The Information reported that they declined an offer from GM and ended up pursuing another round of funding. (It's a little unclear whether there was a formal bid.)
Not in the city I'm in. Lyft drivers are notably more friendly, to the extent that it's almost a stereotype. Uber seems to have more regular taxi drivers moonlighting, Lyft seems to have more people making it their second job.
During driver on-boarding Lyft trains drivers to converse with passengers, while Uber actively discourages it. This is the dynamic you're picking up on, and to me it plays out clearly in the customer space. I prefer a quiet ride, therefore I choose Uber, but I know plenty of people like you who prefer the conversation.
I think currently its a good differentiator for Lyft but Uber's preparing us for our driverless future.
I took a Lyft recently - when I made it clear I didn't want to talk, the driver clammed up, was polite and I got to ride in peace (had a headache & just got off hours of customer calls).
Feel this way about Lyft in SF. I very rarely have bad experiences with Lyft, but with Uber it's been common enough that I only use it when Lyft has no drivers available (which is typically during high surge prices, in which case taking a cab makes more sense).
At least in the LA market, Uber's cheapest level of service appears to accept any car that can wedge in 5 adults. I've been picked up by sub-compacts and 20th century Corollas on UberX.
Drivers I know prefer Lyft because it pays out better. Combine this with the fact that its slightly cheaper (where I am at least) makes Lyft over Uber a no brainer for me.
On average, Lyft Line has actually been a bit more expensive than Uber Pool here in SF, but Lyft pays and treats drivers better, so I'd rather have the difference go to the guy trying to make a buck.
Also, if Uber beats the competition, I doubt they're going to keep fares as cheap as they are. Be prepared for fares to double.
I too prefer Lyft. In my city the drivers are friendlier and verbally indicate they like working for Lyft much more than Uber (most work for both). Better customer experience.
The way it was explained to me by someone who drives for both Uber and Lyft (which isn't a common thing, by the way, contrary to popular belief):
Prospective Lyft drivers actually have to undergo an orientation where they are essentially screened and given basic training by a Lyft driver.
Prospective Uber drivers, on the other hand, can start working right away without even a face-to-face meeting with anyone. All they have to do is apply online.
Not sure how accurate this is, but anecdotally, I've always noticed that Lyft drivers have better customer service skills than Uber drivers, and are more personable.
> someone who drives for both Uber and Lyft (which isn't a common thing, by the way, contrary to popular belief)
Really? Do you have any numbers on that? Every I've talked to who has done one has done both.
> Prospective Uber drivers, on the other hand, can start working right away without even a face-to-face meeting with anyone. All they have to do is apply online.
It's not quite "right away", you still have to go through a background screening, which can take quite a while. With Lyft, I had my mentor orientation the day after I applied and was approved 3 days after. Uber, on the the hand, while not requiring an in-face meeting, took 3 weeks to finally approve me, after requiring additional documentation regarding my driving record on my previous license.
Lyft allows tips, which is nice (since <5 starring people is a death sentence, it provides a better way of differentiating between great and sucky). Both suffer from the problem of having clueless suburbanites drivers who often have no idea how to get around the city. It'd be nice if it were possible to filter on drivers who actually live in the city...
> since <5 starring people is a death sentence, it provides a better way of differentiating between great and sucky
On the other hand, since Lyft won't match you with a driver again if you rate them 3 stars or less, that gives incentive to give low ratings to drivers you don't want to be matched with ever again.
I haven't had many of those, but I'm glad the option is there when it's come up: for example, texting while driving is an automatic 3 and a flag for safety, if not a 1. I don't want to ride with people who are liable to get me killed. Attempting to give me religious tracts is an automatic 1 (yes, this actually happened). Being creepy to me in general is a 1 (see: the guy who insisted on repeatedly screenshotting the Lyft app with my profile picture visible while I was in the car with him). People who make me sit in the back, especially when their front seat is completely empty, are an automatic 3 unless they make up for it by being a really great conversationalist (and I've learned to always cancel on people with vans, because they like to electronically open their sliding doors as soon as I start walking to their vehicle)
Sadly, this is a feature Uber doesn't have. With Uber, you can't do anything to make sure you're never matched with a particular driver again. I just wish Lyft also added a "never match me with this person again" option when cancelling rides or when being cancelled on... I have a handful of drivers I will never ride with because they were utter dicks to me when finding where I am. This includes a few people who, in an office park in the suburbs, parked a block or two way and demanded I walk. Then there was one guy who parked at the hospital across the street (a six-lane arterial with no traffic light in sight) from where I was and had the gall to send the signal that he was here: I called him to tell him he's at the wrong location, he responded "I'm at the hospital", and as soon as I said I'm somewhere else, he shouted "CALL ANOTHER!" at me and cancelled on me. Or the guy who texted me to demand I text him my address and then cancelled on me when I told him I already put my destination into the app. I've just had to memorize their names and remember to cancel whenever I'm matched with them.
So is it reasonable to surmise that what's happening here is:
Lyft has a 1.2B cash reserve, ~400MM/yr in revenue, isn't profitable, and has now hit the end of the line on "unicorn" infusions at favorable terms. It's locked in a total war with Uber, which it cannot win or even stalemate while simultaneously shielding its reserves to keep an adequate runway to profitability.
So, since it can't win the race against Uber, its prospects are greatly diminished, and the greatest value it might hold is as someone else's strategic asset.
I would add that their flanking Uber internationally (China) failed. Whoever purchases them would want some asset whose value isn't tied to fighting Uber head-to-head.
Perhaps the network could be valuable to Google? I notice that Waze seems to be inching in that direction, and perhaps they could get value from the mapping too.
The ride-sharing market seems to have network effects, which means the service with 80% of the market will get much more than 80% of the profit.
- They own a significant stake in Uber via GV (formerly Google Ventures)
- They own Google Maps, which everyone relies on at the moment
- They own the most advanced self driving car and are closest to Level 4 autonomy
- They own Waze, and have a significant community there
In my mind they should acquire Lyft, let it run as is. Then when they are ready to go primetime with their self driving cars, start piloting them as a cheaper/free option within the Lyft app. If the pilot works, expand the cars nationwide and aggressively finance the fleet using their balance sheet.
What is really interesting about that is Google's ability to price it as a loss leader propped up by the ad business. They could even tie in a new AdWords extension to let people pay to have customers driven somewhere.
They could completely undercut Uber on price AND have better data sets.
I think at the end of the day Google will win this game with their self driving cars. Why they should buy Lyft and compete with Uber and lose billions of dollars, the better strategy is to get the self driving car first before anyone else and come in and crush Uber and Lyft and whoever is in the market. this will not get sued by driver and will not be under scrutiny by the regulators!!
We're getting to the point where the siloed web is causing serious problems for commerce and competition. The "network effects" you refer to are a symptom of laws like the CFAA, which make it illegal to get data hosted on someone else's server, even if you do it in a completely non-disruptive manner.
How would it have worked out if different companies could own stretches of the primary thoroughfare and forbid access to the employees and agents of their competitors? What if Google bought all the streets surrounding Apple and declared that Apple employees couldn't travel on them, lest they face legal action? That's essentially what we have happening online. Real competition is being seriously impeded by laws that allow companies to make it impossible to access data that the user has the right to access.
If we really see the internet as the Information Superhighway, we need to stop restricting access based on corporate interest. The data needs to be accessible. Only then will customers be free to choose the application they want to use based on how well it performs its promised functions, instead of based on its holding the relevant data hostage.
No, that's pretty much the scenario as I can see it. And to add to that, they're bleeding to death extremely fast. They have a matter of 12 to 18 months to find a buyer or they might as well close up shop. Each quarter that passes will diminish their financial position and lessen their bargaining power in the sale. If they wait toward the end of the time horizon, it'll practically become an expensive talent acquisition ala Jet.com.
Uber and Lyft are both vulnerable to self driving cars. They're hard to compete against when you need drivers-who-aren't-employees, but not nearly as hard to replace when you can just manufacture new cars.
Their app and scheduling smarts are valuable too, but won't be _more_ valuable when the drivers go away.
I think you miss the point. Just like Amazon disrupted themselves by pioneering ebooks with the Kindle to compete with physical books, along with streaming video against DVDs. Uber will disrupt themselves by introducing self driving cars[1]. They are not vulnerable, they are pioneering because they will have the platform to do it with.
But their valuation may not hold. It is currently based on the defensibility of a monopoly position. That position is predicated on the network effect in a 2 sided market (e.g. Ebay). With autonomous cars now you are talking about defensibility from consumer brand + economies of scale in a commodity market (e.g. United Airlines).
If I understand you correctly, then that means they are screwed either way with regards to the valuation. Go driverless and the valuation may not hold, or don't go driverless and let someone else make them irrelevant.
Google and Tesla and GM and other actual car manufacturers quite literally have the "platform" to build on, not Uber. Self-driving cars are a lot harder to build than a ride-sharing platform.
If one of those companies were to launch a self-driving taxi service that cost half as much as Uber it wouldn't take long at all for it to utterly decimate Uber's business.
Good point. Time will tell I guess. Since you've pointed out that there are a lot of actual manufacturers working on self driving cars, for any second place players who don't enter the B2C taxi service market, the next obvious step is to licence the technology to someone like Uber. Then they can compete on supply and price.
The question is whether it's better for a manufacturer to enter the taxi service industry, or licence their technology and focus on direct consumer sales of the vehicles.
Travis Kalanick made an succinct observation on ridesharing's future yesterday:
"If we are not tied for first [in autonomous vehicle rollout], then the person who is in first. . . rolls out a ride-sharing network that is far cheaper or far higher-quality than Uber's, and Uber is no longer a thing," Kalanick said."(1)
Lyft has raised ~$2b at a recent $5.5b valuation, Uber has raised ~$9b at a $85b valuation.
