logo
Waymo's Self-Driving Cars Are in a Growing Number of Cities. Here's Everything to Know

Waymo's Self-Driving Cars Are in a Growing Number of Cities. Here's Everything to Know

Yahoo14-05-2025

Self-driving cars are slowly becoming less sci-fi and more real-world as companies like Waymo, the driverless arm of Google's parent company, Alphabet, expand into more cities -- and countries.
Waymo currently operates fully autonomous rides for the general public in Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Austin, Texas, which take place aboard the all-electric Jaguar I-Pace. It's expanding its partnership with Uber by launching in Atlanta via the ride share app later this year, and plans to begin offering rides in Washington, DC, and Miami starting in 2026. In April, Waymo said it'll begin driving its vehicles on Tokyo's streets, making this the company's first international location.
Along with those launches, Waymo in January announced it would also begin testing with manually driven vehicles in 10 new cities this year, starting with Las Vegas and San Diego. And last week, Waymo said it reached a preliminary agreement with Toyota to "explore a collaboration" geared toward developing autonomous driving tech, which could someday be factored into personally owned vehicles, too.
Waymo's expansion extends to its manufacturing facilities, too. The company on Monday said it's opening a new, 239,000-square-foot autonomous vehicle factory in the Phoenix area. The plan is to add 2,000 more fully autonomous Jaguar I-Pace vehicles to its existing 1,500-vehicle fleet. Notably, Waymo indicated it received its "final delivery from Jaguar" earlier this year, as it plans for future iterations of its driverless rides. Waymo added that the "facility's flexible design" will allow it to integrate its upcoming sixth-generation self-driving technology into new vehicles, starting with the all-electric Zeekr RT.
In October, Waymo also announced it's partnering with Hyundai to bring the next generation of its technology into Ioniq 5 SUVs. In the years to come, riders will be able to summon those all-electric, autonomous vehicles using the Waymo One app.
Waymo says it provides more than 250,000 paid trips each week. I've hailed several rides myself in San Francisco and, as off-putting as it can seem at first (especially to see a steering wheel turn by itself), I quickly adjusted and it soon felt like an ordinary ride.
That's not to say there hasn't been pushback as Waymo rolls out to more cities. The company's vehicles have been involved in a handful of high-profile collisions, including one with a bicyclist in San Francisco and another with a towed pickup truck in Phoenix. (It recalled and updated its software to address the issue.)
In a research paper published in May, Waymo says that compared to human drivers over 56.7 million miles, its autonomous Waymo Driver technology had "85% fewer crashes with suspected serious or worse injuries." It also indicated significantly fewer crashes with injuries to pedestrians (92%), cyclists (82%) and motorcyclists (82%). The company also released a data hub last year, detailing efforts to improve road safety using its technology.
As Waymo continues to expand and develop its self-driving tech, here's how and where to summon the robotaxi if you happen to be in one of the few cities where the company currently operates its fleet.
Phoenix was the first city to open up fully autonomous Waymo rides to the public, in 2020. To hail a ride, download the Waymo One app on iOS or Android. The service operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
You can also use the Uber app to summon one of Waymo's vehicles in Phoenix. When you request an UberX, Uber Green, Uber Comfort or Uber Comfort Electric ride, you'll have the choice to confirm a Waymo ride, if you're matched.
