No car company is making more headlines right now than Tesla. Can the electric vehicle company stay ahead in the battle for electric car dominance?
Mark Rechtin, Executive Editor at Motor Trend, says Tesla's competitors are quickly gaining ground. Motor Trend tested out the Tesla Model 3, Nissan Leaf, and Chevrolet Bolt. Rechtin says that the Leaf and Bolt offer the best options, especially if you don't have $60,000 to spend on a Tesla.
Rechtin also discusses the ongoing problems Tesla is having with its Model 3 production. The company continues to fall behind its original target numbers, while its CEO Elon Musk is tweeting about a possible Tesla pickup truck. Rechtin says Musk should focus more on the Model 3 and less on his dream projects.
David McCabe, Tech Reporter at Axios, discusses the battle between Uber and Lyft bidding for bikesharing company Motivate, which owns Citi Bike and Ford GoBike.
Daniel Ives, Chief Strategy Officer and Head of Technology Research at GBH Insights, discusses the biggest tech headlines of the week, from Apple's developers' conference to the U.S.'s deal with China's ZTE.
CEO James Quarles says the company wants people to put down their phones and be more active. But Strava has come under fire earlier this year after a report found the tracking data could give clues to the locations of sensitive areas like military bases.
The comedian Julian McCullough talks about how jokes about President Trump aren't as funny to audiences as they once were. McCullough says liberals and conservatives have tired of the material and "no one wants to hear it."
DNA testing service MyHeritage reported a data breach that gave hackers access to email addresses and passwords of over 92 million users. While genetic information wasn't exposed, Rob Verger, Assistant Tech Editor at Popular Science, says the incident serves as a reminder that "almost anything is hackable."
Rob Marvin, associate editor at PCMag.com, discusses Facebook's latest data controversy that may have compromised posts of 14 million users who thought they were posting privately to family and friends. We talk about what this means for the future of the company as it recovers from its last data scandal.
PlayVS is the first esports league for high school students. The company announced $15 million in funding that will go towards preparing for its upcoming inaugural season.
Even though Disney and 21st Century Fox reached an agreement for a sale of many of Fox's assets, Rupert Murdoch is looking elsewhere. Rich Greenfield, media and tech analyst for BTIG, says Murdoch is open to other offers, including one from Comcast. Fox shareholders are set to vote on the $52.4 billion merger next month.
Billionaire investor Warren Buffett and JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon want to change the way companies report earnings. They say the common practice of issuing guidance in a quarterly earnings report forces companies to focus on short-term goals rather than long-term ones.
Honolulu leaders approved a measure on Wednesday that would limit how much ride-sharing companies such as Uber and Lyft can charge customers during peak times. Uber pushed back, saying it would impose "outdated taxi-style requirements" on the industry. Honolulu lawyers will review the measure before it goes to the mayor, who then has 10 days to decide what to do.
Facebook admitted this week it shared user data with Chinese phone maker Huawei, which has been flagged as a national security threat. This slow drip of Facebook's data practices will be a difficult PR crisis for the company to overcome, says Former White House Chief Informatoion Officer Theresa Payton.
Apple is doubling down on its Pay function, expanding it to a wider range of transactions and turning it into a bigger revenue stream for the company.
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