Feature/Jobs

These Truckers Work Alongside the Coders Trying to Eliminate Their Jobs

At the autonomous driving startup Starsky Robotics, the present and future of U.S. employment ride in the same cab.
A prototype control center allows truckers to drive big rigs from anywhere.

A prototype control center allows truckers to drive big rigs from anywhere.

Photographer: Damien Maloney for Bloomberg Businessweek

Just before Stefan Seltz-Axmacher offers a job to an engineer at Starsky Robotics Inc., a driverless trucking startup in San Francisco, he gives them the talk.

This is a company that employs truck drivers, is how the talk begins. The coders are sometimes taken aback—this differs from the usual change-the-world spiel deployed in hiring meetings. Truckers have very different ideas and different experiences from people like you, Seltz-Axmacher continues. Statistically speaking, many of them are Trump voters. They will say things that you may find startling. Not in a malicious way, but because people from, say, rural West Virginia talk differently than people from San Francisco. Can you handle that?