In addition to hailing a ride, you may also have your Uber Eats meal delivered by an autonomous car. When placing an order in the Phoenix area, you might get a note that "autonomous vehicles may deliver your order." When the Waymo car arrives, take your phone with you to pop open the trunk and grab your delivery. You can opt out of this during checkout if you'd rather have a human deliver your food.
San Francisco followed suit after Phoenix, rolling out fully autonomous rides in late 2022. It scrapped the waiting list in June so now anyone can download the Waymo One app to ride anytime. The service also operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week. There's currently no Uber partnership in San Francisco.
In August, Waymo expanded its ride-hailing service into the San Francisco Peninsula, adding 10 square miles and venturing into Daly City, Broadmoor and Colma. And in March, it expanded again so that select Waymo One riders who live in Mountain View, Los Altos, Palo Alto and parts of Sunnyvale have the option to hail a robotaxi there, too. The company says it plans to expand to more riders there over time.
In November, Waymo scrapped its waitlist for Los Angeles and began welcoming all public riders via the Waymo One app. Now any interested passengers can hop in the robotaxis 24/7 and ride across nearly 90 square miles of LA county, including Santa Monica, Beverly Hills, Inglewood and Downtown LA -- with plans to expand into more areas soon.
In Austin, the only way to hail a Waymo ride is through Uber -- no Waymo One app here. By requesting an UberX, Uber Green, Uber Comfort or Uber Comfort Electric, you could be matched with a Waymo vehicle -- and you won't be upcharged. If you'd rather not take a driverless ride, you'll have the option to switch to a standard one. On the other hand, if you want to boost your chances of being matched to a self-driving car, you can go to Account > Settings > Autonomous vehicles, then hit the toggle next to Get more Waymo rides.
Unlock the door, pop open the trunk and start the ride from the Uber app. You'll still be asked to rate your ride at the end -- but you won't be asked to tip.
If there are any issues, riders can access human support 24/7 via the Uber app and from inside the Waymo vehicle (there are screens in the front and back that let you quickly summon customer support).
As part of the Uber partnership, Uber will manage tasks like vehicle cleaning and repair, while "Waymo will continue to be responsible for the testing and operation of the Waymo Driver, including roadside assistance and certain rider support functions," the companies said. The collaboration should make autonomous rides accessible to more people, who now won't have to download a separate app to hitch a ride in a robotaxi.
Waymo currently operates across 37 square miles of the city, with plans for future expansions.
Like in Austin, Uber will soon allow riders in Atlanta to hail a Waymo robotaxi. The service is scheduled to launch in the summer but interested riders can join a waitlist to increase their chances of being matched with a Waymo vehicle once that option becomes available.
To join the Atlanta interest list, make sure your Uber app is up to date, then go to Account > Settings and find Autonomous vehicles under the Ride Preferences menu. Then click Join interest list.
Riders who join the interest list could have the chance to ride with Waymo before the public launch. They'll be notified in-app and via email if chosen.
The service will launch across 65 square miles of Atlanta, with plans for future expansions, according to Uber. You won't have to pay more for a Waymo ride than you would for a standard UberX, Uber Green, Uber Comfort or Uber Comfort Electric ride, and you'll see upfront pricing in the app. You can unlock the vehicle and start the trip all from the Uber app, and will be able to access human support 24/7 via the Uber app and from inside the vehicle.
