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Waymo pauses Atlanta service as its robotaxis keep driving into floods

techcrunch.com

54 points by mattas an hour ago · 39 comments

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paxys 13 minutes ago

Driving through an obviously flooded street thinking "I'll easily make it" and getting stuck in the middle? Yeah, these cars have achieved human level intelligence.

xnx 19 minutes ago

I wonder how much of this is trouble perceiving water depth vs integrating that understanding into the larger driver model without creating regressions elsewhere.

jvanderbot 30 minutes ago

Snark aside, there will probably always be conditions in which waymo is not the right answer. Are they going to do hurricane evacuation? I think removing the driver just necessitates this.

  • VoidWhisperer 17 minutes ago

    While this is going to be an overly optimistic scenario: Imagine how smooth a hurricane evacuation would go if _everyone_ used a self-driving car to do the evacuation - atleast there might be less gridlock than there is during any usual hurricane evacuations. And assuming the self driving cars don't do something stupid that causes every car behind it to essentially lock up and stop moving

    That said, I know a scenario like that would never happen, probably for the best.

    • Eji1700 5 minutes ago

      The problem is they're not designed for that. They aren't spending resources on some master control networking system because in 99% of use cases that won't be useful anyways as most of the traffic being dealt with isn't other waymo's willing to communicate.

      There might be some level of adoption where they would, but honestly we're back to "but what about trains/trucks?".

      Half the problem with evacuations is people don't want to leave behind their stuff to get destroyed. You'd basically be better off getting a fleet of semi's with some quick and dirty cube system thrown up than a bunch of automated sedans.

      • m0llusk a minute ago

        Sort of. There is no built in support for evacuation methods, but the WayMo absolutely does use a master control system for network the cars. This is how the database of streets is kept and is why WayMo vehicles occasionally swarm private non through way ally streets when there is some glitch in the database that indicates private ways are available roads or an ally that looks like a through way turns out to have a fence between properties.

    • Jabrov 13 minutes ago

      Why would there be less gridlock if people were in a driverless car instead of a regular car?

      • loudmax 7 minutes ago

        Ideally, robot drivers will some day be better drivers than humans in all road conditions. They'll be able to coordinate fast lane merges and busy intersections by subtly adjusting speed without vehicles having to stop.

        Imagine a busy intersection where all the cars fly past one another at 40 miles an hour without stopping but none of them crash. Humans can't do this, but machines could, if, and when the technology gets there. To be clear, there's still a way to go.

      • tialaramex 4 minutes ago

        In principle the driverless cars are more able to organize fleeting, operating in a way that's not actually practical if you don't share a single guiding directive.

        I don't know that you'd ever see this in practice, but it's much more practical in theory for almost identical machines running the same software than for a bunch of humans in a variety of vehicles who've maybe only half understood how to do this.

        Also, for this specific problem we know humans are idiots. They should all be driving an agreed route to the agreed evacuation point, but some real humans will decide they know a shortcut, they want to drop past Jim's place, or whatever. Just as there's a difference between what the protocol says happens when you have to abandon an aircraft on the tarmac versus the reality that people will decide they want to self-evacuate and they need their carry on bags and chaos ensues and maybe people die.

      • lukevp 10 minutes ago

        Traffic is usually caused by adding inefficiencies across a system with little slack - someone brakes too hard or too early, and if all the cars are stacked up, that one brake event can ripple through hundreds of following cars, getting worse and worse because each person brakes more. Self driving cars can perfectly sync up and move like a train. Theoretically there could be no traffic on highways if all cars are self-driving. Rarely is a highway so full that there couldn’t be more cars (eg. The entrance ramps are backed up) which implies the issues are related to the driving flow and not the capacity of the street itself.

      • paxys 10 minutes ago

        Same reason there's less gridlock when people obey traffic lights and other rules of the road and don't brake randomly. If every car on the road drove itself then there would never be traffic.

      • daveguy 8 minutes ago

        Well, probably not the current generation of driverless cars. Those would be a nightmare. Contrary to what some want to believe self driving cars do random shit all the time.

        But in the future, if there is a coordination standard among driverless cars, that could allow much higher density at higher speed. Coordination standards + higher density of self driving should reduce the self driving cars doing random shit too.

    • kjkjadksj 11 minutes ago

      It would be a failure. Turns out they do something stupid. People tested this in sf by calling a bunch of waymos at once for a prank, but I guess that is the best case example of what a panicked evacuation on the service might be like. It was like a ddos attack. They ended up gridlocking themselves and turned it into a real life version of one of those rush hour board games. No one got out of the little area they called the waymos in.

    • steveBK123 10 minutes ago

      I mean the logical conclusion is a dedicated lane for automated cars..

      At which point we've reinvented privatized buses with a last mile convenience vs greatly reduced throughput trade-off.

      • treis 3 minutes ago

        I doubt it's less actual throughput in most cases. In a place like Atlanta there's no place where it's bus after bus. The BRT line they built nearby is a bus every 10 minutes. Which being very generous to the bus usage is equivalent to like 5 cars a minute.

      • ghaff 4 minutes ago

        Just take away the sidewalk and bike lane :-/

  • Aboutplants 17 minutes ago

    Evacuation is a use case in my mind. Having a fleet of shuttles on command to move people in preparation of a hurricane would be a benefit. They would obviously need to put weather limitations during actual storms because no one should be driving in a hurricane.

    • steveBK123 8 minutes ago

      Evacuation you want to prioritized throughput - think of how little road space 100 people in a bus take up vs say 50 cars with 2 people each. Or even 25 cars with 4 people each.

    • VoidWhisperer 5 minutes ago

      > No one should be driving in a hurricane.

      I agree, but there are a number of people here in Florida who will do it or die trying (emphasis on the die trying)

  • hooloovoo_zoo 3 minutes ago

    Except the Waymo can do 150 mph bumper to bumper with other Waymos if you let them.

ibejoeb 17 minutes ago

I assumed they went to Miami to develop their foul weather capabilities. It's still pretty early.

ck2 4 minutes ago

does Waymo use Lidar or is it like Musk's "cost saving" cameras only

colordrops 16 minutes ago

Self driving will never handle all corner cases until they essentially have a frontal cortex. They probably need something like an LLM to help with very high level abstract situations, e.g. avoiding a hurricane like someone else mentioned in this thread.

  • quantummagic 11 minutes ago

    A frontal cortex isn't enough; there are plenty of corner cases that humans fail at too. The real test is if self-driving performs on par, or better than, humans in the vast majority of cases. If it saves 50,000 lives a year to go with self-driving, it's a net-win even if there are a few people who die in situations where they would have survived with a human driver behind the wheel.

  • whimsicalism 12 minutes ago

    this is absolutely already a thing under development, you can see Waymo is hiring for reasoning roles

  • moomoo11 14 minutes ago

    how would a llm help

    maybe a little biological brain engineered to think it is a car with api access to the car hardware via the llm?

    imagine you get into the car and in the center console you just see a floating brain in vat like fallout

cucumber3732842 6 minutes ago

Clearly they haven't actually had any serious problems getting stuck or anything because it'd be all over the news.

I don't think they're barreling into foot+ deep water.

I think they're driving into shallower "perfectly navigable but still deep" puddles at normal for the roads speed and this pizza delivery boy type behavior is making passengers clutch their pearls because they are expecting their robotaxi to drive like a high end chauffeur.

LunicLynx 31 minutes ago

If they only would use lidar. Oh wait…

Guestmodinfo 33 minutes ago

Maybe the solution is to put in more billions. Every fad creates jobs.

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