Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Chat

Join the discussion and chat with other Mumsnetters about everyday life, relationships and parenting.

Todays quiz: Spot the missing word

17 replies

SerendipityJane · 29/01/2026 10:53

I will be pleasantly surprised if someone gets it right before 10 posts

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czej9n578k9o

Waymo, the US driverless car firm, said it hopes to be operating a robotaxi service in London as soon as September this year.

The UK government has said it plans to change regulations in the second half of 2026 to enable driverless taxis to operate in the city but has not given a specific date.

Waymo said a pilot service will launch in April and Local Transport Minister Lilian Greenwood said: "We're supporting Waymo and other operators through our passenger pilots, and pro-innovation regulations to make self-driving cars a reality on British roads."

The firm, which is owned by Google-parent Alphabet, showed off a fleet of cars it brought to the UK at London's Transport Museum on Wednesday.
Waymo's vehicles are currently being operated by a safety driver, mapping the streets.

But when the service launches to paying passengers, there will be no human at the wheel.

Greenwood, who attended the Waymo event, said she expected driverless vehicles to make city roads safer.

"We know that unlike human drivers, automated vehicles don't get tired, don't get distracted and don't drive under the influence," she said.
But she added that autonomous vehicles also had to meet strict safety standards, "including protection from hacking and cyber threats" before they would be allowed on UK roads.

The government has estimated that the autonomous vehicle industry could add £42bn to the UK economy by 2035 and create nearly 40,000 new jobs.
Passengers will be able to hail Waymo robotaxis via an app once the rules permit.

They will not initially include airport drop-offs.

The Waymo vehicle uses four sensor systems to gather data from the world around it: lidar, vision, radar and microphone.

It claims these sensors enable its vehicles to be aware of its surroundings 360 degrees, as far as three football fields ahead and during bad weather.
A powerful computer in the boot processes that data and determines the car's actions and reactions in real time.

A Waymo spokesperson said pricing would be "competitive" but "premium" and would rise during periods of high demand.

ival companies Uber and Lyft are also ready to launch robotaxi services in the UK when the rules change.

Waymo's cars are Jaguars while Lyft and Uber have both chosen to partner with the Chinese firm Baidu.

Waymo says a total of 173 million miles have been driven by its cars fully autonomously, mainly in the US. Waymo has a fleet of 1,000 robotaxis in San Francisco and 700 in LA.

Some stories have emerged about cars malfunctioning, occasionally leaving passengers trapped inside

BBC technology editor Zoe Kleinman stands in front of a white car, wearing a red jacket over a black top and black trousers

Driverless taxis set to launch in UK as soon as September

Waymo has laid out plans for a robotaxi service in London with a pilot scheme due to begin in April.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/czej9n578k9o

OP posts:
Waitingfordoggo · 29/01/2026 11:16

Well there is a letter missing from the start of the 13th paragraph. Otherwise, no idea.

Oddities1 · 29/01/2026 12:39

Whatever it is it clearly doesn't affect the overall story and message.

Oddities1 · 29/01/2026 12:42

An 'a' missing before microphone?

TeenToTwenties · 29/01/2026 13:02

The UK government has said it no plans to change regulations in the second half of 2026 to enable driverless taxis to operate in the city but has not given a specific date.

?

LookingThroughGlass · 29/01/2026 13:09

It claims these sensors enable its vehicles to be aware of its surroundings 360 degrees, as far as three football fields ahead and during bad weather.

360 degrees needs a qualifier.

Manifestsleep · 29/01/2026 13:11

Tesla?

SerendipityJane · 29/01/2026 15:48

Oddities1 · 29/01/2026 12:39

Whatever it is it clearly doesn't affect the overall story and message.

I would concur. You are right this is a perfectly normal story in the UK.

(By the way, no one has got it yet.)

OP posts:
Oddities1 · 29/01/2026 18:22

Just tell us?

LookingThroughGlass · 29/01/2026 18:36

Am I missing something? Is this a grammatical error or do you disagree with the sentiment of the article and mean that a negative is missing somewhere?

SerendipityJane · 29/01/2026 19:15

Not a single thought from anyone (certainly not Waymo or the BBC) about accessibility.

I mean we know nobody ever considers the disabled. But sometimes it's so obvious. Especially on MN.

OP posts:
Waitingfordoggo · 29/01/2026 19:24

Ah ok. So not really a missing word, but a missing paragraph or two.

Waitingfordoggo · 29/01/2026 19:25

I took you quite literally and thought you were trying to point out a grammatical error.

LookingThroughGlass · 29/01/2026 19:25

Is there any reason why these taxis should be any less accessible than driven taxis?

TeenToTwenties · 29/01/2026 19:30

LookingThroughGlass · 29/01/2026 19:25

Is there any reason why these taxis should be any less accessible than driven taxis?

Yes, because for example no one to load your wheelchair into the boot.

LookingThroughGlass · 29/01/2026 19:32

TeenToTwenties · 29/01/2026 19:30

Yes, because for example no one to load your wheelchair into the boot.

Ah, yes, I see what you mean now.

Oddities1 · 29/01/2026 20:36

Not 'a missing word' is it.

TheNinkyNonkyIsATardis · 29/01/2026 21:58

But the article isn't about passenger use and equal access. It's about a fairly novel technology being introduced available to the public in the coming year.

Most people will be risk-averse when it comes to new technology, the physically disabled no less so.

It would be logical that the service is rolled out and established alongside existing provision before any adaptations are made such as automated ramps etc.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page