Waymo plans to start offering rides through its Waymo One app in Washington, DC, in 2026. The company returned to the nation's capital in January to test its autonomous driving tech. In late March, it said it was bringing more vehicles to the city and working to scale its service throughout the year. In a blog post, Waymo said it'll "continue to work closely with policymakers to formalize the regulations needed to operate without a human behind the wheel in the District."
You'll also have to wait until 2026 to ride a Waymo in Miami. The company has been conducting weather testing in the lead-up to that eventual rollout, noting in a blog post, "Our previous road trips to the Sunshine State's challenging rainy conditions have been invaluable in advancing our autonomous driving capabilities."
Waymo will collaborate with Moove, a fintech company that offers vehicle financing, first in Phoenix, where Moove will manage the robotaxi's fleet operations, facilities and charging infrastructure. In Phoenix and then Miami, "Waymo will continue to offer our service through the Waymo One app, and remain responsible for validation and operation of the Waymo Driver," the company said in a blog post.
Waymo's expansion into Tokyo, which was announced in December, is happening in partnership with Japanese taxi service Nihon Kotsu and taxi app Go. In April, the self-driving company shared that it's finally ready to hit the road abroad.
Waymo says trained Nihon Kotsu drivers will manually drive its vehicles across seven Tokyo wards, including Minato, Shinjuku, Shibuya, Chiyoda, Chūō, Shinagawa and Kōtō. This will allow engineers to test and adapt Waymo's autonomous driving tech to local road features and traffic.
"In Tokyo, we are abiding by the same steadfast principles that guide us in the US -- commitment to safety, dedication to earning trust in communities where we operate, and collaboration with local officials and community groups here in Tokyo," Nicole Gavel, Waymo's head of business development and strategic partnerships, said in a statement.
It's not clear when riders will be able to hitch a self-driving ride with Waymo in Tokyo.
In August, Waymo unveiled the sixth generation of its self-driving technology, which strives to expand the capabilities of its driverless fleet. Smarter sensors are meant to help the cars better navigate in extreme weather, Waymo said. The sixth-gen Driver will come aboard the all-electric Zeekr vehicle, which features a flat floor, more head- and legroom, adjustable seats and a removable steering wheel and pedals. The updated tech is still being tested but the company says it'll be available to riders soon.
In October, Waymo also announced a partnership with Hyundai to integrate its sixth-generation Driver into the all-electric Ioniq 5 SUV, which, according to a blog post, "will be added to the Waymo One fleet over time." The companies added that they "plan to produce a fleet of Ioniq 5s equipped with Waymo's technology in significant volume over multiple years to support Waymo One's growing scale." Testing with these vehicles will start by late 2025 and become available "in the years to follow."
Currently, everyday riders can't take a Waymo vehicle on highways and freeways but that may soon change. The company is testing fully autonomous rides on freeways in Phoenix, as seen in an exclusive video shared with CNET in May. It's also now making fully autonomous freeway rides available to Waymo employees in Los Angeles.
Waymo is working to expand its autonomous driving tech into trucking as well but it said last year that it's scaling back those efforts for the time being, to focus on ride-hailing with Waymo One. It noted, "Our ongoing investment in advancing Waymo Driver capabilities, especially on freeways, will directly translate to trucking and benefit its development efforts."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Google CEO Sundar Pichai Is 'Vibe Coding' a Website for Fun
Google CEO Sundar Pichai Is 'Vibe Coding' a Website for Fun