Lyft is able to somewhat compete with Uber on today's ground war of drivers & customer acquisition, but unlikely to compete in tomorrow's war of autonomous without a partner.
The recent $500m round Lyft got from GM clearly has GM positioned as takeout partner - GM brings the autonomous / Lyft brings the customers.
What I bet happened here is that Lyft tried to power move GM with some large stalking-horse bids, the tactic backfired, and now GM is leaking to put pressure on Lyft to accept a diminished offer.
Along similar lines, I think you meant "astute observation" [1], not "succinct observation" [2]. The latter is accurate, since he didn't use too many words to get his point across, but probably not what you intended to point out :)
I believe that everything will reset when automated cars come out. Whomever is in the lead now will not matter because automated rides will be such a game-changer that it'll reset the entire market.
Transportation is actually a huge one. Clipper ships dominated up through the mid-1800s; when steam power became reliable enough to cross the Atlantic, all the major sailing ship companies went under, and were replaced by Cunard, White Star, and Inman, all of which were founded within a decade or two of the development of reliable steam power. Then when airliners became reliable enough to cross the Atlantic, all the major steamship lines went under (Cunard is now a division of Carnival Cruises) and were replaced by air service.
Ditto with the transition from propeller to jet aircraft. The major aircraft manufacturers before WW2 were companies like Curtis, Wright, Hughes, Douglas, Grumman etc. After the jet age, the companies that successfully developed jet aircraft (Boeing, McDonnell, Lockheed, Grumman, etc.) survived, while those that didn't were bought up in firesales by their replacements.
You also see examples of competitive industries that are entirely replaced by a single monopolist because of new technology. For example, tobacco was the cash crop of the south, lucrative enough to start a war over, with several numerous wealthy plantation owners forming the backbone of the South's social structure. When American Tobacco adopted the tobacco-rolling machine, they soon ended up with >90% of the market, the most thorough monopoly ever (even moreso than Standard Oil). It was broken up via antitrust legislation on the same day as Standard Oil; descendants include R.J. Reynolds and Liggett group, and still account for a significant portion of the tobacco industry.
People are way, way, WAY underestimating how long it will be before "self driving car picks you up, takes you to location". If we don't have self-driving cars everywhere on highways moving cargo, then we won't have self-driving taxi cabs for many years after whenever that happens. City driving, where Uber can actually make money with the density of people, is the hardest driving of all, and will be the last place where self-driving cars without any human operator take over.
Why can't self-driving electric cars be government/co-op owned to provide mass transit? It would be orders of magnitude less expensive than light rail in almost all major metros (NY, SF, CHI all have the benefit of being fairly dense, allowing subways or elevated tracks).
I'm in Tampa most of my time, and it will be impossible to service that much sprawl with light rail or bus service. And if you don't like sprawl, you're going to need to change public policy to deal with dense real estate costs.
Areas with sprawl are best suited to car ownership.
Dense urban areas are better suited to mass transit.
Uber fills a niche of point to point transport that's current overutilized because of VC subsidization.
Even if you get rid of the driver, you can't expect everyone in an urban core to do point to point transit, especially with the inefficiencies of pick up and drop off.
separate from the perspective of optimising for cost is the goal of optimising for energy efficiency: you get much better energy efficiency by moving more people at once for the cross-sectional area of air that needs to be pushed out of the day. trains are about 50x more energy efficient for moving people than cars.
i agree that at some point low-density sprawl wouldn't make centralised public transport economic (even supposing global regulation existed to force the cost of pollution to be accounted for in market prices)
at this point in our global human predicament it'd be a bit of a shame not to realise that some ideas that were okay in the past aren't very good ideas any more.
Heh, I live in Toronto, 5th largest city in North America.
I've accepted the fact that public transit systems here will never be great. It will only be ever be barely good enough. There are a ton of factors affecting this, but at this point my faith is with the private sector.
Having lived in California for 30 years—in arguably every major city in the state (LA, SF, San Diego, San Jose), multiple times in multiple neighborhoods of each—fully autonomous point-to-point car sharing networks honestly sound less pie-in-the-sky to me than a mass transit system that is efficient OR well funded.
But we did just spend twenty billion dollars on a bullet train from Bakersfield to Merced, so there's that, I guess.
i don't understand why nobody sees them as a symbiosis. We haven't solved anything if driverless cars are clogging up the highway, but they can solve one of the biggest problems for mass transit, the last/first kilometres. I don't know anything specific about the bullet train, but most of the time the problem is getting to/from the bullet-train. If it shortens your travel by one hour, but you have to wait 2 hours for a bus to get to the station it's not going to work.
Public transit in SF sucks. It takes 45 minutes on the so-called "rapid" bus to go 5 miles. The Geary corridor is one of the busiest in the country, approaching (EDIT: well over!) 100k passengers per day if you include the 4 parallel bus lines running 1 block away from each other. It desperately needs a subway. But we're still 5 years away from even a BRT line, which will still take a minimum of 35 minutes.
I think it's a fair bet that autonomous cars will come before Geary BRT is completed, and it's a certainty that they'll come before Geary gets a subway. And while Geary is one of the worst, there are a half dozen similar bus corridors in the city. Also, most of the rail is above ground and similarly slow and crowded.
While I generally think rail and autonomous cars can be symbiotic, autonomous cars are likely to kill buses. Middle-income people ride the bus only out of necessity. High-income people never ride the bus, though they will ride a decent subway system. Once autonomous cars and autonomous shuttles come out, middle-income riders will flock to them, the only people riding busses will be the poor and working class, and the system will collapse, sooner in most other places, but it'll also happen in San Francisco.
Because San Francisco doesn't have a real subway network, SF MTA is in for some rough times in the not too distant future. I wouldn't be surprised if San Francisco bans or heavily taxes private autonomous systems. If they were smart they'd be digging tunnels as fast as possible. Some cities, like Madrid, seemed to have learned to do it cheaply, and the savings aren't just because of geology.
They're extremely complimentary. In LA (for example) mass transit has a tendency to strand you, and traditional taxis and car services have gigantic no-go areas unless you're a VIP.
I can take a bus or train anywhere at any time, knowing that if I'm, for example, south of Washington at any time of day or downtown after 2am, I can call a car and still get home. In the 00s, the only way out of those zones was to bring your own car or be prepared for a "Falling Down" style 10 mile walk.
Yellow cabs (then and still) don't enter a massive buffer zone around regions where they might get a black guy as a fare even if you called, but Uber serves those areas reliably, 24/7.
Absolutely agree with this. There is no reason we can't move people the way we move goods. Public transit, trains/planes, etc serve as the distribution network. Self-driving cars are the "last mile" delivery service.
Exactly. We went to the moon, and back, with a roll of parchment and a pencil strapped to a bunch of explosives. (Ok, a calculator and a rocket).
In my opinion, self driving cars are closer than the naysayers think. The cars don't have to be able to handle every situation initially. Driving from my house to the local shopping centre is only 4 turns, this could be a preprogrammed route to a designated autonomous-vehicle drop off point.
I'm going to say we'll see a lot more of this in the next five years.
Why not next year? It's only four turns after all.
Bus seriously, driving those four turns is several orders of magnitudes more difficult task than going to the moon.
> driving those four turns is several orders of magnitudes more difficult task than going to the moon.
You have that scope reversed. That's why multiple organizations have autonomous cars, which have been real world tested, to various success, and are being allowed to roll out (the whole derail of "they don't exist yet" is naysayer noise) without nine nines reliability. While the moon trip was only done ONCE across all of humanity's history and there wasn't a test beforehand. THAT was impressive, to the point of incredulity.
> In my opinion, self driving cars are closer than the naysayers think. The cars don't have to be able to handle every situation initially. Driving from my house to the local shopping centre is only 4 turns, this could be a preprogrammed route to a designated autonomous-vehicle drop off point.
That's similar to what I've wondered about as a good intermediate step between what we have now and fully autonomous self-driving cars that can go from any given place to any given destination given the address, even if they have never been there before.
The idea is that most of us have various trips that we make frequently, such as to/from work, to/from a grocery store, to/from kid's school, etc., and maybe we could simplify the early consumer self-driving systems by limiting them to such trips. Here's how I imagine it would work.
When you decide you want to add a route to your car's self-drivable routes, such as your commute to work, you put the car in an observer mode and drive the route manually. The car tries to identify traffic signs, traffic lights, lane markers, and other such things that it needs to understand. The car also records video of the drive.
When you tell the car you've reached the destination, it uploads the video of the drive to the vendor that provided your self-driving system. It also uploads what traffic signs, lights, etc., it has identified, and a log of your control inputs.
The vendor has a human watch the video of your drive, review the things that the car identified, and identify things that the car missed that are relevant. The human accesses whether or not the car can handle this route as is, or can handle it if some special cases are added, or cannot handle it. In the first two cases, the vendor notifies the car that it is now allowed to drive the route (and downloads any extra information they identified that the car needs), and the car can then drive the route in self-driving mode.
Whenever the car drives the route in self-driving mode, it compares what it sees and identifies (traffic signs, lane markings, etc.) with those that were used when it was shown the route. If there are more than trivial changes, it asks the passenger to take over driving, and uploads a report to the vendor for review.
Perhaps it also uploads video of the route every time it is driven, and the vendor runs software that automatically compares each to prior videos of that route, and learns what features normally vary over time, and which are more constant. The results can be sent back to the car to adjust its thresholds on a feature by feature basis for when it considers something changed enough to require human intervention.
