What BigRoad learned at the Fergus Truck Show – Photo Essay
This past weekend, BigRoad went on a road trip to the annual Fergus Truck Show.
Read More »What BigRoad learned at the Fergus Truck Show – Photo Essay
This past weekend, BigRoad went on a road trip to the annual Fergus Truck Show.
Read More »What BigRoad learned at the Fergus Truck Show – Photo Essay
Last month, BigRoad sent out a survey regarding the Hours of Service Rules change. We had some interesting results…
Read More »Let’s see how you did – Hours of Service Survey Results
Here is Chapter 3 of our first EBook “The EOBR Compliance Game.” Navigate your way through the timeline to compliance.
The official BigRoad EBook “The EOBR Compliance Game – A guide to playing & winning for drivers, owner-operators & small fleets” has been completed and is ready to be launched. Starting Monday we will be releasing the EBook one chapter at a time (with the option to download the full EBook all at once).
We’re so excited about the new guidance from the FMCSA. It’s great news worth celebrating. The July 10th guidance by the FMCSA clarifying just how legal electronic logbooks and electronic signatures are (spoiler: they’re extremely legal) has been a long time coming. This is the story of how you made that happen with help from BigRoad staff and some folks in enforcement.
“e-Logs: the final rule could show up in 2014 or 2015″ – OTA
These days we use our mobile devices for everything. They can easily transform into calculators, music players, photo albums… you name it and there is probably an app for that.
Our previous blog post in this series, Motorcoach Compliance and Safety – What Can BigRoad Do For Me? we discussed the emphasis on safety and compliance that has been present in the transportation world this past year. This was a big topic at the recent UMA Expo in Los Angeles as well.
Read More »Motorcoach Compliance and Safety – How BigRoad Can Help
Apps have come a long way since the days of client/server. Back then, they were applications (all those syllables!) or programs (how generic) or software (sounds complicated) requiring some serious hardware to power through and deliver key functionality. Processing power generally meant big, clunky, and sometimes slow.