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by pound 787 days ago
I'm curious why Waymo is considered to be not living up to expectations? They operate in limited number of places, but seem to be just fine driving there (of course some people will not like them regardless). Tesla - yes, not comparable..
1 comments

https://arstechnica.com/cars/2017/10/report-waymo-aiming-to-...

"Even if Waymo's schedule slips a few months and it introduces a self-driving car service in the middle of 2018 instead of late 2017, that will still give the company a multiple-year head start over most of its rivals. And it would confound skeptics who insist that full self-driving technology is still years away."

https://www.ft.com/content/3355f5b0-539d-11e8-b24e-cad6aa67e...

Waymo forecast to capture 60% of driverless market

Group’s dominance by 2030 will force carmakers to adopt its technology, says report

Investment bank UBS estimated global revenues from self-driving technology by 2030 will be up to $2.8tn, with Alphabet’s Waymo unit the global leader.

Sure, everyone knows Waymo's schedule has slipped.

I read the comment as saying that Waymo's product itself is not living up to expectations.

It looks like it's slowly but steadily expanding, at least in sunnier climes, and offering a decent user experience.

Ok, maybe the as-of-2024 product is living up to the 2018-horizon expectations from 2017 (as long as your expectations were not at the high end of the range at the time).
Yah, the question is whether we are getting there. No one in 2030 will care whether it was delivered in 2026 or 2020.
The people who didn't get a driving license in 2017 because what was the point if cars would drive themselves in a couple of years may care. Even more so if they finally have to wait to 2050.

Anyway, the question was about expectations - and those came with a timeline.

> Anyway, the question was about expectations - and those came with a timeline.

The mention was of a "collapse" in the space, too-- which can't be true if we're still getting there.

I expect the timeframe of 2030 is when we get most of the way there. Even exponential growth takes time to reach a big world. Most of what Waymo has left to do is rollout.

Waymo does not sell cars. They are in a different business.

I don’t really know the numbers but Waymo adds something like 50k worth of hardware into the cars. That is not a viable approach for consumer cars (Mercedes, Tesla, etc).

That hardware cost will drop eventually as it becomes commoditized and competing providers emerge. We're still pretty early in the game.
Maybe. Not everything ever manages to make it to low cost, high volume- either because there is no reasonable path to making it that cheap, or because there are not sufficiently large markets in the in-between prices.
That article is from 7 years ago. It seems unwise to make a judgement for today based on it.