NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Ainsley Harris, senior writer at Fast Company, about the accelerated rollout of delivery robots and how they're being received in communities across the country.
"I chased after it and looked like a total crazy person, running after a robot in the middle of the street and yelling at it.
AI-powered delivery robots from companies like Serve Robotics are replacing human drivers across the nation — but they can't ...
When delivery units operated by companies like Coco or Serve Robotics run into real-world obstacles — like a garden, for example — these robot wranglers spring into action, freeing them from potholes, ...
In a growing number of U.S. cities, small sidewalk robots are rolling meals from restaurants to customers—no driver required.
For now, the robots remain authorized under Chicago’s Personal Delivery Device pilot program. The companies operate under ...
There’s a new bot in town. The Coco delivery robots that have become a regular part of so many Los Angeles neighborhoods will now have a whole new look — a redesign the company behind them says will ...
As robotic deliveries become more common in major cities, there are still a lot of kinks to work out before the system works without issue. Case in point, ...
Los Angeles motorists and pedestrians aren't the only ones who struggle to navigate torrential rain. Delivery bots battle the ...
Delivery robots, automated saucing and the injection of AI into the ordering process are a few of the ways in which pizza ...
Starship Technologies and Just Eat will be delivering hot food in Sunderland, one of the UK's most tech-savvy cities. It is ...