
Rivian upgrades navigation with Google Maps for R1S and R1T
Automotive technology: Apple CarPlay Ultra faces automaker backlash over data and dashboard control
In other words, Rivian's navigation system will now blend Google's superior mapping capabilities with its proprietary charging information, including estimated range and battery capacity remaining at your destination, route planning, real-time charging info and more. In addition, Rivian skins the whole interface in its own design, a new version of which will also debut with the Google Maps update.
Tesla prices in 2025: From $36K to $250K, here's what you'll actually pay
Even better, Rivian says the update will extend to its Rivian Mobile App (a 2025 MotorTrend Best Tech award winner), which benefits from Google-like photos and descriptions of searched destinations, as well as satellite map views and real-time traffic data. As before, users can send trips and navigation destinations from the app to their Rivians, and now they'll be able to use the "share" function via Google Maps to do the same.
The rollout of the new Google-augmented system is imminent — Rivian says it'll begin doing so via an over-the-air update for every all-electric R1S SUV and R1T pickup it has sold to date, and it will come already equipped with every new model it sells.
Photos by MotorTrend Staff, manufacturer

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Android Authority
20 minutes ago
- Android Authority
I tried two new TECNO phones for the first time, and I was pleasantly surprised
Ryan Haines / Android Authority As a US-based tech reviewer, I might get access to a lot of different devices, but I often find myself changing between the same few companies because of the limited number of brands that launch here. I'll jump from Samsung to Motorola to Google and back again, over and over, only sometimes getting lucky with a new launch from Nothing to spice things up. So, when I was offered the chance to check out a few recent launches from TECNO — a company I've never explored before — I jumped. I waited (mostly patiently) for the TECNO Spark 40 Pro Plus and Pova 7 Ultra to arrive, and I'm glad I did. For less than $250 each, they're more clever than I thought they'd be, and they live up to the old Android slogan, 'Be together, not the same,' much better than I expected, even if there are some concessions to hit their low, low price tags. The Spark 40 Pro Plus is a simple, smooth, cheap starting point Ryan Haines / Android Authority The tricky part about hopping into a pair of new TECNO launches is that I didn't know what to expect. They showed up, I unboxed them, and I reached for what looked like the more familiar phone first. That turned out to be the TECNO Spark 40 Pro Plus — a 4G-only budget model with shades of everything from the Galaxy S25 to the Motorola Edge (2022) baked into its slim plastic shell and a software experience that reminds me of OxygenOS from just a few years back. At a glance, none of those borrowed ideas might sound all that exciting, but hear me out — those phones all cost significantly more than the $150-180 Spark 40 Pro Plus (price depends on region). So, for TECNO to find ways to bring everything to a budget segment is exciting. The Spark 40 Pro Plus also brings back a waterfall display — a 6.78-inch AMOLED panel with a crisp 144Hz refresh rate — that's almost good enough for me to question why everyone abandoned it in the first place. Just kidding, I still struggled with covering it in fingerprints and accidental presses until I put the phone in its included silicone case, but it adds what I remember of a flagship touch without a flagship price, as this one starts at the equivalent of about $150. The Spark 40 Pro Plus looks a little bit like a lot of my favorite phones without the price tag. I'm also perhaps slightly surprised by how many AI-powered features TECNO packed into its Spark 40 Pro Plus. It essentially has its own version of many of Google's photo editing tools, from an AI Eraser 2.0 to an AI Extender, and supports Circle to Search, suggesting that it's not just TECNO's tools at play. I still prefer Google's editing tools — they have more punch to work with from the recent Tensor chips — but I like that TECNO is trying to bring tools to a more accessible price point. That said, there are a few bits of the Spark 40 Pro Plus that remind me that this is… well, a very cheap Android phone. Its 4G-only Helio G200 processor is only a slight upgrade over the previous Helio G100, and its single 50MP rear sensor feels like a dated choice, mainly because it's flanked by two other rings that look like additional camera sensors, but don't house anything. I would have loved even a simple ultrawide sensor for a bit more flexibility, but I've been pretty pleased by the results at 1x and 2x zoom. Of course, the bright side of the Spark 40 Pro Plus's power-sipping processor is that it can make the most out of the 5,200mAh battery. I've only had to reach for a charger once or twice while exploring the phone, and I've been pleased with the peak 45W speeds. They're the same as Samsung pushes to its flagship Galaxy S25 Ultra, while 30W wireless charging is quicker than I'm used to from most flagship phones, though