Houston Chronicle

Grocery deliveries still require human help

- By Ryan Nakashima

SAN JOSE, Calif. — A self-driving car that delivers your groceries seems like a great idea: a robot vehicle that uses artificial intelligen­ce to replicate the service of yesteryear’s milkman and grocery store delivery kid.

There are companies now working on the technology to make it a reality. But they still haven’t managed to get the robots to do all the work.

There’s a human schlepping your food every step of the way. There’s even one behind the wheel.

Tests of the technology in places like Scottsdale, Ariz., and San Jose, Calif., still feature human safety drivers who have to take over if the robotic one gets confused. So from picking and packing the groceries, to loading them in the car, to having the shopper come to the curb to unload them, people are still involved at every turn.

It might not be long before that changes.

San Jose-based AutoX launched a pilot service in late August that uses proprietar­y vision technology to minimize the use of expensive lidar sensors. Those are the rotating sensors that shoot out lasers to see the world around it. Instead, AutoX relies mainly on cameras and stitches together 3-D maps, chief operating officer Jewel Zhou Li says.

Lidar equipment can cost as much as $500,000 per car, but AutoX gets that down to $80,000, Li says. It’s part of the strategy to get the cost of delivery down to below the price to consumers of $2.50 per trip.

“Drivers are expensive,” Li said. “Only with self-driving cars can we make the on-demand economy work.”

AutoX, a startup with nearly 100 employees, has partnered with GrubMarket, a 3-year-old company that uses humans to deliver groceries, normally for a fee of $6 for orders below $40.

It sources produce from local farms in the San Francisco Bay Area, and requires shoppers to choose their items online in the morning or the day prior to delivery.

Its workers sort the produce in a warehouse by hand.

In Scottsdale, startup Nuro is working with grocery giant Kroger on a test that will eventually use its special purpose vehicle, the R1. It’s about half the width of a sedan and doesn’t have room for people. And with a top speed of 25 mph, the electric vehicle, which fits about 12 shopping bags, already has approval to drive on Arizona streets, the company said.

But until internal testing is complete, Nuro is relying on Toyota Priuses outfitted with selfdrivin­g technology, which also requires that a human be behind the wheel. Nuro charges a $5.95 flat fee per delivery.

 ?? Ryan Nakashima / Associated Press ?? Customer Maureen Blaskovich grabs a coconut water from the back of a self-driving AutoX car in San Jose, Calif.
Ryan Nakashima / Associated Press Customer Maureen Blaskovich grabs a coconut water from the back of a self-driving AutoX car in San Jose, Calif.

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