Automotive manufacturer Tesla is reportedly rolling out trials of its ridesharing service, giving employees access, as it looks to expand that service later this year.
According to Tesla, the ride-hailing service uses a suite of features called full self-driving, but the cars still require continual driver supervision and are not considered autonomous.
Tesla plans to unveil a driverless version of the software that will still be remotely supervised, starting in Austin with 10 to 20 Model Y vehicles before scaling further and expanding to other cities and vehicle models.
Tesla executives discussed the company's sluggish sales, which have fallen 41% year to date, and CEO Elon Musk mentioned plans to refocus on the automotive firm and pull back from his work with the U.S. government.