Ether_Snake
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Invasion of the Taxi Snatchers: Uber Leads an Industry's Disruption
When we'll have self-driven cars, it will become innevitable that the taxi industry will disappear, as cars will be able to move to destinations of high demand based on past data, ahead of time, etc. In the future, you end up with much quieter cities, fewer cards on the roads, fewer cars to produce. Vehicles will be operating almost 24/7 at near optimal capacity VS quantity, which means a much better ROI from both an economic and environmental point of view, rather than having massive amounts of cars littering the streets unused over 22 hours a day on average (if not more).
They want to make owning a car completely unnecessary. Theyre battling each other, city regulators, entrenched taxi interests, and critics who claim they are succeeding only because they run roughshod over laws meant to protect public safety.
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The taxi industry has been ripe for disruption for decades. But only technology has allowed it to really kick in.
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Nearly four years ago, Uber introduced the idea of allowing passengers to book the nearest town car by smartphone, then track the vehicle on a map as it approaches their location. After the ride, the service automatically compensates the driver from the customers preloaded credit cardno awkward tipping required.
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Uber has raised $307 million from a group of backers that include Google Ventures, Googles (GOOG) investment arm, and Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon. It operates in 70 cities around the world and was on track to book more than $1 billion annually in rides in 2013
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Uber has also been blocked from operating in several markets, including Miami and Austin, Tex., by regulators out to protect the interests of consumers or entrenched incumbents, depending on whom you ask. In Boston and Chicago, taxi operators have sued their cities for allowing unregulated companies to devalue million-dollar operating permits. Things grew especially heated recently in Paris, when incensed taxi drivers shut down highway exits to the main airports and gridlocked city traffic.
When we'll have self-driven cars, it will become innevitable that the taxi industry will disappear, as cars will be able to move to destinations of high demand based on past data, ahead of time, etc. In the future, you end up with much quieter cities, fewer cards on the roads, fewer cars to produce. Vehicles will be operating almost 24/7 at near optimal capacity VS quantity, which means a much better ROI from both an economic and environmental point of view, rather than having massive amounts of cars littering the streets unused over 22 hours a day on average (if not more).