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#deliveryrobots — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #deliveryrobots, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Delivery robots as evocative objects

    I came across these delivery robots on Sunday morning, clustered in the corner of a park. One had been covered in graffiti, two had their flags snapped and a third one was covered in some strange green slime. It looked like Saturday night had been tough.

    I find it hard not to anthropomorphise these robots. I heard the way they crossed the road described as ‘scrabbling’ yesterday and it’s the perfect adjective for how they appear to look left and right, before accelerating out into the traffic. People interact with them, talk about them, respond to them. In many ways the vandalism is the flip side of the anthromorphism. They are evocative objects in Sherry Turkle’s sense of provoking responses in the humans who encounter them. You might find them cute, you might have the impulse to cover them in graffiti, you might want to help them cross the road, you might want to block their path to see if they do.

    The key thing is that they are evoking a response from you. If their design enables them to do that reliably then they are likely to be normalised, even if the economic model might not currently work in its current form. The real significance of them is how they become evocative features of the urban landscape and what that means for the political economy of the city.

    It occurs to me that if we are projecting into these robots, which we clearly are because they obviously do not feel anything, it raises the question of what we are projecting. My hypothesis is that when I saw them on my run this morning, feeling sad about the vandalism and exhibiting a spatial sense of having retreated into a corner of the park, I was doing something with my own insufficiently acknowledged guilt about the gig economy. I’ve stopped using delivery platforms but I still end up taking Ubers regularly, even if I’m slowly tipping the balance to black caps.

    When I feel vaguely sympathetic for these robots (while recognising how absurd that reaction is) am I expressing in an alienated form my own desire to demonstrate solidarity with gig workers, which is being subordinated to my own convenience in a way that provokes guilt in me?

    I wanted to add that I think vandalism against delivery robots can be a political act. There are clear examples of this in vandalism against robo-taxis for example. I’m just not sure this particular vandalism can plausibly be read in those terms, though perhaps I’m wrong.

    #anthropmorphism #deliveryRobots #evocativeObjects #gigEconomy #gigWorkers #labour #projection #robots #SherryTurkle #urbanism
  2. Delivery robots as evocative objects

    I came across these delivery robots on Sunday morning, clustered in the corner of a park. One had been covered in graffiti, two had their flags snapped and a third one was covered in some strange green slime. It looked like Saturday night had been tough.

    I find it hard not to anthropomorphise these robots. I heard the way they crossed the road described as ‘scrabbling’ yesterday and it’s the perfect adjective for how they appear to look left and right, before accelerating out into the traffic. People interact with them, talk about them, respond to them. In many ways the vandalism is the flip side of the anthromorphism. They are evocative objects in Sherry Turkle’s sense of provoking responses in the humans who encounter them. You might find them cute, you might have the impulse to cover them in graffiti, you might want to help them cross the road, you might want to block their path to see if they do.

    The key thing is that they are evoking a response from you. If their design enables them to do that reliably then they are likely to be normalised, even if the economic model might not currently work in its current form. The real significance of them is how they become evocative features of the urban landscape and what that means for the political economy of the city.

    It occurs to me that if we are projecting into these robots, which we clearly are because they obviously do not feel anything, it raises the question of what we are projecting. My hypothesis is that when I saw them on my run this morning, feeling sad about the vandalism and exhibiting a spatial sense of having retreated into a corner of the park, I was doing something with my own insufficiently acknowledged guilt about the gig economy. I’ve stopped using delivery platforms but I still end up taking Ubers regularly, even if I’m slowly tipping the balance to black caps.

    When I feel vaguely sympathetic for these robots (while recognising how absurd that reaction is) am I expressing in an alienated form my own desire to demonstrate solidarity with gig workers, which is being subordinated to my own convenience in a way that provokes guilt in me?

    I wanted to add that I think vandalism against delivery robots can be a political act. There are clear examples of this in vandalism against robo-taxis for example. I’m just not sure this particular vandalism can plausibly be read in those terms, though perhaps I’m wrong.

