Today’s Solutions: April 25, 2024

The Google self-driving project Waymo started testing its driverless technology in the city of Phoenix back in 2017. Now, three years later, Waymo has announced plans to open its fully autonomous cars to the city’s wider population.

In a similar style to Uber or Lyft, people can now book a trip using the Waymo app and invite their friends or family to join them for a ride. “In the near term, 100 percent of our rides will be fully driverless,” Waymo CEO John Krafcik said.

Once the company adds barriers to its vehicles that separate the front row seats from the rear passenger cabin, Waymo will start offering rides with trained operators again. The move will allow the company to open up the service to more people and service a larger geographical area. Waymo currently operates in a 100-square-mile area that includes the Tempe and Mesa suburbs of Phoenix. However, it’s driverless cars are currently limited to a 50-square-mile operating area.

Although they may be driverless, Waymo’s cars aren’t necessarily left to their own devices. A team of remote employees keep tabs on the vehicles, and can step in if something goes awry.

Can Waymo claim its fully driverless then?

Not exactly. But the guarantee that someone can take the wheel remotely might make people feel more at ease about getting into the vehicles—after all, a recent report found that 48 percent of Americans said they would never get into a self-driving taxi.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Gamers revolutionize biomedical research via DNA analysis

In a remarkable study published in Nature Biotechnology, researchers discovered gaming's transformative potential in biomedical research. Borderlands Science, an interactive mini-game included in Borderlands ...

Read More

The ancient origins of your 600,000 year old cuppa joe

Did you realize that the beans that comprise your morning cup of coffee date back 600,000 years? Scientists have discovered the ancient origins of Coffea arabica, ...

Read More

World record broken for coldest temperature ever recorded

With our current knowledge of how temperature works there is no upper limit, this means materials can keep getting hotter and hotter to no ...

Read More

A youth-led environmental victory creates a paradigm shift in Montana’s...

A group of youth environmental activists scored a landmark legal victory in Montana, marking a critical step forward in the ongoing battle against climate ...

Read More