▲ | troupo 3 days ago | |||||||
> What it isn't is fundamentally true or revealing. Well, they are not a solution to transport problems, or to traffic jams. Yes, they can be complementary to other types of transportation. Yes, companies will enshittify them beyond measure if/when they reach a certain proportion of cars. > It's recognising that humans have diverse and varying needs for interaction and privacy. No. I don't think this was even uttered by any of these companies. Waymo claims to be committed to safety: https://waymo.com/about/ Tesla: stress and safety https://www.tesla.com/fsd Zoox: purpose-built taxi shaping the future of transportation https://zoox.com/about | ||||||||
▲ | JumpCrisscross 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> they are not a solution to transport problems, or to traffic jams Nor to world hunger. > companies will enshittify them beyond measure A hypothetical applicable to every mode of transit, private and public. > don't think this was even uttered by any of these companies Things can be true without being in a corporate press release. (Also, you're the one who originally argued these services' "entire social context is 'never encounter another human as you go from A to B'." If not being in a press release is an argument against one, it 's an argument against the other.) Though, in this case, it has been said: "Waymo gives you your own personal space to focus on more meaningful things" [1]. | ||||||||
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