    #anthropmorphism #deliveryRobots #evocativeObjects #gigEconomy #gigWorkers #labour #projection #robots #SherryTurkle #urbanism
  3. Delivery robots as evocative objects

    I came across these delivery robots on Sunday morning, clustered in the corner of a park. One had been covered in graffiti, two had their flags snapped and a third one was covered in some strange green slime. It looked like Saturday night had been tough.

    I find it hard not to anthropomorphise these robots. I heard the way they crossed the road described as ‘scrabbling’ yesterday and it’s the perfect adjective for how they appear to look left and right, before accelerating out into the traffic. People interact with them, talk about them, respond to them. In many ways the vandalism is the flip side of the anthromorphism. They are evocative objects in Sherry Turkle’s sense of provoking responses in the humans who encounter them. You might find them cute, you might have the impulse to cover them in graffiti, you might want to help them cross the road, you might want to block their path to see if they do.

    The key thing is that they are evoking a response from you. If their design enables them to do that reliably then they are likely to be normalised, even if the economic model might not currently work in its current form. The real significance of them is how they become evocative features of the urban landscape and what that means for the political economy of the city.

    It occurs to me that if we are projecting into these robots, which we clearly are because they obviously do not feel anything, it raises the question of what we are projecting. My hypothesis is that when I saw them on my run this morning, feeling sad about the vandalism and exhibiting a spatial sense of having retreated into a corner of the park, I was doing something with my own insufficiently acknowledged guilt about the gig economy. I’ve stopped using delivery platforms but I still end up taking Ubers regularly, even if I’m slowly tipping the balance to black caps.

    When I feel vaguely sympathetic for these robots (while recognising how absurd that reaction is) am I expressing in an alienated form my own desire to demonstrate solidarity with gig workers, which is being subordinated to my own convenience in a way that provokes guilt in me?

    I wanted to add that I think vandalism against delivery robots can be a political act. There are clear examples of this in vandalism against robo-taxis for example. I’m just not sure this particular vandalism can plausibly be read in those terms, though perhaps I’m wrong.

    #anthropmorphism #deliveryRobots #evocativeObjects #gigEconomy #gigWorkers #labour #projection #robots #SherryTurkle #urbanism
  4. Delivery robots as evocative objects

    I came across these delivery robots on Sunday morning, clustered in the corner of a park. One had been covered in graffiti, two had their flags snapped and a third one was covered in some strange green slime. It looked like Saturday night had been tough.

    I find it hard not to anthropomorphise these robots. I heard the way they crossed the road described as ‘scrabbling’ yesterday and it’s the perfect adjective for how they appear to look left and right, before accelerating out into the traffic. People interact with them, talk about them, respond to them. In many ways the vandalism is the flip side of the anthromorphism. They are evocative objects in Sherry Turkle’s sense of provoking responses in the humans who encounter them. You might find them cute, you might have the impulse to cover them in graffiti, you might want to help them cross the road, you might want to block their path to see if they do.

    The key thing is that they are evoking a response from you. If their design enables them to do that reliably then they are likely to be normalised, even if the economic model might not currently work in its current form. The real significance of them is how they become evocative features of the urban landscape and what that means for the political economy of the city.

    It occurs to me that if we are projecting into these robots, which we clearly are because they obviously do not feel anything, it raises the question of what we are projecting. My hypothesis is that when I saw them on my run this morning, feeling sad about the vandalism and exhibiting a spatial sense of having retreated into a corner of the park, I was doing something with my own insufficiently acknowledged guilt about the gig economy. I’ve stopped using delivery platforms but I still end up taking Ubers regularly, even if I’m slowly tipping the balance to black caps.

    When I feel vaguely sympathetic for these robots (while recognising how absurd that reaction is) am I expressing in an alienated form my own desire to demonstrate solidarity with gig workers, which is being subordinated to my own convenience in a way that provokes guilt in me?

    I wanted to add that I think vandalism against delivery robots can be a political act. There are clear examples of this in vandalism against robo-taxis for example. I’m just not sure this particular vandalism can plausibly be read in those terms, though perhaps I’m wrong.

