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Dude it's been here for two years. I see 20 a day. One of their parking pods is across the street in a business park. White Jaguars. I've taken a few rides. They observe the speed limit so everyone passes you. Not on the highways yet. |
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Waymo’s robotaxis are now available to everyone in Los Angeles
Waymo is ditching its waitlist in Los Angeles, much like it did before in Phoenix and San Francisco, making its fully autonomous vehicles available to anyone who downloads the company’s Waymo One app. There are still some geographic limitations with which to contend: Waymo only operates within 80 square miles of Los Angeles County, which includes neighborhoods such as Hollywood, Chinatown, Westwood, Marina del Rey, Mar Vista, and Playa Vista. Still, it was a sign of the company’s growing confidence in its technology, especially after securing a record $5.6 billion investment round, led by its parent company, Alphabet, to help fund its next phase of growth. Waymo recently said it was conducting 150,000 paid trips and driving over 1 million fully autonomous miles every week. https://www.theverge.com/2024/11/12/...ent=newsletter |
Cruise to slash workforce by nearly 50% after GM cuts funding to robotaxi operations
Autonomous vehicle company Cruise is laying off “nearly” 50% of its workforce — cuts that extend to the CEO and several other top executives — as it prepares to shut down operations. What remains of Cruise will move under parent company General Motors as the automaker directs its resources toward improving its hands-free driver assistance system Super Cruise — and eventually rolls out personal autonomous vehicles.
The layoffs were announced by Craig Glidden, Cruise’s president and chief administrative officer, according to a companywide email that TechCrunch has viewed and verified with sources. Individuals who were affected received a separate email from Cruise Chief Human Resources Officer Nilka Thomas. CEO Marc Whitten will depart from Cruise this week, along with Thomas, Chief Safety Officer Steve Kenner, and Global Head of Public Policy Rob Grant. Mo Elshenawy, Cruise’s chief technologist, will stay on through the end of April to help with the transition. “As a result of the change in strategy we announced in December, today we will part with nearly 50% of our Cruise employee base, through a reduction in force,” the email from Glidden reads. “Anyone who has been through a reduction knows that days like this are extremely difficult, and today is no different. With our move away from the ride-hail business and toward providing autonomous vehicles to customers alongside GM, our staffing and resource needs have dramatically changed. Today’s actions align our teams to our new needs, and focus our efforts on continuing to build world-class AV technology.” As of January 2024, Cruise employed about 2,100 people, according to sources who based the estimates on the number of members on a Slack channel for company announcements. That means more than 1,000 employees might have been impacted by the layoffs. “Cruise shared the difficult decision to part ways with approximately 50% of its workforce,” the company wrote in an emailed statement. “We are grateful for their passion and contributions to help us reach this stage, and our focus is on supporting them into their next chapter with severance packages and career support. While not an easy decision, we are focused on combining efforts with General Motors to accelerate autonomy at scale on personal autonomous vehicles.” https://techcrunch.com/2025/02/04/cr...78644b3aaad4a0 |
Waymo moving into Houston
This should be a good test for the driverless cars as I hear Houston has horrible traffic.
Waymo One begins autonomous rides in Austin, Texas, exclusively through Uber Starting today, the fully autonomous Waymo One ride service is available exclusively to customers in Austin, Texas through the Uber app. Today’s news builds upon Waymo’s existing partnership with Uber and is a milestone in the robotaxi startup’s expansion to new cities around the US. As promised, robotaxi developer Waymo is expanding its Waymo One service to new US cities. While much of the world is still not completely sold on the plausibility of full-fledged robotaxi operations across major metropolitan areas, Waymo is trekking forward in its operations and has the data to prove it is, in fact, safer in many ways. https://electrek.co/2025/03/04/waymo...78644b3aaad4a0 |
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waymo's all over phoenix
Good luck in the snow. |
Yes, it is my understanding they have stuck to snow free environments and places that they have mapped in very high detail.
A great start and an impressive accomplishment. Still a ways to go before a truly driverless society. The hacking or just software failure is, or at least should be, a concern. |
The other thing that killed me is-that is a lot of technology on and in a car. I am sure they are electric, but makes it heavier.
Would love to know the cost to run one. |
You're looking for 5 nines of reliability. 99.999% reliable.
It's such a vehicle existed and it was big enough I just live in it. |
Early this morning I drove from Tempe to the Scottsdale Airpark to pick up my mail. Without exaggeration I passed and saw at least 12 or more Waymo Jaguars out making the rounds.
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Body by Plymouth.... Soul by Satan.... |
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