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jcgrilloyesterday at 6:10 PM1 replyview on HN

I guess once they demonstrate it working smoothly and profitably in cities like Boston, NY, Detroit, etc. I'll be more concerned? Given that it doesn't really even work too well in places with good signage, lane markings, etc--not to mention no weather--I'm not worried yet. And frankly I'm done with "the future". If it doesn't deliver results now, it's not real. Until it's real, it's nothing to get alarmed about.


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JumpCrisscrossyesterday at 6:33 PM

> cities like Boston

Couldn't come soon enough [1].

> Given that it doesn't really even work too well in places with good signage, lane markings, etc

Works fine in Phoenix, Miami and Los Angeles. Plenty of neighbourhoods there have non-existent, defaced and degraded signage and markings.

> Until it's real, it's nothing to get alarmed about

I don't think there is anything to be alarmed about, period. Driving is a silly job when you think about it. We made these machines to do our bidding, not enslave us behind their wheels.

My belief in a smooth roll-out is reinforced by those who would probably oppose AVs also not believing it's real. Once the first factory mass manufacturing AVs breaks ground, any limited local opposition can be preëmpted.

[1] https://waymo.com/blog/shorts/back-to-boston/

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