>Driving from my house to the local shopping centre is only 4 turns, this could be a preprogrammed route to a designated autonomous-vehicle drop off point.
Who's going to preprogram it? And then the billions other potential preprogrammed routes.
Will it though? Uber's Pittsburgh fleet alone will be collecting enough data that even .000001% likelihood errors will be coming up in a matter of weeks. And as people always like to point out in this debate, the minimum bar for safety (beating a human driver) is not that high.
I don't think the software is the gating item for full autonomy. The production cycle of the hardware (the actual cars) is what we'll be waiting on most over the next few years.
I could see see something like Uber electric cars / golf carts where driving distances are small such as Sun City in AZ. Baby steps. Can't have a death in an accident though.
did you read what they said or were you just looking to score a quick point? there's an operator sitting in the driver seat in those cars, intervening, from time to time.
> If we don't have self-driving cars everywhere on highways moving cargo, then we won't have self-driving taxi cabs for many years after
This seems wrong. Wouldn't taxis be first, since cargo still needs to be hauled off and loaded by someone/thing? Many of the those drivers double as laborers.
i completely agree. reading HN, people seem under the impression like a year from now all the taxis in the world will be autonomous. in my opinion (not that it means much), we are years away from this happening.
But as we get closer and closer to that inevitability, the value of Lyft and other non-autonomous ride-sharing companies will just get lower and lower.
George is kind of arrogant and brash... but even he says "I don't know anything about level 4". Everyone thinks level 3 and 4 are the same thing, but now that I've heard him dismiss level 4, that actually gives me more confidence in his startup.
Those are two completely different things!!!
Google has been working on self-driving cars since 2009, and the DARPA challenges were around 2005-2007. We're not even at level 3. Level 4 might not come for decades after that.
Tesla has "good enough" L3 already on the road, and I highly doubt Tesla's Autopilot is anywhere near as sophisticated as what Google is working on in their labs.
Preprogrammed paths is absolutely not what is meant by self-driving vehicles. Preprogrammed means a human has made all the decisions an actual self-driving vehicle would need to make.
Though whatever you call them there's a lot of potential for that kind of stuff. There are a lot of busses in the world and if they can drive themselves that's a big thing even if it is on set routes. Plus trucks driving themselves on certain prepared interstates with humans to take over for the last 10 miles could be big.
I'm curious to know your logic, because in my opinion it doesn't really follow.
In a city, not only do you have better/more frequently updated map data, but you also have a large corpus of cars that can share info with each other, which will be a big aspect of driverless cabs. Also the speeds don't get as high, so safety is a bit easier. Also flooding/snowstorms/other things computers can't yet handle well are more of a problem on the open road.
Your assertion that moving freight must come first, to me, has no apparent logic behind it.
If you think about it, taxi cab drivers barely need any qualifications to drive a cab. Truckers need more, almost as if trucking is a more demanding type of driving. By that alone, I feel like it's fairly apparent which would be easier to replicate on silicon.
Your assertion that moving freight must come first, to me, has no apparent logic behind it.
Sure it does. It is the easier problem, and it makes sense to assume the easier problem will be solved before the hard one.
Self driving cars that move about long stretches of interstate highways with little to no interactions with intersections, pedestrians or complicated traffic patterns is a far easier problem than driving in densely populated urban areas.
If you think about it, taxi cab drivers barely need any qualifications to drive a cab. Truckers need more, almost as if trucking is a more demanding type of driving. By that alone, I feel like it's fairly apparent which would be easier to replicate on silicon.
Trucking is a far more demanding job than driving a cab, but that is only true for humans. What makes trucking demanding is long, rigorous driving schedules that require high degree of driving stamina. As it turns out computers have very high stamina and are very good at doing long rigorous activities without suffering any fatigue. This is as opposed to driving a cab where the difficulty of the job is not so much in the rigor of the job but more in what humans do better than computers. Which is mainly dealing with other people, understanding patterns and learning from past experiences.
Freight generally needs to be handle all of the problems that a cab does (turning, stoplights, other cars, getting from point A to point B, etc.), mostly because pretty much all freight trucks need to go through a town/city at some point.
Additionally, they need to be able to drive at night in areas without much lighting, they need to drive for hours and hours on end, instead of just 5-45minutes, etc. Finally, they are 40+ feet long (instead of being around 15 feet long) and have much less maneuverability and a much longer stopping distance/time.
The economic win (and comparatively easy problem) is to have trucks self drive on the interstate, stopping on the outskirts of whatever city or town is the destination to pick up a human driver who will take care of the "last mile".
Set up a distribution center on I90 30 miles outside Chicago (e.g. Gary Indiana) set up a distribution center on I80 30 miles outside New York (e.g. Paterson NJ). Use human drivers for the last 30 miles, and automation to drive the rest. The route doesn't go through any heavily trafficked areas except Gary and Cleveland, which you could avoid by starting the route at 9pm for a 9am arrival with travel through Cleveland occurring at 2am. I'd say that with current technology we could probably do this in less than a year. Since trucks cost about 150k new and truck drivers can't drive 12 hours straight, the economics of full automation are much easier to justify.
Having driven back and forth from Chicago to New York a couple of times, I would welcome autonomous trucks driving throughout the night, especially if they strictly adhere to the right lane at a moderate, passable speed.
Once night falls, truckers take over the road, and they typically like to go at or slightly above speed limit, making it less of a cozy environment for regular sedan drivers.
> they need to drive for hours and hours on end, instead of just 5-45minutes
If you assume that whatever vehicle considered is being driven near full-duty-cycle, the total amount of time is roughly conserved (perhaps autonomous vehicles will get 2x-3x utilization per day, for better or worse)
You could create a system, potentially using truck stops or in some way your own infrastructure, which is a docking point for autonomous vehicles. At these locations, human drivers pick up and drop off the otherwise autonomous vehicles, allowing humans to take the burden of the difficult portion of driving, while computers handle the boring part of driving. Of course, you would have to place similar stops every (80% of a tank of gas, measured in distance), as well for refueling. Naturally, this idea has a dozen holes at the moment and would need to be improved to be viable.
> Freight generally needs to be handle all of the problems that a cab does (turning, stoplights, other cars, getting from point A to point B, etc.), mostly because pretty much all freight trucks need to go through a town/city at some point.
Freight consists of both long and short haul, with different needs and approaches. Your point applies to the "last mile" delivery phase, which may or may not be a significant part of the operation.
In fact, many big stores like Walmart, Costco, Aldi, and the like are placed pretty close to an interstate exit.
I would guess that this allows significant reduction in costs, as the operators don't need to switch from their optimized long haul vehicles (big trailers, etc) to more maneuvarable, less efficient (per unit weight of goods) trucks for the last mile stage.
There is plenty of freight that is carried on highways over long distances with low traffic volumes, in a similar role to rail freight.
> Additionally, they need to be able to drive at night in areas without much lighting,
During winter at higher latitudes a lot of driving is at night. As for lighting, plenty of city streets are dark and have poor lighting at night.
> they need to drive for hours and hours on end, instead of just 5-45minutes, etc.
So? Fatigue is something that affects human drivers. There should be no serious differences for an autonomous vehicle driving 10 30 minute trips and one 5 hour one, modulo start and stop. In fact, if anything, longer duration trips tend to involve a greater fraction of highway usage that does not require significant brake usage, turning, etc.
> Finally, they are 40+ feet long (instead of being around 15 feet long) and have much less maneuverability and a much longer stopping distance/time.
As long as they share the road with other vehicles it does not sound very practical.Heavy vehicles have their unique handling and failure patterns that I doubt are well suited to automation at the moment.
Driving straight, and at a constant speed is pretty easy, tesla has almost got it down.
Driving in weather is harder, but that is still a problem for city cars, I'm not sure why you think it is more of a problem on the open road.
The map data might be more frequently updated, but it is also more complicated. Stop and go traffic (with lane changes!), turns, traffic lights, construction, busses, etc. all add to the complexity of city driving.
The first thing for freight isn't going to be completely autonomous, it is going to be a slightly smarter tesla style autopilot, i.e. a driver who is alerted by the computer when he needs to take over (weather, pulling into towns, etc).
I honestly have the opposite opinion that you do: freight (ignoring the last mile) is a much easier problem than inner city driving.
Truck drivers are also professional drivers. They don't want to get in a wreck any more than you do. I'd trust a random truck driver to be much wiser in their use of autopilot than a random driver.
Furthermore, those trucks are expensive. Tacking on an extra $10,000 to a family sedan for sensors and electronics is huge. It's not so extreme when you're paying $100,000 for a base truck.
And finally, those fleet vehicles have regular inspections and maintenance. Everything works great when it's all shiny and new. It'll be interesting to see what happens to autopilots on cars that don't even get regular oil changes.
> If you think about it, taxi cab drivers barely need any qualifications to drive a cab. Truckers need more...
Well, part of those rules and regulations do things like specifically limit how much they can drive per day (11 hours is the limit, I believe). There's also super high turn over in the trucking industry and they've had driver shortages fairly regularly. A lot of these rules are about protecting the human driver from themselves (fatigue, misbehavior etc). When I think about the problem it seems that regular, predictable freight movement from port to warehouse would be a logical place to start because a) it's easier and b) the labor market for drivers is so severely distorted right now.
Edit: It's 11 hours but I'm remembering there's other restrictions too, like limits on consecutive blocks of 11-hour driving without rest. I'll look it up later.
It seems more like a rush to the finish to me [1], rather than a slow crawl. The goal doesn't seem to be to create a 'perfect' AI driver before deployment, just one that is good enough.
And after all, we only really need a statistical improvement over human drivers for it to be worth it, given that the software in these cars can be updated over time.
