The magic of Uber doesn’t begin when the car arrives. It begins the instant the app tells you “how long” the wait will be. A tiny estimate — “2 minutes away” or “6 minutes away” — flashes onto your screen so casually that most people never think twice about it. Yet producing that single number requires a planet-scale system constantly processing live GPS streams, road traffic, driver movement, rider demand, map intelligence, and prediction models in real time. What looks like a simple countdown is actually the visible tip of one of the most advanced distributed systems ever engineered for everyday consumers.
That number is the Estimated Time of Arrival, and computing it correctly — at global scale, in real time, across millions of concurrent users — is genuinely one of the hardest problems in applied engineering.
This post is a deep walkthrough of how a system like Uber’s ETA engine works. We will go through the GPS infrastructure, the map matching algorithms, the routing engines, the machine learning prediction pipelines, the streaming systems, the geo-spatial indexing, and the tradeoffs that engineers make every day to keep that number accurate and fast.
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