Comment by jeroenhd

4 hours ago

Sounds like their disaster recovery plan was insufficient, intensified traffic jams in already congested areas because of "backlog", and is now being fixed to support the current scale.

The fact this backlog created issues indicates that it's perhaps Waymo that doesn't understand the complexity of running at that scale, because their systems got overwhelmed.

DR always stands for "didn't realize" in the aftermath of an event.

That's what they're learning and fixing for in the future to give the cars more self-confidence.

They probably do, they just don't give a shit. It's still the "move fast and break things" mindset. Internalize profits but externalize failures to be carried by the public. Will there be legal consequences for Waymo (i.e. fines?) for this? Probably not...

  • What Waymo profits?

    They're one-of-one still. Having ridden in a Waymo many times, there's very little "move fast and break things" leaking in the experience.

    They can simulate power outages as much as they want (testing) but the production break had some surprises. This is a technical forum.. most of us have been there.. bad things happened, plans weren't sufficient, we can measure their response on the next iteration in terms of how they respond to production insufficiencies in the next event.

    Also, culturally speaking, "they suck" isn't really a working response to an RCA.

  • Waymo cars have been proven safer than human drivers in California. At the same time, 40k people die each year in the US in car accidents caused by human drivers.

    I'm very happy they're moving fast so hopefully fewer people die in the future