Business World

Estonian delivery robots try to master crosswalks

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TALLINN, ESTONIA — A kneehigh, black-and-white buggy rolls down a snowy pavement in Estonia’s capital Tallinn and, carefully avoiding pedestrian­s, stops obediently at the red traffic light of a large road junction.

The six- wheeled robot, on its way to deliver lunch to a client, knows to cross only when the pedestrian light is green, but, armless, it cannot press the traffic light button.

Inventors Starship Technologi­es have taught their robots to avoid traffic lights with buttons and are now giving them speakers and microphone­s to help them navigate pedestrian crossings.

While not quite as talkative as C-3PO, the quick-witted droid of Star Wars movies, Starship robots will be able to communicat­e with humans.

“We’ll have predefined sentences that are used in certain situations. Like ‘ hello’ or... ‘could you press the button of the traffic light,’” Mikk Martmaa, the 26-year- old head of Starship’s testing program in Estonia, told AFP.

Most passersby smile as the robot resembling a hi- tech icebox roams the streets of Tallinn’s Mustamae district.

“I’ve seen the Second World War and now I’ve lived to see robots on the streets of Tallinn!” marvels 80- year- old resident Aleksandra Vaskina.

A prototype of the robot was first designed for a NASA competitio­n seeking bots able to collect rock samples on Mars or the Moon.

While it did not win, the Tallinn-based engineers behind the model thought it was perfect for food deliveries.

To explore the idea, lead engineer Estonian Ahti Heinla and Denmark’s Janus Friis, cofounders of the online call service Skype, created Starship Technologi­es in London in 2014.

The start-up’s bots are being developed and tested in the Baltic state of Estonia, one of the world’s most wired countries and a trailblaze­r in new technology.

‘KNOCK-KNOCK’

On a cold February day, 27-yearold TV producer Liisi Molder does not feel like going out but fancies a 1€2 ($13) portion of squid and celeriac with herring roe and rocket in shellfish sauce from the busy nearby Umami restaurant.

With a few clicks, Ms. Molder places her order on an applicatio­n on her mobile phone and 20 minutes later the robot arrives with her lunch.

It had no trouble climbing a paving stone in front of Ms. Molder’s block of flats, but unable to press the entry buzzer, it sends a message to her phone.

“Knock- knock! Your Wolt delivery is arriving, please come outside and unlock the robot,” reads the message with an access code to open the robot’s container.

“I’m sure it’s going to make some services more efficient,” Ms. Molder told AFP.

The robots’ top speed is around six kilometers ( four miles) per hour but they are far less expensive to build and operate than delivery drones now being tested by online retail giant Amazon and others.

Once on the market, the final product is expected to cost “as much as a laptop or a really expensive phone. A few thousand euros,” Mr. Martmaa said.

Starship partnered with Finland-based Wolt, a company handling food deliveries for over 120 Tallinn eateries.

For now, Wolt robot deliveries are available from four Mustamae area restaurant­s. But Starship has its sights set on the US.

Similar pilot projects for robotic deliveries of parcels, groceries and prepared foods are being launched in Washington and Redwood City, an IT hub in California.

SOCIAL COST?

While its nine cameras and other sensors keep the robots from bumping into humans, exceptions to common traffic rules are tricky.

“The main (concern) are the intersecti­ons... In many places in the world there are roads where cars can turn right even if the traffic light is red. Our robot can’t detect that,” Mr. Martmaa said.

Replacing humans with robots on the labor market could however carry a social cost. It runs the “risk of exacerbati­ng the gap between the haves and the have-nots,” Peter Stone, who led a 2016 Stanford University study on artificial intelligen­ce, told AFP.

He predicts that over the next 15 years autonomous vehicles and robots will take over unskilled jobs like the transport of people and packages. However, highly skilled — and paid — jobs developing artificial intelligen­ce devices will emerge. —

 ??  ?? A SIX-WHEELED robot by Starship Technologi­es makes its way to deliver food from restaurant in Tallinn, Estonia on Feb. 16.
A SIX-WHEELED robot by Starship Technologi­es makes its way to deliver food from restaurant in Tallinn, Estonia on Feb. 16.

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