I'm not sure about the type of statment that says Uber cars could replace city buses.I thought this BBC item on Uber was interesting, and looks at a different aspect of the long term costs...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-38252405
Ed.
That sounds like a bit much for any one app to do. Thousands of aiports & stations each with their own timings, etc. And what about if you decided to grab a cup of coffee or use the restroom?maybe this already exists but i haven't seen it yet.
Where I think Uber is missng a trick is when you tell them where you are now.
I don't want to call an Uber on the app when I'm already at a station. I want to to tell them I'm on this or that train and leave it to the Uber system to work out when i will be at destination (including any late running that may occur between now and my arrivals time) so the Uber car will be there to pick me up.
At airports a GPS system could even track my precise location so the driver knows, now I'm picking up my luggage, now I'm walking towards the pick up point etc, so they can coordinate their position to pick me up seamslessly.
As long as Uber can't work that stuff out, it's just easier for me to walk to the front of a row of waiting taxis.
At my hometown airport you can initiate an Uber/Lyft ride while still inside the airport and meet them at a designated ride sharing curb area as you exit. I don't check luggage so I simply initialized the pickup as I disembarked my aircraft. By the time I reached the curb my ride was waiting for me. Just as easy as catching the next cab in my view.At airports a GPS system could even track my precise location so the driver knows, now I'm picking up my luggage, now I'm walking towards the pick up point etc, so they can coordinate their position to pick me up seamslessly. As long as Uber can't work that stuff out, it's just easier for me to walk to the front of a row of waiting taxis.
Is this so?New York airports would have been connected by rail decades ago if it weren't for the taxi's fighting against it.
Uber wouldn't need to know the precise layout and timings of every airport. What they can do is aggregate data. They tend to pick up lots of people at airports so could have a lot of data to do statistics with. Then they could say, on average it takes 10 minutes from picking up luggage to reaching the pick up point.That sounds like a bit much for any one app to do. Thousands of aiports & stations each with their own timings, etc. And what about if you decided to grab a cup of coffee or use the restroom?maybe this already exists but i haven't seen it yet.
Where I think Uber is missng a trick is when you tell them where you are now.
I don't want to call an Uber on the app when I'm already at a station. I want to to tell them I'm on this or that train and leave it to the Uber system to work out when i will be at destination (including any late running that may occur between now and my arrivals time) so the Uber car will be there to pick me up.
At airports a GPS system could even track my precise location so the driver knows, now I'm picking up my luggage, now I'm walking towards the pick up point etc, so they can coordinate their position to pick me up seamslessly.
As long as Uber can't work that stuff out, it's just easier for me to walk to the front of a row of waiting taxis.
I don't know the exact details but yes, but a transit was proposed in the 70's or 80's to go from JFK to La Guardia and on into Manhattan.Is this so?New York airports would have been connected by rail decades ago if it weren't for the taxi's fighting against it.
I've heard on the contrary that the airports gets cash for every taxi that drives onto their land, and that it's the airports that don't want people to use transit.
You can say it as much as you like but I think you'll be waiting just shy of forever to see that. Taxi companies wouldn't have been able to codify absurd rules or demand exorbitant rates and nullify the threat of price competition without the help of the local councils.I've said it before and I'll say it again, I'm waiting for a major showdown between a taxi group and Uber to happen and the taxis to end up being the ones thrown out in a "kill the king" approach (e.g. a city council deciding that the politically rational move is obliterating the taxi drivers as a political force before an election four years hence).
I really think you presume too much. Though it varies based on jurisdiction, there's solid evidence that the taxis' situation is sliding fast. The best evidence of this is the price of an NYC taxi medallion dropping by about 50% over the last few years. Moreover, there are plenty of places which are not New York or San Francisco and where the taxi lobby is hardly going to be as strong...and frankly in some places I suspect the number of Uber drivers is likely to substantially exceed the number of taxi drivers.You can say it as much as you like but I think you'll be waiting just shy of forever to see that. Taxi companies wouldn't have been able to codify absurd rules or demand exorbitant rates and nullify the threat of price competition without the help of the local councils.I've said it before and I'll say it again, I'm waiting for a major showdown between a taxi group and Uber to happen and the taxis to end up being the ones thrown out in a "kill the king" approach (e.g. a city council deciding that the politically rational move is obliterating the taxi drivers as a political force before an election four years hence).
Austin never banned Uber or Lyft. In fact Uber and Lfyt can still return to Austin and probably will again in the future. Uber and Lyft didn't agree with Austin's new rules about more invasive background checks for drivers and took their concerns to the voters. Rightly or wrongly when the votes were counted Uber and Lyft had lost. Rather than comply with the new rules they simply picked up and left town. Which is their right of course, but all things considered it sounds as though the bulk of your disagreement is with the concept of democracy rather than with the city of Austin.Heck, just the simple fact that Austin bans it, tells me it's probably a better product at a lower price. Austin just hates capitalistic free market enterprise.
Ran out of arguments, eh?If nothing else, you're still amusing.
Inevitably the the People's Republics in the US tend to have higher income levels than the destitute homes of laissez-faire. Some of the latter are totally at the bottom of the economic pile these days and digging deeper.Shortline:
There are now Six Ride Share Companies and Four Chartered Taxi Companies serving Austin ( the Home of Alex Jones!) and Uber and Lyft are operating in the Metro Area around Austin.
Thus it seems that there is plenty of money to be made in the People's Republic of Austin which now has the highest per capita income in Texas and governments that are strongly pro business.
Amusing even if it doesn't fit the Right Wing/Fox Model that equates Austin with California and Cuba eh?!!!
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