A robot delivery idea so crazy it just might work | Hard Reset
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- Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
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About our video: McNuggets delivered in under 10 min for just $1? This underground Prime-like delivery service is the closest thing humans have to teleportation.
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We drive everything everywhere - for each food order we place or package we order, it takes miles and manpower to get to us. But what if there was a simpler, more sustainable solution? Pipedream Labs has created a technology that’s the closest to teleportation we’ll ever get.
Small, electric robots could make near-instant delivery possible, and for a much lower cost and environmental impact than current methods. Utilizing underground tunnels, the robots would drop your delivery into a dedicated box in your home.
The company’s idea to build a network of tubes would allow direct delivery right into your home, for far less time and money than even Prime 2-day shipping.
00:00 This is a tube that grants wishes
01:48 Welcome to Hard Reset
03:23 Follow us to Pipedream Labs in Austin, Texas
04:02 Building a city-wide network of tubes
04:55 Pipedream Labs’ prototype graveyard
06:30 Last-mile logistics is expensive and car-dependant
09:16 Pipedream could make mail delivery safer
09:51 The engineering problems with Pipedream
11:30 How Pipedream is testing tube tech in Georgia
12:55 Here’s how these pipes are installed
14:30 Pipedream’s in-house prototype of this tech
17:50 Pipedream’s long-term plan
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Read more of our stories on last-mile logistics:
Autonomous tech is taking over last-mile delivery
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Solving the last mile problem with robotic delivery vehicles
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Delivery drones are now dropping off packages for Walmart
► www.freethink.com/consumer-te...
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finally I got to learn how this awesome voice belongs to
I know one of the founders of Muse. Very smart, very cool lady.
Omg if You like Avatar the air bender.. Bruhhhhh
Why not just build cities where food is really close.
@@thegrandnil764 That is a GREAT idea! Decentralize foo production so that every community can cultivate its own food! I definitely think we should do this! But food is not the only thing that gets delivered.
If something gets stuck, the maintenance man gonna cuss like crazy
i suspect the maintenance man will be a maintenance robot. now if the maintenance robot gets stuck...
we send another one 😎
@@juzeus9I think there was a Star Trek TNG episode about this
@@moshimoshibar exocomps?
drones should deliver our food🌭
There is a similiar project in switzerland called cargo sous terrain, but on a much larger scale. It uses bigger tubes, larger vehicles and aims to connect cities and big businesses via underground transport. The lawmakers already implemented the necessary changes and many big swiss companies are invested in the project. To be fair, in siwtzerland they do have to build tunnels all the time anyway, in order to get anything anywhere.
Politicians from other countries should learn from the swiss ones
so, a subway, a tried and true transport method
Im sure in Switzerland, it will be built successfully. In the U.S., the Politicians will have to get their percentage of kickbacks and the Unions will spend most time on breaks so that the job goes 100 years past the time when it was supposed to be finished and several trillion over budget all on tax payers pockets
@@chrxmeface wait for robots to automate construction, and ai to automate politics. boom, max efficiency
Sounds interesting, shame in America we would never get anything like this
“Let’s give Bezos a tunnel to your bedroom”
He doesn't need one, yet.
I pictured Bezos big head all the sudden peaking from a hole in the wall with a big smile lol
Wait until bro finds out about a pad lock
I was hoping he could sneak in and read me bedtime stories.
Thing is we have drones
Switzerland is building a network of underground narrow tunnels for deliveries but more on an industrial scale than a private one
And just like the idea in this video the Swiss Cargo Sous-Terrain sounds cool at first until you have a look at the realistic cost / benefit of it. Then you start seeing that just improving existing systems like rail for long-distance and shared mobility for short distances will be so much better.
someone looked at itemducts in modded minecraft and was like, you know what, i can do that in real life
ahahah nice ref
Or Odd squad on PBS
The closest to the teleportation is falling asleep on a flight
that is exactly how it would feel i reckon lol, maybe airliners and co should offer a sleeping gas to customers on a flight and advertise it as 'feels like teleportation!'
@@JTheoryScience it would be a nightmare for the fda though lmao, stores in airports selling sleeping pills (which i think is already a thing) might sound better to them
(BILLION DOLLAR IDEA) Airlines: "Hey... we can stack human bodies more efficiently in an airplane if people are asleep!" HERE COMES THE SLEEPY GAS!