I guess it would be nice though, if we had a really tough standardized test course, involving various common situations with pedestrians, cyclists, etc.
On the other hand, we test human drivers on real roads too.
And that's for the relative ease of driving in a US city. I just got back from two weeks of driving in Kiev and I'm pretty confident that we're a looong way away from being able to navigate that kind of traffic autonomously.
> People are way, way, WAY underestimating how long it will be before "self driving car picks you up, takes you to location".
Thank you. This is a pet peeve of mine. Self driving cars do not exist, at all, yet, nor does anything that's really all that close but if you point that out on HN you'll be met with breathless disagreement.
Even more relevant, there's literally nothing in the historical record to suggest that the real breakthroughs when they come will come from a company like Uber.
> Even more relevant, there's literally nothing in the historical record to suggest that the real breakthroughs when they come will come from a company like Uber.
Why not? The team at Uber that is working on this is largely comprised of researchers from Carnegie Mellon and former members of Google's driverless car team. Historical record suggests otherwise...
The fact that Uber has never, once, successfully created a motor vehicle, physical product, or applied artificial intelligence device, ever, of any kind, has to top the list.
I mean they are competing against Apple and BMW, among many others, presumably, who have actually made a car, computer, or transportation device that worked.
That notwithstanding, the burden of proof is in the other direction.
Sure, but the company is filled with ex-Apple/Google/etc folks that have worked on successfully creating motor vehicles, physical products, and applied artificial intelligence devices.
Remember, a company is merely comprised of the people within it. If Uber has people that have joined from the kinds of companies that you mentioned, it becomes more and more indistinguishable from them.
> Remember, a company is merely comprised of the people within it.
Not really. Software companies are like that. They are the exception to the general rule that companies are composed of people plus things like factories, equipment, patents, trade secrets, inventory, real estate, global supply chains, and dealer networks for service and support.
Making cars, even regular ones, is hard and Uber has never really done anything like it.
Uber isn't making cars, the CEO has made that explicitly clear. Uber has hired people who have built systems that enable a regular car to self-drive. I just don't understand where the disconnect is for you.
Then you would be wrong. But it of course depends on what your definition of "self-drive" is. If you have an overly strict, ridiculously high standard for what a self-driving car is, then in your mind, you're right.
But if you define what Tesla already has in production as a self-driving car, then you would be wrong.
>There is a huge difference between the real world and a closed track.
Indeed. The unpredictable behavior of humans occupying the same environment is key. Remove this element and things get simpler (though not simple. And v2v comms might be required.)
I suspect highways are the road infrastructure most akin to a closed track. Which is why the Otto acquisition is so interesting.
Historically they haven't done anything. OTTO was just 8 months old when it was acquired this week, and they had two blog posts - one saying they formed, one saying they're acquired.
For a very literal definition of close. The following is from 2014... it would be interesting to know how much progress they have made in how much detail their cars need to be successful.
The key to Google's success has been that these cars aren't forced to process an entire scene from scratch. Instead, their teams travel and map each road that the car will travel. And these are not any old maps. They are not even the rich, road-logic-filled maps of consumer-grade Google Maps.
They're probably best thought of as ultra-precise digitizations of the physical world, all the way down to tiny details like the position and height of every single curb. A normal digital map would show a road intersection; these maps would have a precision measured in inches.
The devil is truly in the details. You're covering 99.5% of all driving situations with 99.9% reliability? Well, then the remaining bit is going to be pretty devilishly hard! What do you do about cars that are stuck stationary on the the side of a bit of shoulder-less road? Here's what a human being does: They "sense" that something is up on the road ahead because the traffic patterns are different. They observe what the drivers ahead are doing, then start exercising caution concerning what's going on at the side of the road, maybe even to the point of hugging the other side of the lane out of caution.
Are "driverless" cars doing this now? No. Are you going to have to develop human-equivalent AI to do that? No. But is taking things like this into account going to take a lot? Damn straight!
Agreed 100%. I'd be amazed if a stage 4 autonomous vehicle existed in less than 5 years, honestly I'd guess closer to 10. I do think highway driving can be fully automated within 2-3 years, so Otto makes a ton of sense.
I actually think because the rewards are so great, and the technology is so difficult, that infrastructure will change before the tech. There are things you can do to drastically reduce the complexity, like install smart traffic lights and have cars talk to each other, in addition to special road markings designed for self-driving cars.
CMU has been working on self-driving cars since 1984, people seem to think nobody was doing anything before Google (and they also think that Google's cars are far more capable than they are). Yes, money makes a difference, but sometimes reality just disagrees with profit. And if there's something startups are good at, it's hyping themselves up to jack up valuations.
Ageed. With existing Google, Tesla, Mercedes, BMW, etc. companies' technology you could have cargo hubs off the highways that are entered and exited by self driving trucks. Either human driven trucks can then load/unload those self-driving trucks or humans can then get in and drive the last last mile, so to speak.
Google is currently doing this today. They have a fleet of autonomous cars driving around Mountain View / Palo Alto without any assistance on a daily basis.
I disagree. There are already cities that have shut off much of the traffic downtown, either through high taxes or straight up forcing people off the road, like Mexico City. I can easily see a city saying "No more human driven cars in the downtown core, only self-driving cars" and it instantly becomes useful.
Think harder... how to bring self driving cars to the world...
Currently, bus/overground/tubes/whatever have only few lines and they can cover a lot of users.
Tomorrow, self driving cars could cover only the few main roads of a city. That would be enough to be useful for 80% of people in the city. That ignores the hard 90% roads which are harder to do.
We'd still have to walk down the block to reach the uber and that's annoying, but that's a huge progress over the current public transportation systems (whom coverage vary hugely by city and country, to the point there might not be any).
Interesting, my intuition is the exact opposite. With human driven vehicles, you have a chicken and egg problem. Drivers only come if there are riders, and riders only come if there are drivers. Having the biggest user base is a big plus.
With driverless vehicles, a company can solve the supply side of the market making problem by buying a few cars in one market.
If I'm in city A, I just want an app that summons a driverless car to me. Do I care if the company behind that app is also in 200 other cities? Is there any cost to me to having multiple apps on my phone?
My intuition would have been that uber is way overvalued because once driverless cars are mainstream, it's easy for a competitor (possibly local government!) to break into any given market.
This is beyond a doubt the biggest problem with these valuations.
However, it is obvious that in the short and medium term the largest company wins. It is also noteworthy that the battles they win against each cities taxi mafia will be one less battle for autonomous cabs. We could see a surprisingly smooth roll out whebever it happens
It's interesting that Google decided early on that fully autonomous was the only way to go (because half-awake driver + imperfect computer = accidents), but Tesla, BMW, and Uber are bringing to market semi-autonomous vehicles first.
It occurs to me that their incentives aren't exactly aligned, and aren't aligned with the public. If Tesla or Uber brings out a semi-autonomous vehicle and then lots of accidents occur, it poisons the well for self-driving vehicles. People start associating them with fatal crashes, they shy away from them out of fear, and the status quo reigns. In the status quo, Uber is on top for ridesharing and Tesla/BMW/GM/etc are on top for conventional car purchases, so it all works out for them.
By contrast, Google only succeeds if autonomous vehicles become a real thing that people trust for their everyday transportation needs. They don't have a horse in today's race; either they build a fully-autonomous vehicle or they get nothing.
Methinks we'll see a big PR campaign from Google to make a big public distinction between semi-autonomous and fully-autonomous driving, along with a lobbying campaign to ban semi-autonomous driving. They have to get out ahead of public opinion before lots of accidents happen, otherwise the whole category will be ruined.
He might be right, but it would require allowing cars to drive around on roads without anyone in them.
Using a shared, limited resource in that way is such a prototypical "tragedy of the commons" that I can't see any government allowing it.
Traffic will be insane if people can send their cars on errands without having to sit in the resulting traffic, or if hired cars can drive halfway across the city to pick up the next fare with no impact to the car's owner besides wear and fuel.
No amount of incremental improvements in capacity due to "better" robot drivers will make up for that.
There's somewhere around 60 million kids in the US alone. Picking them up and dropping them off from school, soccer practice, ukulele lessons, birthday parties, etc. is a large amount of time as a parent. Ask anyone with kids if they'd buy a car that would take their kids to dance rehearsals on its own.
People will love these things, and they'll want to use them all the time, and the traffic will be horrendous.
That's the only solution I can think of other than an outright ban. It could also coincide with the last gasps of the gasoline tax.
It might still not be enough, however, and it would be highly regressive without some sort of heavy scaling based on income: The disparity between the value that people at different income levels place on their time is staggering. That disparity is the entire reason Uber (and the rest of the service industry) are thriving.
> Traffic will be insane if people can send their cars on errands without having to sit in the resulting traffic, or if hired cars can drive halfway across the city to pick up the next fare with no impact to the car's owner besides wear and fuel.
Of course, what do you care what traffic is like, if you're being driven? So you get to read the news for an extra fifteen minutes, or have another beer.
> Traffic will be insane if people can send their cars on errands without having to sit in the resulting traffic
Most errands involving cars also require the user on both ends to load and/or unload or perform some other function. But, sure, we can ignore that for the sake of argument...
> or if hired cars can drive halfway across the city to pick up the next fare with no impact to the car's owner besides wear and fuel.
Well, it will if there is no cost other than low-cost fuel (like the US has no) or similarly low-cost energy (e.g., for electrics).
OTOH, the solution to "the aggregate amount of traffic is too high because the cost is too low" is to increase the cost -- probably not with gas charges because of the move to EVs, but by tracking cars on the road and charging for their use of the road, more at peak hours.
