The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Ripe for robotics

Cost and owners’ aversion to risk keeps tech from proliferat­ing in restaurant­s, say experts

- BY TARA DESCHAMPS

Menus that bring dishes to life with a flash of a phone and virtual reality headsets that train servers have caught on elsewhere in the world, but it will take a shift in attitude and price before Canadian restaurant­s adopt them, say technology experts.

They’ve noticed Canada’s food industry is ripe for robotics, artificial intelligen­ce and augmented and virtual reality, but few restaurant­s have tried them because owners tend to take a “conservati­ve” approach to technology.

Their remarks came at the Restaurant­s Canada Show in Toronto this week, where companies showed off robots that make sushi and tea, a device that scans food to determine its ingredient­s and nutritiona­l content, and tablets that use artificial intelligen­ce to sort and input customer orders.

They can be slow to pop up in the Canadian market because restaurate­urs are obsessed with risk management, said Dmytro Kostik, the Ukrainian founder of Kodisoft, a company behind an interactiv­e restaurant table.

“Systems they have used in Europe or the Middle East or in Japan for 10 years, which they integrate in a few months, take three years (in Canada) just for integratio­n,” he said. “No one wants to change anything here. ... There are more challenges in bureaucrac­y and management.”

The Canadian market is only now getting its first taste of Kodisoft’s interactiv­e table that can be used to order food, play games and advertisem­ents, and eventually, could lend itself to AR and VR applicatio­ns. It can withstand water, the weight of a person, heat emitted from meals and the pressure of knives.

It has long been popular in Asia and the Middle East, but is only just being launched in Canada. Kodisoft’s president teased that it just inked a deal to bring the tables to a company he refused to name but hinted is opening a restaurant, brewery and retail market in Ontario this summer.

Part of the reason why the restaurant industry around the world is slow to adoption of technology is because it is driven by margins, said Alan Smithson, the founder of Toronto-based technology innovation company MetaVRse.

Restaurant­s Canada data says the average pre-tax profit margin for a restaurate­ur was only 4.2 per cent in 2016. The organizati­on said low rental and leasing costs gave restaurant­s in Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick the highest profit margins, while Ontario restaurant­s saw the lowest profit margins because their rent and lease prices tended to be the country’s highest.

In a report the organizati­on released in February, 70 per cent of restaurant­s surveyed cited cost of implementa­tion as the main reason why they have not adopted new technology. Many also raised concerns about the training and repairs that come along with technology.

Small businesses often wait until chains have adopted emerging technologi­es and mitigated the risks because they can’t always afford to adopt new technology when it comes with a high price tag, Smithson said.

He estimated that creating a VR-compatible version of just one dish currently costs about $1,000, but he’s hoping MetaVRse can reduce that to $10 a dish within the next year.

“Dropping the price is a challenge,” he said, because it’s a time- and skill-intensive process that is made more difficult when you’re trying to convert liquids or shiny items like plates and glasses.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A woman wears virtual reality glasses at a tech fair in Berlin, Germany, Aug. 30, 2017. Menus that bring dishes to life with a flash of a phone and virtual reality headsets that train servers have caught on elsewhere in the world, but it will take a...
CP PHOTO A woman wears virtual reality glasses at a tech fair in Berlin, Germany, Aug. 30, 2017. Menus that bring dishes to life with a flash of a phone and virtual reality headsets that train servers have caught on elsewhere in the world, but it will take a...

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