I have been visiting the Frankfurt Book Fair for 35 years. For reasons of cost (hotel prices at fair times are astronomical there), we usually sought out accommodations that were located outside. I have fond memories of a hotel in Hanau, for example. Hanau is a neighboring city of Frankfurt, and the public connections to the Main metropolis were good even then. But ...
But the trade show program also included attending evening events, which had to end with a cab ride back to the hotel. And here the horror began, not out of fear, but because the cab drivers regularly didn't have the slightest knowledge of the area as soon as they passed the Frankfurt city limits. Erroneous journeys, unsuccessful inquiries with colleagues - the journey home was always an odyssey.
Why do I remember this? Because these days the CEO of Uber Austria demanded that the test of local knowledge for obtaining the driving authorization should be dropped without replacement; it was obsolete in times of digitization (note: for rental car drivers like those of Uber, this obligation was only recently introduced in Austria). Is it?
I wrestled with myself for a while, but I think the man is right. Surely it's not a mistake for cab drivers to have some local knowledge. After all, systems can break down once in a while. But we live in the age of digitization, and it's more important to me that the driver drives properly and perhaps also speaks the local language. In truth, I don't care whether he follows his knowledge or a digital helper on the way to Hanau.
Perhaps the following will get around to the representatives of the cab industry: If you're late, life punishes you.
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