Most errands involving cars primarily involve transporting people, who are usually more than capable of getting into cars by themselves. In fact, that's the whole point of Uber's business model.
If I can send my car out without having to drive it myself, I'll use it for things things like picking up kids. Take my spouse to work, drive back home, take me to work at a different time, repeat.
Right now many families buy two cars, often not because they need to drive both of them at exactly the same time, but because they need to use them in different places. If you can send the car between locations then you can use one car, and the cost is that the car spends time on the road, making someone else's commute worse.
Again, this is Uber's entire business model, and if they're successful at getting everyone to use ride-sharing, regardless of self-driving cars, then we will trade a bunch of parking spaces for more cars on the road. It's literally how Uber works.
In addition, if your car can drive itself places, whole new business models will spring up around things like delivery of food, packages, etc. Businesses will be happy to start providing you the service of putting stuff in your trunk.
Yes, I'm guessing that the arrival of self driving cars coincides with electric drive becoming commonplace. They could even go hand in hand: send the car back home to charge, then have it pick us up later.
All of these things reduce the incremental cost of having your car on the road, which will drastically increase traffic.
In my (limited) circle, I often hear Uber mentioned. I never hear mention of Lyft.
Paywall is keeping me out of the NYT article, at the moment, but I wonder whether Lyft is simply on the losing slope of a plot of momentum, at this point.
Shame, as I am not very fond of Uber's business practices. Though I don't know that Lyft is any better.
I know a lot of people prefer Lyft as a first resort but to me it has two serious problems:
* Lyft doesn't let you book a ride by web or sms, which means in an emergency, I can't cadge a ride easily at a web cafe, library, laptop at a Starbucks, borrowed phone, etc. Lyft is optional, having a working m.uber.com login is a survival skill.
* I've never experienced the level of drivers outright misbehaving and fucking with passengers in an Uber that I semi-frequently experience as a friend's guest in a Lyft. I don't know if it's culture or what, but Lyft drivers seem to feel comfortable doing things like picking a location and ditching you or not accepting your instructions to drive a particular place, which as far as I can tell is a "never drive for us again" infraction over at Uber and the drivers know it.
What city are you in? I've never experienced a terrible ride like that from Lyft, and I use it exclusively, almost every day. The weirdest experience was a driver offering to take me to a weed dispensery to buy weed for me. And that was him tryin to be nice! Besides that it's just maybe tired or awkward drivers who can't hold a conversation...
I'm honestly a little surprised Uber and Lyft can't manage a duopoly, considering how many miles ahead of the nearest competitors they are and how many mutual enemies they have.
Competition is so last-cen. You need a monopoly, so you can screw over the customers. Read Peter Thiel, "Competition is for losers".[1] "If you corner the market for something, you can jack up the price; others will have no choice but to buy from you."
Your quote is taken a bit out of context, but still – I already didn't like Peter Thiel, this further reinforces my impression of him being a scummy, shady character.
Name one "unicorn" with a competitor that's at least half its size. In automotive, GM, Ford, Toyota, and Chrysler have been plugging away for decades, and all have US market shares within a 2:1 range. We're not seeing that in new businesses.
I thought your grandparent post was being facetious, but are you being serious with this one?
Here's off the top of my head: Airbnb, Xiaomi, Flipkart, Pinterest, Snapchat (if you count instagram as a competitor), Zenefits, Didi until last week, Dropbox, Theranos, Snapdeal, Slack.
Now that I think about it, it's probably much harder to come up with unicorns that do have a monopoly.
I wasn't thinking HomeAway, I was thinking every hotel chain out there.
You said within 2:1, so Pinterest and Snapchat definitely qualify if you are counting their competitor as Facebook. Unless you meant 1:2, which doesn't make sense for your argument.
Sounds like you agree then that Thiel's "You must be a monopoly" argument is bunk? Haha, I'm still confused by your comments.
That is pretty interesting, though it's also possible Lyft's got itself into a tight spot with finances (debt service or other obligations).
If the ride-share service industry can't support two major players, questions of why emerge. Is it not sufficiently large, and current expectations are horribly overblown? Or is it subject to natural (or unnatural) monopoly effects to some massive degree?
Isn't transportation a "commodity" service? And if so, how can Uber's and Lyft's valuation be explained then?
I'm not an economist, but I would predict that the future of personal transportation is going to look like a race to the bottom, just like what is happening to cable companies (who transport data instead of people, and actually own some important infrastructure to keep their quasi monopolies up).
I 100% agree. Uber would like to own a 2 sided marketplace like Ebay, in which case it's nearly winner take all. The dynamics of ridesharing don't seem to match up with that. Every driver in NYC has 2 or 3 phones running multiple apps, the supply is not constrained to any particular network. Autonomous cars owned independently would obviously be smart enough to take the ride with the highest revenue. Thus the marketplaces are going to have to compete based on how much they pass through to the car owners. The margins are going to be paper thin.
If Uber is investing heavily in self-driving cars, there's a case to be made that Lyft represents a "purer" investment in ride-sharing without assuming the cost/risk of that massive expenditure.
Uber is betting that they'll be first to self-driving cars, Lyft is betting it will be any one of a dozen companies that aren't Uber.
I think that's a pretty reasonable bet. If/when self-driving cars hit there's no way they'll be limited to ride sharing, so the chance that Lyft will be able to benefit from general availability is high.
I agree there is not a great difference in the places I am mostly (SF and LA) but I think Uber was smart to bring on a lot of cheap capital the past few years.
I'm not surprised: I've only done one Lyft ride in my life. I arrived into Newark Airport and needed to get to New York City. Uber had a 3x surge, so I downloaded the Lyft app. I saw that Lyft was offering $5 if I did their ride share option, so I chose it.
- Driver picks me up quickly, no problem
- Driver makes 3 loops around the airport to pick up my ride share, but she cannot understand the Lyft app's GPS/map and is unable to find the person.
- Driver decides to just leave the airport without picking the ride share person
- Lyft app cancels other ride share's ride AND my ride, while at this point we are on the high way.
- Lyft driver tells me to re-request the ride, but after a couple of attempts, I am unable to pair back with the driver whom's car I am in (kept pairing me with other drivers)
- Eventually I get out of the car, on the side of the highway, and order an Uber.
- Because I'm not in the airport geofence, I didn't get a surge :O
Wait...what? The Lyft driver ordered you out of the vehicle on the shoulder of the highway?? Because his own app isn't functioning???
How does this person still have a driver's license let alone a job?
If that was me, I would have told him, "tough luck, sorry your app sucks, but I'm not getting out of this car, feel free to phone the police...sure they would be interested in hearing about your plan to drop me off on the highway shoulder..."
They didn't order me out of the car; I actually chose to get out and order an Uber because this driver took me to a random warehouse area off the highway. They said if we waited there a few minutes that the app would let us pair up and then they could drive me. I didn't feel safe so I decided to not participate any longer; I requested an Uber near the highway entrance ramp.
The ride-sharing hype train ran out of investors. I struggle to think of a company who would want to buy Lyft. The most interesting one which comes to mind is Didi Chuxing.
Though given how much money they wasted competing with Uber in China and then buying Uber out of China; I don't think Didi has much cash left (or interest) to buy Lyft in order to compete with Uber on US soil - They probably just want to bury the hatchet with Uber and each plow their own fields.
I don't think Uber would buy Lyft for several reasons:
- Uber started cutting back on spending - Probably not the best time for acquisitions.
- Such an acquisition could raise antitrust issues.
- Uber knows that there aren't many potential buyers for Lyft - Uber may be tempted to just wait it out and let Lyft go out of business - Then Uber can pick up most of Lyft's old customers for free.
I would not want to be a Lyft employee right now; especially not the kind who has stock options.
this is playing right into Uber's hand's, part of their fundraising strategy was to scare investors from putting more money into Lyft and it may be finally paying off.
Now Lyft won't be in a position of leverage when they have to sell themselves as no one wants them at their current price and acquirers will know Lyft is running out of options and will be 1/4 of the price by the end of 2017
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 171 ms ] threadhttps://www.theinformation.com/lyft-rebuffs-acquisition-appr...
(sorry for paywall)
I think currently its a good differentiator for Lyft but Uber's preparing us for our driverless future.
Also, if Uber beats the competition, I doubt they're going to keep fares as cheap as they are. Be prepared for fares to double.
Prospective Lyft drivers actually have to undergo an orientation where they are essentially screened and given basic training by a Lyft driver.
Prospective Uber drivers, on the other hand, can start working right away without even a face-to-face meeting with anyone. All they have to do is apply online.
Not sure how accurate this is, but anecdotally, I've always noticed that Lyft drivers have better customer service skills than Uber drivers, and are more personable.
Really? Do you have any numbers on that? Every I've talked to who has done one has done both.
> Prospective Uber drivers, on the other hand, can start working right away without even a face-to-face meeting with anyone. All they have to do is apply online.
It's not quite "right away", you still have to go through a background screening, which can take quite a while. With Lyft, I had my mentor orientation the day after I applied and was approved 3 days after. Uber, on the the hand, while not requiring an in-face meeting, took 3 weeks to finally approve me, after requiring additional documentation regarding my driving record on my previous license.
On the other hand, since Lyft won't match you with a driver again if you rate them 3 stars or less, that gives incentive to give low ratings to drivers you don't want to be matched with ever again.
