crazygringo a day ago

You joke, but the reality is going to be dynamic self-driving buses that don't have preset routes or stops but respond to instant demand.

You'll pay $$$ for a nonstop ride into midtown in a dedicated vehicle, or $ for a short dedicated ride to a self-driving bus you only need to wait a few minutes for, and which will drop you off on your destination block.

So yes -- self-driving buses seamlessly integrated into ride sharing are certainly going to be a major part of 21st century urban transportation. Which will save a ton of time compared to current buses.

  • buu700 a day ago

    I could also see potential efficiencies to scheduling your bus stops in advance, maybe with some configuration to set how far you're willing to walk, how long you're willing to wait, how long a grace period you want in the event that you're running late, what time you need to arrive by, how many seats you need, and whether or not you need access to luggage/bike storage. (Each of these values would of course impact the cost of your trip; in the worst case scenario, if your configuration couldn't be reconciled with enough other people's to fit you into an efficient bus ride, then you might just be offered a regular car ride.)

    You could even set that up on a recurring schedule, sort of like a school bus system that dynamically adjusts to everyone's locations and requirements and instantly remaps routes as passengers are added and removed to the schedule.

thfuran a day ago

You need to think bigger. Once we have separate lanes just for the waymos, we don't need them to be regular roadways. We can scale up the waymo even more and size the lane exactly to the vehicle, maybe even radically redesign the road surface for lower rolling resistance. What a future it will be.

  • poemxo a day ago

    We could even install metal rails into the ground to meet this rolling resistence requirement.

  • mlsu a day ago

    This is surely impossible. Such a thing has never been tried, it could never work.

  • Traubenfuchs a day ago

    By forming those waymos like aerodynamic bullets, they could reach ridiculously high speeds on those special lanes. Something like 200 mph should be possible.

    Maybe the waymos could be powered by overhead wires?

    • thfuran a day ago

      I'm having a hard time even picturing such a thing, but I have no doubt that Waymo could manage to operate them in cities across the nation, with sufficient re-training.

    • ripe 21 hours ago

      Now, sir, you're in pure fantasy land. Next you'll be asking for columns of them chained together to carry hundreds of people together, stopping at designated locations.

dgs_sgd a day ago

I would like that just as much as the next guy but the problem of public transport cannot be addressed until you first address the problem of anti social behavior on public transport.

  • freeone3000 a day ago

    That’s just being around people. We gotta live together as people; the idea that we can atomize ourselves away from the society we live in is more disastrous to the shared social fabric than any amount of people listening to music without headphones.

lotsofpulp 10 hours ago

One of the big, big advantages of Waymo is not being in a car with a stranger. I know quite a few women who don’t mind paying extra for Waymo over Uber/Lyft.

Far more people might able to afford a Waymo than a personal (in person) chauffeur.

stuxnet79 a day ago

This already exists outside of America and is abundant and cheap. It's called public transit.

  • astrange a day ago

    Public transit doesn't always have dedicated lanes. That's BRT.

Aaronstotle a day ago

Imagine if we went further and put them on rails and interconnected them. Maybe even built dedicated tunnels for them.