frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Show HN: FPGA Based IBM-PC-XT

https://bit-hack.net/2025/11/10/fpga-based-ibm-pc-xt/
1•bit-hack•15s ago•0 comments

Show HN: Replace Your macOS Dock

https://www.flowylabs.ai
2•talksik•1m ago•0 comments

Discovering orphaned binaries in /usr/sbin on Fedora 42

https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/linux/Fedora42OrphanUsrSbinBinaries
1•speckx•3m ago•0 comments

U of T hires three top U.S. scholars, announces $24M recruitment plan

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/education/article-u-of-t-hires-three-top-us-scholars-plans...
1•Teever•3m ago•0 comments

.NET 10 File Based Apps Demonstration (C# Scripting)

https://www.appsoftware.com/blog/net-10-file-based-apps-demonstration-c-scripting
1•appsoftware•4m ago•0 comments

Odds of asteroid 2024 YR4 hitting the moon may rise to 30 per cent

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2503607-odds-of-asteroid-2024-yr4-hitting-the-moon-may-rise-...
1•belter•4m ago•0 comments

SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccines sensitize tumours to immune checkpoint blockade

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09655-y
1•doener•5m ago•0 comments

Enshittification and the Rot Economy: Cory Doctorow and Ed Zitron [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tz71pIWbFyc
1•laserlight•6m ago•0 comments

Satya Nadella – How Microsoft Is Preparing for AGI

https://www.dwarkesh.com/p/satya-nadella-2
1•ctoth•7m ago•0 comments

SaaS Black Friday Deals

https://github.com/trungdq88/Awesome-Black-Friday-Cyber-Monday
1•m_0_r_g_a_n_•7m ago•0 comments

Read the Jeffrey Epstein Emails That Mention Trump

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/11/12/us/epstein-emails.html
5•ceejayoz•9m ago•0 comments

EU readies fresh investigation into Google over news publisher rankings

https://www.ft.com/content/644edfe6-ccba-466a-bc93-e82f59e124df
1•donohoe•9m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Rando – Random photo picker/slideshow for local drives (100% private)

http://randopicker.com
1•interapp•9m ago•0 comments

Kaspersky Antivirus Is Now Available for Linux. Will You Use It?

https://itsfoss.com/news/kaspersky-for-linux/
2•speckx•10m ago•0 comments

Why China's central bank is quietly leading the world on climate action

https://www.manchester.ac.uk/about/news/chinas-central-bank-is-quietly-leading-the-world-on-clima...
1•gnufx•10m ago•0 comments

Pioneer Anomaly

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pioneer_anomaly
1•ugur2nd•11m ago•1 comments

A House of Dynamite is good on nuclear threat – and great on smartphone reliance

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/nov/10/house-of-dynamite-nuclear-warfare-smartphone-addiction
1•edward•11m ago•0 comments

Show HN: AI interviewer that replaces static feedback forms

https://diaform.io
1•vdszds•11m ago•0 comments

Project Euler

https://projecteuler.net
3•swatson741•13m ago•1 comments

Prebake: A Straightforward Developer Platform for Kubernetes

https://github.com/prebake/prebake
1•ryan0x44•13m ago•1 comments

Let the Mind-Control Games Begin

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/12/science/brain-implants-technology-disability.html
1•pretext•14m ago•0 comments

Vortex – An extensible, state of the art columnar file format

https://github.com/vortex-data/vortex
2•rickette•16m ago•0 comments

GoDaddy is auctioning a 15-year-old .org from an FOSS volunteer group – help?

http://somosazucar.org/
3•icarito•16m ago•3 comments

New Glenn Mission NG-2

https://www.blueorigin.com/missions/ng-2
1•JPLeRouzic•17m ago•0 comments

Renowned exoplanet researcher is bringing quest to find explanets back Canada

https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/sara-seager-uoft-exoplanet-research-9.6971176
1•Teever•17m ago•1 comments

Astringent flavanol fires locus-noradrenergic system, regulates autonomic nerves

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2665927125002266
1•PaulHoule•18m ago•0 comments

The Duchess Who Invented Science Fiction

https://compellingsciencefiction.com/posts/the-duchess-who-invented-science-fiction.html
2•davnicwil•20m ago•0 comments