@@fitybux4664 Ha ha, that's cool! 😊
I had an idea exactly like this when I was a little kid, and I thought it was just so genius. Only difference was my idea was on a much smaller scale, basically a pneumatic tube going from the mailbox to the inside of your house so you didn't have to leave the house to get the mail in the winter
That's more viable than this video
I think you would soon wish you had bigger tubes. How would you maintain them or retrieve robots when they break or run off the rails? Can you keep animals out? Could people traffic drugs via tubes? How do you increase capacity in the future?
Home industry could be facilitated by these tubes too. Order some Aluminum, when it arrives, machine it into parts and send the parts to someone else, etc. The idea has merits.
they really should make the pipes split in the middle and place them under hollow sidewalks, that way, when something inevitability clogs the tube, you could easily just lift up the concrete slab from the sidewalk, unbolt the top section of the tube off and remove the clog. It's a lot more infrastructure work but you'd at least get to run water-mains, gas and electricity all in the same hole...
It's cool but not good on a small personal scale. The cost and energy required to build all the tubes with rails would be enormous. Above-ground rail for longer distances with a transition to aerial transit over short neighborhood distances would be much better.
Small autonomous electric ground vehicles will soon do this same thing everywhere with no infrastructure adjustments. So this underground rail option is only good for very high frequency needs over very short distances.
Good point you could get drugs delivered too...now I'm definitely on board.
In all seriousness drugs are the least concern, they are valuable enough people are happy to drive.
@@Mavrik9000Indeed, but very high frequency over short distance IS our reality. At least in (dense) cities. Basically everyone is having stuff in and out all the time, and it would dramatically increase and replace more traditional ways if this was implemented. I mean, people would have even more stuff delivered vs go and buy, you’d send stuff to other people, there would be more rental services, second hand services… Not overnight, but in the medium to long term. Today I can already see delivering vans and trucks in my street all the time… So it would pay off. My guess.
@@brunosco Imagine installing street-size sewer mains to every address with rail tracts inside them. Then add in all the intersections and switching equipment. It's an enormously complex system and prohibitively expensive.
In new developments where they put multiple utilities in the same chamber or tunnel, it might be feasible, not to every location but instead only to central hub locations.
Hey! I’m the guy who stuffed an entire donut in my mouth 15:48 and built the network in Georgia. Feel free to ask any questions!
What do you think about developing this system and licencing it out to other parts of the world? Different cities might have different requirements. The physical parts of such a system could be made by any manufacturer, when it is standardized.
@@thx9977 That’s definitely one of the ways we think of getting the technology out into the world. Similar to how internet is spread, we develop the technology and others can be the one putting it in your home. It’s gonna be a massive challenge getting this everywhere the way we want it to be, but that’s just part of the fun :)
Have you guys designed any systems that’s targeting apartments/multifamily buildings? Like just for in building deliveries like a dumbwaiter lift. I live in a large apartment building and the number 1 problem we have is the overflowing packages that’s taking up all the lockers and lobby spaces. My building management had since knocked down 3 rooms and redone an office room to try to accommodate but it’s still loose packages everywhere and people’s stuff gets lost sometimes. I feel like if you guys can marketing it to luxury buildings as a storage/concierge solution. With them you can make some money to further the company and I bet they will be able to provide yall with plenty of interior design models and field data
Oh yea and office buildings to to deliver mails and stuff
15:46; I just wanted to say that this really does seem like a great idea and although I'm sure there's tons of hurdles, the payoffs seem worth the investments. All the best!
The year is 1994, studying mech Eng, me and a friend conceptualized this exact idea. Today it might work because the issues we found are now not an issue with 30 years of tech advancement.
Porch pirates will adapt to be "pipe pirates"
lol They'll train ferrets to go into the tunnels and retrieve packages for them.
