Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News Round Ups

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

This week in EV tech: California dreaming

Add as a preferred source on Google
QuickCharge: This Week In EV General Motors Advanced Design California Corvette concept.
General Motors
Image of EVs charging with a lighting bolt icon on top.
This story is part of our regular series, QuickCharge: This Week in EV

While Chevrolet Corvette hybrids are now a thing, it could still be a while before an all-electric Corvette enters production. But General Motors is tasking its designers to imagine what a future Corvette EV could look like.

Unveiled this week, the California Corvette concept is the second of three ‘Vette design studies debuting this year, each from a GM studio in a different region. The first, revealed in March, came from the automaker’s U.K. studio while this one, as the name implies, is the product of GM’s Advanced Design studios in Pasadena, California.

Recommended Videos

Borrowing the internal codename of another concept car that eventually morphed into 1992’s Corvette Stingray III concept, the California Corvette of 2025 leverages the packaging flexibility of electric powertrains to improve performance. Its carbon-fiber tub chassis incorporates a T-shaped battery pack with prismatic cells (the same form factor used in current GM EVs), which leaves room for large underbody tunnels that channel air more efficiently around the vehicle.

Tunnels like these have been used in race cars — mostly notably the AAR/Toyota Eagle Mk III — to generate downforce that presses the car into the track surface for better grip without generating the aerodynamic drag associated with more conventional downforce-generating like spoilers that sit on the surface of the bodywork. Minimizing drag is crucial to maximizing EV range, so a design like this could offer the best of both worlds for a future electric sports car.

The California Corvette is just a design exercise, but GM did say in 2022 that an all-electric Corvette, based on the current-generation C8 model, was in development. When we’ll finally see it — and whether it will look anything like the California Corvette or the other two concepts GM is trotting out — remains to be seen.

Faraday Future’s new face

Few EV startups have been embroiled in as much drama as Faraday Future, which spent nearly a decade trying to get its FF91 electric SUV into a production, a process that saw it abandon a planned Nevada factory project for a repurposed tire plant in California while suffering a constant stream of financial calamities. Having finally launched low-volume production of the FF91, Faraday Future this week unveiled a bizarre follow-up.

It’s called the Faraday FX Super One, and it’s an electric minivan pitched as a rival to the Cadillac Escalade, with high-tech AI features. In actuality, it’s a Chinese-market Great Wall Motors Wey Gaoshan with a screen attached to the front. Faraday Future calls that “Super EAI F.A.C.E. (Front AI Communication Ecosystem) System,” and claims it will allow the vehicle to “communicate” with the world as a representative of its driver. How that will work, and what benefit it might have, is unclear.

On the more practical side, Faraday Future said the FX Super One will be available in six-, seven-, or more luxurious four-seat configurations. The latter will feature suspended zero-gravity seats with heating, ventilation, and 10-way massage. Faraday isn’t the only automaker thinking along these lines; earlier this year Mercedes-Benz unveiled its Vision V concept, previewing a luxurious van expected to debut within the next year or so.

Solid-state batteries still in the news

Two announcements this week indicated incremental progress in bringing solid-state batteries to production EVs. Solid-state batteries get their name from their solid electrolyte, which a host of startups and automakers have said will result greater range without increasing battery-pack size. But commercialization has proceeded slowly.

Volkswagen has been collaborating with solid-state battery developer QuantumScape since 2012, and last year its PowerCo battery division inked a deal with QuantumScape for enough batteries to power up to one million EVs annually. This week the two corporate entities announced an expansion of that agreement that will see PowerCo become actively involved in pilot production of solid-state batteries earlier. QuantumScape says this will help it scale manufacturing more quickly.

Meanwhile, fellow German automaker Mercedes-Benz expects to bring an EV powered by solid-state batteries to production “before the end of the decade,” Markus Schafer, the automaker’s head of development, said in an interview with Automobilwoche. Mercedes has also partnered with a startup — Factorial — but has also begun public testing of an EQS sedan with prototype solid-state batteries.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
After acing range and charging, Chinese EV brands flaunt three-wheel driving on SUVs
BYD, Aito, and Li Auto are making active suspension the new battleground after range and charging
Machine, Wheel, Transportation

Chinese EV brands have spent years trying to win on range, charging speed, and screens. Now the fight is getting stranger, with premium SUVs showing off three-wheel driving as the next battleground.

According to Car News China, BYD’s Denza B8 Flash Charge Edition, Huawei-backed Aito M9, and Li Auto L9 are all being used to show how active suspension can lift a wheel while the vehicle keeps moving at low speed. The demos look theatrical, and the intended uses are practical, including tire changes, off-road recovery, and crossing uneven ground without getting stuck.

Read more
This Android Auto update is trying to change how you drive and use your car
Road, Electronics, Credit Card

I use Android Auto every day, and at this point, it feels like a quiet co-driver sitting on my dashboard. That’s exactly why this upcoming refresh from Google actually matters. It is not just a visual tweak; it is a proper overhaul of how Android Auto should feel inside a modern car. The biggest change is the design. Google is bringing its Material 3 Expressive design language from phones into cars. That means Android Auto is getting a more modern, more fluid look with expressive fonts, smoother animations, and even support for wallpapers. This should really make the entire interface feel less rigid and more alive while you are driving.

Widgets finally make Android Auto feel useful at a glance

Read more
BYD’s latest EV costs just over $10,000, goes 250 miles, and packs a LiDAR, too
LiDAR, 250 miles, and a five-figure price tag: the 2026 Seagull is proof that the future of affordable EVs is already here, just not in the West.
BYD 2026 Seagull.

BYD has officially unveiled the 2026 Seagull, sold internationally as the Dolphin Mini or Dolphin Surf, and the numbers deserve your attention. 

The updated compact EV’s price starts from 69,900 yuan, which is around $10,300, in China, and tops out at 85,900 yuan, which is around $12,600. It debuted at the 2026 Beijing Auto Show before going on sale this week (via CarsNewsChina). 

Read more