NLnet's €21.6M fund for open-source internet projects

https://nlnet.nl/commonsfund/
2•handystudio•22m ago•1 comments

Veilid: Distributed Decentralized Framework (From CultoftheDeadCow)

https://veilid.com/
1•0xbadcafebee•22m ago•0 comments

We analyzed 47,000 ChatGPT conversations. Here's what people use it for

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/11/12/how-people-use-chatgpt-data
5•pseudolus•22m ago•2 comments
Open in hackernews

Waymo begins freeway rides for the public

https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/12/waymo-robotaxis-are-now-giving-rides-on-freeways-in-these-3-cities/
96•nharada•1h ago

Comments

NullHypothesist•1h ago
This is a huge sign of confidence that they think they can do this safely and at scale... Freeways might appear "easy" on the surface, but there are all sorts of long tail edge-cases that make them insanely tricky to do confidently without a driver. This will unlock a lot for them with all of the smaller US cities (where highways are essential) they've announced plans for over the next year or so.
NullHypothesist•1h ago
Looks like they've opened up SJC Airport, too! SFO imminent?
terminalshort•1h ago
Freeways are easier than surface streets. The reason they held off allowing highways is because Waymo wants to minimize the probability of death for PR purposes. They figure they can get away with a lot of wrecks as long as they don't kill people.
jordanb•56m ago
There's also the risk of a phantom breaking event causing a big pileup. The PR of a Waymo causing a large cascading accident would be horrible.
xnx•23m ago
Do Waymo's phantom brake? Given the number of trips hey do I would imagine there would be a ton of videos if that was happening.
razingeden•14m ago
they brake to “suss out” certain things, that ive noticed:

construction workers, delivery vehicles, traffic cones.. nothing unreasonable for it to approach with caution, brake for, and move around.

im in a line of work where the waymo usually gets about 2 feet away from a utility truck and then sits there confused for awhile before it goes away.

it usually gets very close to these hazards before making that maneuver.

it seems like having a flashing utility strobe really messes with it and it gets extra cautious and weird around us. and it should be respectful of emergency lights but-

i would see a problem here if it decided to do this on a freeway , five feet away from a pulled over cop or someone changing a tire. i really hope it wouldnt do that.

most people spot the hazard and change lanes well in advance. that hasnt been my experience with a waymo in local driving conditions but we’ll find out.

we need the lights, uh, were almost getting creamed by drunks and people texting every single day. even with them. and i have zero incidents of a waymo careening around a corner at us yet. but it sure does spazz out and sit there for a long time over the emergency lights before it decides what to do

jordanb•3m ago
> sits there confused for awhile before it goes away.

Probably what you're witnessing is the car sitting in exception state until a human remote driver gets assigned

repsilat•42m ago
"Easier" is probably the right one-word generalization, but worth noting that there are quite different challenges. Stopping distance is substantially greater, so "dead halt" isn't as much of a panacea as it is in dense city environments. And you need to have good perception of things further away, especially in front of you, which affects the sensors you use.
andy99•33m ago
Also on surface roads you can basically stop in the middle of the street and be annoying but not particularly dangerous. You can’t just stop safely dead in the middle of a freeway.
QuadmasterXLII•17m ago
It sounds like you are saying freeways are easier than surface streets if you don’t care about killing a reasonably small number of people during testing. That is an unusual definition of easier.
0_____0•55m ago
Waymo (prev. Chauffeur) were cruising freeways long before they were doing city streets. Problem was that you can't do revenue autonomous service with freeway-only driving.

The real reason I see for not running freeways until now is that the physical operational domain of for street-level autonomous operations was not large enough to warrant validating highway driving to their current standard.

embedding-shape•38m ago
> Freeways might appear "easy" on the surface, but there are all sorts of long tail edge-cases that make them insanely tricky to do confidently without a driver

Maybe my memory is failing me, but I seem to remember people saying the exact opposite here on HN when Tesla first announced/showed off their "self-driving but not really self-driving" features, saying it'll be very easy to get working on the highways, but then everything else is the tricky stuff.

notatoad•30m ago
the difficult part of the highways is the interchanges, not the straight shots between interchanges. and iirc, tesla didn't do interchanges at the time people were criticizing them for only doing the easiest part of self-driving.
xnx•25m ago
Highways are on average a much more structured and consistent environment, but every single weird thing (pedestrians, animals, debris, flooding) that occurs on streets also happens on highways. When you're doing as many trips and miles as Waymo, once-in-a-lifetime exceptions happen every day.

