Waymo to begin passenger rides in its new Ojai robotaxi

The Verge ·

Waymo to begin passenger rides in its new Ojai robotaxi

After several months of testing, Waymo is finally ready to invite non-employee passengers into its newest vehicle, the Zeekr RT minivan, which has been rebranded as Ojai . …

After several months of testing, Waymo is finally ready to invite non-employee passengers into its newest vehicle, the Zeekr RT minivan, which has been rebranded as Ojai . Waymo says it will begin offering “select riders” access in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Phoenix, before “gradually” expanding to more riders and cities. Trips will be free to start out, as Waymo collects data about the passenger experience in the new vehicle. Paid rides will follow. Waymo’s current fleet of Jaguar I-Pace vehicles runs on the company’s fifth generation technology , first rolled out in March 2020. But that vehicle has reached the end of its shelf life, after Jaguar discontinued the model at the end of 2024. The Ojai will be the debut of the sixth generation system, followed by the Hyundai Ioniq 5 . Waymo is also partnering with Toyota for future models. It’s been nearly four years since Waymo first debuted the Zeekr minivan as its next, purpose-built autonomous ridehail vehicle. It’s the second ground-up design that Waymo has unveiled after the original Firefly, the iconic tiny bubble car that was retired in 2017 . Waymo partnered with Chinese automaker Geely to design the purpose-built, passenger-first autonomous vehicle. Geely owns automakers like Volvo, Lotus, and Polestar, as well as a stake in the luxury British automaker Aston Martin. The company makes luxury vehicles mostly for the Chinese market. …

Original source: The Verge

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Toyota · Chinese · Hyundai · Alphabet · Polestar · Los Angeles · Aston Martin · San Francisco