The Guardian (USA)

‘Eat the future, pay with your face’: my dystopian trip to an AI burger joint

- Lois Beckett in Los Angeles

On 1 April, the same day California’s new $20 hourly minimum wage for fast-food workers went into effect, a new restaurant opened in north-east Los Angeles that was conspicuou­sly light on human staff.

CaliExpres­s by Flippy claims to be the world’s first fully autonomous restaurant, using a system of AI-powered robots to churn out fast-food burgers and fries. A small number of humans are still required to push the buttons on the machines and assemble the burgers and toppings, but the companies involved tout that using their technology could cut labor costs, perhaps dramatical­ly. “Eat the future,” they offer.

I visited CaliExpres­s last week to find out what an all-American lunch served with a side of existentia­l dread tastes like. When I entered the restaurant, located near Caltech university in Pasadena, I was greeted with giant posters advertisin­g the “frying AI robot marvel”, but few actual customers. Most of the people inside were other journalist­s. A television crew hovered over the grill machine.

The space was decorated with early prototypes of robot arms, as well as a riff on Michelange­lo’s Sistine Chapel, with a human hand reaching out not to the hand of God, but to a robot claw holding french fries.

I placed my order at a self-serve screen, where my robot-made cheeseburg­er and fries cost $15 plus tax. A sign urged me to “pay with my face”, offering me $10 to enroll with a company called PopID to link my face to my credit or debit card. “Pay with just a smile!” it urged. I did not.

The burger joint is a collaborat­ion between multiple companies using it as a “test kitchen” for the future of fast-food technology. The machine for making the burgers is produced by Cucina, a company focused on automating food production, which described its “BurgerChef” as a solution to a “65% increase in food service wages in the past 15 years”. The french frymaking robot, Flippy, was created by Miso Robotics, a local startup founded by a group of Caltech grads.

I was offered a tour of the kitchen by Denise Koons, who works with PopID, the “biometric ordering” facial recognitio­n company. She demonstrat­ed the various stages of my order. She pushed a button on a nearby screen. The BurgerChef ground a single burger’s worth of wagyu steak to order and then squeezed it out from a tube and tucked it between two metal plates to brown. One hundred and ninety-five seconds later, a plastic arm rotated to receive the browned burger, ultimately dropping the meat into a waiting container.

The BurgerChef was a large, boxy piece of equipment that felt no more threatenin­g than a toaster oven, and was not particular­ly exciting to watch.

Flippy, however, was the real star of the place, and absolutely terrifying.

It was just humanoid enough to be disturbing, with one big, snake-like arm extending down from the ceiling, poised over a frying station protected behind a transparen­t window. Another press of a button, and the arm jerked up a waiting metal fry basket and maneuvered it to one side, where a predetermi­ned amount of frozen potato slices tumbled down into the basket. Then Flippy dunked the basket into the sizzling oil, and we waited.

Flippy was originally conceived as a grill-master robot that could flip burgers, hence the name, Rob Anderson, one of the co-founders of Miso Robotics, told me later. But manning a grill – keeping track of burgers and cheese and buns and onions, and being able to flip the different objects at the proper time – turned out to be a tremendous­ly sophistica­ted robotics problem, one too tricky for the startup to tackle, he said. So they decided to pivot to a simpler challenge: making a robot that could manage a frying station, what Anderson argued was “probably the most stressful and dangerous tasks in the kitchen” for human workers, and thus a good task for a robot, which would not be burned by hot oil or bothered by the heat.

As I watched a giant metal arm encased in rubber pick up the fry basket again and shake it roughly, I had only one thought: the future of sex robots is going to be very unpleasant.

What does AI actually do?

It wasn’t clear to me how the restaurant differed from other robot-assisted operations, of which there are now many across California and the US. So I followed up with Anderson to find out how exactly AI was being put to use.

He explained that Flippy’s AI components were designed for subtle and difficult tasks, such as adjusting to differentl­y sized kitchens and ranges. It also had computer vision, a type of artificial intelligen­ce that uses machine learning and neural networks to allow computers to act on visual inputs, like photos or videos, in the way that humans respond to sight. Flippy’s computer vision was continuous­ly monitoring where the fry baskets were placed, so if a human worker replaced one in a slightly different spot, the machine would simply adjust.

The robot wasn’t limited to french fries: it could also fry chicken wings and onion rings, and could detect when onions had been place inside the fryer, rather than potatoes, and adjust its fry times automatica­lly, he said. Artificial intelligen­ce also informed the robot’s “scheduling and forecastin­g” abilities, like deciding “what is the right order to cook all this food so it’s still cooked perfectly” during the lunch hour rush or slower times in the afternoon.

Flippy was not designed to replace human workers completely, but to be a “tool” to make their work easier and safer, Anderson said.

“It’s very much this collaborat­ive setup,” he said, adding that working alongside robots would teach people “new skills” that are “more career growth oriented, rather than just learning how to cook french fries”.

I asked Anderson what those skills would be, other than knowing how to push buttons.

While Flippy’s interface was designed to be very simple, Anderson said, employees would have to master “how it works, how to clean it, how to keep it operating”, and how to get in touch with the robotics support line when it might need service or repairs. Flippy could not clean itself: it needed wipe-downs every night, and more intensive cleanings monthly and quarterly. Human employees could also do “more customer engagement work”, he said. “You don’t just have to sit there and monitor a fryer.”

Flippy-style fryers were already at work in multiple locations of fast-food outlets including White Castle and Jack in the Box, Anderson told me: “We’ve got a fleet of robots out there.”

Tasting the results

So, after all the hype, how good were the robot-made burgers and fries?

The robot burger, despite its higher-quality In-N-Out burger-style house sauce and fresh lettuce and tomato,

 ?? ?? Flippy, a robot with the ability to cook burgers and fries. Photograph: Courtesy of Miso Robotics
Flippy, a robot with the ability to cook burgers and fries. Photograph: Courtesy of Miso Robotics
 ?? Miso Robotics ?? Flippy, a robot with the ability to cook burgers and fries. Photograph: Courtesy of
Miso Robotics Flippy, a robot with the ability to cook burgers and fries. Photograph: Courtesy of

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States