    #anthropmorphism #deliveryRobots #evocativeObjects #gigEconomy #gigWorkers #labour #projection #robots #SherryTurkle #urbanism
  5. Weekly output: Most Innovative Companies, Serve Robotics, Android 17, United Airlines’ ambitions, Polymarket’s pop-up bar

    CHICAGO–This is one of my favorite cities in the U.S., but it doesn’t show up in my work travel as often as I’d like. So I’m delighted that the Online News Association decided to move its annual conference from late summer to early spring and then stage this year’s event here–in a hotel that should be familiar to everybody who’s seen The Fugitive.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post that I’d meant to have written weeks earlier: a recap of MWC Barcelona in which I also gave away a global eSIM to the first reader to ask for it.

    3/24/2026: The most innovative robotics and engineering companies of 2026, Fast Company

    This list, the product of months of research and editorial back-and-forth, finally emerged online this week. And then we had to run a quick correction after one of the companies honored said that we’d mentioned an achievement that they did not want disclosed.

    3/25/2026: Delivery Robots Have a Mapping Problem, PCMag

    I sat down in a hotel lobby in Austin during SXSW with MJ Burk Chun, co-founder and vice president of product and design at Serve Robotics, to talk about the issues that company is working to address as it tries to scale up having four-wheeled robots cart food deliveries to customers.

    3/27/2026: Google Ships Latest Android 17 Beta. Here’s What’s New, PCMag

    In between having so many longer stories to write, I was happy to get one that I could bang out in an hour or so.

    3/28/2026: United’s New Upgrades Aim to Keep You Online and Fully Charged at 35,000 Feet, PCMag

    My week started with me flying to another one of United’s hubs–with the airline covering my airfare and lodging–for its United Elevated event at LAX. In addition to looping me into UA’s ambitions for its onboard product, this event doubled as a reunion with some of the avgeek journalists I met at Cranky Dorkfest in September and with my former Washington Post colleague Lori Aratani, who interviewed United CEO Scott Kirby onstage Tuesday morning.

    3/29/2026: Pints meet prop bets: Polymarket’s “Situation Room” pop-up bar in DC, Ars Technica

    I thought I saw an opportunity to write for this occasional client for the first time since the summer of 2023; fortunately, my editor then and now agreed.

    #AIMIntelligentMachines #Android17 #Austin #BostonDynamics #Chicago #deliveryRobots #Dexterity #ForwardXRobotics #GlacierRobotics #Infravision #LAX #LosAngeles #LucidBots #ONA #OnlineNewsAssociation #ORD #Polymarket #predictionMarkets #RobustAi #ServeRobotics #sxsw #Symbotic #TerabaseEnergy #UA #United #UnitedAirlines
  6. Weekly output: Most Innovative Companies, Serve Robotics, Android 17, United Airlines’ ambitions, Polymarket’s pop-up bar

    CHICAGO–This is one of my favorite cities in the U.S., but it doesn’t show up in my work travel as often as I’d like. So I’m delighted that the Online News Association decided to move its annual conference from late summer to early spring and then stage this year’s event here–in a hotel that should be familiar to everybody who’s seen The Fugitive.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post that I’d meant to have written weeks earlier: a recap of MWC Barcelona in which I also gave away a global eSIM to the first reader to ask for it.

    3/24/2026: The most innovative robotics and engineering companies of 2026, Fast Company

    This list, the product of months of research and editorial back-and-forth, finally emerged online this week. And then we had to run a quick correction after one of the companies honored said that we’d mentioned an achievement that they did not want disclosed.

    3/25/2026: Delivery Robots Have a Mapping Problem, PCMag

    I sat down in a hotel lobby in Austin during SXSW with MJ Burk Chun, co-founder and vice president of product and design at Serve Robotics, to talk about the issues that company is working to address as it tries to scale up having four-wheeled robots cart food deliveries to customers.

    3/27/2026: Google Ships Latest Android 17 Beta. Here’s What’s New, PCMag

    In between having so many longer stories to write, I was happy to get one that I could bang out in an hour or so.

