"I believe 90% of the future value of Tesla is going to be autonomous and robotics," Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives told the BBC this week, adding that the Austin launch would be "a watershed moment".
Ms Patterson has denied this allegation repeatedly throughout the week, often becoming emotional as she told the court she loved them like her own family.She has also repeatedly told the court that she realised, in the days after the lunch, that the beef Wellington may have accidentally included dried mushrooms she had foraged, which were kept in a container with store-bought ones.
She lied to the police and health authorities about the source of the mushrooms, as well as her decision to dispose of a food dehydrator, because she was scared of being blamed for the guests' dire illnesses, she said."Surely if you had loved them, then you would have immediately notified the medical authorities?" Dr Rogers asked.Ms Patterson said she didn't tell doctors about the possibility that wild mushrooms had been unintentionally included because the lunch guests were already getting treatment for death cap mushroom poisoning.
"Even after you were discharged from hospital you did not tell a single person that there may have been foraged mushroom used in the meal," Dr Rogers said."Instead you got up, you drove your children to school... and drove home. And then you got rid of the dehydrator."
"Correct," Ms Patterson said.
The court heard there'd been conflict between Ms Patterson and her husband, and Dr Rogers suggested the accused was still angry at her in-laws for taking their son's side.Media strategies, indigenous languages and the future of television, with a Celtic twist, have been on the agenda at the Celtic Media Festival this week.
Some of the top media figures from Celtic nations and regions all over Europe came together for the annual event in Newquay, Cornwall.Over the course of Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday attendees have had the chance to network
of panel discussions, workshops, pitching masterclasses and the Torc Awards.Cathy MacDonald from BBC Radio nan Gàidheal was one of the judges and praised "a growing confidence in our respective languages, enriched by that awareness of our shared cultural heritage within the Celtic nations."