Career city manager. CalBerkeley faculty. Portfolio manager. California Story writer. Painter who takes pictures. Once had a Velvet Underground cover band.
@jefftangx Because it has good management practices baked into its DNA thanks to practices introduced forty years ago by Lou Turpen and, later, the legendary John Martin.
At Cruise I built robotaxis that completed 250k driverless rides, including the first rides ever in a major city.
With the Tesla event coming up, many people have asked for my thoughts. I truly hope they get robotaxis working. Autonomy is the fastest and most effective way to eliminate car accidents, and we desperately need this.
I don’t know what we will see tonight. What I know is that it takes a non-trivial amount of work to go from making a car mostly drive without interventions to safe, robust, and legally compliant robotaxi network that meshes well with local communities.
So here are 15 key things to look for from new robotaxi players:
1) Getting stuck - is there a method for remote operators to relocate unoccupied vehicles that are blocking traffic or emergency vehicles? What happens if there are no available remote operators and the vehicle becomes stuck?
2) Detecting collisions - is there a high recall system that can detect collisions, including minor contact with cycles or pedestrians? Does this comply with local, state, and federal reporting requirements?
3) AI override - is there a way for remote confirmation of critical, long tail decisions (is it safe to stop on these railroad tracks, was that a collision or not, is it ok to enter this emergency scene, is that officer telling me to stop)?
4) First responders - is there a way to remotely unlock cars and provide access to first responders who need to relocate a stuck vehicle? Is there a training program in place? Is there live phone support?
5) Connectivity dropouts - do these cars have Starlink, cellularly redundancy, or some other way to remain connected? What happens if telemetry is lost for an active but unoccupied vehicle and it gets stuck?
6) Sensor cleaning - is there a way to clear blocked or dirty sensors? Are various forms of degraded performance detected and mitigated?
7) Degraded states - in the event of a computer, sensor, or software failure, can the vehicle utilize a backup system to safely pull out of traffic or otherwise reach a safe stopping location? Is there coverage for all known or plausible faults? Will this work properly on highways where pulling over is not necessarily a safe option?
8) Congestion control - will vehicle take diverse routes to avoid creating traffic jams? If 20 vehicles arrive at a busy concert venue is there any “air traffic control” to ensure they don’t get stuck in a cluster?
9) Emergency vehicle detection - do vehicles correctly pull over or yield to emergency vehicles? Can they traverse active emergency scenes when necessary or appropriate?
10) Long tail detections - do they avoid flooded areas, downed power lines, wet cement, caution tape, crossing guard hand motions, open pits or manhole covers?
11) Liability - who is at fault when a vehicle causes property damage or injury? Are there high recall data logging systems in place as needed to absolve the owner of liability when the other driver was truly at fault?
12) Regulation and permitting - will these vehicles operate in states with public reporting requirements and meet all requirements? If vehicles do not have a steering wheel or traditional controls, will they be self-certified by Tesla as FMVSS compliant?
13) Bad weather - does the system correctly degrade its performance in the event of sudden changes in weather? What happens if a trip is in progress when weather becomes severe? Will it refuse to operate if conditions are too severe?
14) Pullovers - does the system avoid pulling over in bus stops, restricted areas, or in front of private driveways? What happens someone needs the car to be moved from their driveway?
15) Local laws - does the system obey local traffic laws, and who pays the ticket if there is a violation?
Tesla will undoubtedly solve all of these eventually. Have they done it yet? Who knows. I’m still very excited to see what they’ve been cooking up.
@moseskagan Don’t disagree but let’s not forget that Americans used their government as a an authoritarian and thuggish tool to control and enslave the lives of more than four million people — a full 15% of the population — for the first ~100 years of the nation’s history.
We ain’t perfect.
…character itself in the author’s debut memoir, which spans nearly 100 years. Each chapter is set in a uniquely picturesque California spot, with the narrative covering the years from the Great Depression through the Covid-19 pandemic. The most enthralling passages are…