Entrepreneur

timean hour ago

  • Entrepreneur

Google CEO Sundar Pichai Is 'Vibe Coding' a Website for Fun

Vibe coding is the process of prompting AI to write code, instead of doing it manually. Google and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai disclosed that he has been "vibe coding," or using AI to code for him through prompts, to build a webpage. Pichai said on Wednesday at Bloomberg Tech in San Francisco that he had been experimenting with AI coding assistants Cursor and Replit, both of which are advertised as able to create code from text prompts, to build a new webpage. Related: Here's How Much a Typical Google Employee Makes in a Year "I've just been messing around — either with Cursor or I vibe coded with Replit — trying to build a custom webpage with all the sources of information I wanted in one place," Pichai said, per Business Insider. Google CEO Sundar Pichai. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images Pichai said that he had "partially" completed the webpage, and that coding had "come a long way" from its early days. Vibe coding is a term coined by OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy. In a post on X in February, Karpathy described how AI tools are getting good enough that software developers can "forget that the code even exists." Instead, they can ask for AI to code on their behalf and create a project or web app without writing a line of code themselves. There's a new kind of coding I call "vibe coding", where you fully give in to the vibes, embrace exponentials, and forget that the code even exists. It's possible because the LLMs (e.g. Cursor Composer w Sonnet) are getting too good. Also I just talk to Composer with SuperWhisper… — Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) February 2, 2025 The rise of vibe coding has led AI coding assistants to explode in popularity. One AI coding tool, Cursor, became the fastest-growing software app to reach $100 million in annual revenue in January. Almost all of Cursor's revenue comes from 360,000 individual subscribers, not big enterprises. However, that balance could change: As of earlier this week, Amazon is reportedly in talks to adopt Cursor for its employees. Another coding tool, Replit, says it has enabled users to make more than two million apps in six months. The company has 34 million global users as of November. Related: This AI Startup Spent $0 on Marketing. Its Revenue Just Hit $200 Million. Noncoders are using vibe coding to bring their ideas to life. Lenard Flören, a 28-year-old art director with no prior coding experience, told NBC News last month that he used AI tools to vibe code a personalized workout tracking app. Harvard University neuroscience student, Rishab Jain, 20, told the outlet that he used Replit to vibe code an app that translates ancient texts into English. Instead of downloading someone else's app and paying a subscription fee, "now you can just make it," Jain said. Popular vibe coding tools offer a free entry point into vibe coding, as well as subscription plans. Replit has a free tier, a $20 a month core level with expanded capabilities, such as unlimited private and public apps, and a $35 per user, per month teams subscription. Cursor also has a free tier, a $20 per month pro level, and a $40 per user, per month, business subscription. Despite the existence of vibe coding, Pichai still thinks that human software engineers are necessary. At Bloomberg Tech on Wednesday, Pichai said that Google will keep hiring human engineers and growing its engineering workforce "even into next year" because a bigger workforce "allows us to do more." "I just view this [AI] as making engineers dramatically more productive," he said. Alphabet is the fifth most valuable company in the world with a market cap of $2 trillion.