    3/28/2026: United’s New Upgrades Aim to Keep You Online and Fully Charged at 35,000 Feet, PCMag

    My week started with me flying to another one of United’s hubs–with the airline covering my airfare and lodging–for its United Elevated event at LAX. In addition to looping me into UA’s ambitions for its onboard product, this event doubled as a reunion with some of the avgeek journalists I met at Cranky Dorkfest in September and with my former Washington Post colleague Lori Aratani, who interviewed United CEO Scott Kirby onstage Tuesday morning.

    3/29/2026: Pints meet prop bets: Polymarket’s “Situation Room” pop-up bar in DC, Ars Technica

    I thought I saw an opportunity to write for this occasional client for the first time since the summer of 2023; fortunately, my editor then and now agreed.

    #AIMIntelligentMachines #Android17 #Austin #BostonDynamics #Chicago #deliveryRobots #Dexterity #ForwardXRobotics #GlacierRobotics #Infravision #LAX #LosAngeles #LucidBots #ONA #OnlineNewsAssociation #ORD #Polymarket #predictionMarkets #RobustAi #ServeRobotics #sxsw #Symbotic #TerabaseEnergy #UA #United #UnitedAirlines
  7. Weekly output: Most Innovative Companies, Serve Robotics, Android 17, United Airlines’ ambitions, Polymarket’s pop-up bar

    CHICAGO–This is one of my favorite cities in the U.S., but it doesn’t show up in my work travel as often as I’d like. So I’m delighted that the Online News Association decided to move its annual conference from late summer to early spring and then stage this year’s event here–in a hotel that should be familiar to everybody who’s seen The Fugitive.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post that I’d meant to have written weeks earlier: a recap of MWC Barcelona in which I also gave away a global eSIM to the first reader to ask for it.

    3/24/2026: The most innovative robotics and engineering companies of 2026, Fast Company

    This list, the product of months of research and editorial back-and-forth, finally emerged online this week. And then we had to run a quick correction after one of the companies honored said that we’d mentioned an achievement that they did not want disclosed.

    3/25/2026: Delivery Robots Have a Mapping Problem, PCMag

    I sat down in a hotel lobby in Austin during SXSW with MJ Burk Chun, co-founder and vice president of product and design at Serve Robotics, to talk about the issues that company is working to address as it tries to scale up having four-wheeled robots cart food deliveries to customers.

    3/27/2026: Google Ships Latest Android 17 Beta. Here’s What’s New, PCMag

    In between having so many longer stories to write, I was happy to get one that I could bang out in an hour or so.

    3/28/2026: United’s New Upgrades Aim to Keep You Online and Fully Charged at 35,000 Feet, PCMag

    My week started with me flying to another one of United’s hubs–with the airline covering my airfare and lodging–for its United Elevated event at LAX. In addition to looping me into UA’s ambitions for its onboard product, this event doubled as a reunion with some of the avgeek journalists I met at Cranky Dorkfest in September and with my former Washington Post colleague Lori Aratani, who interviewed United CEO Scott Kirby onstage Tuesday morning.

    3/29/2026: Pints meet prop bets: Polymarket’s “Situation Room” pop-up bar in DC, Ars Technica

    I thought I saw an opportunity to write for this occasional client for the first time since the summer of 2023; fortunately, my editor then and now agreed.

    #AIMIntelligentMachines #Android17 #Austin #BostonDynamics #Chicago #deliveryRobots #Dexterity #ForwardXRobotics #GlacierRobotics #Infravision #LAX #LosAngeles #LucidBots #ONA #OnlineNewsAssociation #ORD #Polymarket #predictionMarkets #RobustAi #ServeRobotics #sxsw #Symbotic #TerabaseEnergy #UA #United #UnitedAirlines
  8. Weekly output: Most Innovative Companies, Serve Robotics, Android 17, United Airlines’ ambitions, Polymarket’s pop-up bar

    CHICAGO–This is one of my favorite cities in the U.S., but it doesn’t show up in my work travel as often as I’d like. So I’m delighted that the Online News Association decided to move its annual conference from late summer to early spring and then stage this year’s event here–in a hotel that should be familiar to everybody who’s seen The Fugitive.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post that I’d meant to have written weeks earlier: a recap of MWC Barcelona in which I also gave away a global eSIM to the first reader to ask for it.