I wouldn't have hit top speeds without TECNO's proprietary charging pad. I might actually keep using the Pova 7 Ultra as a cheap gaming phone Ryan Haines / Android Authority Once I felt like I had a pretty good feel for the Spark 40 Pro Plus, I decided it was time to switch gears to the TECNO phone I was more excited about in the first place: The Pova 7 Ultra. Dedicated gaming phones are few and far between here in the US — I usually have to hope for the best with something like the OnePlus 13 or Pixel 9 Pro — so I was curious how TECNO's dedicated hardware at a budget-friendly price point of around $230 would handle a few of my favorite titles. Put simply, it handled them pretty well with help from its 12-layer cooling architecture. Unfortunately, due to limited band support, I couldn't pop my personal Verizon SIM into the Pova 7 Ultra to make it a go-to option for Pokémon Go, but I had no problems racing through games while I was at home on Wi-Fi. It conducted its way through Railbound without a problem, let me take control of Warhammer 40,000 Tacticus as smoothly as I'm used to, and kept me from getting wrecked in PUBG Mobile. I'm still not good at the game, but at least it ran pretty well. Ryan Haines / Android Authority However, what caught me about the Pova 7 Ultra was its design. I know what they say about imitation and flattery, and I'm not even mad about it this time. There's no way to avoid the fact that the Pova 7 Ultra looks like a distant Nothing cousin, from its pseudo-transparent back panel to the Status Light that wraps around its triangular camera bump. Like the Spark 40 Pro Plus, that camera bump plays a trick on the eye by housing two cameras (a 108MP primary sensor and an 8MP ultrawide backup) while looking like it has room for a third. Although I'm a little disappointed that I couldn't give the Pova 7 Ultra its full run due to band support, I'm still impressed by what it packs under the hood. It pairs the Dimensity 8350 Ultimate with 256GB of storage and either 8GB or 12GB of RAM, though TECNO likes to claim it has 16GB or 24GB by converting a dash of its storage to serve as extended RAM. Ryan Haines / Android Authority And then, there's the battery. In true gaming phone fashion, TECNO packed its Pova 7 Ultra with a hefty 6,000mAh cell backed by 70W wired Ultra Charge and the same 30W wireless charging as the Spark 40 Pro Plus. I've had a tough time draining the cell through most of my in-home gaming sessions, but I've done my best to get it there so I could use the included 3,000mAh magnetic power bank. Before you get your Qi2 hopes up, though, know that you need a magnetic case to use the power bank, but thankfully, one comes in the box. Honestly, I didn't realize that TECNO was such a chameleon After about a week with the TECNO Pova 7 Ultra and the Spark 40 Pro Plus, I still have to say I'm impressed. No, I won't say that either phone is about to replace the Pixel that has a permanent place in my pocket, but I can see how they punch above their price tags. More impressively, they do it in different ways. Although they both run a very slightly Pixel-like HiOS 15 based on Android 15, the overall software experience is entirely different. It's a pretty standard affair on the Spark, pairing a somewhat iOS-like quick settings menu with a very colorful app drawer full of a mix of Google apps and in-house versions like Game Space, Hi Translate, and the Hola Browser. I'll still probably skew towards Google Translate and Chrome since I've been using them for years, but the Hola Browser interface is cuter than expected. On the Pova 7 Ultra, the same HiOS experience is completely different. Taking another page out of Nothing's book, the team at TECNO rebuilt a few hundred custom icons in a white, black, and orange color scheme and adopted a customized new font that reminds me of a certain other Android skin. It still has essentially the same slate of in-house TECNO apps for you to explore, they just have a bit more of a gaming edge. Both of these phones run HiOS, but the day-to-day experience is different as can be. Of course, we still have to talk about the budget-minded elephant in the room. Although I've had a lot of fun exploring TECNO for the last little while, and I appreciate that it still includes goodies like cases, wireless power banks, and even chargers in the box (with UK pins), it's still tough to hop on board in the US. Limited band support means that you'll mostly have to hunt for a Wi-Fi connection to use your Pova 7 Ultra or Spark 40 Pro Plus, which is a hard sell for a smartphone. I'm also wary of TECNO's update commitment. I wasn't expecting it to rival Google or Samsung with a seven-year promise. Still, the Pova 7 Ultra's two Android updates and three years of security support, and the Spark 40 Pro Plus's two years of security patches are more than a little behind the times. But, like I said, the Pova 7 Ultra starts at just $210 while the Spark 40 Pro Plus is even more approachable at $150 (though prices may vary by region), so either of these devices could find a role as your backup phone once it's run out of updates. Then again, Nothing finally has solid carrier support after three generations of launches, so maybe TECNO is next.


