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Once we have self-driving cars, there will no longer be any pressing need to have the parking lots immediately adjacent to the places that people are going. The cars will be able to drive empty to the parking area after dropping off passengers. This will also increase the willingness of people to commutte long distances, since people spend most of their time on their phones and laptops anyway.
Personally, I get motion sick if I try to read in a car, so that's useless to me.
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But how far away are we from fully automated driving becoming a legal reality? I feel like I've been hearing it's 2-3 years away since almost a decade ago.
Waymo exists, and Tesla's tech is pretty advanced, I believe. I wonder how much of why we haven't seen it much yet is fear of heavy lawsuits and regulation.
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and we were 2-3 years away from useful AI for 3 decades. And then chat gpt happened. There are self driving cars in SF now. So it could swing either way - the last couple of percentages could require new paradigm or we are very close.
Right, so we still don't have useful AI.
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Cubicles-on-wheels will be such a game-changer.
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