| ▲ | themafia 3 hours ago |
| > achieved the abilities they have with great safety numbers. Driving around in good weather and never on freeways is not much of an achievement. Having vehicles that continually interfere in active medical and police cordons isn't particularly safe, even though there haven't been terrible consequences from it, yet. If all you're doing is observing a single number you're drastically under prepared for what happens when they expand this program beyond these paltry self imposed limits. > Some of us call them out. You should be working to get their certificate pulled at the government level. If this program is so dangerous then why wouldn't you do that? > And they seem to keep providing evidence we may be right. It's tragic you can't apply the same logic in isolation to Waymo. |
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| ▲ | bryanlarsen 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| Freeways are far easier for a robot to drive on than streets. Driving on freeways would significantly lower Waymo's accident per mile rate. The difference is that accidents on a freeway are far more likely to be fatal than accidents on a city street. Waymo didn't avoid freeways because they were hard, they avoided them because they were dangerous. |
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| ▲ | MBCook an hour ago | parent | next [-] | | > Driving on freeways would significantly lower Waymo's accident per mile rate. Maybe. We don’t know for sure. You seem to frame that a bit like Waymo is cheating or padding their numbers. But I see that as them taking appropriate care and avoiding stupid risks. Anyway as someone else pointed out they recently started doing freeways in Austin so we’ll know soon. | |
| ▲ | mikkupikku 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Freeway accidents, due to their nature, are a lot harder to ignore and underreport than accidentally bumping or scraping into another car at low speeds. It's like using murder rates to estimate real crime rates because murders, unlike most other crimes, are far more likely to be properly documented. |
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| ▲ | phainopepla2 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Waymo started rolling out freeway trips in some cities late last year |
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| ▲ | irl_zebra 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Elon definitely has this cult of personality around him where people will jump in and defend his companies (as a stand-in for him) on the internet, even in the face of some common sense observations. I don't get the sense that anything you've said is particularly reasonable outside of being lured in by Elon's personality. |
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| ▲ | mikkupikku 3 hours ago | parent [-] | | This is absolutely true. There is a flip side however, where people who dislike Elon Musk will sometimes talk up his competitors, seemingly for no good reason other than them being at least nominally competitors to Musk companies. Nikola and Spinlaunch are two that come to mind; quite blatant scams that have gotten far too much attention because they aren't Musk companies. Tesla FSD is crap. But I also think we wouldn't see quite so much praise of Waymo unless Tesla also had aspirations in this domain. Genuinely, what is so great about a robo taxi even if it works well? Do people really hate immigrants this much? | | |
| ▲ | largbae 16 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | It isn't about hatred of the human drivers for me. Waymo's service is so safe and consistent that I would trust my 10-yr-old to take a ride in it solo if it were permitted by the ToS. Most Uber/Lyft/etc. rides are just as safe, but due to the inconsistency I would never reach that level of trust. I don't live in a covered area, but when I am in range I will gladly pay 10-20% more for a Waymo ride than an Uber/Lyft/etc. | |
| ▲ | MBCook an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | I think we’d see praise, but maybe not as much. Every time it’s clear Tesla screwed up it’s an incredibly obvious thing to do to compare them to the number one self driving car out there.
Tesla provides such an obvious anchor point for comparisons it’s really hard for Waymo not to come out on top. What’s so great about a robotaxi even if it works well? It’s neat. As a technology person I like it exists. I don’t know past that. I’ve never used one they’re not deployed where I live. | |
| ▲ | ericd 30 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | | Kind of like how people maintained that LLMs were trash well past the point where it was obvious that that wasn't true anymore, I often wonder how many people who talk confidently about Tesla FSD have actually used a recent version. Because when we tried a recent FSD and Waymo, we found FSD to be excellent in handling pretty complex scenarios, including one of the worst, a busy airport loop, and we found Waymo to behave a bit weirdly (but still good). But FSD clearly isn't the dumpster fire that people try to make it out to be. v12 was a bit sketchy, and I was too nervous to use it past the first couple of times I tried it, but v14 is great. |
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| ▲ | UltraSane 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| Waymo overall has a FANTASTIC safety record and has been improving steadily. You can't say the same about Tesla's FSD and Robotaxi. LIDAR gives Waymo a fundamental advantage. |