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TigeriusKirk | 1 year ago

I'm curious why they can't pick up and drop off at exact locations, as long as the location is in their operating boundaries.

discuss

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vineyardmike|1 year ago

Because they have courtesy to not block traffic. Anecdotally, drivers are also MUCH more aggressive near them, so I’d be pretty nervous as a pedestrian getting in/out of one near heavy traffic. I’m not handicap in any way, and I’m totally fine walking to the corner of a city block to get in it, in exchange for a much safer ride than an Uber.

I’ve never had it be more than a few hundred feet - usually it’s 2-3 cars away where it can parallel park on the other side of an intersection in the WORST case. Oh I guess they do avoid some of the intense AF hills but I’ve had Uber drivers do the same.

wanderingstan|1 year ago

In my experience they are very strict about finding a “safe” place to pick up and drop off, which often means turning onto a small side street or looking for a gap in parked cars. They won’t block traffic like a Lyft/Uber driver might.

crazygringo|1 year ago

> They won’t block traffic like a Lyft/Uber driver might.

Wow, then I don't know how they'd ever expand to NYC.

In most areas there's no such thing as a "safe place" that doesn't block traffic.

If there are sides of the road that aren't traffic (or bicycle) lanes, then they're taken up by parking.

Taxis, Ubers, delivery trucks -- literally everything just stops in the street (or bicycle lane) and traffic temporarily goes around it.

tanvach|1 year ago

The app forces you to pick locations that the car can park safely (no double parking) that's closest to the requested locations. They can be 1-2 minutes walk.

Not a big deal for us to be honest, except when going to the theaters in SF, where the car can stop a block away in sketchy Tenderloin.

TulliusCicero|1 year ago

Human drivers are willing to break the law for pick ups and drop offs, and as a society we largely tolerate that as long as it's not egregious in terms of safety or blocking others.

But programming a robot to deliberately break the law is uncomfortable for people to think about.

elsonrodriguez|1 year ago

This might lead to a beneficial feedback loop for some traffic laws.

BurningFrog|1 year ago

When an Uber is near people wave to it, and the driver can stop where they are.

The Waymos probably don't have that kind of social skills.

throwaway48476|1 year ago

They should have flashing lights and stop in the middle of the road like school busses do.