@hed420 lol most of them arent sophisticated. They trip often while running away with packages
@@hed420 or other robots, excepts their cameras in the tubes
All you gotta do is open up the maintenance hatch and swipe them as they slow down for curves
@@seeranos I see you thought this all out already :P
This is an awesome thought. Lots of questions to be answered along the way (examples: what about apartments?, what happens when a robot fails?, is it secure enough for medicine and banking? is is too hot/cold/dirty for certain perishables?, how well will it scale?). It also has a ton of potential to improve our lives (less trucks clogging city streets, faster access to goods, easier returns, easier access to goods especially for the elderly and wheelchair users). Whether it actually becomes a reality or not, it's fantastic to see people punching holes to get outside the box we often get stuck in.
I think it could get very reliable, like almost no fails, and it would be such a cheap service compared to nowadays delivery system that it would have a fairly good margin to afford warranty politic.
My bet is that this WILL happen, and after it starts, it will get better and better very fast. I don't know when this will happen but i believe it will.
I think this is cool in concept, but probably requires building too much infrastructure to be worth the investment. And it really only lends itself to high-density, urban environments. I think drones are a more practical solution to moving mail and deliveries around without the use of cars
Yeah, drones can carry the lightest and the $20k Tesla bot humanoids can work in pairs to carry any other weight to any other place.
Exactly
They'd need air traffic controllers just for drones if everybody used them. Imagine all the drones they would need for New York City, who want's to see a drone every time they look up. Besides, they might scratch the paint on my flying car.
@@charlestaylor3195The entire DJI drone network can sense other drones. It’s like self-driving cars on a 3 dimensional level.
Or, you know, a truck? We already have enough noise pollution, the last thing we need is a constant stream of drone buzzing.
I like the idea of using it to return items. Specially, if foods were sent in durable containers that could be washed and used again.
Haha. Your comment made me realize how many people would put their dirty dishes in this thing rather than running a dishwasher, especially if they don't already have one... I guess it could be as good as a dishwasher if someone runs an Amazon style service that washes your dishes and returns them clean.
@@devon9075 I was mostly thinking of glass soda bottles, glass milk jugs, etc. but yeah that would be an awesome service!!
*this. dishwasher. laundry. garbage, compost, recycling. everything... imagine the boost to gifting (freecycle/free stuff on craigslist) lots of things i've wanted to get but couldn't see driving 5 miles for a $3 item*
Having a tube going to every house sounds expensive, but if there would be boxes within a few hundred meters of your house, where stuff could be delivered automatically and very cheaply would be already nice. Would maybe spawn home appliance etc. rental business, when you wouldn't have to buy rarely needed items. Just rent them for a few euros a brief time and receive within an hour and return the same way.
Totally!
the initial cost is crazy expensive, but the operating cost if incredibly lower to normal delivery. (not to mention that it would be faster and more realiable ).
Yeah, I think this would start out as a rich person only network, then service suburbs and neighborhoods at a front hub, and then slowly become available as a more standard option for new homes as they are being built and connected to pipe networks. One thing is certain though: they would not be readily available in rural places, which is a bummer since they’d be most useful there.
Great concept; difficult to execute. Definitely a pipe dream, but also quite possible. All the best!
💯
This kind of inferstructure is so expensive and difficult to build but it could be super economical if implimented in somewhere like new york and lasted for a long time.
In New York especially you could maybe even bolt a pipe underneath bridges or subway lines. Would eliminate a huge amount of drilling
I've said for a while that municipalities should be managing holes in the ground and leasing them out to various utility companies. I was mostly thinking in terms of telecommunications but small robo-trains could make sense as well.
Sounds like a great way to give possums and raccoons direct access to your house.
At first I was like, why do consumers need instant gratification for impulse purchases.
Then I remembered all brick and mortar close at 11pm. My child got extremely sick at midnight the other night and the only option was a gas station or the ER for medicine...
Damn! 1.5 years ago I came up with this vision and during Christmas drinks, I was entertaining family and friends with it. Of course I'm a mobile app developer, so didn't start anything, but wow! It's great to see it coming alive. Would love to contribute in the future
the system needs to be installed in a New Apartment building, with a location in the parking garage for delivery drivers to load to the individual apartments. It can then be upgraded to a city wide system. make sure the largest pizza can be delivered . 😎
Make it a calzone. More space efficient
We can’t even figure out underground powerlines in most places and they expect us to believe municipal governments will support mini subways for Amazon packages?
