Your Delivery Robot Is Here

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Aryan Marshall: Hello.

Michael Hit: Given today’s topic, I’m interested in knowing what is the most unexpected thing you have ordered through the delivery app?

Louis Matsakis: So I was on a press trip recently in China, and I was taking note during an interview and I got a pen across my white pants. So I ordered the Chinese equivalent to a tidal pen. I think this is probably the most strange thing I have ever achieved in demand.

Aryan Marshall: I am constitutionally against paying for delivery just before apps. I hate paying the delivery people. What they do is a lot of respect, but I will spend my money in another way. So I think I’ve been really desperate recently and ordered the pad Thai and it was a wild for me. So where I am.

Michael Hit: Is it your most unexpected thing?

Aryan Marshall: Yes, I used it at all is unexpected.

Michael Hit: Yes, I mean I live in the dense part of one of the population of the western coast of California and I rarely use delivery applications, but I will probably say that the most unexpected thing I ordered is Jameson Irish Whiskey Bottle.

Aryan Marshall: Respect.

Michael Hit: It is wired Uncanny valleySilicon Valley is a show about the people, strength and impact. Today we are talking about how Delivery app companies are still trying to fix their robots at your doorstep after a few years of struggle. At an event earlier this week, Dordash Dot unveiled its new autonomous robot. The agency says it is a hybrid, quotation, “working model for supply, working with people, but also drones and autonomous vehicles in the mix”, but Dordash is not alone in trying to provide your dinner by any robot. The autonomous supply industry has developed continuously and has faced considerable challenges on the way. We will dive by drowning on why some of these companies are still betting on delivery robots, the competition to create the right technology between them and what these robots in our cities can mean to all of us. I am the director of Michael Calor, Customer Technology and Culture.

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