'Postmates, which is an American quick-commerce and food delivery service owned by Uber, has created a two-eyed semi-autonomous robot called Serve that can speed up deliveries and cut costs, but for regular folks, this is surprising to encounter. Postmates is an app-based on-demand delivery company from San Francisco that serves businesses and enables them to make quick local deliveries. Postmates has referred to itself as the anti-Amazon, transporting products from small stores and restaurants within a city rather than picking up goods from a warehouse far away. Last week, Postmates unveiled what it believes will be the future of local delivery: a robot it calls Serve. It will employ Serve to take groceries and meals to residents in Los Angeles. The company says it plans to roll out the service to more cities over the next 12 months. As autonomous driving goes through its growing pains, Postmates is betting that robots can drive down costs for consumers. Serve is an all-electric shopping cart-sized robot with a locked compartment on wheels and blinking eyes and lights that allow it to communicate with pedestrians through light patterns. For example, it has a ring of lights on its top to indicate an upcoming turn. The robot will be able to roll alongside people on sidewalks, relying on lidar and other sensors to avoid obstacles and pedestrians. Lidar, short for light detection and ranging, is a system that uses pulsed lasers to measure distances. These are the same types of sensor used in some autonomous cars. Serve, the robot, will deliver products to customers’ front doors. The cargo hatch can then be unlocked using a smartphone or passcode. The bot can also pick up food from restaurants in congested areas and bring them to a Postmates dispatch hub from where delivery people can take packages the last mile. Postmates already makes more than 4 million deliveries per month, but using traditional transport methods such as bikes rather than bots. It competes with restaurant-delivery companies like DoorDash, Grubhub and Uber Eats. This has become a very competitive business, with companies frequently using promotions to lure customers. Postmates expects its new robot fleet will allow it to lower costs. We believe the day will come when Postmates’ vision of using robots for door-to-door delivery plays out, making human delivery a type of luxury. But getting there won’t be easy: this type of shift doesn’t happen overnight and will face many obstacles other than physical objects. Municipalities will look to regulate these services and consumers will be sceptical or even alarmed by these autonomous carts trundling up and down streets. We’re keen to see if Postmates can deliver on its promise. The Postmates’ Serve is all electric, and has a 50 lb (22.7 kg) storage capacity, with a total length of 30” (76.2 cm), an estimated width of 21” (53.3), and a height of 40” (101.6 cm). It has a maximum speed of 3 mph (4.8 kph) Uber and Postmates have long shared a belief that platforms like ours can power much more than just food delivery — they can be a hugely important part of local commerce and communities, all the more important during crises like COVID-19,” said Dara Khosrowshahi, CEO of Uber. #PostmatesFoodDeliveryRobot #ServeRobot #PostmatesServe What do you think of Postmates, readers? The comments section is open. Copyright Notice: We make these videos to Entertain people and Educatethem. We do not own the clips and music we use in most cases. Our understanding is that it is in correlation to Fair Right Use, however, given that it is open to interpretation, if any owners of the content clips would like us to remove the video, we have no problem with that and will do so as fast as possible. Please email us if you have any concerns at arvinithu@gmail.com Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976,allowance is made for \"fair use\" for purposes such as criticism,comment, news reporting, teaching scholarship, and research. Fair usise a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise beinfringing. Non profiteducational or personal use tips the balance infavor of fair us cc0cc by SA 10. ce by SA 2.0, ce by SA 3.0 and ce by SA 4.0 license https://cxxreativecommons.org/licensed 1) This video has no negative impact on the original works (It would actually be positive for them) 2)I only used bits and pieces of videos to get the point across where necessary.'
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