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Joined 8 months ago
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Cake day: March 30th, 2024

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  • The honking thing specifically is another skewed fact. The neighbors want the Waymos, they just had a hard time getting ahold of the right folks at Waymo. That includes Sophia Tung, the neighbor who set up the honking video stream that Jason used.

    As a local in the area, I can say for certain that the majority of SF wants the cars there. There’s more resistance further down the peninsula, but it’s intermixed with anti-taxi messaging. It’s hard to tell if it’s about the cars or about “those kind of people” having access to their city.

    San Francisco neighbors say repeated Waymo honking is keeping them up at night

    Christopher Cherry who lives in the building next door said he was “really excited” to have Waymo in the neighborhood, thinking it would bring more security and quiet to the area.

    The residents who spoke with NBC Bay Area said they are not opposed to having the Waymo cars nearby. But they say they want to see a more neighborly response from the new autonomous vehicle company on the block.

    “We love having them there, we just would like for them to stop honking their horn at four in the morning repeatedly,” Cherry said.

    San Francisco neighbors say Waymo honking continues, global audience follows along live

    The incidents were captured on resident Sophia Tung’s YouTube live stream

    Tung and many of her neighbors said that they are Waymo customers and actually like the Waymo technology. But what they don’t like is the repeated, overnight noise.


  • Well, formerly operating companies. The Uber and Cruise examples stopped both of them dead. Uber left the business entirely and Cruise had its license to operate revoked.

    That’s just omitting info. There’s also straight up wrong stuff, like residents not wanting it. As crazy as it sounds, at least with SF, the residents’ reps wrote the regulation law and haven’t had a measure to reject self-driving cars (at least K passed). The majority want to see these cars. Also, Facebook dumped their move fast motto a decade ago because of how bad it was (self-harm problems).

    It’s unfortunate too. I like Jason’s rants, but it’s too distracting when he gets a quick google level of facts wrong.





  • San Francisco’s critical mass was successful to the point it almost doesn’t exist anymore (it’s not necessary anymore with better political engagement). I believe it was successful because it:

    • started at the same location and time (once a month on a Friday)
    • occurred during evening commute hours
    • had no formal leadership
    • no planned route until just before departure

    This combination meant authorities had no ability to shut it down. What office could the raid? How could they bring a lawsuit?

    Once a month on a Friday meant it didn’t have to be about your commute. Rather you’d leave work and ride to the start point. It was a protest first and a utility second (though the route did start from the financial center of the city).

    Take a look at bike parties if you’re looking more for a community ride. They bring more of a general supportive base than as a protest.









  • I’m not car-free, but I do all my grocery shopping without a car. In fact, I’m at my local grocer as I type at 1.7 miles away taking 250 feet elevation gain and 210 feet loss. I understand your pain!

    Here’s why I still think a bike fits your situation. Namely an inexpensive folding bike with a front basket and rack.

    Hills are conquered in the same way as a cart: walking uphill. Also known as “hike a bike.” Folding bikes are usually also allowed on busses, so you could take a bus one way. You could time your departure to a bus schedule and shop knowing you don’t have to rush or spend a long time at the store.

    Folders can be brought inside and consume about the same space as a folding trailer.

    My overall point is a folding bike is a trailer that you can ride downhill in. Electric would be a nice upgrade, but it’s not necessary.