First cargo-carrying robot now available for consumers

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • (21 Nov 2019) LEAD IN:
    The first cargo-carrying robot marketed directly to consumers is now on sale this holiday season.
    But how many people are ready to ditch their second car to buy a two-wheeled rover that can follow them around like a dog?
    STORY-LINE:
    Gita the robot is obediently following one of its creators.
    It can be turned on and off with the push of a button.
    Corporate giants like Amazon, FedEx and Ford have already been publicly experimenting with sending delivery robots to doorsteps.
    Now Piaggio, the Italian maker of the Vespa scooter, is offering a version - albeit one that weighs 50 pounds and costs 3,250 US dollars.
    It's named the Gita (JEE'-tah) after the Italian word for a short, pleasurable excursion.
    Its creators have such trips in mind for the "hands-free carrier" that can hold produce and other objects as it follows its owner down a sidewalk.
    "Gita is a mobile carrier, it's a robot and it enables you to make pedestrian mobility choices: Instead of reaching for the keys to the car, you can go out for a walk with Gita," says Jeffrey Schnapp, the co-founder of Piaggio Fast Forward, a subsidiary of the Italian automaker.
    A pedestrian walking by takes interest in the Gita, which swerves around, keeping in pursuit as she switches directions.
    The Gita doesn't require a phone or intrusive people-tracking technology such as facial recognition or GPS.
    It locks on to people using cameras and sensors and then tracks them, according to Schnapp.
    The startup's chief executive, Greg Lynn, says the aim was to get people away from their screens and out into the real world.
    "After a year and a half of research and design, we decided to focus on helping people be pedestrian and outdoors rather than giving them another thing to ride on, but something to walk with," he says.
    Other startups like Starship Technologies have a more conventional business plan for their own delivery robots.
    The company charges a delivery fee starting at 1.99 US dollars if you order its rovers to bring you a Starbucks coffee or a takeaway lunch.
    So far, the best habitat to find Starship's six-wheelers in the wild are relatively confined spaces such as college campuses; the University of Houston and the University of Wisconsin-Madison rolled them out this fall.
    The robots, which look kind of like oversized ice chests on wheels, can carry up to 20 pounds.
    "I love them, I think they're so cute," says University of Houston freshman Sadie Garcia as one of the machines rolled up with a bagel sandwich she'd ordered.
    She says she was so cold she didn't want to leave her dorm.
    The San Francisco startup once looked at selling the machines directly to consumers but dropped the idea after realizing it would have to price them at more than 3,000 US dollars.
    Amazon is experimenting with a similar-looking machine that delivers retail goods in a handful of US neighborhoods.
    FedEx is testing its own delivery rover in partnership with Pizza Hut, Walmart, Target and Walgreens.
    So far, none are as far along as Starship, which has hundreds of its machines already in service.
    Forrester technology analyst J.P. Gownder is bullish about delivery robots of the Starship variety because their autonomy will help save labour costs, though he says it's still an open question whether ground-based rovers or aerial delivery drones will prove more successful.
    Both types of cargo robots still have significant limitations.
    Starship's machines still require plenty of manual supervision to load them with food orders and remote pilots to troubleshoot navigation problems.
    But its creators remain optimistic.
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Комментарии • 17

  • @MysticalMastodon
    @MysticalMastodon 4 года назад +9

    2:04 - 2:15 why? Lmao

    • @bertsbug
      @bertsbug 4 года назад

      I thought it was going to go up the stairs

  • @TheLillianYoung
    @TheLillianYoung 3 года назад +1

    I want it for groceries, but there’s also a market for freelancers who use things like heavy hard drives. Once you can come up with a way to lower the price and maybe work on stair climbing, I can see it being more broadly appealing. I have an elevator but not everywhere I travel does.

  • @nnoffuture
    @nnoffuture 3 года назад +1

    Instead of reaching for the keys in the car, you can carry just as much in a $40 fake purse

  • @danieldulivero
    @danieldulivero 4 года назад +2

    Um, what about steps? How can it handle steps if human already stepped over the steps? 🤔

    • @danieldulivero
      @danieldulivero 4 года назад

      But again, that means they have to walk on ramps so that robot carriers can continue follow them. They also have to use elevators as well. 🤔
      Is that good thing to do that in daily life? I don’t know. 🤔🤷‍♂️
      We’ll have to see once we get our own carriers. 😶🥴🤔👍👎

    • @cmasterson
      @cmasterson 3 года назад

      All humans dont climb steps. Every business or place has a ADA compliance. Meaning ramps etc. No steps needed.

  • @sbespn3820
    @sbespn3820 4 года назад +1

    Sir I think there's a robot trying to stalk you.

  • @go-gogino5663
    @go-gogino5663 4 года назад +1

    CAN GITA PROTECT MY STUFF?? 🤔🤔 I DON'T HAVE EYES IN THE BACK OF MY HEAD.... 😅

    • @PersonOfBook
      @PersonOfBook 4 года назад +1

      There should be a mode to make it go in front.

    • @TheLillianYoung
      @TheLillianYoung 3 года назад

      @@PersonOfBook Agreed. But as loud as it is, I think we’d know. Also, I saw a video stating it has security features. It better at &3,500.

  • @cmasterson
    @cmasterson 3 года назад

    Can my daughter sit in it while at the grocery store. Lol

  • @Nomaaaaam
    @Nomaaaaam 4 года назад +2

    It’s loud

  • @peng109
    @peng109 4 года назад

    I would use this to carry my dog.

  • @luyle5425
    @luyle5425 3 года назад

    Can it read me an audiobook 😂😂

  • @cmasterson
    @cmasterson 3 года назад

    People saying steps forget all businesses and places in general have ADA compliance for wheelchairs and etc. No stairs needed unless your house has stairs. I'm that case leave it downstairs lmao.

  • @user-ts6vo3qk1w
    @user-ts6vo3qk1w 4 года назад

    I 2th viewrs