San Francisco?
SF’s problems are real and the city went from being a beautiful tourist attraction to a homeless, drug and crime ridden dump. What if some of the woke decisions by their politicians that led to this condition weren’t just typical progressive policies gone bad? Maybe, some of it was on purpose. They need a fairly large city (but not as crowded a downtown as it once was) to test out the viability of driverless vehicles. Maybe all part of the plan. See Below copied from a Seeking Alpha piece. Big expansion for Cruise, Waymo driverless vehicles in San Francisco
Aug. 11, 2023 6:39 AM ETAlphabet Inc. (GOOGL), GOOG, GM, UBERAMZN, TSLA, LYFTBy: Yoel Minkoff, SA News Editor66 Comments
San Francisco Serves As Testing Grounds For Autonomous Vehicles
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images News
A strange vibration is coming in the 2020s as driverless vehicles are set in motion. A whole generation has a new explanation for the future of mobility, but instead of flowers in their hair, technology is the new love-in there. If you’re going to San Francisco, be aware of a supercharged initiative that will likely transform the automotive industry and the ways people operate all across the nation.
Summertime: In a contentious vote, California regulators gave the green light to Alphabet’s Waymo (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG) and General Motors’ Cruise (NYSE:GM) to expand the breadth and location of their operations. The companies, which collectively have more than 500 autonomous vehicles already operating in San Francisco, will be able to take paying passengers without a human safety driver during the day or at night, and throughout the entire city. Waymo (GOOGL) (GOOG) will also be permitted to drive in inclement weather, and at speeds of up to 65 miles per hour, while Cruise (GM) will be limited to a speed of 35 mph.
“While we don’t yet have the data to judge AVs against the standard that humans are setting, I do believe in the potential of this technology to increase safety on the roadway,” said California Public Utilities Commissioner John Reynolds. The technologists agree, citing the elimination of human error and challenging the “inaccessible transportation status quo.” On the other side of the debate were residents, as well as police and fire departments, frustrated at the potential for traffic incident interference, or job threats to human drivers of Uber (NYSE:UBER) and Lyft (LYFT) – which are also based in San Francisco.
Expensive endeavor: GM (GM) has been shelling out around $2B a year to make the self-driving dream a reality, hoping to gain from a first-mover advantage that’s also being sought after by Tesla (TSLA) and Amazon’s (AMZN) Zoox. The strategy is part of CEO Mary Barra’s plan to double the automaker’s revenue by 2030, though its Cruise subsidiary only recorded $102M in revenue last year, compared to $3.3B in expenses. Regarding Waymo, Investing Group Leader Stone Fox Capital argued that drastic cuts weren’t needed after shareholders in November urged the tech giant to slash its losses, while SA analyst Albert Lin penned an article on what Alphabet (GOOGL) (GOOG) would look like without its “Other Bets” category.