On highways the kinetic energy is much greater (Waymo's reaction time is superhuman, but the car can't brake any harder.) and there isn't the option to fail safe (stop in place) like their is on normal roads.

jerlam•9m ago
One of the first high-profile Tesla fatalities was on a highway, where the vehicle misunderstood a left exit and crashed into a concrete barrier.

https://enewspaper.latimes.com/infinity/article_share.aspx?g...

lumens•23m ago
Perhaps more a reaction to pressure from Tesla; the latest FSD builds show full autonomy is coming very soon. Without highway driving, Waymo would quickly be seen as a distant second in the race when the safety driver is removed from Robotaxis in Austin (supposedly before EOY 2025).
eloncuck•12m ago
You Tesla/Elon stans crack me up. "2 more weeks" has been the claim for literal decades at this point.
lumens•5m ago
Truly curious - have you tried it recently?
sjducb•22m ago
Slow roads are easier because you can rely on a simple emergency breaking system for safety. You have a radar that looks directly in front of the car and slams on the breaks if you’re about to crash. This prevents almost all accidents below 35mph.

The emergency breaking system gives you a lot of room for error in the rest of the system.

Once you’re going faster than 35mph this approach no longer works. You have lots of objects on the pavement that are false positives for the emergency breaking system so you have to turn it off.

ddp26•17m ago
I agree, but it's funny to think that Project Chauffeur (as it was known then) was doing completely driverless freeway circuits in the bay area as far back as 2012! Back when they couldn't do the simplest things with traffic lights.

I think anyone back then would be totally shocked that urban and suburban driving launched to the public before freeway driving.

kappi•17m ago
This is correct. Freeways have lot of edge cases of hitting random objects and it becomes serious issue. Check the youtube video of bearded Tesla whose car hit a random metal object making them replace the entire battery pack.
bronco21016•53m ago
I don’t live in a served market yet so I haven’t yet tried Waymo. However I have used SuperCruise and BlueCruise from GM and Ford.

What I’ve noticed from those other systems is that a human in the loop makes the system so much more comfortable. I’ve had times where I can see the red lights ahead and the system is not yet slowing because the car immediately in front of me isn’t slowing yet. It’s unsettling when the automated system brakes at the last moment.

Because of this experience the highway has been the line in the sand for me personally. Surface streets where you’re rarely traveling more than 45 mph are far less likely to lead to catastrophic injury vs a mistake at 70 mph.

I don’t think Waymo is necessarily playing fast and loose with their tech but it will be interesting how this plays out. A few fatal accidents could be a fatal PR blow to their roll out. I’m also very curious to see how the system will handle human takeover. Stopping in the middle of a freeway is extremely dangerous. Other drivers can have a lapse in attention and getting smoked by a semi traveling 65 mph is not going to be a good day.

huevosabio•51m ago
In my experience, Waymo's driving style is more comfortable than most humans.
Workaccount2•47m ago
I'm not sure about Supercruise (although I am pretty sure its the same), but I know blue cruise is only available in places where there are no stop lights, and that is pretty much 95% interstates only. Supercruise and blue cruise are way under Tesla's FSD, and Tesla is a bit of a ways under Waymo.

You may be thinking of the ACC these cars offer, which is a standard feature, but different than their premium "self-driving" services they offer.

rubicon33•43m ago
Honestly you need to try Waymo. It’s in a league of its own.
jjfoooo4•15m ago
Waymo is in another league compared to every other autpilot system out there - I've used Tesla, Toyota, and Cruise before it got shut down.

The political climate is VERY suspicious of autonomous vehicles, but they most serious incident I can really recall was the recent one where a car ran over a cat. You can see the reaction here: https://www.reddit.com/r/cats/comments/1omortk/the_shrine_to...

If the biggest black mark against the company is running over a cat on the street at 11:40 PM (according to Waymo, after it darted under the car), I feel pretty good.

advisedwang•14m ago
Waymo isn't relying only on speed matching the car in front, so your experience with SuperCruise and BlueCruise doesn't extrapolate to Waymo.
s1mon•49m ago
How will Waymos handle speed limits on highways? In the city, they seem to stick to the rules. A large percentage of drivers in the bay area, including non-emergency police, drive well above the legal limit regularly. Unless Waymo sticks to the slow lane, it's going to be a weird issue.
tintor•44m ago
That is the problem for "well above the legal limit" speeding drivers.