I haven't had many of those, but I'm glad the option is there when it's come up: for example, texting while driving is an automatic 3 and a flag for safety, if not a 1. I don't want to ride with people who are liable to get me killed. Attempting to give me religious tracts is an automatic 1 (yes, this actually happened). Being creepy to me in general is a 1 (see: the guy who insisted on repeatedly screenshotting the Lyft app with my profile picture visible while I was in the car with him). People who make me sit in the back, especially when their front seat is completely empty, are an automatic 3 unless they make up for it by being a really great conversationalist (and I've learned to always cancel on people with vans, because they like to electronically open their sliding doors as soon as I start walking to their vehicle)
Sadly, this is a feature Uber doesn't have. With Uber, you can't do anything to make sure you're never matched with a particular driver again. I just wish Lyft also added a "never match me with this person again" option when cancelling rides or when being cancelled on... I have a handful of drivers I will never ride with because they were utter dicks to me when finding where I am. This includes a few people who, in an office park in the suburbs, parked a block or two way and demanded I walk. Then there was one guy who parked at the hospital across the street (a six-lane arterial with no traffic light in sight) from where I was and had the gall to send the signal that he was here: I called him to tell him he's at the wrong location, he responded "I'm at the hospital", and as soon as I said I'm somewhere else, he shouted "CALL ANOTHER!" at me and cancelled on me. Or the guy who texted me to demand I text him my address and then cancelled on me when I told him I already put my destination into the app. I've just had to memorize their names and remember to cancel whenever I'm matched with them.
I also take cabs when it's feasible and not significantly (ie, 2x) more expensive than Lyft/Uber (though most of that travel is expensed).
Lyft has a 1.2B cash reserve, ~400MM/yr in revenue, isn't profitable, and has now hit the end of the line on "unicorn" infusions at favorable terms. It's locked in a total war with Uber, which it cannot win or even stalemate while simultaneously shielding its reserves to keep an adequate runway to profitability.
So, since it can't win the race against Uber, its prospects are greatly diminished, and the greatest value it might hold is as someone else's strategic asset.
Or is it something more fundamental than that?
Perhaps the network could be valuable to Google? I notice that Waze seems to be inching in that direction, and perhaps they could get value from the mapping too.
The ride-sharing market seems to have network effects, which means the service with 80% of the market will get much more than 80% of the profit.
- They own a significant stake in Uber via GV (formerly Google Ventures)
- They own Google Maps, which everyone relies on at the moment
- They own the most advanced self driving car and are closest to Level 4 autonomy
- They own Waze, and have a significant community there
In my mind they should acquire Lyft, let it run as is. Then when they are ready to go primetime with their self driving cars, start piloting them as a cheaper/free option within the Lyft app. If the pilot works, expand the cars nationwide and aggressively finance the fleet using their balance sheet.
They could completely undercut Uber on price AND have better data sets.
How would it have worked out if different companies could own stretches of the primary thoroughfare and forbid access to the employees and agents of their competitors? What if Google bought all the streets surrounding Apple and declared that Apple employees couldn't travel on them, lest they face legal action? That's essentially what we have happening online. Real competition is being seriously impeded by laws that allow companies to make it impossible to access data that the user has the right to access.
If we really see the internet as the Information Superhighway, we need to stop restricting access based on corporate interest. The data needs to be accessible. Only then will customers be free to choose the application they want to use based on how well it performs its promised functions, instead of based on its holding the relevant data hostage.
Their app and scheduling smarts are valuable too, but won't be _more_ valuable when the drivers go away.
[1] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-37117831
If one of those companies were to launch a self-driving taxi service that cost half as much as Uber it wouldn't take long at all for it to utterly decimate Uber's business.
The question is whether it's better for a manufacturer to enter the taxi service industry, or licence their technology and focus on direct consumer sales of the vehicles.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-37106570
"If we are not tied for first [in autonomous vehicle rollout], then the person who is in first. . . rolls out a ride-sharing network that is far cheaper or far higher-quality than Uber's, and Uber is no longer a thing," Kalanick said."(1)
Lyft has raised ~$2b at a recent $5.5b valuation, Uber has raised ~$9b at a $85b valuation.
Lyft is able to somewhat compete with Uber on today's ground war of drivers & customer acquisition, but unlikely to compete in tomorrow's war of autonomous without a partner.
The recent $500m round Lyft got from GM clearly has GM positioned as takeout partner - GM brings the autonomous / Lyft brings the customers.
What I bet happened here is that Lyft tried to power move GM with some large stalking-horse bids, the tactic backfired, and now GM is leaking to put pressure on Lyft to accept a diminished offer.
(1) http://www.businessinsider.com/travis-kalanick-interview-on-...
[1] http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/astute [2] http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/succinct
Horse-drawn carriages.
PC Word processors (vs. typewriters).
Ditto with the transition from propeller to jet aircraft. The major aircraft manufacturers before WW2 were companies like Curtis, Wright, Hughes, Douglas, Grumman etc. After the jet age, the companies that successfully developed jet aircraft (Boeing, McDonnell, Lockheed, Grumman, etc.) survived, while those that didn't were bought up in firesales by their replacements.
You also see examples of competitive industries that are entirely replaced by a single monopolist because of new technology. For example, tobacco was the cash crop of the south, lucrative enough to start a war over, with several numerous wealthy plantation owners forming the backbone of the South's social structure. When American Tobacco adopted the tobacco-rolling machine, they soon ended up with >90% of the market, the most thorough monopoly ever (even moreso than Standard Oil). It was broken up via antitrust legislation on the same day as Standard Oil; descendants include R.J. Reynolds and Liggett group, and still account for a significant portion of the tobacco industry.
[1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2013/09/20...
[2] http://www.gartner.com/newsroom/id/3415117
I'm in Tampa most of my time, and it will be impossible to service that much sprawl with light rail or bus service. And if you don't like sprawl, you're going to need to change public policy to deal with dense real estate costs.
There is no free urban planning lunch.
Dense urban areas are better suited to mass transit.
Uber fills a niche of point to point transport that's current overutilized because of VC subsidization.
Even if you get rid of the driver, you can't expect everyone in an urban core to do point to point transit, especially with the inefficiencies of pick up and drop off.
i agree that at some point low-density sprawl wouldn't make centralised public transport economic (even supposing global regulation existed to force the cost of pollution to be accounted for in market prices)
at this point in our global human predicament it'd be a bit of a shame not to realise that some ideas that were okay in the past aren't very good ideas any more.
I've accepted the fact that public transit systems here will never be great. It will only be ever be barely good enough. There are a ton of factors affecting this, but at this point my faith is with the private sector.
But we did just spend twenty billion dollars on a bullet train from Bakersfield to Merced, so there's that, I guess.
I think it's a fair bet that autonomous cars will come before Geary BRT is completed, and it's a certainty that they'll come before Geary gets a subway. And while Geary is one of the worst, there are a half dozen similar bus corridors in the city. Also, most of the rail is above ground and similarly slow and crowded.
While I generally think rail and autonomous cars can be symbiotic, autonomous cars are likely to kill buses. Middle-income people ride the bus only out of necessity. High-income people never ride the bus, though they will ride a decent subway system. Once autonomous cars and autonomous shuttles come out, middle-income riders will flock to them, the only people riding busses will be the poor and working class, and the system will collapse, sooner in most other places, but it'll also happen in San Francisco.
Because San Francisco doesn't have a real subway network, SF MTA is in for some rough times in the not too distant future. I wouldn't be surprised if San Francisco bans or heavily taxes private autonomous systems. If they were smart they'd be digging tunnels as fast as possible. Some cities, like Madrid, seemed to have learned to do it cheaply, and the savings aren't just because of geology.
I can take a bus or train anywhere at any time, knowing that if I'm, for example, south of Washington at any time of day or downtown after 2am, I can call a car and still get home. In the 00s, the only way out of those zones was to bring your own car or be prepared for a "Falling Down" style 10 mile walk.
Yellow cabs (then and still) don't enter a massive buffer zone around regions where they might get a black guy as a fare even if you called, but Uber serves those areas reliably, 24/7.
Wherever it's deployed you have to conisder the traffic and congestion repercussions if everyone uses it, not just rich people.
Transit has to move poor and middle class people too.
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/uber-autonomous-c...
In my opinion, self driving cars are closer than the naysayers think. The cars don't have to be able to handle every situation initially. Driving from my house to the local shopping centre is only 4 turns, this could be a preprogrammed route to a designated autonomous-vehicle drop off point.
I'm going to say we'll see a lot more of this in the next five years.
You have that scope reversed. That's why multiple organizations have autonomous cars, which have been real world tested, to various success, and are being allowed to roll out (the whole derail of "they don't exist yet" is naysayer noise) without nine nines reliability. While the moon trip was only done ONCE across all of humanity's history and there wasn't a test beforehand. THAT was impressive, to the point of incredulity.
That's similar to what I've wondered about as a good intermediate step between what we have now and fully autonomous self-driving cars that can go from any given place to any given destination given the address, even if they have never been there before.
The idea is that most of us have various trips that we make frequently, such as to/from work, to/from a grocery store, to/from kid's school, etc., and maybe we could simplify the early consumer self-driving systems by limiting them to such trips. Here's how I imagine it would work.
When you decide you want to add a route to your car's self-drivable routes, such as your commute to work, you put the car in an observer mode and drive the route manually. The car tries to identify traffic signs, traffic lights, lane markers, and other such things that it needs to understand. The car also records video of the drive.
When you tell the car you've reached the destination, it uploads the video of the drive to the vendor that provided your self-driving system. It also uploads what traffic signs, lights, etc., it has identified, and a log of your control inputs.
The vendor has a human watch the video of your drive, review the things that the car identified, and identify things that the car missed that are relevant. The human accesses whether or not the car can handle this route as is, or can handle it if some special cases are added, or cannot handle it. In the first two cases, the vendor notifies the car that it is now allowed to drive the route (and downloads any extra information they identified that the car needs), and the car can then drive the route in self-driving mode.
