (CCP, SAA, DVA, SAP), GCP ACE, and PSM1 Explanations for wrong answers - walks through the reasoning, not just the correct option AI-powered explanations coming soon Claude (Anthropic) Confidence tracking - shows which topics you're weak on Free to practice, no signup required. Pro unlocks full history and tracking. The stack Frontend: Next.js 14 (App Router) Backend: FastAPI (Python) AI: Claude (Anthropic) - explanations launching soon Payments: Dodo Hosting: Vercel (web) + Railway (API) Nothing exotic. I kept it boring on purpose - solo founder, 2-5 hrs/week, I can't afford interesting infrastructure problems. What I actually learned Ship before it feels ready. I had a list of 12 features I thought were "required for launch." I launched with 4. Nobody noticed the missing 8. Questions sourced from open-source + AI is good enough to start. Questions come from curated GitHub repos and AI-generated content built around official exam frameworks. That's enough to be useful. Perfection is a later problem. The hardest part isn't building - it's the first 10 users. The product exists. Getting people to try it is the actual work now. Where it is today Live at archready.io . Early stage. Still building. If you're prepping for AWS, GCP, or PSM1 - try it free, no account needed. Honest feedba
Writing a prompt isn't engineering. It's typing. You type what you want. The AI figures out the rest...
Hey everyone! I'm a Front-End developer with over 4.5 years of hands-on experience building scalable, performant web applications. I'm currently looking for a full-time remote opportunity. i could make modern web applications using Next.js or React.js & fueled by a passion for solving complex problems, diving into intricate challenges, and crafting clean, scalable solutions that deliver seamless user experiences. 🛠 Tech Stack: React.js & Next.js (SSR, SSG, App Router) TypeScript & JavaScript (ES6+) - Node.js - Express.js REST APIs & state management (Zustand, React Query) CSS/Tailwind/Styled Components , many Animation packages Git, CI/CD basics, Docker performance-optimization & SEO friendly Application Time Management – Responsible – Open mind – Team work – Attention to detail Commitment to work – Continuous learning 💼 What I bring: 4.5+ years building production-grade UIs Strong focus on performance, accessibility, and clean code Experience working in agile, remote-friendly teams Good communication and ability to work independently across time zones 🌍 Availability: Full-time/Part-time remote | Open to companies worldwide 🌐 My Portfolio ⬇️⬇️ https://pouyaazhkan.vercel.app/ 👨🏻💻My GitHub ⬇️⬇️ https://github.com/PouyaAzhkan 📩 Email Me ⬇️⬇️ codpoya.azhkan@gmail.com Feel free to DM me or drop a comment — happy to share my portfolio and discuss further! forhire #frontend #react #nextjs #typescript #remotework #webdeveloper #developer #Front_End #hiredeveloper #hire
Polystyrene can be upcycled into carbon sponge material.
I said "maybe a couple days" on a call last Tuesday. By Wednesday morning it was in a Jira ticket as "2 days." By Thursday afternoon somebody was checking in to see if we were tracking against the two day commitment. Nobody did anything wrong. The person who wrote it down was capturing what I said. The person checking in was doing their job. I was the one who said the words. The system worked exactly as designed. The system is the problem. Something Ive learned is that theres no such thing as a rough number in meetings today with all of the AI note takers... The moment you say a number out loud, it stops being a feeling and starts being a quote. The hedge in front of it doesnt survive the transcription. "Maybe" disappears. "Couple" gets rounded to a specific integer. "Give or take" is the first thing that hits the cutting room floor. What lands in the document is the number, naked, with no caveats and no error bars. Everyone in the meeting heard what you heard. They heard the hedge. They watched you wave your hands. They understood, in the moment, that you werent committing. But the document doesnt remember any of that. The document just remembers the number. And the document outlives the conversation, which is where all the nuance lived. Ive watched myself do this for years and I still get caught by it. Someone asks how long something will take. I want to be helpful. I want to seem confident. I want to keep the meeting moving. So I say a number. The number is approximately right, or at least I think it is, but I havent actually thought about it the way you would think about it if you were going to commit to it. By saying it out loud, Ive committed to it. The fix, if theres one, is to refuse the number. Not rudely. Just clearly. "I need to look at it before I give you a real number. I can have one for you by Friday." This works about half the time. The other half, somebody in the room is going to ask you for a ballpark anyway, and youre going to give them one, and t
The cars are too big to race well, but the competition for pole position is thrilling.
Field journal of Dr. E. Rempel, Department of Minority Neurological Studies, University of New Carthage (A work of fiction. "Allism" is a real term used by some autistic people to describe the neurological profile of the non-autistic majority.) March 3, 2089 I have now spent three months embedded with an allistic community in the outer provinces. Allism, for those unfamiliar, is a rare neurological variant affecting approximately 1% of our population. My colleagues at the University have long debated its origins and persistence. After direct observation, I am no more certain of the answers, but I have accumulated a remarkable set of field notes. The allistic subjects I have observed appear, on the surface, entirely functional. They hold jobs, maintain relationships, raise children. And yet their neurological profile diverges from the norm in ways that are at once fascinating and bewildering. March 11, 2089 The most immediately striking feature of the allistic profile is their relationship with information. Where a typical individual experiences the sharing of useful knowledge as a basic social reflex, the allistic subject appears to require an elaborate ritual before any information exchange can occur. Approach an allistic subject directly with a piece of useful data and observe what happens. Rather than receiving it, they freeze. A threat-assessment process appears to engage, entirely pre-consciously, before the content of the communication can be evaluated at all. One subject described it to me as feeling "strange" when a stranger approached with unsolicited information, though she could not articulate why. I have learned to preface all information exchanges with what my translator calls "the preamble ritual" — a sequence of social signals that appears to deactivate the threat response and allow communication to proceed. The exact form varies, but typically involves eye contact, a softening of posture, and verbal acknowledgment that one is about to speak. Only the
The latest bill would ban day trips from Canada or Mexico in Chinese cars.