Uber and Motional launch self-driving rides in Las Vegas, with plans to expand to Los Angeles

Uber and Motional announced Wednesday they’re kicking off their self-driving offering in Las Vegas, two months after the companies inked a 10-year deal to offer driverless rides and deliveries.

Customers aren’t able to book the autonomous vehicles directly. Rather, they’ll have to select the “UberX” or “Uber Comfort Electric” options for a chance to be matched with a Motional vehicle. If one of its self-driving cars is available, customers will have to opt-in before the trip is confirmed and sent to pick them up.

Initially, the companies aren’t charging for the autonomous rides, though they plan to charge for the driverless commercial launch later on.

The offering is launching with safety drivers behind the wheel, though Uber says it intends to launch a fully autonomous service in 2023. The two companies also plan on expanding the offering to Los Angeles but didn’t provide a specific timeframe.

[Photo: Uber]

The launch pushes Uber into a new era of self-driving, exactly two years after the company sold its self-driving unit to Aurora Innovation. Rideshare companies, including Uber and Lyft, have long looked at automation as a way to cut down on costs and speed up service.

Travis Kalanick, cofounder and former CEO of Uber, was convinced self-driving was an essential investment since he viewed autonomous vehicles as the future of transportation. Still, efforts have proven costly and yielded mixed results as well as a host of safety concerns, leading companies to sell off their segments and look to outside partners for help.

[Photo: Uber]

“It’s a testament to our technology and the power of our partnership with Uber that we’re able to go from concept to consumer in such a short time,” Akshay Jaising, Motional’s VP of commercialization, said in a statement.

Motional already offers rideshare rides in its Hyundai IONIQ 5-based robotaxis via Lyft in Las Vegas, with plans to become fully driverless next year. The two companies also announced an expansion to Los Angeles last month.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90820656/uber-and-motional-launch-self-driving-rides-in-las-vegas-with-plans-to-expand-to-los-angeles?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 3y | 08.12.2022, 02:21:36


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

Why the ‘Tiny Chef’ cancellation broke the internet’s heart

Justice for Tiny Chef.

A now-viral clip of the stop-motion animated star of The Tiny Chef Show getting laid off directly by the execs at “Mickelflodeon” has tugged a

27.06.2025, 19:30:07 | Fast company - tech
Bumble is stumbling. Tinder is flagging. But this go-to gay dating app is thriving

Dating app Bumble continues to lose its footing. After subpar earnings, sluggish user growth, and internal stagnation, the company has

27.06.2025, 17:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Why Apple is revamping its App Store terms in the European Union

Apple has revamped its app store policies in the

27.06.2025, 14:50:06 | Fast company - tech
This AI-powered social app aims to end loneliness—by ‘engineering chance’

“An opportunity to choose chance.”

That’s what social platform startup 222 claims to offer its members. It isn’t a dating app—there’s no swiping, and, mo

27.06.2025, 14:50:05 | Fast company - tech
Has AI already rotted my brain?

Five years ago, I bought an e-bike. At the time, the motor-equipp

27.06.2025, 12:40:04 | Fast company - tech
Gen Alpha slang baffles parents—and AI

If a Gen Alpha tween said, “Let him cook,” would you know what that meant? No? AI doesn’t either.

A research paper

27.06.2025, 12:40:02 | Fast company - tech
Why Gen Z is ditching popular emojis for unexpected alternatives

Not all emojis are created equal.

The sparkle emoji or red heart emoji are staples of t

27.06.2025, 10:20:05 | Fast company - tech