Hopefully highway Waymos can automatically detect and report such aggressive drivers in real-time.

embedding-shape•36m ago
Indeed, and I'm guessing the Waymos have forward facing cameras + know their own speed? Feels like a natural jump to begin automatically reporting cars that are speeding past them to the police, with a camera snapshot of the plate, with everything else censored.
dogman144•30m ago
Why is that the problem for above the legal speed limit drivers?

A slow fleet of Waymo’s will impact your average 5-10 over same as your 20 over, and that’ll collectively impact traffic.

The implicit assumption you and many other in tech share is humans must adapt to the tech protocol, and not the other way around.

After 20 years of growing negative externalities from this general approach, which I see baked into your comment - are we seriously about to let this occur all over again with a new version of tech?

Fool me once, fool me twice… I think we’re at fool me 10 times and do it again in terms of civic trust of tech in its spaces.

testdummy13•5m ago
As long as they don't sit in the passing lane, I don't see how a fleet of vehicles moving at a consistent speed and not driving erratically will have any more negative impact on traffic than a human driver. Like other's have mentioned, it might actually improve traffic as you don't have people speeding up to get close to a person and then quickly slowing down, causing "phantom" traffic jams.

Also, if the Waymos are following the laws, and that causes problems... then maybe those laws should be changed? Especially if most drivers already don't follow the laws.

andy99•30m ago
Sounds like you’ve never driven on a highway. Taking some imaginary moral high ground doesn’t make one any less dangerous.
gs17•26m ago
That's a great way to make them targets for vandalism. I'm in a city they're about to get in to (Nashville), and if the snitch-mobile tattled on everyone (the highways here that are officially 55 are "really" 75 with some exceptions, and going the speed limit can end up being more dangerous), sensors would start getting bullet holes.

Of course, unlike the normal car break-ins here, the cops might do something about them.

toss1•19m ago
No, it is not only a problem for "'well above the legal limit' speeding drivers"; it is a problem for you, and the solution requires more thought than the "just follow the rules" that you put into your post.

There are many instances where the entire mass of traffic across three or four lanes is 10-20mph above the stated limit, e.g., going 75-85mph in a 66mph posted area.

It may not be legal, but it is reality. And when it is everyone, it is not only "aggressive" drivers. It is everyone. And one driver thinking they will change the situation only makes it worse.

If you are going 20-30mph below the speed of traffic you are at least as much a hazard to yourself and everyone around you as going 20-30mph above the speed of traffic, and the stated speed limit has nothing to do with it.

Going substantially slower than traffic, even in the slow lane with flashers on, nearly all of the threats and actions are overtaking you and coming from behind you, meaning to see and react to most of the developing situations, you must be driving through your rear-view mirrors.

And the situation you create can be very deadly, as one car can change lanes to avoid you, revealing you late to the next car, which barely changes lanes, and further reduces time for the next, who hits you and starts the pile-up.

It is not only their problem, it is yours too. Sure, you may be legally in the right, but you have still caused yourself to get hit.

What my grandfather explained to me is still correct:

"You never want to be dead right."

mkinsella•43m ago
In the few times I’ve seen a Waymo on the freeway in the Bay Area, they have always been in the slow lane and driving 55-65 MPH.
jeffbee•42m ago
If you watch the videos that insiders have been posting, it never exceeds the speed limits.

If you watch the videos more carefully, you will notice the people who speed by at 85 MPH later enter the screen again, because that is the nature of freeway traffic.

I predict that a few hundred of these on the road will measurably improve safety and decrease severe congestion by being that one sane driver that defuses stop-and-go catastrophes. In fact I think CHP should just contract with them to pace 101 in waves.

aworks•33m ago
I was on 101 during evening rush hour, speeding along like everyone. Then I saw brake lights from a Waymo. Later followed by all the surrounding cars. Interesting that it was the first to detect a slowdown.
gs17•22m ago
> In fact I think CHP should just contract with them to pace 101 in waves.

