(no title)
blakes | 4 years ago
Most likely this app was not navigation. Remember, feature phone, probably had less than a couple hundred MB of memory for the entire device. I assume the app would just give the taxi driver address details and what not.
mwcampbell|4 years ago
duped|4 years ago
In the major urban areas I've lived, every cab drive would start with "take this street to that street" or "head towards major landmark."
Even in cities with decent grids you couldn't trust a cabbie to take the fastest route.
wolverine876|4 years ago
> Even in cities with decent grids you couldn't trust a cabbie to take the fastest route.
I heard these stories and would direct cabs the same way, until I realized that the cab drivers were right and I was wrong, and that the depictions of them as shady thieves who would purposely take you out of your way, or were horribly incompetent, were urban myths.
And I was being disrespectful to the drivers, to presume that and treat them that way. I don't treat other service industry people that way. And if you think about it, cab drives make more from a flag drop than a longer trip - as one cab driver said, 'people say these things to me - do you know how much I make for an extra few blocks? 50 cents? And what is my take of that?'
I learned to trust and respect the cab driver, who after all were human beings, and drove around all day long, and like most people was honest and considerate.
Talanes|4 years ago
How did Cabbies know where to show up when called?
Or did they not? I only ever took Taxis from places I could flag them down pre-Uber.
bobthepanda|4 years ago
wolverine876|4 years ago
In what city? London cab drivers famously were (are?) required to pass a memorization test, but in American cities I've had many cab drivers who didn't know their way around. They've been generally better than Lyft/Uber drivers.
evgen|4 years ago
MagnumOpus|4 years ago
jmkb|4 years ago