←back to thread

281 points nharada | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.219s | source
Show context
mmmlinux ◴[] No.45902647[source]
I was in SF a few weekend ago and rode both Waymo and normal Lyft style taxi cars. the Waymo was a better experience in every single way. One of the Lyfts i was in drove on the shoulder for a while like it was a lane. The Waymos were just smooth consistent driving. No aggressive driving to get you dumped off so they can get to the next fair.
replies(12): >>45902760 #>>45902967 #>>45902998 #>>45903093 #>>45903449 #>>45904903 #>>45904913 #>>45905127 #>>45905613 #>>45906080 #>>45906696 #>>45908668 #
LZ_Khan ◴[] No.45903093[source]
Waymo is overly conservative last time I checked. Driving the speed limit basically means getting to your destination twice as slow.
replies(5): >>45903135 #>>45903152 #>>45903168 #>>45903437 #>>45907764 #
superfrank ◴[] No.45903152[source]
I've ridden in Waymos in LA, SF, and Phoenix. You're right about them being a bit conservative, but only in Phoenix did I feel like that really slowed my ride. In LA and SF there was so much traffic that even if cars pulled away from us, we'd catch them at the next red light.
replies(2): >>45903166 #>>45903885 #
1. jessriedel ◴[] No.45903885[source]
I check Google maps ETA estimates when I get in a car in SF; they are accurate for Uber or Lyfts, but Waymos are absolutely slower there. This is especially, but not exclusively, true for routes where a human would take the 101 or 280, for obvious reasons.