It is a good idea though, instead of drones
Maybe Bezos billions might fund these networks, would be for the public good but he would have a massive head start and recoup the costs over decades with fees
Hey it might not work, but we’re going to try to get funding for the next decade
So how does plumbing work then?
@@jackwilliamburgess the pressurized 6 inch diameter water mains or the 1.5 in diameter supply to each house… aren’t cheap and every house needs them to be a livable dwelling. Sewer is cheaper but tends to have vermin and filth and flood waters and roots growing in it… not exactly a good place for your robot to swim through with your McDonald’s order.
This video is 1 parts inspiring, 1 parts cool, and 998 parts Meme/Joke material. Infinite donut drawer lol.
To solve the issue of waste and things, you could have different containers for different items. A blue bin for recycling, a red bin for hazardous waste like batteries. Hell, this could replace garbage trucks - rarely do you have huge things to throw out, it’s just napkins or random bits and pieces. You could have a bin just like a trash can but send it away in the tube and it goes right to a garbage center
For the first half of this video I was thinking I don't want this! I want some friction between my deciding I want something and actually buying it. For the second half where they start to consider the implications of having quick access (not necessarily buying) to stuff we want, I'm in. All those tools and equipment I have that I rarely use can be shared or rented just by putting it in a drawer. I love it!
Instead of individual underground pipes going directly to each house, a much more efficient and cost-effective approach is building neighborhood distribution delivery centers. Centralizing the pipes in these centers would make it convenient for everyone to collect their deliveries by simply walking to the center.
Americans need... Donuts delivered directly to their gobs, without leaving the chair/bed. Awesome idea!
😂
Yeah, and Europeans ice cream. 😅 It would have bad consequences for some. 😁
@@brunosco Europeans are sooooo much fatter than us Yanks 💪😲🤣🤣🤣
Hot donuts!
you've now sold me on muse. I've been reading into it's uses within vr applications, and now you've mentioned it in a _totally_ different field. Thank you for sharing your story of muse!
This seems an obvious next step for delivery. I really like the idea of storing your own physical items in the "cloud" just like data, or accessing shared items almost instantly. Very cool. 😊
3:38
Me: look away for a second.
Video: Hi I'm Nick ... Cannon...
Mind: they got Nick Cannon ...
Me: look back ..ohhhh. 😅😅😅.
This need more likes 😂😂😂
2:53 Great Face Muscle coordination! Im always impressed at how people can pull up this face movements! Wholesome!
A year or two ago I saw a TikTok from what I think was one of the founders of this company talking about this idea. At the time everyone in the comments was calling this a long-shot idea that had no hope of succeeding. It's great to see that they're still around and making real progress with this.
I spoke about this same idea with my father in detail a few years back. I'm glad to have it validated
Very interesting idea, reminds me a little of the vacuum-tubes they used to have in offices.
Wonder how they would deal with higher volumes, we only see one cart driving but what if its hundreds, how would that scale. Looking at how vulnerable trains are how you gonna prevent a nightmare gridlock underground. Also, that one delivery Van is a lot more environmentally friendly than 100+ people individually driving up to the shops and back home. The better option would be if people would walk / take the bike to the shops, but that means properly designed cities for humans instead of cars. Buying less shit would also help....
This.
Honestly this could change the world. Seems like a pipedream to make happen but all the use cases listed at the end are game changing.
I had this idea 6 years ago, for elderly living facility in a closed environment. All the elderly lives in seperate places and get deliveries from tubes
Even if this isn't for long haul, I think its really cool. If means that a post office kind of place in an area can take deliveries and send it through a neighborhood or two (5-50 houses) its pretty cool. Apartments also feel like a good place for this (going up as well of course). Better than the front office stealing your mail...
The items sharing part is incredible.
Also once house robots will be a thing, if you forget something at home you can just tell your robot to send it through the tube
Hi from Greece. Nice idea. If a country decides to build a smart city from scratch then they should absolutely adopt this.
I really wish these guys success, but I doubt it will work. So many potential problems: small animals, gas leaks, flooding, earthquakes causing damage to the rails, deliberate sabotage etc etc. Maybe it works on a smaller scale within commercial facilities or something like that.
Aren’t these already issues with things like sewage, gas, water, electricity etc?
You could also "ship out" waste.