2025 Jaguar F-PACE Review: Expert Insights, Pricing, and Trims
2025 Jaguar F-PACE Review: Expert Insights, Pricing, and Trims

Motor Trend

timean hour ago

  • Motor Trend

2025 Jaguar F-PACE Review: Expert Insights, Pricing, and Trims

If you've ever been attracted to the F-Pace's curves and snarling exhaust note, act now because it's not clear how much longer the model will remain in the lineup. As Jaguar shifts even further upmarket and makes the leap to an all-electric product strategy, this is likely the final model year of the F-Pace. The 2025 Jaguar F-Pace challenges rivals such as the BMW X3, Genesis GV70, and Mercedes-Benz GLC-Class. What's New On the cusp of discontinuation, the Jaguar F-Pace enters 2025 with a few updates. The Driver Intelligence package receives a 360-degree camera and an automated parking assist system The F-Pace SVR receives a new P575 badge and an output bump to 567 hp, an increase of 25 hp over the prior model year What We Think As Jaguar's rebranding continues, the F-Pace lingers as the automaker's only model for 2025. The compact luxury SUV, which was originally introduced for 2017 and was most recently refreshed for 2021, is showing its age. The exterior styling and cabin layout remain attractive, but we'd be hoping for a total redesign for 2026 if Jaguar hadn't already confirmed the F-Pace's discontinuation. There are plenty of reasons why you might want to snap up an F-Pace before it's gone. The available turbocharged and electric supercharged inline-six makes use of mild hybrid assistance. Not only does this P400 version of the F-Pace sound sweet and deliver power smoothly, it has sharp steering and nimble handling. Braking feel and off-road capability are other positive attributes. Stepping up to the SVR model swaps the I-6 for a supercharged V-8 with a delectable engine note and outrageous power output. The six- and eight-cylinder F-Paces deliver a great driving experience, but we recommend forgoing the forgettable base engine. Inside the SUV, the infotainment system isn't as user friendly as the touchscreens found in the competition. Pricing is another issue; Jaguar charges a pretty penny for the privilege of driving its only model. Ultimately, the cost is worth it if you're able to spring for the I-6 and V-8 variants—the F-Pace remains an attractive and fun-to-drive alternative. Performance and MPGs The 2025 Jaguar F-Pace carries over with the same trio of powertrains as 2024, although the range-topping SVR model gets a power bump as a farewell present for the compact luxury SUV. All models continue to receive a standard eight-speed automatic transmission and AWD. The base F-Pace P250 comes equipped with a 2.0-liter turbo-four developing 247 hp and 269 lb-ft of torque. Acceleration from 0-60 mph requires 6.9 seconds, which is somewhat sluggish for the segment. The EPA rates the 2025 F-Pace P250 at 22/27 mpg city/highway. The mild-hybrid F-Pace P400 uses a turbocharged and electrically supercharged 3.0-liter inline-six engine developing 395 hp and 406 lb-ft of torque. 0-60 mph falls to 5.9 seconds, which is much more acceptable for a vehicle in the F-Pace's competitive class. Fuel economy is pegged at 19/25 mpg. At the top of the trim walk is the F-Pace SVR P575, which develops 567 hp for the 2025 model year. That's an increase of 25 hp over the 2024 F-Pace SVR. Torque remains the same at 516 lb-ft. Jaguar claims the updated SVR model can sprint from 0-60 mph in 3.8 seconds. That acceleration comes courtesy of a 5.0-liter supercharged V-8 engine, so its thirstiness is reflected in the EPA's rating of 15/21 mpg. 2025 F-Pace SVR 575 Edition In addition to its 5.0-liter supercharged V-8 engine, the F-Pace SVR 575 Edition receives other upgrades to reinforce its status as one of Jaguar's Special Vehicle Racing models. Model-specific features include bigger brakes, an active electronic differential, torque vectoring by braking, adaptive suspension damping, sticky low-profile summer tires, and selectable drive modes. These are just the type of enhancements drivers expect from a super SUV capable of attaining a 178-mph top speed. Supercharged V-8 engines are on the verge of extinction, so this last-chance version of the F-Pace is also a rare opportunity to drive a rapid SUV like this. Safety Features Jaguar outfits every 2025 F-Pace with the same basic advanced safety features including: Automatic emergency braking Blind-spot assistance Driver condition monitoring Lane keeping assistance Front and rear parking sensors Rear traffic monitoring Traffic sign assistance Jaguar also makes adaptive cruise standard across the entire F-Pace lineup. SVR models get a standard 360-degree camera. Cargo Space and Interior Room The 2025 Jaguar F-Pace is on the larger side of the compact luxury SUV class. Second-row legroom is ample for adults and flipping down the rear seats opens up plentiful storage space. Technology Every 2025 Jaguar F-Pace receives a standard 11.4-inch infotainment display with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster, wireless charging, and a 12-speaker premium sound from Meridian. Jaguar offers other available tech such as a Wi-Fi hot spot and a head-up display. Value Recommended Trim Jaguar continues to offer the 2025 F-Pace in R-Dynamic S P250, R-Dynamic S P400, and SVR P575 variants. And although we'd love to have a 567-hp SVR 575 Edition F-Pace in our driveway, the F-Pace R-Dynamic S P400 is the one that makes more financial sense. Balancing strong acceleration and engaging handling with sensible fuel economy, the inline-six version of the F-Pace starts just under $70,000. If any version of the F-Pace appeals to you, however, head to a dealership now. As Jaguar rebrands, the F-Pace is getting discontinued after the 2025 model year. Other Compact Luxury SUVs: Genesis GV70 BMW X3 Volvo XC60 Mercedes-Benz GLC-Class

Bonfire's new software lets users build their own social communities, free from platform control
Bonfire's new software lets users build their own social communities, free from platform control

TechCrunch

time2 hours ago

  • TechCrunch

Bonfire's new software lets users build their own social communities, free from platform control

