Skip to main content

Silicon Valley gets siphoned in software shift | CES: Automotive AI comes down to earth; EVs, charging to take back seat; Suppliers to pitch electrification, software capabilities

Having trouble viewing this email? See the online version

Automotive News Weekly
Sunday, December 31, 2023
artificial_intelligence-MAIN_i.jpg
Subscription Required

Ahead of CES 2024, automotive AI comes down to earth

 
Read More >
 
EVGO-MAIN_i.jpg
Subscription Required

EVs, charging to take back seat at CES

 
Read More >
 
CES_HYUNDAI-MAIN_i.jpg
Subscription Required

Suppliers to pitch electrification, software capabilities at CES

 
Read More >
 

Tesla blamed drivers for failures of parts it long knew were defective

Read More >
 
Subscription Required

Vehicle that caught fire at Chrysler Tech Center was EV prototype

Read More >
 
Subscription Required

Former Lincoln marketing boss Doug Gilmour switches careers, becomes Ford dealer

Read More >
 
Subscription Required

EVs contribute to delayed vehicle launches

Read More >
 
Subscription Required

Commercial vehicle makers dive into EVs

Read More >
 

GM blasts San Francisco in lawsuit over $108 million tax bill

Read More >
 

Flavio Volpe named to Order of Canada

Read More >
 
Subscription Required

Kia buys name of Orlando Magic arena

Read More >
 
Subscription Required

Customers want more car loan information online, eLEND finds

Read More >
 
OPINION
Leo Michael cartoon: New Year's regulations
Editorial: 2024 is a year to be patient on EV transition
Tossing and turning with twists of U.S.-China relations
Column: The Roadster Factory, link to storied MG and Triumph sports cars, destroyed in fire
Column: My NACTOY picks for 2024
Guest commentary: Unlocking the next wave of EV buyers

Best Dealerships to Work For

See which dealers are going above and beyond for their staff this year.

SUBSCRIBE NOW
Automotive News Weekly
 

This email was sent to manojdole1.wheeler@blogger.com
Manage My Account | Contact Us

 

© 2023 Automotive News
1155 Gratiot Ave., Detroit, MI 48207-2997 United States
Privacy Policy | Terms and Conditions | Unsubscribe

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

UAW warns it will add plants to strike at any time | Entire Utah football team gets Ram trucks | NAMAD head is out to show business case for diversity efforts | Tesla Semi outperforms rivals

Ford now has more workers on strike than General Motors and Stellantis, even though it has offered the highest pay among the three automakers. Having trouble viewing this email? See the online version Sunday, October 15, 2023 UAW warns it will add plants to strike at any time until deal reached   Read More >   Subscription Required Entire Utah football team gets Ram trucks   Read More > ...

The Best Cyber Monday Deals of 2023

The biggest sale holiday of the year is back. Here's where to shop this Cyber Monday. If you are unable to view the images in this email, click here . You don’t have to wait until Black Friday for epic deals this year. ...

How One Amateur Group Did What Law Enforcement Couldn't—Solve Dozens of Cold Cases

Late one night in the fall of 1998, Samantha Hopper called her mother to ask if she'd watch Samantha's two young daughters, 3-year-old Dezarae and 22-month-old Courtney. Her mom, Debbie Mahan, said she could handle only one of the girls, so Hopper drove the short distance to Mahan's Russellville, Arkansas, house and dropped off Dezarae. Hopper, who was 19 years old and eight months pregnant at the time, then left in her Ford Tempo with her other daughter, ostensibly to visit a new boyfriend in Tennessee. She and Courtney were never seen again. As the years passed, Debbie Mahan filed so many missing-persons reports that she ran out of photos picturing her daughter. The local sheriff's office treated the case as a potentially criminal one but soon exhausted all good leads. Samantha and Courtney, it seemed, had disappeared without a trace. That was a particularly bitter pill for Dezarae Carpenter, who grew up wondering if her mother had abandoned her, perhaps to start a...