Whenever the car drives the route in self-driving mode, it compares what it sees and identifies (traffic signs, lane markings, etc.) with those that were used when it was shown the route. If there are more than trivial changes, it asks the passenger to take over driving, and uploads a report to the vendor for review.
Perhaps it also uploads video of the route every time it is driven, and the vendor runs software that automatically compares each to prior videos of that route, and learns what features normally vary over time, and which are more constant. The results can be sent back to the car to adjust its thresholds on a feature by feature basis for when it considers something changed enough to require human intervention.
Who's going to preprogram it? And then the billions other potential preprogrammed routes.
> But since the technology has not been perfected, the cars will come with human backup drivers to handle any unexpected situations.
Getting those last 0.01% of situations right will take a long time.
I don't think the software is the gating item for full autonomy. The production cycle of the hardware (the actual cars) is what we'll be waiting on most over the next few years.
This seems wrong. Wouldn't taxis be first, since cargo still needs to be hauled off and loaded by someone/thing? Many of the those drivers double as laborers.
But as we get closer and closer to that inevitability, the value of Lyft and other non-autonomous ride-sharing companies will just get lower and lower.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autonomous_car#Classification
Level 4 still a LONG time coming. That was underscored for me by this interview:
http://thisweekinstartups.com/george-hotz-commaai/
George is kind of arrogant and brash... but even he says "I don't know anything about level 4". Everyone thinks level 3 and 4 are the same thing, but now that I've heard him dismiss level 4, that actually gives me more confidence in his startup.
Those are two completely different things!!!
Google has been working on self-driving cars since 2009, and the DARPA challenges were around 2005-2007. We're not even at level 3. Level 4 might not come for decades after that.
Tesla has "good enough" L3 already on the road, and I highly doubt Tesla's Autopilot is anywhere near as sophisticated as what Google is working on in their labs.
You can get on a bus that does that now in Helsinki. Admittedly they are slow and on set routes but even so they're there.
http://money.cnn.com/2016/08/18/technology/self-driving-bus-...
Problem is, that makes them rigid and unable to handle anything unplanned for.
In a city, not only do you have better/more frequently updated map data, but you also have a large corpus of cars that can share info with each other, which will be a big aspect of driverless cabs. Also the speeds don't get as high, so safety is a bit easier. Also flooding/snowstorms/other things computers can't yet handle well are more of a problem on the open road.
Your assertion that moving freight must come first, to me, has no apparent logic behind it.
If you think about it, taxi cab drivers barely need any qualifications to drive a cab. Truckers need more, almost as if trucking is a more demanding type of driving. By that alone, I feel like it's fairly apparent which would be easier to replicate on silicon.
Sure it does. It is the easier problem, and it makes sense to assume the easier problem will be solved before the hard one.
Self driving cars that move about long stretches of interstate highways with little to no interactions with intersections, pedestrians or complicated traffic patterns is a far easier problem than driving in densely populated urban areas.
If you think about it, taxi cab drivers barely need any qualifications to drive a cab. Truckers need more, almost as if trucking is a more demanding type of driving. By that alone, I feel like it's fairly apparent which would be easier to replicate on silicon.
Trucking is a far more demanding job than driving a cab, but that is only true for humans. What makes trucking demanding is long, rigorous driving schedules that require high degree of driving stamina. As it turns out computers have very high stamina and are very good at doing long rigorous activities without suffering any fatigue. This is as opposed to driving a cab where the difficulty of the job is not so much in the rigor of the job but more in what humans do better than computers. Which is mainly dealing with other people, understanding patterns and learning from past experiences.
Additionally, they need to be able to drive at night in areas without much lighting, they need to drive for hours and hours on end, instead of just 5-45minutes, etc. Finally, they are 40+ feet long (instead of being around 15 feet long) and have much less maneuverability and a much longer stopping distance/time.
Sounds like a harder problem to me.
You could create a system, potentially using truck stops or in some way your own infrastructure, which is a docking point for autonomous vehicles. At these locations, human drivers pick up and drop off the otherwise autonomous vehicles, allowing humans to take the burden of the difficult portion of driving, while computers handle the boring part of driving. Of course, you would have to place similar stops every (80% of a tank of gas, measured in distance), as well for refueling. Naturally, this idea has a dozen holes at the moment and would need to be improved to be viable.
Freight consists of both long and short haul, with different needs and approaches. Your point applies to the "last mile" delivery phase, which may or may not be a significant part of the operation.
In fact, many big stores like Walmart, Costco, Aldi, and the like are placed pretty close to an interstate exit. I would guess that this allows significant reduction in costs, as the operators don't need to switch from their optimized long haul vehicles (big trailers, etc) to more maneuvarable, less efficient (per unit weight of goods) trucks for the last mile stage.
There is plenty of freight that is carried on highways over long distances with low traffic volumes, in a similar role to rail freight.
> Additionally, they need to be able to drive at night in areas without much lighting,
During winter at higher latitudes a lot of driving is at night. As for lighting, plenty of city streets are dark and have poor lighting at night.
> they need to drive for hours and hours on end, instead of just 5-45minutes, etc.
So? Fatigue is something that affects human drivers. There should be no serious differences for an autonomous vehicle driving 10 30 minute trips and one 5 hour one, modulo start and stop. In fact, if anything, longer duration trips tend to involve a greater fraction of highway usage that does not require significant brake usage, turning, etc.
> Finally, they are 40+ feet long (instead of being around 15 feet long) and have much less maneuverability and a much longer stopping distance/time.
I agree with this.
Driving in weather is harder, but that is still a problem for city cars, I'm not sure why you think it is more of a problem on the open road.
The map data might be more frequently updated, but it is also more complicated. Stop and go traffic (with lane changes!), turns, traffic lights, construction, busses, etc. all add to the complexity of city driving.
The first thing for freight isn't going to be completely autonomous, it is going to be a slightly smarter tesla style autopilot, i.e. a driver who is alerted by the computer when he needs to take over (weather, pulling into towns, etc).
I honestly have the opposite opinion that you do: freight (ignoring the last mile) is a much easier problem than inner city driving.
Furthermore, those trucks are expensive. Tacking on an extra $10,000 to a family sedan for sensors and electronics is huge. It's not so extreme when you're paying $100,000 for a base truck.
And finally, those fleet vehicles have regular inspections and maintenance. Everything works great when it's all shiny and new. It'll be interesting to see what happens to autopilots on cars that don't even get regular oil changes.
Well, part of those rules and regulations do things like specifically limit how much they can drive per day (11 hours is the limit, I believe). There's also super high turn over in the trucking industry and they've had driver shortages fairly regularly. A lot of these rules are about protecting the human driver from themselves (fatigue, misbehavior etc). When I think about the problem it seems that regular, predictable freight movement from port to warehouse would be a logical place to start because a) it's easier and b) the labor market for drivers is so severely distorted right now.
Edit: It's 11 hours but I'm remembering there's other restrictions too, like limits on consecutive blocks of 11-hour driving without rest. I'll look it up later.
And after all, we only really need a statistical improvement over human drivers for it to be worth it, given that the software in these cars can be updated over time.
I guess it would be nice though, if we had a really tough standardized test course, involving various common situations with pedestrians, cyclists, etc.
On the other hand, we test human drivers on real roads too.
[1]: http://www.driverless-future.com/?page_id=384
Thank you. This is a pet peeve of mine. Self driving cars do not exist, at all, yet, nor does anything that's really all that close but if you point that out on HN you'll be met with breathless disagreement.
Even more relevant, there's literally nothing in the historical record to suggest that the real breakthroughs when they come will come from a company like Uber.
Why not? The team at Uber that is working on this is largely comprised of researchers from Carnegie Mellon and former members of Google's driverless car team. Historical record suggests otherwise...
I mean they are competing against Apple and BMW, among many others, presumably, who have actually made a car, computer, or transportation device that worked.
That notwithstanding, the burden of proof is in the other direction.
Remember, a company is merely comprised of the people within it. If Uber has people that have joined from the kinds of companies that you mentioned, it becomes more and more indistinguishable from them.
Not really. Software companies are like that. They are the exception to the general rule that companies are composed of people plus things like factories, equipment, patents, trade secrets, inventory, real estate, global supply chains, and dealer networks for service and support.
Making cars, even regular ones, is hard and Uber has never really done anything like it.
No they haven't.
I know this because there aren't any cars in the world that can self-drive.
But if you define what Tesla already has in production as a self-driving car, then you would be wrong.
Brace yourselves. AI Winter Is Coming.
Indeed. The unpredictable behavior of humans occupying the same environment is key. Remove this element and things get simpler (though not simple. And v2v comms might be required.)
I suspect highways are the road infrastructure most akin to a closed track. Which is why the Otto acquisition is so interesting.
Edit: Figures from 2015 indicate human interventions to prevent an accident were about once per 74,000 miles or maybe slightly worse than humans but not that much. http://www.roboticstrends.com/article/google_self_driving_ca...
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/05/all-th...
The key to Google's success has been that these cars aren't forced to process an entire scene from scratch. Instead, their teams travel and map each road that the car will travel. And these are not any old maps. They are not even the rich, road-logic-filled maps of consumer-grade Google Maps.
They're probably best thought of as ultra-precise digitizations of the physical world, all the way down to tiny details like the position and height of every single curb. A normal digital map would show a road intersection; these maps would have a precision measured in inches.
The devil is truly in the details. You're covering 99.5% of all driving situations with 99.9% reliability? Well, then the remaining bit is going to be pretty devilishly hard! What do you do about cars that are stuck stationary on the the side of a bit of shoulder-less road? Here's what a human being does: They "sense" that something is up on the road ahead because the traffic patterns are different. They observe what the drivers ahead are doing, then start exercising caution concerning what's going on at the side of the road, maybe even to the point of hugging the other side of the lane out of caution.