"Waves" are really what we would want them to prevent: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_wave

The autonomous cars can prevent these waves from forming, which would get people to their destinations faster than speeding.

cortesoft•31m ago
Luckily this won't be a problem in Los Angeles, because traffic prevents you from ever going over the speed limit.
circuit10•16m ago
As someone who doesn’t drive but has done a UK theory test - aren’t you supposed to stick to the “slow lane” (no matter how fast you’re going) unless you’re overtaking? And that’s why it’s not actually called the “fast lane” but the “passing lane”. So I don’t see why you would be in the passing lane unless you’re going faster than others anyway. And there are plenty of lorries and coaches (trucks and buses in US terms?) that are physically limited to below the speed limit anyway

Though I’ve heard people treat it differently in the US

jjfoooo4•5m ago
Yes. People do in fact safely drive the speed limit.

If "we'll have too many cars on the freeway following the speed limit" ranks as a serious concern, I think we've really lost the plot.

I recently drove by a fatal accident that had just happened on the freeway. A man on the street had been ripped in half, and his body was lying on the road. I can't imagine the scene is all that unlike the 40 thousand other US road deaths that happen every year.

As a driver I'm willing to accept some minor inconvenience to improve the situation. As a rider I trust Waymo's more than human drivers.

tfehring•5m ago
You’re correct. There are people in the US who drive in the passing lane without passing, but most consider that a bad practice, as it makes roads both less efficient and less safe.
m0llusk•49m ago
All of the serious problems I have seen with Waymo navigation so far have had to do with busy urban streets. Trying to make use of blocked non through way alleys, turning around in driveways when other vehicles are exiting, coming to a complete dead stop on busy one way streets, failing to brake predictably for pedestrians walking into lanes, suddenly backing up a half block from stopped at a red light in order to change lanes, and so on. Freeways are a simplified driving environment that should suit current technologies well.
tanseydavid•12m ago
>> suddenly backing up a half block from stopped at a red light in order to change lanes

I have taken at least 50 Waymo rides and have never experienced anything remotely like what you have described here.

I am not saying it never happened, just that I expect that if a bone-headed move of this magnitude was at all commonplace with Waymo, we would be hearing about it and probably with a lot more details.

xnx•48m ago
The gap between Waymo's service and Tesla's public beta test keeps getting larger.
ChrisArchitect•44m ago
Official post: https://waymo.com/blog/2025/11/taking-riders-further-safely-... (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45901905)
dfee•43m ago
I want to see the Waymo's go up to Skyline. Can they handle the windy roads?
fnord77•27m ago
I rode one through the Presidio which has some windy roads. It didn't have problems.
greesil•40m ago
I have seen a Waymo do a very stupid thing where it darted across a busy street, and it left very little margin of error for the oncoming traffic, which happened to be a loaded dump truck that could not have stopped. The dump truck driver was clearly surprised. It was a move that I never would have made as a driver. Did they dial the aggression up? I'm sure they're safer than humans in aggregate as there are some dumb humans out there but it's not infallible.
brokencode•36m ago
Waymo continues to improve every year, but dumb drivers never will.
izzydata•33m ago
It is probably possible to get drivers to improve if the incentives were there or if they had no choice due to external factors. I bet it would be cheaper than money spent on self driving tech too.

Or public transit on a track.

jeffbee•31m ago
American drivers specifically can be improved. Every other country stands as an existence proof of that.
some_random•29m ago
You clearly haven't been to very many countries if you think American drivers are the worst out there.
jeffbee•20m ago
I don't need to travel to learn this: https://www.onlinesafetytrainer.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/...
some_random•18m ago
Ah of course, all other thirty seven countries of the world.
eloncuck•7m ago
Not normalized per miles driven? Sure, makes sense chief.
sagarm•30m ago
Drivers hate enforcement, and they vote.
bluGill•18m ago
Drivers can improve, but they won't. They will talk about the abstract just fine, but always in context of how "the other guy" is so bad, they resist any suggestion that they might not be good either. As soon as your point out something that nearly everyone is doing wrong (as backed up by statistics and traffic safety engineers who study this) and suddenly they will shut you down. As the other reply said: drivers vote and so any change that would affect all of them is impossible.

I'd love to see better public transit, but transit is so bad for most of us that it would take a massive investment before there is any return, and half measures won't work. You have to go all in on transit before you can see any significant change - if you invest in the wrong network you won't know until a massive amount as been invested and there is no return (leaving open the question of if a different investment would have worked).

sagarm•29m ago
Waymos do seem to have gotten a lot more aggressive.
mmmlinux•31m ago
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.
prismatix•23m ago
I had a similar experience. A few months ago, I was in the city for a weekend and took Waymo for most of my rides. The one time I chose to use Lyft/Uber, the driver floored it before we even had a chance to shut the door or get buckled! The rest of the time we took Waymo.

