Saturday, 17th August 2019
UPS invests in self-driving trucks
by ABC News
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The self-driving tractor-trailer of the future is one step closer, with UPS in tow.
UPS announced an investment in TuSimple, an autonomous truck startup, on Thursday in an effort to cut costs and time in the ever-increasing race for more-efficient ground deliveries.
UPS has already contracted TuSimple to deliver packages between Phoenix and Tucson since May, UPS revealed in the announcement.
"Throughout the ongoing tests, UPS has been providing truckloads of goods for TuSimple to carry on a North American Freight Forwarding route between Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona. The company initiated self-driving service in May, 2019, with a driver and engineer in the vehicle. TuSimple and UPS monitor distance and time the trucks travel autonomously, safety data and transport time," according to the statement from UPS.
Neither company commented on the size of the investment.
In May, the United States Postal Service (USPS) contracted with TuSimple to drive five round trips between distribution centers in Phoenix and Dallas.
Like all self-driving vehicles currently operating, TuSimple trucks require a driver at all times. There's also an engineer on board the trips.
Eventually, TuSimple is betting its fleet can reduce shipping costs by 30%, according to the statement.
Driver pay is the largest cost for trucking companies, accounting for as much as 43% of operational costs, according to the American Transportation Research Institute.
A spokesperson for the Teamsters Union, which represents truck drivers, told ABC News that these driverless trucks do not affect their members who drive for UPS, because these trailers are used in air freight logistics, and are not package delivery drivers, who are union members.
"We have been and continue to monitor technological developments as it pertains to automation in trucking," the Teamsters Union spokesperson said.
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"While fully autonomous, driverless vehicles still have development and regulatory work ahead, we are excited by the advances in braking and other technologies that companies like TuSimple are mastering," UPS' Chief Strategy and Transformation Officer Scott Price said in a statement.
"All of these technologies offer significant safety and other benefits that will be realized long before the full vision of autonomous vehicles is brought to fruition -- and UPS will be there, as a leader implementing these new technologies in our fleet."
The 4-year-old San Diego company also claims that its trucks will "increase road safety,” founder Xiaodi Hou said.
When the company announced its pilot program with the U.S. Postal Service, its safety pitch addressed the difficulty of recruiting drivers to overnight shifts, which Hou said usually requires two drivers.
"Driving teams are challenging to recruit due to overnight driving requirements, the need to share close quarters with another person and a significant truck driver shortage," he said.
As the e-commerce market booms, so does the competition to deliver packages while embracing more efficient tracking systems and moving toward autonomous vehicles and robots.
In January, Amazon debuted a delivery robot named Scout, with a human walker, for that last "retail mile" of deliveries.
Earlier this month the company announced it was extending the Scout trial program to Irvine, California.
The online retailer announced in June it plans to start drone delivery "within months."
In February, FedEx unveiled the "FedEx SameDay Bot," for same-day orders within a 3-mile distance from a store.
The program was slated to roll out this summer in Memphis, Tennessee, with Autozone, Pizza Hut, Target and Walmart signed up as partners.
Would you Like To Know More?
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/ups-invests-in-self-driving-trucks-reveals-its-already-been-using-them/ar-AAFWcwb?ocid=spartandhp (https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/ups-invests-in-self-driving-trucks-reveals-its-already-been-using-them/ar-AAFWcwb?ocid=spartandhp)
Saturday, 27th November Twenty One
THE FAMILY OF A BLACK RESTAURANT OWNER, JOHN YOUNG, SAYS HE WAS NEVER CREDITED AS THE ORIGINATOR OF WORLD-FAMOUS ‘BUFFALO’ WINGS
by Alexa Imani Spencer
(https://i.imgur.com/MZAakGf.jpg)
A Black man who once lived on Buffalo, New York’s East Side spent the last few years of his life fighting to be credited as the creator of the world-famous buffalo wings.
All the while, a local Italian family says they’re the originators.
John Young was the owner of a busy restaurant on Jefferson Avenue in the 1960s, which was considered Buffalo’s Black Main Street during segregation.
He was first known for his whole, breaded wings before his tangy “mombo”-sauced wings became a hit.
Today, the spicy “buffalo” wings are known by their buttery hot sauce mixture.
Theodore Clyburn, 74, recalls chowing down on Young’s saucy orange-red wings after he graduated high school in 1964, USA TODAY reported.
“Anybody that was around back then will tell you that John Young was the originator,” Clyburn told USA TODAY about the owner of John Young’s Wings and Things.
By 1970, Young left the city.
Due to riots and racial tension he didn’t feel it was a safe place to live.
When he returned a decade later, the hot wings were all the rave and all the credit had gone to a local Italian restaurant, Anchor Bar, which sat just a mile from Young’s restaurant.
After going back into wing business, Young told his story to any newspaper around, including the New Yorker in 1980.
“I am the true inventor of the Buffalo chicken wing,” he told Buffalo News food critic Janice Okun in 1996, two years before his death.
“It hurts me so bad that other people take the credit.”
As some tell it, Frank and Teressa Bellissimo—owners of Anchor Bar—invented the buffalo wings in their decades-old restaurant.
There are several renditions to what exactly happened.
In one version of the story, set in 1964, the Bellissimo’s son Dominic walked in the spot on a Friday night with a group of friends.
They were hungry and looking for something new.
It’s said his mother improvised with what she had on hand.
“They looked like chicken wings, a part of the chicken that usually went into the stock pot for soup,” the bar’s official history read on a placard outside its door.
“Teressa had deep fried the wings and flavored them with a secret sauce. The wings were an instant hit.”
Now a multi-state franchise, Anchor Bar sells bottled sauce sold as far away as Japan.
“If you talk about one of the hallmarks of Buffalo’s cultural contributions when it comes to food, chicken wings, there was an African American man there who—if it was parallel circumstances, or some kind of linear progression—he was doing it on the East Side,” City of Buffalo councilman James Pitts said.
“He was serving up stuff to his community because he couldn’t get to any other community.”
Would You Like To Know More?
https://www.blackenterprise.com/black-restaurant-owner-john-young-died-without-being-credited-as-the-originator-of-world-famous-buffalo-wings/ (https://www.blackenterprise.com/black-restaurant-owner-john-young-died-without-being-credited-as-the-originator-of-world-famous-buffalo-wings/)
https://hiphopwired.com/1070143/john-young-buffalo-wings-mambo-sauce-dc/ (https://hiphopwired.com/1070143/john-young-buffalo-wings-mambo-sauce-dc/)