|
|
|
|
|
by Someone
3749 days ago
|
|
Only 32 rides per day? I would think that's pushing the limit. You will have to buy cars for peak times, so most of them will see only a few hours of use each day. At a guessed 6 hours of busy service a day, that's 5 trips an hour, or 6 minutes to drive to a customer and 6 to drive him where he wants to be. Also, a risk here is that other large parties will make the same calculation, flood the market (anybody with money will be able to start a cab company with a lot less hassle from labor laws because you don't need that much personnel) and drive margins down. To win in this space you probably will need both a lean model of operations and a good image in the customer's eye. Uber currently seems to have both, but committing _now_ to a provider of cars is risky (what if other manufacturers turn out to have better or cheaper self-driving cars?). On the other hand, it also may be necessary to commit now in order to stay lean (committing now probably gets them a nice price cut) |
|
So it'd be the best of both worlds for Uber: being able to put the self-driving vehicles to use around the clock and not having to make a capital investment to handle spikes in demand, which would just continue to be handled by existing drivers (for now). Just call in the human backup to help out when required.
I'm also wondering if they made the huge order so that they'd be able to influence and guide the requirements for the vehicles to Uber's specs. It seems that the requirements for a self-driving car for an individual's use differs from that for commercial taxiing.