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Ford and Tesla sign EV-charging pact

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engadget.com

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Fri, May 26, 2023 12:15 PM

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Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts | | It's Friday, May 26, 2023

[The Morning After]( Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts [Apple Podcasts]( | [Spotify]( | [Google Podcasts]( It's Friday, May 26, 2023. Ford has become the first major automaker to leap into bed with Tesla after the US government pushed to make EV charging more widely accessible. The carmaker has signed a deal, starting spring 2024, so selected Ford EVs can slurp down power at some [Tesla Supercharger stations](. As part of the pact, Ford said, from the 2025 model year, it’ll switch to Tesla’s open-source North American Charging Standard (NACS) on its vehicles. Meanwhile, existing models that still use the (more or less) global standard Combined Charging System (CCS) will be able to pick up a Tesla-designed adapter to bridge the gap. The deal is surprising, especially given the relative power, size and prestige of the two companies involved. Ford, one of the world’s biggest car makers, is ceding control of its charger future to a relative minnow, albeit one that built a sizable own-brand charging network. Not to mention it runs the risk of creating a NACS–CCS EV-charging format war, which may erode consumer faith in EVs. After all, if you pull up at a gas station anywhere in the US, there should be a one-size-fits-all way to get fuel in your tank without worrying about the size of the pipe. – Dan Cooper The Morning After isn’t just a[newsletter]( – it’s also a daily podcast. Get our daily audio briefings, Monday through Friday, by[subscribing right here](. The biggest stories you might have missed [TikTok is testing an AI chatbot for content discovery]( [Twitter says startups can 'experiment' with its data for $5,000 a month]( [Twitch is raising prices for its ad-free Turbo service]( [YouTube Stories are going away on June 26th]( [Virgin Galactic completes its final VSS Unity flight test before space tourism debut]( [The best passive bookshelf speakers for most people]( [Google Play Games for PC is now available in Europe and New Zealand]( [Abode's entry-level Smart Home Security Kit only costs $160 but drops HomeKit support]( [The Arc internet browser lets you customize (or vandalize) any website]( [Acer’s 16-inch Predator Triton and Swift Edge laptops are for gamers and creators]( [Google begins opening access to generative AI in search]( At least for those who signed up for the Search Labs waitlist. At I/O, Google showed off SGE, its experimental system to incorporate generative AI inside its search results. Now, the company’s answer to Bing AI is [open for testing]( at least to users who signed up to the Search Labs waitlist. Once they’ve received the email saying they have access, they can type into the Google search bar – there’s no separate chat window like Bing – to get AI-generated search results, which they can either expand or choose to ask follow-up questions. [Continue Reading.]( [Neuralink receives FDA clearance to begin human trials of its brain-computer interface]( It’s a small but vital step on the road to Elon Musk getting wires into people’s brains. Neuralink, Elon Musk’s controversial brain-to-computer interface startup, claims the FDA has [approved it to begin human trials](. The regulator hasn’t yet confirmed the claim, and while the company has said it’s not yet recruiting for a human trial, this approval makes one possible. In a tweet, Neuralink wanted to celebrate the “incredible work” taken by its team to secure the FDA’s blessing, not mentioning it was rejected back in March after it was revealed that more than 1,500 animals implanted with the technology [had died](. [Continue Reading.]( [MoviePass relaunches nationwide with a new pricing model]( $10 a month for three movies ain’t such a bad deal. After months of testing, MoviePass’ all-you-can-eat cinema subscription has [relaunched itself]( across the US. This new version will offer you a tiered subscription plan, with the lowest offering charging you $10 a month for three screenings. It might not be the crazy bargain the previous version offered, but it’s still a damn sight cheaper than most single tickets. And if you’re a real cinephile, you can pay up to $40 a month for 30 screenings, which is staggering on a per-movie basis. [Continue Reading.]( [Sci-fi strategy game 'Homeworld 3' has been delayed to February 2024]( The further delay will enable developers to give the title more polish. [[Image of the mothership, and fleet, from Homeworld 3] Gearbox Publishing / Blackbird Interactive]( Homeworld 3, the long-awaited second sequel to the groundbreaking space-based RTS, has been further delayed [until February 2024](. It’s the second time the title has been pushed back, with developers Blackbird Interactive asking for more time to polish and refine the title. Given that Homeworld 2 debuted in 2003, the two-decade wait for a true follow-up (yes, I’m ignoring Deserts of Kharak) is going to test the idiom “good things come to those who wait” to its very limits. [Continue Reading.]( The Morning After is a daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't [subscribe](. Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts: [Apple Podcasts]( | [Spotify]( | [Google Podcasts]( Craving even more? [Like us on Facebook]( or [follow us on Twitter](. Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? [Send us a note.]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Youtube]( [Instagram]( You are receiving this email because you opted in at [engadget.com](. Not interested anymore? [Unsubscribe from this newsletter.]( Copyright © 2023 Yahoo. All rights reserved.

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