Bonfire Social, a new framework for building communities on the open social web, launched on Thursday during the FediForum online conference. While Bonfire Social is a federated app, meaning it's powered by the same underlying protocol as Mastodon (ActivityPub), it's designed to be more modular and more customizable. That means communities on Bonfire have more control over how the app functions, which features and defaults are in place, and what their own roadmap and priorities will include. There's a decidedly disruptive bent to the software, which describes itself as a place where 'all living beings thrive and communities flourish, free from private interest and capitalistic control.' In other words, its mission is to build social software where people get to make the decisions, not big tech platform makers like Meta or Google. The organization itself runs as a nonprofit funded by donations and grants, and it doesn't take venture capital. Its code is open source, and it works in collaboration with the communities and researchers that use it to build and enhance online digital spaces. Bonfire Social, now offered as a 1.0 Release Candidate ahead of the public release, is just one representation of what Bonfire offers. Bonfire calls it a 'flavor.' Image Credits:Bonfire Each flavor is a preconfigured bundle of Bonfire extensions, features, and defaults, sort of like a starting template. When a community opts to run a particular 'flavor,' it gets to govern the app as it sees fit, adding its own extensions and determining its own roadmap for product changes. This puts the social software back under users' control, instead of being subject to the whims of a platform maker with an ever-changing feature sets and algorithms. The organization is already developing other flavors like Bonfire Community and Open Science, and the Bonfire software lets any other community create their own version. Techcrunch event Save now through June 4 for TechCrunch Sessions: AI Save $300 on your ticket to TC Sessions: AI—and get 50% off a second. Hear from leaders at OpenAI, Anthropic, Khosla Ventures, and more during a full day of expert insights, hands-on workshops, and high-impact networking. These low-rate deals disappear when the doors open on June 5. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you've built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | REGISTER NOW In Bonfire Social, users will recognize familiar features, like feeds and tools to follow users, share posts, create user profiles, flag or block content, and more. Image Credits:Bonfire However, it also offers other tools and features that traditional social networks may not have, like tools for customizing feeds, support for nested discussions, the ability to host multiple profiles per user, rich-text posts, and access control features. Custom feeds are a key differentiation between Bonfire and traditional social media apps. Though the idea of following custom feeds is something that's been popularized by newer social networks like Bluesky or social browsers like Flipboard's Surf, the tools to actually create those feeds are maintained by third parties. Bonfire instead offers its own custom feed-building tools in a simple interface that doesn't require users to understand coding. To build feeds, users can filter and sort content by type, date, engagement level, source instance, and more, including something it calls 'circles.' Image Credits:Bonfire Those who lived through the Google+ era of social networks may be familiar with the concept of Circles. On Google's social network, users organized contacts into groups, called Circles, for optimized sharing. That concept lives on at Bonfire, where a circle represents a list of people. That can be a group of friends, a fan group, local users, organizers at a mutual aid group, or anything else users can come up with. These circles are private by default but can be shared with others. Another unique feature on Bonfire Social is Boundaries, which let you control who can see or engage with your content. For instance, you could share a post with a number of your circles, but only allow one specific circle's members to comment. Image Credits:Bonfire Bonfire also supports threaded conversations (nested discussions) where replies can branch out into their own sub-threads. This can be useful for communities where deeper discussions and collaboration are more valuable than those where everyone competes for attention. Image Credits:Bonfire Plus, Bonfire users can customize the app using one of the 16 built-in themes, or they can design their own layout and pick their own colors and fonts. Accounts on Bonfires can also host multiple profiles that have their own followers, content, and settings. This could be useful for those who simply prefer to have both public and private profiles, but also for those who need to share a given profile with others — like a profile for a business, a publication, a collective, or a project team. Image Credits:Bonfire Other features available at launch include PWA support for mobile devices, community blocklists, custom emoji support, full-text search (with opt out), direct messages, private group discussions (also with nested threads), and more. Extensions, which add different features, can be enabled or disabled by both admins and users. Admins simply decide what the defaults are. That means users could turn on or off features they don't like, even core features such as likes or boosts (the federated version of the retweet/repost). Because Bonfire is built on ActivityPub, it also federates with Mastodon, Peertube, Mobilizon, and others. The software is meant to be self-installed, though work to develop a hosting network is under way. For those who just want to kick the tires, a demo instance is available.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store