I rarely use ride-sharing but other experiences include having been in a FSD Tesla Uber where the driver wasn't paying attention to the road the entire time (hands off the wheel, looking behind him, etc.).

I don't know if I trust Waymo cars with my life, but at least there are SOME standards, compared to the natural variance of humans.

Swizec•12m ago
> I don't know if I trust Waymo cars with my life, but at least there are SOME standards, compared to the natural variance of humans

I’ve ridden in a lot of Waymos – 800km I’m told! – and they’re great. The bit that impresses me most is that they drive like a confident city driver. Already in the intersection and it turns red? Floor it out of the way! Light just turned yellow and you don’t have time to stop? Continue calmly. Stuff like that.

Saw a lot of other AI cars get flustered and confused in those situations. Humans too.

For me I like Waymos because of the consistent social experience. There is none. With drivers they’re usually chatty at all the wrong moments when I’m not in the mood or just want to catch up on emails. Or I’m feeling chatty and the driver is not, it’s rarely a perfect match. With Waymo it’s just a ride.

ericmcer•12m ago
It must be interesting being an Uber driver right now and literally watching the robots that will replace you driving around with you.

This has been a 15+ year process and will probably take a few more years. I don't feel too bad if they didn't manage to pivot in that time period.

pa7ch•4m ago
You say the term pivot like its a startup founder who has every option in life. You should feel bad for anyone who would struggle for a basic job.
holler•8m ago
I had my first waymo ride in Austin recently and it suddenly slowed down to 20mph in 40mph zone for 5+ mins before returning to normal speed. Cars were passing around us and it felt like the car was glitching out, which felt very sketchy.
vjerancrnjak•6m ago
I was doing this a lot in US whenever I’d see construction work speed limits and had similar experience. Realized no one cares about these custom signs.
thebytefairy•4m ago
I've been in ride shares where the driver has crossed a curb road divider or squeezed through tiny gaps in front of trucks. Going too slow sounds like a better 'bad' experience to me.
toast0•6m ago
> 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.

These sentances conflict. I recently took a taxi from JFK to Manhattan during rush hour, and I estimate if the driver didn't use all of the paved surface, it would have taken at least 10 more minutes to arrive. (And it wouldn't have been an authentic NYC experience)

It's ok if you prefer the Waymo experience, and if you find it a better experience overall, but if a human driver saves you time, the Waymo wasn't better in every single way.

I am assuming the Lyft driver used the shoulder effectively. My experience with Lyft+Uber has been hit or miss... Some drivers are like traditional taxi drivers: it's an exciting ride because the driver knows the capabilities of their vehicle and uses them and they navigate obstacles within inches; some drivers are the opposite, it's an exciting ride because it feels like Star Tours (is this your first time? well, it's mine too) and they're using your ride to find the capabilities of their vehicle. The first type of driver is likely to use the shoulder effectively, and the second not so much.

QuercusMax•3m ago
You want your cab driver to drive on the shoulder and break the law? What?
world2vec•21m ago
An interesting prospect is that a bunch of autonomous cars on the freeways might have a meaningful impact in preventing traffic jams (specifically those "phantom jams") [0] simply by driving in a calm and pondered way always at a constant distance.

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m74zazYPwkY&t=1860s

paganel•20m ago
No cats on freeways, so they’re safe in that regard. Any word back from Alphabet on the cat their machines killed in SF?
NooneAtAll3•12m ago
does anyone know statistics on computer-controlled cars' safety? I can guess "safer than humans most likely", but by how much?

it seems like these robotaxis have been around long enough to have conclusions now

brunoTbear•4m ago
https://waymo.com/blog/2025/05/waymo-making-streets-safer-fo...
next_xibalba•9m ago
Road in a Waymo last weekend in Austin. Amazing experience. I was surprised at how mundane it felt. I had to keep looking at the empty driver's seat to remind myself that I was experiencing science fiction becoming reality.

I will say, I was surprised that the interior of the car was kind of dirty. I would imagine this is going to be a growing issue these FSD taxi fleets are going to have deal with. Lots of people will behave poorly in them.