CNN
21 minutes ago
- CNN
On Tesla's earnings call, no one wanted to talk about … Tesla's earnings
A version of this story appeared in CNN Business' Nightcap newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here. If you happened to glance at Tesla's second-quarter earnings report Wednesday night, you might not be surprised that the company's stock was getting pummeled on Wall Street Thursday morning. Put simply: sales are in freefall, profits have been shrinking for three straight quarters and the US government is about to cut off a crucial revenue stream. But if you just listened in on the company's call with analysts, you would have no idea why. For an earnings call, there was zero talk of, um, earnings. And the overall message from Tesla's top brass seemed to be: We are a robotics and AI company, and, someday soon, it's going to be awesome. For now, many bullish analysts — especially those whom the company called on during the conference call — are on board with CEO Elon Musk's vision of Tesla as an AI and robotics company first and an organization that builds and sells cars that people purchase and drive themselves second. But Thursday's selloff suggests that Musk's 'hey, look over here!' comms strategy is getting harder for Wall Street to swallow. ICYMI: CEO Elon Musk did acknowledge in response to one question that Tesla was in a 'weird transition period' and 'could have a few rough quarters' ahead because of the loss of a $7,500 tax credit for US EV buyers starting in October and the vanishing market for regulatory credit sales, which has driven a significant portion of Tesla's profits for years. But over the course of an hourlong call, Musk barely mentioned Tesla's core business — selling cars, which, as my colleague Chris Isidore reports, isn't going great. Musk kept his gaze firmly on the far horizon, skipping over the fact that demand is cratering for the things Tesla actually sells right now, while touting dreams of a still largely hypothetical future where the company would build and sell more than a million humanoid robots. And for the most part, the analysts who were called on to ask questions followed suit, opting not to dwell on the declining financials of the world's most valuable automaker. Analysts' questions largely focused on robotaxis, Tesla's 'Full Self Driving' software, the Optimus robot and other products that are, again, still largely unrealized as viable consumer products. 'The company offered remarkably little detail on some of the most important factors' — like its mysterious new lower-priced model —'making our outlook lean more on imagination than realistic targets,' said Truist's William Stein, who has a hold rating on Tesla, in a note after the call. Even Dan Ives of Wedbush Securities, known as Tesla's biggest cheerleader on Wall Street, said Tesla management's performance was a letdown. 'I wouldn't say it was a conference call that should be put in the Hall of Fame,' Ives told CNN on Thursday, while underscoring he is still bullish on Tesla's robotics future with Musk at the helm. 'Communication on the call was less than stellar in terms of details, and I think that definitely played into the selloff that we're seeing.' Tesla shares (TSLA) fell more than 8% Thursday. For Tesla's detractors, Musk's opaque responses confirmed what they've long seen as an overvalued company that's banking on hype. 'The stock price no longer rests on selling cars. It hinges almost entirely on the promise of a robot-driven, self-driving future… one that continues to recede on contact with reality,' said analyst Gordon L. Johnson, one of Tesla's biggest critics on Wall Street, in a note. 'The key to convincing the market that you're not just a car company is to avoid discussing your car business… If you're trying to justify a trillion-dollar valuation while your core business stagnates, it helps to keep the details as fuzzy as the timeline for your next 'miracle product.'' But to a certain extent, this is who Musk is and who he has always been. The focus, he believes, shouldn't be on what Tesla is doing now. It should always be on what Tesla is going to do, someday. Someday soon, Tesla is going to build and sell an inexpensive car. Someday soon, Tesla is going to build and sell hundreds of thousands, if not more than a million, Cybertrucks. Someday soon, Tesla is going to build and sell a car that drives itself, from coast to coast. Someday soon, Tesla is going to be an AI and robotics company. If it isn't one now, you're just focused on the wrong things. And if it isn't one tomorrow, then you just need to hear about what it's going to accomplish, someday soon.