    3/24/2026: The most innovative robotics and engineering companies of 2026, Fast Company

    This list, the product of months of research and editorial back-and-forth, finally emerged online this week. And then we had to run a quick correction after one of the companies honored said that we’d mentioned an achievement that they did not want disclosed.

    3/25/2026: Delivery Robots Have a Mapping Problem, PCMag

    I sat down in a hotel lobby in Austin during SXSW with MJ Burk Chun, co-founder and vice president of product and design at Serve Robotics, to talk about the issues that company is working to address as it tries to scale up having four-wheeled robots cart food deliveries to customers.

    3/27/2026: Google Ships Latest Android 17 Beta. Here’s What’s New, PCMag

    In between having so many longer stories to write, I was happy to get one that I could bang out in an hour or so.

    3/28/2026: United’s New Upgrades Aim to Keep You Online and Fully Charged at 35,000 Feet, PCMag

    My week started with me flying to another one of United’s hubs–with the airline covering my airfare and lodging–for its United Elevated event at LAX. In addition to looping me into UA’s ambitions for its onboard product, this event doubled as a reunion with some of the avgeek journalists I met at Cranky Dorkfest in September and with my former Washington Post colleague Lori Aratani, who interviewed United CEO Scott Kirby onstage Tuesday morning.

    3/29/2026: Pints meet prop bets: Polymarket’s “Situation Room” pop-up bar in DC, Ars Technica

    I thought I saw an opportunity to write for this occasional client for the first time since the summer of 2023; fortunately, my editor then and now agreed.

    #AIMIntelligentMachines #Android17 #Austin #BostonDynamics #Chicago #deliveryRobots #Dexterity #ForwardXRobotics #GlacierRobotics #Infravision #LAX #LosAngeles #LucidBots #ONA #OnlineNewsAssociation #ORD #Polymarket #predictionMarkets #RobustAi #ServeRobotics #sxsw #Symbotic #TerabaseEnergy #UA #United #UnitedAirlines
  9. TechSpot: Pokémon Go’s AR data has been turned into centimeter-accurate navigation for delivery robots. “The same location data and street-level imagery that once anchored monsters to sidewalks and plazas have been repurposed by Niantic. Coco Robotics is now using that technology to guide its sidewalk bots through dense urban areas where GPS alone is too unreliable to keep them on course.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2026/03/19/techspot-pokemon-gos-ar-data-has-been-turned-into-centimeter-accurate-navigation-for-delivery-robots/
  10. TechSpot: Pokémon Go’s AR data has been turned into centimeter-accurate navigation for delivery robots. “The same location data and street-level imagery that once anchored monsters to sidewalks and plazas have been repurposed by Niantic. Coco Robotics is now using that technology to guide its sidewalk bots through dense urban areas where GPS alone is too unreliable to keep them on course.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2026/03/19/techspot-pokemon-gos-ar-data-has-been-turned-into-centimeter-accurate-navigation-for-delivery-robots/
  11. TechSpot: Pokémon Go’s AR data has been turned into centimeter-accurate navigation for delivery robots. “The same location data and street-level imagery that once anchored monsters to sidewalks and plazas have been repurposed by Niantic. Coco Robotics is now using that technology to guide its sidewalk bots through dense urban areas where GPS alone is too unreliable to keep them on course.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2026/03/19/techspot-pokemon-gos-ar-data-has-been-turned-into-centimeter-accurate-navigation-for-delivery-robots/
  12. TechSpot: Pokémon Go’s AR data has been turned into centimeter-accurate navigation for delivery robots. “The same location data and street-level imagery that once anchored monsters to sidewalks and plazas have been repurposed by Niantic. Coco Robotics is now using that technology to guide its sidewalk bots through dense urban areas where GPS alone is too unreliable to keep them on course.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2026/03/19/techspot-pokemon-gos-ar-data-has-been-turned-into-centimeter-accurate-navigation-for-delivery-robots/
  13. TechSpot: Pokémon Go’s AR data has been turned into centimeter-accurate navigation for delivery robots. “The same location data and street-level imagery that once anchored monsters to sidewalks and plazas have been repurposed by Niantic. Coco Robotics is now using that technology to guide its sidewalk bots through dense urban areas where GPS alone is too unreliable to keep them on course.”

