REDWOOD
CITY: The robots are coming. And they have burritos, Chinese food and burgers.
If you're a hungry DoorDash user in Redwood City, they may be coming for you. Recently,
the on-demand food delivery startup announced that in the next few weeks some
customers will see robots showing up on their doorstep with their orders.
The
robots, made by London-based Starship Technologies, are small, six-wheeled
gizmos that cruise along city sidewalks, rolling at about the speed a
pedestrian would walk (no more than 4 mph). They come up to a person's knee,
have space to store three grocery bags of food, and weigh about 50 pounds when
fully loaded. DoorDash will roll out fewer than a dozen in Redwood City to
start, intending to use them for small deliveries traveling short distances
(good news for robot lovers who are too lazy to walk down the street to pick up
their to-go order).
The
robots are self-driving and are equipped with nine cameras to sense dangers and
obstacles, but during this testing stage, will be accompanied by a human
handler who can take control if necessary.
"By
adding robots as a complement to the tens of thousands of Dashers who use the
DoorDash platform, we'll be able to better delight customers with faster, more
convenient deliveries," Co-founder and Chief Product Officer Stanley Tang
wrote in a news release. "While other companies trying to play catch up in
the delivery space either ignore the law or chase ideas like drones that lack
the infrastructure to implement, we're excited to be bringing autonomous
deliveries to customers in weeks rather than years."
Eventually
DoorDash envisions the robots arriving outside a restaurant on their own, and
alerting a worker inside of their arrival. Then the worker will load the food
into the container, and the robot will zoom away. When it arrives at its
destination, the robot will alert its customer with a text message, and the
customer can use a button on his or her smartphone to open the compartment and
grab the food.
The
robots got a green light from Redwood City officials, ensuring the programme
won't meet the same fate as Uber's failed self-driving car pilot in San
Francisco. Redwood City in November announced it approved the use of the
"personal delivery devices" on city sidewalks for nine months.
"We're
excited that Starship Technologies chose Redwood City for this innovative
autonomous robot programme," Mayor John Seybert wrote in a news release.
"This has strong potential to reduce traffic in Redwood City and allow for
some restaurants and businesses to serve a greater number of customers."
For
DoorDash, the idea behind the pilot programme is to test out whether the robots
can provide fast deliveries with good customer service, and to see how
customers and restaurants react to and interact with the bots. For now, at
least, DoorDash promises it doesn't envision fleets of robots replacing its
human delivery drivers. Instead, the company may add robots as one of its many
delivery vehicle options. DoorDash workers use cars, motorcycles, scooters and
bicycles, or they walk, and the startup takes those delivery methods into
account when assigning orders.
Robots
can avoid traffic (they drive on sidewalks, not the street) and don't have to
worry about parking, but can't carry bulky pizza boxes or other large orders,
making them
ideal
candidates for the small, short-distance orders human DoorDash workers tend to
avoid because they promise less money than large, complicated orders.
The
company also may use the robots to shuttle food from a restaurant to a human
waiting at a nearby parking lot, saving the human the trouble of finding
parking. — The Mercury News/Tribune News
Service.
Also you may read Meet China’s Robot Goddess Who Can Be Confused For A Real Human
Also you may read Meet China’s Robot Goddess Who Can Be Confused For A Real Human
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