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Transportation

Uber Teams Up With Waymo To Add Robotaxis To Its App (theverge.com) 25

Waymo and Uber announced a new partnership today that will make robotaxis available via the Uber app in Phoenix. The Verge reports: A "set number" of Waymo vehicles will be available to Uber riders and Uber Eats delivery customers in Phoenix, where the Alphabet company recently doubled its service area to 180 square miles. The partnership was described as "multi-year," with the goal of bringing together "Waymo's world-leading autonomous driving technology with the massive scale of Uber's ridesharing and delivery networks."

Katherine Barna, a spokesperson for Waymo, declined to disclose the number of vehicles that would be hail-able through Uber's app, though she did share that the vehicles will not be exclusive to Uber. For example, Phoenix residents can also summon a Waymo vehicle through the company's Waymo One app.

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Uber Teams Up With Waymo To Add Robotaxis To Its App

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  • It is unclear to me how people think the current wave of generative AI will displace so many jobs.

    With self-driving vehicles, on the other hand, it's blindingly obvious.

    • I agree with you with the self-driving vehicles thing. Although I would like to point out that millions of employees are still out there whose job is to basically talk to others to sell something. Call center employees, recruiters, sales, receptionists are going to be a lot cheaper to replace. One program and a AWS server farm has a lot of scaling potential without the $50-200k cost per work truck. Among commercial vehicles, taxis and freight trucks require minimal driver interactions. But a lot of commerci
      • Also, a lot of commercial vehicles have to drive where it snows, or a taxi may have to drop a person off at the end of a long winding driveway only showing as two tire tracks. Pretty sure Waymo's self driving is no where near dealing with that. Will it even know if it can go down that driveway after it has snowed and not get stuck?
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      With self-driving vehicles, on the other hand, it's blindingly obvious.

      I'll say. It's been speculated this was Uber's endgame for years now. Humans driving still was just a stopgap waiting for the tech to catch up. Then start buying up a fleet of vehicles of their own, get rid of the "contractors", and keep all the revenue for themselves (probably planning to have the fleet owned by some shell company to take the legal fall for any accidents during operation).

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday May 25, 2023 @01:18AM (#63549617) Homepage

    Maybe I have an unjustifiably low opinion of humanity, but: how long until the inside of a robo-taxi is trashed? College students barfing in it, druggies shooting up it in, people just leaving their fast-food wrappers behind, etc.?

  • I'm in South Africa. I recently took two rides with $RIDE_HAILING_APP (not Uber, although I've used them too). Both rides could have ended in a fatal crash, one multiple times, the other once. Drivers have a total disregard for traffic rules or any common sense re. basic safety. They seem to ride for multiple services. So in future I'll avoid using them all - if I next have an in-hospital procedure that involves anesthesia, I'll probably just take the chance and drive myself (and lie to the personnel that i

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