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Bungdit Din's avatar

Baidu and a few other Chinese firms were recently granted government incentives to trial Autonomous Electric Vehicles throughout the UAE; the aim is 25%, or 7000 vehicles by 2040. Waymo's name is absent from the big Gulf projects (Uber partnered with WeRide for Dubai), which leaves it casting about for the harder, less lucrative markets.

This would be us. Absent Gulf Incentives, infrastructure or regulatory encouragement, Waymo are likely expanding here because nobody else wanted to. The narrow, cohabited roads of our tottering metropole are not to be underestimated, and I imagine we will, no doubt, introduce their AI to the concept of frustration.

As with the Gulf initiatives, this also bodes poorly for the drivers currently slumming for Uber et al, without these bloody foreign robots coming here and taking their jobs.

Of course there is a downside to an AI taxi, and that's the membership tier. I imagine that at some point, if you don't pay the monthly stipend, Waymo will engage in the taxi equivalent of ads, and drive you past their sponsors. Pay your monthly fee, or find each trip involves a few minutes outside a branch of Dominos.

My compliments on another, excellent series of articles, and for the truly capital podcast on Prospect. Most illuminating, dear boy.

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JS's avatar

Thanks for the good article. There is one factual error though. It states that jaywalking is illegal in San Francisco, which has not been correct since 2023.

Reference: https://www.rmdlaw.com/blog/california-new-jaywalking-law-impact-pedestrian-accident-claims/

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