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š Good morning and happy Juneteenth for yesterday!
Alright, team, this is my final week here at Android Authority. Iāll be wrapping up here after starting this newsletter as the DGiT Daily back on October 2nd, 2018, and there have been some 800 newsletters sent since! Donāt worry, the team will keep making sure you get your morningās tech news you need to know. Iāll write more about what it all means during the week!
Self-driving trucks
The reality of self-driving vehicles has been pretty fun to keep tabs on over the years: weāve seen Teslaās controversial beta testing (without using Lidar sensors), constant improvement from the likes of Alphabetās Waymo and GMās Cruise, to autonomous shipping, and plenty more ā like trucks!
- Itās clear at some point soon that most new vehicles will be capable of significant portions of self-driving, especially on highways which are mostly alike.
- And as that comes closer, the differentiator wonāt be if a brand of car can or cannot, but more what it costs to have it available.
- Teslaās add-on āFull Self-Drivingā (which still isnāt full but something like a Level 2 driver-assistance system) is $199p/m or, last check, $12,000.
- Elon Musk suggested recently that Tesla would be worth almost nothing if it doesnāt solve self-driving, or at least would be worth what other car manufacturers are worth.
- Thereās so far to go from handling 90% of daily roads and traffic to all scenarios, which is the big challenge.
- But hereās one area thatās coming fast: self-driving big rigs.
Better for almost everyone?
- Christopher Mims in the WSJ ($) ponders the changes coming to big rigs, and if America is ready.
- The argument is that fully-decked out trucks with loads of sensors will be better than humans in some ways: helping trucks see things a human driver might miss will avoid the cost to people who drive trucks for long distances and long hours.
- Plus, thereās apparently a shortage of 80,000 drivers.
- Though, nowhere near as smart as a human, or adaptable, but with useful help, and in a limited sense at first: highway driving, not full A to B.
- Mims writes itās going to be jarring: āSome day in the next few years, if youāre on the right stretch of highway in Americaās Sunbelt, you are likely to have the disconcerting experience of pulling alongside a fully loaded semi-truck, glancing at the cab, and seeing no one behind the wheel at all.ā
When?
- That day might be the end of 2023, though that date is based on two start-ups and their aims, rather than a super realistic view.
- Waymoās trucking arm notes āthere is no production-ready, commercially available truck with the redundant control systems that a self-driving system would require,ā like backup steering, brakes, electrical systems ā and those additions wonāt be cheap, but the cost will quickly be offset.
- The potential might be an extra $20,000 of hardware of sensors and computing, with labor costs mostly removed, and truck utilization going up if theyāre allowed to run at more times than without driver limitations.
- Jobs will be lost and the romance of the road will cause pushback. But trucks will be remotely monitored by humans, and itās likely humans will pilot them on city streets.
- One good quote to finish from Parth Vaishnav, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan, whoās been looking at the impacts of self-driving trucks on truckers themselves: āThese trucks are going to have different capabilities than a human-driven truck will have, so they will not be used in the way a human-driven truck will be used ā in the same way a hundred guys with shovels are not an excavator.ā
Roundup
š© Google uses a Drake song to argue against green bubbles in iMessage (Android Authority).
ā Hereās how the new āNearby Unlockā feature might work on the Pixel Watch (Android Authority).
š We asked, you told us: Most of you like the Nothing Phone 1 design ā good result! (Android Authority).
šŗ āWe all want a new NVIDIA Shield Tablet and now is the perfect timeā. Agree! A refresh here would be perfect. (Android Authority).
šµ Telegram Premium launched: Hereās everything you need to know (Android Authority).
š āMicrosoftās weird Surface Duo 2 has surprisingly become my favorite device of the yearā: At least nine software updates and a sizable price cut have transformed Microsoftās dual-screen phone, though Dan here admits itās more a secondary device (The Verge).
š„ Diablo Immortal has reportedly earned $24 million since release from eight million downloads (Engadget).
š As cryptocurrency tumbles, prices for GPUs continue to fall, which is great for gamers but more interesting for alternative uses such as machine learning and big data crunching (Ars Technica).
š ICYMI: Senators call for a common charger standard in the US (Engadget).
š The race to produce green steel: steel industry is testing new technologies that donāt rely on fossil fuels (Ars Technica).
š¶ Er: The Scooby Doo Mystery Machine is an Airbnb for the summer (Gizmodo).
š¤ āWhatās a midlife crisis for people who could never afford a sports car?ā (r/askreddit).
Monday Meme
Iām not sure why this popped up, but please enjoy the insanity at ManhattanHenge from, I guess, earlier this year.
Next chance is July 13, and this photo on Wikipedia of the event back in 2016 brings back some memories of some old phones:
Have a great start to your week,
Tristan Rayner, Senior Editor