Best pipedream labs video I've seen so far
I could see this being a feasible option for eco new build: if the buildings deal with their own graywater, you could use this to transport the "output" of composting toilets to a central facility. That way you'd only need to install the same number of pipes as a normal building. And yeah, I would love to live in a small apartment where I have access to a massive library of shared tools, instruments etc. within a few minutes. That would be awesome, and so much more sustainable!
Pump liquid is hugely energy efficient. I guess the problem is that sewage system carries low concentration (in organic matter) water. If every apartment had a Food Waste Grinder and every building a system for pre treatment, it could generate reuse water for the entire building, and let the concentrate sewage flows to a treatment plant to produce methane for electricity generation and bio fertilizer.
"Why are you pooping in that drawer?" "Don't worry about it, I'm saving the planet"
Alternative idea: instead of going directly into every home, it could go to a sort of mini distribution centre, of which for example every block has one. There it could either be picked up by the person that ordered it, within walking distance instead of driving distance; or it could be picked up by a drone and delivered to the doorstep, instead of that drone flying over all the way from a distribution centre. This drine thus wouldnt need as big of a battery as it would otherwise, saving on cost even more. If autonomous flight is deemed too unsafe, it could be fixed by one pilot flying multiple drones. Not at the same time of course, but while the others are charging/waiting.
That last part about sharing tools or storing items would solve a lot of our current problems. I hope this gets implemented soon
Wendy's just partnered with them, so it could be a step in the right direction RE: implementation! www.irwendys.com/news/news-details/2023/Wendys-Partners-with-Pipedream-to-Pilot-Industry-First-Underground-Delivery-System-for-Mobile-Orders/default.aspx
This is 100% the future of last mile delivery
I mean mail delivery used to be done by pneumatic tubes all throughout the city long ago, so this isn't exactly new. It was dangerous and expensive to maintain. So we got rid of that and moved to driver mail. This might be easier to maintain than the pneumatic tubes though. A tube system would be cool though, and faster.
But wouldn't be a drone based system better since there is no need for infrastructure ? Imagine having to dig up everything to put in the tube with a drone you dont need it.
London used to have small underground trains just to move mail from one post office to another throughout the city.
@@kilian42 Except drones get attacked by birds and have trouble in inclement weather. Drones are cool, but aren't practical for deliveries, at least non consistently. That said, this system is even more impractical.
@@kilian42 safety hazard too. I've heard someone else that was doing drones commercially say they were doing well into their insurance asked "You're fly how much weight over peoples heads?"
@@kilian42Some commented here on some of the drone issues. But what about robots using the pavement? I think this exists already. Still, that wouldn’t solve the “last inch” portion, where the stuff gets into your house.
I think instead of rails... Round carrier vehicle with 5 wheels all around the diameter will be much cheaper and efficient.
No extra cost of rails.
Can go any direction even up.
I had the same overall idea a long time ago, and thus I must agree that it is a good idea 🙂 I didn't think about using it to store stuff, and that's a great idea. Most of what I have in my room isn't needed often and I'd be okay with waiting 15 minutes or more, to get the part or tool I need in exchange for getting rid of clutter.
You said that they gave a lot of thoughts to the pipe size and settled for 18", but I think it's too limiting, the cost of digging a trench for a 36" pipe wouldn't be much greater, obviously the pipe would cost more, but the usefulness of a larger diameter would become obvious once such a transportation network becomes the main mode of transportation. And it doesn't prevent sending smaller loads into the home, while sending larger loads to a collection box in the lobby or at the nearest intersection. The usefulness of a larger pipe can't be underestimated.
There are many challenges in the way, flooding is one, piracy is another, and of course, mechanical failures. Nothing insurmountable though.
It may sound disturbing at first, but I would go as far as suggesting simply upgrading the existing sewer and storm drain systems to have them double as transportation pipes. These pipes spend a lot of time mostly empty anyway.
Awesome concept and something I would happily install at home and connect to.
How would you stop people on the receiving end from sending garbage or dangerous items back through the tunnels. You could easily end up with a waste problem that then has to be addressed and issues with oversized items being jammed into it. It almost needs a sealable capsule with a sensor that has to be closed and the sensor knows its sealed it fits back through the tube.
Also if you did have service pits similar to sewerage, porch pirates etc would likely start breaking into those to take stuff as well.
