>>22369022I think the carts honestly make a lot of sense.
>Camera>Some wheels>A cooler>A GPSIt's remarkably simple technology. Everything else isn't.
>The cost of a typical delivery robot ranges from $2,500 and $5,000You get one up and running for 5,000 dollars for a high-end one. They already do make sense, with a cost like that you can buy 6 of them for the price of one wagie working for 15 bucks an hour.
Granted, they go 4 miles an hour, but you can run 6 of them. No expensive insurance. If one is lost you're down 5,000 dollars, but it's much less than paying a yearly insurance cost for an autonomous car. They are EXTREMELY practical if you don't let them go near niggers, and any places running them probably already don't let them go to nigger areas because they keep a map of where they lost them and just don't let them go there.
>>22369011>>22369024Yeah, but it's not inherently more advanced. They have specific use cases. It doesn't make your delivery drones more advanced than the machine that works, is cheaper, and is reliable, it just means you don't have the infrastructure to run the cart bots.
That's what I'm pointing out, using a drone isn't more advanced in any way really the same way a train or car or bus isn't more "advanced", they all have specific use cases.