over the leadership of her party and country to chris hipkins. the new prime minister has picked a female deputy of pacific island heritage. you re watching bbc news. now it s time for click. this week, it s all about cars and cardio. yeah, we have teslas looping the las vegas loop. spencer takes a swing for it. yes, got a seagull. and lara gets mean. well, she tries to. i m a bit slow with this. i d be in terrible trouble if there was a person punching. and is that. both: a flying elvis?
and we re patiently waiting for it. 0ver ces, the boring company claimed nearly 100,000 people used the loop. that s a lot. and there s hope the cars will soon be autonomous, too. however, its real test will be in the years to come. can it go from a gimmicky convention centre ride to a genuine travel game changer? many will be watching here in las vegas to see whether this is yet more elon musk hype or something genuinely important. and when it comes to elon musk, it s often hard to tell which that is. that was james underground. now we re moving from cars down there to cars up in the air. yeah, not so long ago, we saw this thing take off in france. and now at this year s ces, paul carter has witnessed another one going up. and you re not going to believe who s driving.
however, even though this is pretty far away from what elon musk said he wanted to create, many people at ces loved it. excuse me, madam. i m from the bbc, we rejust asking people what they thought about the loop just now. i love it. you loved it? it s really cool. how much would you give it out of ten? ten. well, not quite everyone. it sjust like the classic meme of, like, oh, let s reduce- the number of drivers i by linking them together and make it more efficient. by putting it on a steel wheel and bubble loading platforms, and they re just reinventing i the subway. there s also a much more fundamental question, which is, is this actually a good idea? if you look at the number of teslas here that are all being driven by expensive humans, it kind of begs the question, why not just use a train? we didn t want to just be able to move people around our campus in an efficient way. we wanted them to kind of have a smile on their face at the end of the day, and so when you see the lights i
instruments to give us our best ever view of the moons, and to assess whether they could be habitable. now on bbc news, click. this week, it s all about cars and cardio. yeah, we have teslas looping the las vegas loop. spencer takes a swing for it. yes, got a seagull. and lara gets mean. well, she tries to. i m a bit slow with this. i d be in terrible trouble if there was a person punching. and is that.
and we know the future of being autonomous is that last piece of the puzzle, and we re patiently waiting for it. over ces, the boring company claimed nearly 100,000 people used the loop. that s a lot. and there s hope the cars will soon be autonomous, too. however, its real test will be in the years to come. can it go from a gimmicky convention centre ride to a genuine travel game changer? many will be watching here in las vegas to see whether this is yet more elon musk hype or something genuinely important. and when it comes to elon musk, it s often hard to tell which that is. that was james underground. now we re moving from cars down there to cars up in the air. yeah, not so long ago, we saw this thing take off in france. and now at this year s ces, paul carter has witnessed another one going up. and you re not going