    https://rbfirehose.com/2026/03/19/techspot-pokemon-gos-ar-data-has-been-turned-into-centimeter-accurate-navigation-for-delivery-robots/
  14. Delivery Robots Ignite Sidewalk Conflicts and Public Discontent

    Delivery robots in US cities like Chicago and Los Angeles face vandalism and protests as residents demand a pause due to sidewalk conflicts and accessibility issues.

    #DeliveryRobots, #SidewalkWars, #UrbanTech, #PublicSpace, #RobotProtest

    newsletter.tf/us-cities-sidewa

  15. Delivery Robots Ignite Sidewalk Conflicts and Public Discontent

    Delivery robots in US cities like Chicago and Los Angeles face vandalism and protests as residents demand a pause due to sidewalk conflicts and accessibility issues.

    #DeliveryRobots, #SidewalkWars, #UrbanTech, #PublicSpace, #RobotProtest

    newsletter.tf/us-cities-sidewa

  16. Delivery robots are causing problems in US cities, with over 1,500 people signing a petition in Chicago to stop them. This is a big increase from last year.

    #DeliveryRobots, #SidewalkWars, #UrbanTech, #PublicSpace, #RobotProtest

    newsletter.tf/us-cities-sidewa

  17. Delivery robots are causing problems in US cities, with over 1,500 people signing a petition in Chicago to stop them. This is a big increase from last year.

    #DeliveryRobots, #SidewalkWars, #UrbanTech, #PublicSpace, #RobotProtest

    newsletter.tf/us-cities-sidewa

  18. Welcome to the future: logistics hubs filled with robots, zero humans
    As China pushes Industry 4.0, outdoor delivery robots are revolutionizing last-mile logistics. These autonomous machines navigate sidewalks, campuses, and smart districts using AI, sensors, and real-time mapping.
    From food and groceries to medicine and parcels, they're cutting delivery costs and reshaping urban infrastructure.
    #Industry40 #Robotics #AI #Logistics #Automation #DeliveryRobots #SmartCities #China

  19. I'd like to think that the rise of #DeliveryRobots might lead to more #accessible and #walkable cities, but it is probably only a matter of time before they are outlawed on sidewalks and forced out onto the dangerous streets with the bicyclists.

    instagram.com/reel/DNgFqolNZE1

  20. I'd like to think that the rise of #DeliveryRobots might lead to more #accessible and #walkable cities, but it is probably only a matter of time before they are outlawed on sidewalks and forced out onto the dangerous streets with the bicyclists.

    instagram.com/reel/DNgFqolNZE1

  21. I'd like to think that the rise of #DeliveryRobots might lead to more #accessible and #walkable cities, but it is probably only a matter of time before they are outlawed on sidewalks and forced out onto the dangerous streets with the bicyclists.

    instagram.com/reel/DNgFqolNZE1

  22. I'd like to think that the rise of #DeliveryRobots might lead to more #accessible and #walkable cities, but it is probably only a matter of time before they are outlawed on sidewalks and forced out onto the dangerous streets with the bicyclists.

    instagram.com/reel/DNgFqolNZE1

  23. I'd like to think that the rise of #DeliveryRobots might lead to more #accessible and #walkable cities, but it is probably only a matter of time before they are outlawed on sidewalks and forced out onto the dangerous streets with the bicyclists.

    instagram.com/reel/DNgFqolNZE1

  24. Coco Robotics secures $80M funding (total $120M) to expand its zero-emission delivery robot fleet. With OpenAI as a strategic partner, Coco aims to scale to 10,000 bots by 2026, transforming last-mile delivery in cities like LA, Chicago, and Miami.