Business Insider
21 minutes ago
- Business Insider
A new type of dealmaking is unnerving startup employees. Here are the questions to ask to make sure you don't get left out.
As a new kind of dealmaking is sweeping Silicon Valley, forcing employees to be vigilant about how much trust they are willing to put in startup founders. Over the past two years, instead of acquiring AI startups outright, Big Tech companies have been licensing their technology or making deals for top talent, with startup employees sometimes getting divided into separate camps of haves and have-nots. Those with the most desirable AI skills reap a windfall while those who remain are shrouded in uncertainty. That recently happened to Windsurf employees after the AI coding company was on the verge of being acquired by OpenAI for $3 billion, but was instead split in half. Google paid billions to hire Windsurf's CEO and top talent, and the hundreds of employees who remained were bought by another startup, Cognition. Unfortunately for startup employees, many investors expect these kinds of novel transactions to continue as the velocity of developments in AI makes companies unlikely to want to wait months or years for regulatory approval. Candidates need to ask tough questions about the founder Given traditional M&A has mostly gone out the window, it is more important than ever for startup employees to do their homework, advises Steve Brotman, managing partner at Alpha Partners. "In light of what we just saw with Windsurf, it's crucial to understand the ownership dynamics," Brotman said. " You don't want to be working 100-hour weeks only to realize your options are underwater or your exit upside is capped. And remember: companies that are transparent and deliberate about governance tend to be better long-term bets, both for your career and your equity." "Ask hard questions about runway, revenue, burn, and investor syndicate quality," Brotman continued. "Who's on the board? Are they structured for long-term growth or a quick flip?" The most important thing candidates should assess is how much they trust the founder, according to Deedy Das, an investor at Menlo Ventures. "Nobody wants to talk about the fact that founders control almost everything that happens in a company, including how you get paid, when you get paid, how the equity vests, and when you can sell the equity," said Das. "It's everything, so having trust in your founder to do the right thing by the team is extremely important." Just as investors would typically research a founder before writing a check to one of their many portfolio companies, prospective employees should ask around about founders whom they could be tied to for years, said Hari Raghavan, cofounder and CEO of Autograph. "They should be doing diligence on whether this is a standup person," said Raghavan. "Do your best to suss out, 'Are these guys going to take care of me?'" Raghavan suggests that founders should sign a written pledge agreeing to treat employees well in terms of stock options and exit scenarios. "These are things that any good founder should be doing, and the vast majority of good ones do, but I think even just establishing that set of rules is a good idea," he said. Prospective employees should not be afraid to "interrogate" a founder on how they are thinking about an exit, according to Jake Saper, a general partner at Emergence Capital. "Ask founders how they would weigh staying independent, a classic acquisition, or a licensing deal that carves out key people," Saper said. "Their answer tells you a lot about the journey you're signing up for." Scrutinizing the fine print has also become more important, said Saper. "Make sure offer letters and stock agreements spell out vesting acceleration, treatment of options, and retention bonuses if only 'substantially all' of the team moves," Saper said. "Those clauses mattered at Inflection and Windsurf, and they will matter again." In 2024, Microsoft hired the founder of Inflection AI, Mustafa Suleyman, and some of the startup's staff to help lead its AI efforts. In June, Meta paid $14 billion for a 49 percent stake in the data labeling company Scale AI and hired its founder, Alexandr Wang, to run its Superintelligence group. Meta also hired some of the startup's researchers. Last week, Scale AI laid off 14% of its workforce, or 200 employees, and revealed it is unprofitable. Finally, Saper says to take a hard look at the underlying business model of a startup to make sure it can last. "Startups with unique data feeds, embedded distribution or clear recurring revenue have leverage to stay independent," Saper said. "If a company's main asset is a brilliant but portable research team, you should assume Big Tech will come knocking."