| Companies have departments and groups meant to fight, shape, and push legislation in their favor, as well as shape public opinion, even against the public's own interest. Do you know how carmakers literally paid to have tram lined ripped out of cities, in order to discourage public transport usage and get people to buy their cars? This is not some weird thing and it's a literal, documented, conspiracy with actual indictments. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Motors_streetcar_consp... > If personal transport can be made cheaper, less hassle and hands-free (all of which is possible by autonomous vehicles), then people will vote with their pennies and no lobbying will be required by Tesla. Secondly, physics and economics: you can never make personal transport as cheap as public transport, because personal transport will always carry fewer passengers per ride. And personal transport, if you look at it, is going in the wrong direction for efficiency. https://www.autoweek.com/car-life/classic-cars/a1860276/car-... A 4.4m long Chevrolet Sonic 2017 weighs 1.3 tons, almost as much as the 5m long Chevrolet Chevelle 1967. The most lightweight Tesla Model 3 weighs 1.8 tons, that's 50% more, on top of the existing ICE weight gain over the last 50+ years. Adding more safety and comfort features will only make things <<heavier>>. And people really want to ride in nice, clean, custom cars, plus they really don't want to ride with other people most of the time. I guess we'll just keep burning the planet down, pumping out particulate matter, destroying wildlife, etc. Oh, and fully autonomous driving could be 50 years into the future, banking on it is a very risky move. We're still at the basic research phase, our tech isn't good enough. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ |
Oh man, another "never" statement. An autonomous car that doesn't have a driver, doesn't need to take breaks to eat or sleep, that doesn't need to be parked, can in fact become cheaper than public transport. I invite you to do some research on that.
> And people really want to ride in nice, clean, custom cars, plus they really don't want to ride with other people most of the time.
That's exactly my point, and why in presence of a price competitive option such as a self driving taxi, no one would want to catch a bus or a train with many people and dirty seats.
> autonomous driving could be 50 years into the future
Not if you're in the know. It's far closer, but I'm not arguing for that. Wait and see.