    Read Full Article Here :- techi.com/coco-robotics-raises

  25. Coco Robotics secures $80M funding (total $120M) to expand its zero-emission delivery robot fleet. With OpenAI as a strategic partner, Coco aims to scale to 10,000 bots by 2026, transforming last-mile delivery in cities like LA, Chicago, and Miami.

    #CocoRobotics #AI #OpenAI #DeliveryRobots #UrbanMobility #LastMile #TechFunding #SustainableTech #Automation #SmartLogistics

    Read Full Article Here :- techi.com/coco-robotics-raises

  26. Coco Robotics secures $80M funding (total $120M) to expand its zero-emission delivery robot fleet. With OpenAI as a strategic partner, Coco aims to scale to 10,000 bots by 2026, transforming last-mile delivery in cities like LA, Chicago, and Miami.

    #CocoRobotics #AI #OpenAI #DeliveryRobots #UrbanMobility #LastMile #TechFunding #SustainableTech #Automation #SmartLogistics

    Read Full Article Here :- techi.com/coco-robotics-raises

  27. Coco Robotics secures $80M funding (total $120M) to expand its zero-emission delivery robot fleet. With OpenAI as a strategic partner, Coco aims to scale to 10,000 bots by 2026, transforming last-mile delivery in cities like LA, Chicago, and Miami.

    #CocoRobotics #AI #OpenAI #DeliveryRobots #UrbanMobility #LastMile #TechFunding #SustainableTech #Automation #SmartLogistics

    Read Full Article Here :- techi.com/coco-robotics-raises

  28. Coco Robotics secures $80M funding (total $120M) to expand its zero-emission delivery robot fleet. With OpenAI as a strategic partner, Coco aims to scale to 10,000 bots by 2026, transforming last-mile delivery in cities like LA, Chicago, and Miami.

    #CocoRobotics #AI #OpenAI #DeliveryRobots #UrbanMobility #LastMile #TechFunding #SustainableTech #Automation #SmartLogistics

    Read Full Article Here :- techi.com/coco-robotics-raises

  29. I think I've found one of their nests.
    --

    There have been more and more of these obnoxious little delivery robots with the fake-cute animated eyes on their front displays infesting the neighborhood. Clearly they've been breeding.

    It looks as if I've found one of their nests.

    #deliveryrobots #deliveryrobot #unnecessarytechnology #jobtheft #enshittification #fakecute

  30. I think I've found one of their nests.
    --

    There have been more and more of these obnoxious little delivery robots with the fake-cute animated eyes on their front displays infesting the neighborhood. Clearly they've been breeding.

    It looks as if I've found one of their nests.

    #deliveryrobots #deliveryrobot #unnecessarytechnology #jobtheft #enshittification #fakecute

  31. I think I've found one of their nests.
    --

    There have been more and more of these obnoxious little delivery robots with the fake-cute animated eyes on their front displays infesting the neighborhood. Clearly they've been breeding.

    It looks as if I've found one of their nests.

    #deliveryrobots #deliveryrobot #unnecessarytechnology #jobtheft #enshittification #fakecute

  32. I think I've found one of their nests.
    --

    There have been more and more of these obnoxious little delivery robots with the fake-cute animated eyes on their front displays infesting the neighborhood. Clearly they've been breeding.

    It looks as if I've found one of their nests.

    #deliveryrobots #deliveryrobot #unnecessarytechnology #jobtheft #enshittification #fakecute

  33. I think I've found one of their nests.
    --

    There have been more and more of these obnoxious little delivery robots with the fake-cute animated eyes on their front displays infesting the neighborhood. Clearly they've been breeding.

    It looks as if I've found one of their nests.

    #deliveryrobots #deliveryrobot #unnecessarytechnology #jobtheft #enshittification #fakecute