If you look at the ability of a self-driving car to stay in the lane and not to speed and keep a good distance to the car in front of you, it actually does better than me.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
It's a no-brainer for me that at some point our cars will have the ability to drive themselves.
I love driving, but sometimes, I'm not too good at it because I spend too much time looking in the rearview mirror if I know I'm being followed. You don't respond like, 'Oh, there's paparazzi.' It's more like, 'There's a man, and he's going to attack me.' That's how your body responds.
Self-driving cars will enable car-sharing even in spread-out suburbs. A car will come to you just when you need it. And when you are done with it, the car will just drive away, so you won't even have to look for parking.
Driving will never be away from me - I can't just give it up. It's all I've ever done, and there's something about being in that car.
My defensiveness in life really helps me as a driver.
Humans are unbelievably data efficient. You don't have to drive 1 million miles to drive a car, but the way we teach a self-driving car is have it drive a million miles.
It frustrates me about myself when I see I'm not taking the road that demands more of me.
The more precisely I can drive, the more I enjoy myself.
When I'm driving the highway by myself is when I write best.
I've always been attracted to cars, and driving is a completely measurable experience: if you qualify last on the grid, you're the slowest, and if you qualify first on the grid, you're the fastest. So no one can say you're slow if you're fast and no one can say you're fast if you're slow.