Or eventually people living in all the tubes and crawling into houses.
They have sewer pipe everywhere, it's not totally idiot proof, but close to it. We're gonna need some more plumbers though, for when the tubes get jammed.
I guess there would be some additional robots specifically designed to police and address those issues. Similar to the streets where people (police, security people, service people) deal with whatever issue arises, robots would do it in the tubes, autonomously or remotely controlled. Those problems wouldn’t appear overnight, I guess, so there would be time for such special robots to be developed and deployed alongside the main ones.
Yeah people can put bugs in there on purpose and cause chaos
This is one of the most exciting videos I've seen in ages! What a brilliant idea, from such a bold and impressive little startup. If I could invest in it (or be part of it), I totally would. I really hope to see this come to life within my lifetime 😀
Why not help implement it in your area? Work with them and be active at your level… Pretty bold, but why not? I’m telling this to myself too! 😄
Could it drastically reduce single use packaging? For fast food and drinks, send it in reusable dishes that keep things hot and cold. Just return it to the point of origin to be washed and reused.
A great proving ground could be the next to last mile, connecting warehouses on the edge of major metro areas to micro distribution centers in neighborhoods. That could eventually connect to every house.
Might as well run a fiber optic cables in the pipe and include hight speed internet as part of the deal !
I love this idea, hope it works out!
the real question is what would this look like to scale, like what amount of trips would it replace, and how many of these robots can you put in the tube before it backs up? There should be a prioritization system in place so things like your mail or routine deliveries can go out at off peak times, but food can be high priority and be prioritized for one hour delivery etc. You will really want to maximize the amount of deliveries you can make with each tube, and you will want redundancy so if one tube breaks it can go to another tube, and they can flow in both directions. Interested in this, but need to see more questions answered to know how it will scale and what its reliability is in test models. A pilot would be needed.
The biggest obvious problem is flooding. These pipes would have to be air-tight throughout.
The main issue I see with something like this is cost and infrastructure.
If you have a pickup slot in your house, it needs to have motors of some sort to lift the package, and lots of complex hardware to make it work smoothly.
That means you have a lot of places for something to break and end up impacting larger systems.
If you have something like water, it's just pipes. Nothing moves, and the only hardware being worn with time are pipes and valves and the like, which are very durable and have fairly simple maintenance for most issues.
A large lifting mechanism is more prone to breaking because of all the moving parts.
Will we need to add more grease every so often?
Will we have to upgrade systems every few years like with cars?
also, how do we prevent animals from getting in pipes? if there's an opening, an animal could easily enter and cause issues if a port is not maintained properly.
I think that the system is great, but has a bottle neck on the basket that needs to be empty and put back on a robot to let the robot go back. They should use a standard box or bag or a system that moves the content of the basket out. Another solution could be a tow basket system were the robot have a basket and the delivery point have another, and the delivery only starts if de basket on the delivery point is empty or have something to be delivered, this way the robot cant charge between the baskets. That way, the robot doesn't need to wait.
this looks very similar to what Philip Jose Farmer described in his Dayworld trilogy, and I'm all here for it.
Didn't it occur to them that their analogy to water pipes quickly break down when you consider that: 1. Each recipient getting a liter of water is getting ANY liter of water, and not a specific one, 2. Many liters of water can travel tru the pipes together mixed in with no contention. We already have the "Things Pipe" they are looking for ... it is called a road!
I could see this working once AI and robots are here in large numbers. It could be used for the examples talked about in the video, but also for things we could not even imagine yet. Like send a small robot to your home to fix something in your house like plumbing, electrical etc. Use specific specialized robots for different tasks that can service a neighborhood. One robot is a cleaning robot, one is a chef, etc. It is an interesting idea. I don't see it happening until the robots can build it themselves though.
Super dope ideas, we like the way you think.
This is the real hyperloop!!
Seems pretty cool, I would definitely have this for any future cities being built
The advert was actually super interesting.
Wow! I really hope this is a reality. It has a lot of potential.
6:40 I have a solutoin to the high "last-mile" cost: There could be pick-up points where people can get their package themselves, while they are shopping groceries. There could even be offices specialized for packages, perhaps even for post.
