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by grecy
1037 days ago
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> I am also a person with fundamental human rights. A self-driving car has no rights, and deserves no empathy. Are you saying that driving a vehicle is a fundamental human right? Becuase it is absolutely 100% not. > In this case, San Francisco's emergency response departments aren't willing to put up with these faults. What are you talking about? San Francisco's emergency response departments absolutely ARE putting up with these faults, and the regulators and people who make decisions about if they should or should not be on those streets are deciding they should be. I understand the self-driving cars can be inconvenient right now, but that always happens when you're aiming for improvement or progress. When lanes get added to a road the traffic suffers during construction. When you renovate your kitchen it's painful to live in during the work, etc. etc.
Just because it's inconvenient doesn't mean you shouldn't do it - the eventual improvement will be worth it.! |
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This argument comes from my interpretation of two books: "Crossing the Chasm" and "The Innovator's Dilemma."
Cruise can choose any market they want: any city, any municipality, any closed road network like a resort. I keep arguing that San Francisco is the wrong choice right now.
Choosing an early market is an important step in developing a technology business. It doesn't matter how wonderful your technology is, your company needs to succeed in its first market in order to move to another market and then to larger markets. Furthermore, your customers must be willing to put up with the bugs and shortcomings of your product compared to existing technology.
If a company overestimates the maturity of their product, they can lose the goodwill of the future customers who don't want to put up with bugs or other shortcomings.
I think the big problem that Cruise is facing is that they will be regulated out of existence before they fully debug their product. (For the sake of argument,) if they had used resorts as their first customer, They wouldn't have to worry about being regulated out of existence because they would only have to deal with a government; and they would have had a much easier situation to debug the product.