Big news in autonomous trucking! Kodiak is partnering with Bosch to scale up its self-driving tech, aiming to get their systems into more trucks, faster. Are we ready for a highway full of robot big rigs?
Read more: https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/05/kodiak-taps-bosch-to-scale-its-self-driving-truck-tech/
#AutonomousTrucks #Bosch #KodiakAI #FutureOfTransport #TechNews
Kodiak taps Bosch to scale its self-driving truck tech | TechCrunch

There is no timeline for when these systems will become available. But once they do, Kodiak could bring its tech to more trucks, faster.

TechCrunch
China Tests 5G-Powered Autonomous Mining Trucks In Extreme Altitudes

China has completed successful tests of its domestically developed 5G-powered unmanned mining trucks at the Huoshaoyun lead-zinc site, showcasing an advanced autonomous transport system designed to…

Lowyat.NET
#Ordos, a sparsely populated Chinese city, has become a #testingground for #autonomousvehicles due to its wide roads and minimal traffic. The city’s #transformation from a failed property development to a tech hub reflects #China’s strategy of turning infrastructure failures into opportunities. While Ordos provides ideal conditions for testing #autonomoustrucks, its lack of pedestrian traffic limits its potential for consumer-focused applications. https://restofworld.org/2025/china-ordos-ghost-city-autonomous-vehicles?eicker.news #China #Tech #ChinaTech
China’s most infamous ghost town is now training ground for driverless trucks

The empty boulevards that once symbolized the mainland’s property bust now serve as testing grounds for hundreds of autonomous vehicles.

Rest of World
Not another round of process -- #USCanada talks need to produce an outcome: #Cabotage for air travel and cargo, then pilots for land transportation. Pro #innovation reform beyond #tariffs opening the way to #autonomoustrucks and #ai -driven #supplychain #Resillience. https://christophersands1.substack.com/p/the-private-eye-air-canada-carney

Weekly output: Mark Vena podcast, Verizon customer service, AI fair use, Comcast ditches data caps, Aurora’s autonomous trucks, age verification for porn sites, Universal Service Fund, Trump tariffs

The first half of this year is almost in the books, which means I’m thinking of a few longer pieces that I’d meant to have seen published and paid for by now but instead have yet to start writing.

Patreon readers got an extra post from me this week: a recap of how Uber rides in Mexico City helped me realize how much trouble cheap Chinese EVs are going to cause for Tesla.

6/23/2025: Ep 112 SmartTechCheck Podcast — Apple WWDC 25, Apple Intelligence, OpenAI device, Trump phone, Mark Vena

I suggested that this podcast cover the exercise in commercialized cult worship that is Trump Mobile. Two days after we recorded the show, that site’s description of the T1 phone that it plans to sell changed from “proudly made right here in the USA” to “brought to life right here in the USA.”

6/24/2025: Verizon Touts Upgraded Customer Service Push: Will It Make a Difference?, PCMag

Put me down as a skeptic of the difference that customer service can make in broadband: I can’t remember when I last called either my wireless carrier or my Internet provider for help.

6/24/2025: Judge: It’s Fair Use to Train AI on Books You Bought, But Not Ones You Pirated, PCMag

I found this case interesting for two reasons: It did not involve any claims of AI plagiarism and it allowed for a distinction between training AI models on purchased content and training it on pirated material. That last point should have Silicon Valley nervious, since so many large firms–hi, Meta–could not resist taking that copyright-infringing shortcut.

6/26/2025: Comcast’s New Plans Dump the Data Caps, PCMag

This is a post I have wanted to be able to write for years. I guess seeing enough subscribers flee for unlimited-data offerings of fiber and fixed-wireless services had a persuasive effect on Comcast’s management that my own posts denouncing this exercise in abuse of market power did not.

6/27/2025: Aurora hits a self-driving trucking milestone, Fast Company

One of my editors suggested that Aurora launching commercial deliveries via its self-driving trucks meant it was time to revisit the company I’d profiled for Fast Co. last summer. Conveniently enough, Aurora’s president Ossa Fisher was one of the speakers at Web Summit Vancouver, allowing me to interview her IRL during that conference.

6/27/2025: Sorry, Pornhub Fans: Supreme Court Upholds Texas Age-Verification Law, PCMag

I had this case on my list of opinions to look for on the Supreme Court’s site Friday morning, with an idea that my lede would have to reference Avenue Q’s “The Internet Is For Porn” regardless of the outcome. I’m surprised nobody else seems to have gone with that. After publication, my editor added statements about the decision from a few interested parties.

6/27/2025: That ‘Universal Service Charge’ on Your Phone Bill Isn’t Going Away, PCMag

As I was working on a post about the Texas case, I saw this opinion pop up and realized that I should write about that as well. In the hours that passed, my inbox accumulated comments from a variety of groups–including telecom trade associations that in other scenarios want the government to butt out–applauding this decision.

6/28/2025: For Electronics Makers in Latin America, the Roller-Coaster Ride Is Worse Than Just Paying a High Tariff, PCMag

I started writing this piece from my hotel in Mexico City hours before my departure and then needed another week to check with NielsenIQ to see if they had any stats about the effects of tariffs on the country and then find time to finish and file the thing.

 

#ageVerification #AITraining #Anthropic #Aurora #autonomousTrucks #autonomousVehicles #Comcast #ComcastDataCaps #copyright #dataCaps #ElectronicsHomeMexico #FirstAmendment #LLMs #MarkVena #podcast #SupremeCourt #tariffs #UniversalServiceFund #USF #VerizonCustomerService #VerizonSupport #Vz #Xfinity

With a load of pastries, Aurora hits driverless truck milestone in Texas

After four years of testing with humans behind the wheel, Aurora pulled the driver for the first time last Sunday.

Axios
The first driverless semis have started running regular longhaul routes

Driverless trucks are officially running their first regular long-haul routes, making roundtrips between Dallas and Houston.

CNN
Kodiak has made its first driverless truck deliveries to customer Atlas Energy | TechCrunch

Kodiak Robotics has officially handed off two autonomous trucks to customer Atlas Energy Solutions, marking the startup’s first commercial launch. 

TechCrunch