They already know your idea will work. And better. They want to erode citizen privacy and normalize consumerism to your jobless, starving children.
In cyberpunk genre, this is called, "The Feed"...
I love the idea but how do we regulate what gets sent back. 99.99% chance that someone sends a poop bomb back to pipedream HQ, or figures out a way to catastrophically damage the system with just a stick and some spare parts.
"You magnificent bastard." Made me laugh. Very cool concept, I'm interested in how this scales and how intersecting pipes that can go in different directions / destinations rather than a single pipe.
The very first example of needing to drive a massive car to get six chicken nuggets can be solved by building 15 minute cities that are walkable and therefore actually pleasant to live in, rather than building a brand new system of tunnels to bring you items from Amazon while you remain in isolation
My childhood idea bro. Good to see in action. Keep going.
Can't wait for the Adam Something episode about this.
EDIT: OK, I watched the video. It's actually a pretty cool idea with exciting implications. It's just gonna be quite hard to implement.
*it's not a dump truck, it's a series of tubes*
0:16 Why is there an envelope with the Berlin Code of Arms? Man, I love these Easter eggs from stock footage.
Nice. A new way to steal packages with your own drone.
This could enable much more granular recycling, currently we are bottlnecked by waste collections being a truck that comes every two weeks. If instead we had an allocation of totes per month we could seperate glass, metal, cloth ect and just send them when full.
Also getting fresh stuff delivered each morning or each evening.
Getting beer tubbed directly into my house could get out of hand though.....
What kind of third world country are you living in that you are not able to seperate your garbage? 😅
Must be the US I guess 🤡
It's all tubes and games until a tree finds a way in or a flood from a heavy storm fills the tube with gunk, stopping all deliveries along at that line.
I thought of this idea when I was seven years old, watching my mom cash her check at the bank and putting her check into the tube. Thinking why can’t we have tubes going to everyone’s home to deliver food and packages like we do our water.
great work guys . this is an excellent idea
"you magnificent bastard" rofl. May the design gods be with you
this is a great idea and it would fix many traffic problems
I'm all for the 'Star Trek' level, tubular is the way.
That said, having done last mile deliver with the Teamsters for a year, I did love the job (mostly). It made me some cash and I finally caught up on 200 audiobooks I wanted to ingest. :)
soooo many reasons to do this, proud of the guys
Tucker should make a Pokémon like donut journey. Where he needs to get every single donut type from that neighborhood, city, even country.
It's disgusting that with such a cool concept, everybody is making negative "what ifs" that are so easily solvable if you have an IQ above 95.
Gives 'the internet of things ' a different meaning 😂
I do love this idea. Bandwidth would be a huge bottleneck. The main “tube” would have to carry thousands of bins, plus the bins would need to be sent back for other deliveries. I think apartment/condo buildings this concept is very viable. I also wonder if there would be a downside of more consumption due to the additional convenience.
didn't expect to see Peachtree Corners in here. I've driven by the technology park but didn't know it was actually working!
Go a step further, and you got yourself Futurama pipes to transport people.
So much energy spent on solving an issue that is basically non-existant in other countries. I just buy groceries and grab any small deliveries i ordered when I walk home from the subway.
The USA has so many fucked up suburbs where you need to drive for 10-20 minutes just to get to the grocery store, so I get why they have this problem.
“Product pipes bring your food in, poop pipes bring your food out”
Sorry, but I don't see how it would be plausible to install into every home. Best scalable solution would be to have multiple public parcel lockers that refills/send automaticly using undergraund tubes. Those lockers could be placed in most sensible spots over the city to cover most homes. Not so convenient as getting package directly into your kitchen, but more realistic for sure.
This is cool but not good on a small personal scale. The cost and energy required to build all the tubes with rails would be enormous. Above-ground rail for longer distances with a transition to ariel transit over short neighborhood distances would be much better.
The cost to this would be astronomical. Nice idea and probably will have some niche success withing some small communities and high rises.
I can imagine seeing a system like this solving food waste as well.
I can totally see these tubes being as essential as water, electricity and internet are today in the near future
If this became a reality, there would probably be several restaurant chains that only delivered through pipe. That would be a wild thing
I can 100% see Saudi Arabia being a future customer for something like the Line Project at Neom.