![]() ![]() The theory fueling the ambition is that driverless cars will be safer than vehicles operated by frequently distracted and occasionally intoxicated humans - and, in the case of robotaxis, be less expensive and more convenient to ride in than automobiles that require a human behind the wheel. It was all going so smoothly that I was starting to buy into the vision of Cruise and Waymo, a self-driving car pioneer spun off from a Google project that is also trying launch a ride-hailing service in San Francisco. Peaches and I were getting along great for most of our time together, as the car deftly navigated through hilly San Francisco streets similar to those Steve McQueen careened through during the famous chase scene in the 1968 film “Bullitt.” Unlike McQueen, Peaches never exceeded 30 mph (48 kph) because of restrictions imposed by state regulators on a ride-hailing service operated by Cruise, a General Motors subsidiary, since it won approval to transport fare-paying passengers last year. Then an unexpected twist made me worry that the encounter had turned into a mistake I would regret. Our ensuing half-hour ride together produced, at first, a titillating display of technology’s promise. ![]() It happened one night last September when a Chevy Bolt named Peaches picked me up outside a San Francisco bar. SAN FRANCISCO - I won’t forget the first time I took a ride in a car without anyone sitting in the driver’s seat. ![]()
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