Are "driverless" cars doing this now? No. Are you going to have to develop human-equivalent AI to do that? No. But is taking things like this into account going to take a lot? Damn straight!
I actually think because the rewards are so great, and the technology is so difficult, that infrastructure will change before the tech. There are things you can do to drastically reduce the complexity, like install smart traffic lights and have cars talk to each other, in addition to special road markings designed for self-driving cars.
CMU has been working on self-driving cars since 1984, people seem to think nobody was doing anything before Google (and they also think that Google's cars are far more capable than they are). Yes, money makes a difference, but sometimes reality just disagrees with profit. And if there's something startups are good at, it's hyping themselves up to jack up valuations.
Currently, bus/overground/tubes/whatever have only few lines and they can cover a lot of users.
Tomorrow, self driving cars could cover only the few main roads of a city. That would be enough to be useful for 80% of people in the city. That ignores the hard 90% roads which are harder to do.
We'd still have to walk down the block to reach the uber and that's annoying, but that's a huge progress over the current public transportation systems (whom coverage vary hugely by city and country, to the point there might not be any).
With driverless vehicles, a company can solve the supply side of the market making problem by buying a few cars in one market.
If I'm in city A, I just want an app that summons a driverless car to me. Do I care if the company behind that app is also in 200 other cities? Is there any cost to me to having multiple apps on my phone?
My intuition would have been that uber is way overvalued because once driverless cars are mainstream, it's easy for a competitor (possibly local government!) to break into any given market.
However, it is obvious that in the short and medium term the largest company wins. It is also noteworthy that the battles they win against each cities taxi mafia will be one less battle for autonomous cabs. We could see a surprisingly smooth roll out whebever it happens
It occurs to me that their incentives aren't exactly aligned, and aren't aligned with the public. If Tesla or Uber brings out a semi-autonomous vehicle and then lots of accidents occur, it poisons the well for self-driving vehicles. People start associating them with fatal crashes, they shy away from them out of fear, and the status quo reigns. In the status quo, Uber is on top for ridesharing and Tesla/BMW/GM/etc are on top for conventional car purchases, so it all works out for them.
By contrast, Google only succeeds if autonomous vehicles become a real thing that people trust for their everyday transportation needs. They don't have a horse in today's race; either they build a fully-autonomous vehicle or they get nothing.
Methinks we'll see a big PR campaign from Google to make a big public distinction between semi-autonomous and fully-autonomous driving, along with a lobbying campaign to ban semi-autonomous driving. They have to get out ahead of public opinion before lots of accidents happen, otherwise the whole category will be ruined.
Using a shared, limited resource in that way is such a prototypical "tragedy of the commons" that I can't see any government allowing it.
Traffic will be insane if people can send their cars on errands without having to sit in the resulting traffic, or if hired cars can drive halfway across the city to pick up the next fare with no impact to the car's owner besides wear and fuel.
No amount of incremental improvements in capacity due to "better" robot drivers will make up for that.
People will love these things, and they'll want to use them all the time, and the traffic will be horrendous.
What if they could apply a "time on the streets" tax?
It might still not be enough, however, and it would be highly regressive without some sort of heavy scaling based on income: The disparity between the value that people at different income levels place on their time is staggering. That disparity is the entire reason Uber (and the rest of the service industry) are thriving.
Of course, what do you care what traffic is like, if you're being driven? So you get to read the news for an extra fifteen minutes, or have another beer.
Most errands involving cars also require the user on both ends to load and/or unload or perform some other function. But, sure, we can ignore that for the sake of argument...
> or if hired cars can drive halfway across the city to pick up the next fare with no impact to the car's owner besides wear and fuel.
Well, it will if there is no cost other than low-cost fuel (like the US has no) or similarly low-cost energy (e.g., for electrics).
OTOH, the solution to "the aggregate amount of traffic is too high because the cost is too low" is to increase the cost -- probably not with gas charges because of the move to EVs, but by tracking cars on the road and charging for their use of the road, more at peak hours.
If I can send my car out without having to drive it myself, I'll use it for things things like picking up kids. Take my spouse to work, drive back home, take me to work at a different time, repeat.
Right now many families buy two cars, often not because they need to drive both of them at exactly the same time, but because they need to use them in different places. If you can send the car between locations then you can use one car, and the cost is that the car spends time on the road, making someone else's commute worse.
Again, this is Uber's entire business model, and if they're successful at getting everyone to use ride-sharing, regardless of self-driving cars, then we will trade a bunch of parking spaces for more cars on the road. It's literally how Uber works.
In addition, if your car can drive itself places, whole new business models will spring up around things like delivery of food, packages, etc. Businesses will be happy to start providing you the service of putting stuff in your trunk.
Yes, I'm guessing that the arrival of self driving cars coincides with electric drive becoming commonplace. They could even go hand in hand: send the car back home to charge, then have it pick us up later.
All of these things reduce the incremental cost of having your car on the road, which will drastically increase traffic.
[1]: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2016-08-12/lyft-said-to...
Paywall is keeping me out of the NYT article, at the moment, but I wonder whether Lyft is simply on the losing slope of a plot of momentum, at this point.
Shame, as I am not very fond of Uber's business practices. Though I don't know that Lyft is any better.
* Lyft doesn't let you book a ride by web or sms, which means in an emergency, I can't cadge a ride easily at a web cafe, library, laptop at a Starbucks, borrowed phone, etc. Lyft is optional, having a working m.uber.com login is a survival skill.
* I've never experienced the level of drivers outright misbehaving and fucking with passengers in an Uber that I semi-frequently experience as a friend's guest in a Lyft. I don't know if it's culture or what, but Lyft drivers seem to feel comfortable doing things like picking a location and ditching you or not accepting your instructions to drive a particular place, which as far as I can tell is a "never drive for us again" infraction over at Uber and the drivers know it.
You can either click the "web" button under the article link, or right-click the link and open in a private browsing window.
[1] http://www.wsj.com/articles/peter-thiel-competition-is-for-l...
Here's off the top of my head: Airbnb, Xiaomi, Flipkart, Pinterest, Snapchat (if you count instagram as a competitor), Zenefits, Didi until last week, Dropbox, Theranos, Snapdeal, Slack.
Now that I think about it, it's probably much harder to come up with unicorns that do have a monopoly.
Xiaomi is a cell phone manufacturer, in an established industry.
In the social space, Facebook towers over Pinterest, Snapchat, Instagram, etc.
Zenefits is indeed in a competitive space. It's in B2B, where crushing the competition is harder because of lock-in.
Theranos may have a value of zero.
Shopping cart companies (Flipkart, Snapdeal, Alibaba) tend to be nation-oriented, so you have to look at them country by country.
Slack and Atlassan do seem to be in the 2:1 range. Again, B2B with lock-in.
[1] http://fortune.com/2014/03/12/growing-quietly-in-airbnbs-sha...
You said within 2:1, so Pinterest and Snapchat definitely qualify if you are counting their competitor as Facebook. Unless you meant 1:2, which doesn't make sense for your argument.
Sounds like you agree then that Thiel's "You must be a monopoly" argument is bunk? Haha, I'm still confused by your comments.
If the ride-share service industry can't support two major players, questions of why emerge. Is it not sufficiently large, and current expectations are horribly overblown? Or is it subject to natural (or unnatural) monopoly effects to some massive degree?
I'm not an economist, but I would predict that the future of personal transportation is going to look like a race to the bottom, just like what is happening to cable companies (who transport data instead of people, and actually own some important infrastructure to keep their quasi monopolies up).
Uber will just become the service provider. That is their goal to become the PG&E of transportation.
Aren't the emperor's clothes simply fabulous?
Uber is betting that they'll be first to self-driving cars, Lyft is betting it will be any one of a dozen companies that aren't Uber.
I think that's a pretty reasonable bet. If/when self-driving cars hit there's no way they'll be limited to ride sharing, so the chance that Lyft will be able to benefit from general availability is high.
- Driver picks me up quickly, no problem
- Driver makes 3 loops around the airport to pick up my ride share, but she cannot understand the Lyft app's GPS/map and is unable to find the person.
- Driver decides to just leave the airport without picking the ride share person
- Lyft app cancels other ride share's ride AND my ride, while at this point we are on the high way.
- Lyft driver tells me to re-request the ride, but after a couple of attempts, I am unable to pair back with the driver whom's car I am in (kept pairing me with other drivers)
- Eventually I get out of the car, on the side of the highway, and order an Uber.
- Because I'm not in the airport geofence, I didn't get a surge :O
How does this person still have a driver's license let alone a job?
If that was me, I would have told him, "tough luck, sorry your app sucks, but I'm not getting out of this car, feel free to phone the police...sure they would be interested in hearing about your plan to drop me off on the highway shoulder..."
Though given how much money they wasted competing with Uber in China and then buying Uber out of China; I don't think Didi has much cash left (or interest) to buy Lyft in order to compete with Uber on US soil - They probably just want to bury the hatchet with Uber and each plow their own fields.
I don't think Uber would buy Lyft for several reasons: - Uber started cutting back on spending - Probably not the best time for acquisitions. - Such an acquisition could raise antitrust issues. - Uber knows that there aren't many potential buyers for Lyft - Uber may be tempted to just wait it out and let Lyft go out of business - Then Uber can pick up most of Lyft's old customers for free.
I would not want to be a Lyft employee right now; especially not the kind who has stock options.
Now Lyft won't be in a position of leverage when they have to sell themselves as no one wants them at their current price and acquirers will know Lyft is running out of options and will be 1/4 of the price by the end of 2017