According to a recent LinkedIn post from Teleo, the company is showcasing a live demonstration in Las Vegas of one operator remotely running two autonomous machines located in Pleasanton, California. The demonstration uses Teleo’s supervised autonomy system to control a Hitachi ZW310-7 wheel loader and a Bell B30E articulated dump truck in a continuous production cycle.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
The post outlines a workflow in which the operator remotely loads the truck, dispatches it to drive autonomously across the site, and then supervises the loader as it autonomously returns to the material to prepare the next load. This setup is presented as enabling one operator to manage multiple machines, suggesting potential labor efficiency gains and increased site productivity for future commercial deployments.
The collaboration with Hitachi Construction Machinery and the presence at the CONEXPO-CON/AGG trade show indicate Teleo’s focus on building ecosystem partnerships and gaining visibility among heavy equipment buyers. For investors, the public demonstration may signal technical maturity of Teleo’s supervised autonomy platform, which could support adoption in mining and construction markets if the technology proves scalable and reliable.
If successfully commercialized, the ability to run multiple autonomous machines per operator could improve customers’ return on equipment and labor, reinforcing Teleo’s value proposition in a capital- and labor-intensive industry. The trade show exposure and association with established brands like Hitachi and Bell Trucks America may also enhance Teleo’s competitive positioning as autonomous solutions increasingly influence procurement decisions in heavy equipment fleets.

