Skip to main content

California approves Flywheel’s TaxiOS to modernize traditional taxi cabs

california approves flywheels taxios to upgrade taxis help them fight uber and lyft taxi
PaylessImages/123RF.com
California taxi cabs are gearing up to fend off disruptors like Uber and Lyft from their territory. Earlier this week, the California Division of Measurement Standards approved a smartphone-based taxi meter called TaxiOS for use in the state’s taxis. The system comes from San Francisco-based Flywheel, which has a mobile app that allows users to hail a taxi ride from a licensed driver.

Flywheel’s TaxiOS is an Android smartphone app that acts as a GPS-based taxi meter. It’s an all-in-one approach, as the app handles payments, navigation, and dispatching.

Recommended Videos

TaxiOS shows riders the real-time cost of their trip and will offer some features that will be familiar to Uber and Lyft users, including fare splitting between riders, dynamic pricing (i.e., fare reduction to attract passengers), last-mile deliveries, and payments via the Flywheel app.

The state’s approval of TaxiOS came after a successful two-month pilot with about 50 taxi cabs in San Francisco.

“Working with Flywheel, we put its metering software through a wide variety of tests under very challenging conditions,” said Kristin Macey, director of California’s Division of Measurement Standards, in Flywheel’s press release.

The challenge now will be getting taxi fleets across California to adopt the system, a task Flywheel CEO Rakesh Mathur expects to be straightforward.

“The existing equipment in a taxi replicates everything a smartphone already has, and all that stuff is more expensive than a smartphone,” Mathur told the Los Angeles Times. “It takes a lot of money to install, it’s inherently unreliable, and 30 percent of cars have to come into the garage because of problems with those devices, because at the end of the day, you’re dealing with a mechanical device.”

The modernization of the traditional taxi cab will continue to be a growing story as fleets try to answer the challenges posed by Uber, Lyft, and other new competitors. New York City taxis, for instance, are piloting a program that will install GPS-based fare meters in 1,000 cabs and replace “Taxi TVs.”

Jason Hahn
Jason Hahn is a part-time freelance writer based in New Jersey. He earned his master's degree in journalism at Northwestern…
These new NASA EVs will drive astronauts part way to the moon (sort of)
NASA's new crew transportation electric vehicles.

Three specially designed, fully electric, environmentally friendly crew transportation vehicles for Artemis missions arrived at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida this week. The zero-emission vehicles, which will carry astronauts to Launch Complex 39B for Artemis missions, were delivered by Canoo Technologies of Torrance, California. NASA/Isaac Watson

NASA has shown off a trio of new all-electric vehicles that will shuttle the next generation of lunar astronauts to the launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center.

Read more
5 upcoming EVs I’m excited for, from luxury SUVs to budget champions
Lotus Eletre

Almost every major automaker has released an EV by now -- or plans to soon -- and makers like Ford and Kia already have a variety to choose from. But if you haven't found one that's right for you yet, hang tight. There are dozens of announced electric car models that have yet to come out, and it's clear that the future of EVs is bright.

From longer range to lower prices, the next batch of EVs gives us plenty to get excited about. Here are five upcoming EVs that we can't wait to drive.
Volvo EX30

Read more
Tesla shows off first Cybertruck after two years of delays
The first Cybertruck built at Tesla's Giga Texas facility.

The first Cybertruck built at Tesla's Giga Texas facility. Tesla

Tesla has shown off the first Cybertruck to roll off the production line at its new Gigafactory plant in Austin, Texas.

Read more